Posted on 04/21/2011 10:07:51 AM PDT by Altura Ct.
Abstract: Achievement disparities among racial and ethnic groups persist in the American education system. Asian and white students consistently perform better on standardized tests than Hispanic and black students. While many commentators blame the achievement gap on alleged disparities in school funding, this Heritage Foundation paper demonstrates that public education spending per pupil is broadly similar across racial and ethnic groups. To the extent that funding differences exist at all, they tend to slightly favor lower-performing groups, especially blacks. Since unequal funding for minority students is largely a myth, it cannot be a valid explanation for racial and ethnic differences in school achievement, and there is little evidence that increasing public spending will close the gaps.
In 2009, white public school eighth-graders outscored their black classmates by one standard deviation (equivalent to roughly two and a half years of learning) on the math portion of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) test.[1] Racial differences in achievement like this one are pervasive in the U.S. education system, and the gaps have persisted for decades.
The Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), a standardized test battery given to 15-year-olds in all 34 OECD[2] countries, puts the gaps in stark terms. If white American students were counted as a separate group, their PISA reading score would rank them third in the world. Hispanic and black Americans, however, would score 31st and 33rd, respectively.[3]
Blaming Unequal Funding. A common hypothesis is that Hispanic and black students perform worse in school because less money is spent on them. In 1995, Columbia Universitys Linda Darling-Hammond claimed, The resources devoted to the education of poor children and children of color in the U.S. continue to be significantly less than those devoted to other American children and it is these inequalities that create and sustain the bell curve of differential achievement.[4]
Part of the NAACPs official statement on education policy reads: Quality public education for African American and Latino students is persistently threatened as a direct result of inequitable school funding.[5]
Responding in 2001 to criticism that blacks and Hispanics perform poorly on the SAT, College Board President Gaston Caperton declared, Tests are not the problem . The problem we have is an unfair education system in Americaan unequal education system.[6]
Even conservative author John McWhorter, while downplaying structural and institutional explanations for the racial achievement gap, still asserts that the alleged funding disadvantage for black students is a real one.[7]
These commentators are mistaken on two levels. First, increasing school spending has rarely led to better outcomes.[8] Second, and more fundamentally, based on data from the U.S. Department of Education itself, the assumed funding disparities between racial and ethnic groups do not exist.
Existing Literature. Past research on educational resource disparities has often avoided direct calculations of per-pupil spending. Darling-Hammond, for example, has written extensively on specific inputs, particularly teacher certifications, that tend to be lower in schools with large minority populations. But deficiencies in certain resources do not necessarily indicate an overall disparity. Other analysts, such as Jonathan Kozol, have explored case studies of poorly funded minority schools, but the limited set of examples are not representative of the national picture.[9]
The Education Trust, a non-profit advocacy group committed to closing the achievement gap, published a 2005 report on funding differences between the highest-minority and lowest-minority school districts in states and large cities.[10] Leaving out the districts in the middle, however, can lead to misleading results.
One of the more rigorous reports on funding disparities was published by the Urban Institute.[11] The authors of the study combined district-level spending data with the racial and ethnic composition of schools within districts. They found that spending on minority students eclipsed spending on white students in the early 1980s and remained slightly higher through 2002, the most recent year in their study.
This paper employs a similar methodology, using 20062007 datasets from the U.S. Department of Education to examine school funding at both the national and regional levels. In addition, the paper adjusts spending figures to account for cost-of-living differences across districts.
Data and Methods
This paper uses two datasets published by the Department of Educations National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). The Secondary School Universe Survey for the 20062007 school year provides the racial and ethnic breakdown of schools across the nation;[12] the Financial Survey for the 20062007 school year contains detailed expenditure and revenue data for public school districts.[13] Merging these two datasets allows expenditures to be weighted by the racial composition of each district, creating per-pupil expenditures for each group.
Specific Procedure. In each district, the number of white students is multiplied by per-pupil spending to generate the total spending on white students, district by district. The district totals are summed to create a national grand total of spending on white students. That grand total is then divided by the total number of white students across the country, producing the national per-pupil figure for white students. The same procedure is repeated for each racial and ethnic group.
*See Equation At Link*
Mathematically, the calculation is shown above.
District Level vs. School Level. Ideally, the NCES would provide expenditures on a school-by-school basis, not just on a district-by-district basis, so that the spending data would have the same level of precision as the racial and ethnic data. But given the district-only limitation, students are assigned the per-pupil spending level of their district as a whole, rather than the per-pupil spending in their individual schools. The Discussion section below explores how this might affect the analysis.
Cost-of-Living Adjustment. Because the cost of living varies across the U.S., school expenditures are not always directly comparable. In areas with a lower cost of living, the same amount of money can buy more resources than in high-cost areas. To account for this difference, the NCES calculates a Comparable Wage Index (CWI) for each school district based on the average non-teacher wage in the districts labor market.[14] If non-teacher wages are high in a given market, the NCES assumes it has a high cost of living. The NCES excludes teacher wages from the CWI calculation to avoid confusing a districts commitment to education funding with general cost-of-living differences.
Cost adjustments should be regarded cautiously. Living expenses can still vary within markets, sometimes considerably. The District of Columbia, for example, is a high-expense city overall, but its poorest (and mostly black and Hispanic) sections have a lower cost of living than the white sections. While the raw data are likely to overstate the minority school funding advantage, the adjusted data probably understate it. Nevertheless, the CWI is the best dataset currently available for making cost adjustments.
Results
Table 1 displays three columns of results. The first shows the raw per-pupil spending figures for whites, blacks, Hispanics, and Asians. The second column shows per-pupil spending on white students. The third column adjusts this percentage with the CWI to reflect differences in the cost of living. All three data points for each group are then broken down by census region.
*See Table At Link*
Nationwide, raw per-pupil spending is similar across racial and ethnic groups. The small differences that do exist favor non-white students. After breaking down the data by region, the non-white funding advantage becomes more pronounced. In the Northeast, for example, blacks receive over $2,000 more than whites in per-pupil funding per year. The region with the smallest differences is the South, where spending on black and Hispanic students is only slightly higher than on whites.
Adjusted for cost of living, the differences narrow. Asian and Hispanic students receive slightly less money than whites overall, while blacks receive slightly more. Regional differences persist after the adjustment, especially in the Northeast.
Discussion
The results in the previous section are straightforwardminority students receive about as much public school funding as white students. However, there are two additional issues that complicate the debate over school financing:
1. Funding Disparities Within Districts. The preceding analysis assigns each student the per-pupil spending level of his or her district, meaning that the analysis cannot capture funding differences within districts at the school level.[15] This limitation is unlikely to be a problem in smaller suburban and rural districts, where socioeconomic differences are less pronounced. In big-city districts, such as New York or Chicago, however, intra-district funding disparities are a potential issue.
Indeed, Darling-Hammond, the University of Washingtons Marguerite Roza, and other education analysts have focused on possible disparities at the school level, particularly the tendency for veteran teachers to avoid schools with low-income and high-minority student bodies.[16] District policies often allow teachers with higher seniority to move to their preferred schools within the same district.
It is difficult to know how important this phenomenon is, since teaching experience is a weak predictor of teacher quality.[17] Data from the 1990s indicate that young teachers in high-minority schools are, if anything, more qualified than the average teacher, but they are also more likely to desire a different career.[18]
To the extent that money is indeed distributed inefficiently within districts, it is the result of poor public administration, not a lack of appropriated funds. Though minority students face many obstacles in getting a quality education from the public school system, an inequitable commitment of resources from taxpayers is not one of them.
2. Accounting for Differences in Student Needs. Since school funding is so similar across racial and ethnic groups, it cannot be the proximate cause of group differences in school achievement. Still, some analysts now argue that education funding is not equitable unless far more money is spent on minority students compared to white students. Indeed, a 1998 NCES report used a student-needs adjustment that made school funding equitable only if poor students (usually defined as qualifying for free or reduced-fee lunch) received 20 percent more per-pupil funding than non-poor students.[19]
The justification is that poor and minority students face greater socioeconomic problems outside the classroom, necessitating greater education spending as a kind of remediation. This revised view of school funding is very different from the one espoused by the NAACP, Kozol, and others quoted earlier. The original argument made by equalization advocates identified the alleged disparity in school funding as the cause of lower minority achievement. Under the revised view, the cause must be problems outside the classroom, and spending is considered equitable only if it is high enough to remediate those problems.
The degree to which student-needs adjustments are appropriate is beyond the scope of this paper, which specifically focuses on refuting the claim that minority students receive less funding for school than white students. Clearly, students with physical handicaps or language barriers will require more resources than students without them, but whether poverty by itself or low ability by itself requires statistical adjustment is questionable. Student-needs adjustments taken to an extreme could imply that no level of school fundingno matter how generous to minority studentscould ever be considered equitable as long as achievement disparities remain.
That debate aside, it is a mistake to assume that funding increases for public schools can close the achievement gap. Purchasing more educational resources is a popular idea, but rigorous studies on reduced class sizes, graduate degrees for teachers, and enhanced amenities in schools suggest little or no impact on student achievement.[20]
Conclusion
Although it is often blamed for the racial achievement gap, unequal school funding is largely a myth. Per-pupil spending in the U.S. is broadly similar across racial and ethnic groups. If any one group enjoys an advantage in funding, it is black students, especially in the Northeastern states. Group differences in school achievement cannot be the result of an unequal commitment of resources to minority students, and simple increases in public school funding are not likely to close the gaps.
Ping
The answer is vouchers.
For any school.
Except a muslim school.
No mention of parental involvement.
borrowing from Golda Meir:
The problems in the black commnunity will cease when black people love their children more than they hate whitey....
‘Except a muslim school’ — which causes me to stop short. And now, I am NOT in favor of vouchers at all. How about free Catholic education like the Catholic church used to offer? No strings attached, no federal mandates. There is an archdiocese in (Kansas? Nebraska?) where they give it free to every attending parish family. Paid for by those who have gone before.
The key, I believe, to student success in school is a stable, Mom and Dad family, along with consistent parental commitment/support to education. As dismal the statistics are in our country, as a whole, regarding the number of stable, two-parent families, all you have to do is look at the destruction of the family in the Black community to see that this is the “missing” element that holds black kids back educationally. This missing element also applies, in general, to all races and economic situations.
As to Hispanics, while the family is in much better condition than in the Black community, the commitment to education is not very consistent. If education is not a high priority within a given family - even in stable, two-parent families, that lack of commitment is also detrimental to kids succeeding in school.
re: “The answer is vouchers.”
I fear vouchers for the following reason. I think private schools receiving such funds will open a back door for the government to infringe upon them. Once schools take tax-payer money (i.e. government money) - then, they will have to abide by all the stupid rules and regualtions that the state government (or federal government) might require.
Am I off-base here?
Universal compulsory state funded education is a failure for parents, children, and teachers. Its a great success for the Globalist Banksters that designed the system to produce a dumbed-down population of consumer/peasants. This focus on the “Achievement Gap” is a convenient excuse to waste vast amounts of time and money on the ineducable at the expense of White Christian Middle-class children. Highly educated self-reliant adults won’t put up with being looted and lorded over by a class of effete Bankster parasites.
First, let me repeat: there is NO SUCH THING as a “good” public school, and I don’t care where it is, what the demographics are, or how much is paid in property taxes.
The problem isn’t what is ever mentioned. Urban schools are more likely to be largely black and hispanic and the parents either illegal or unengaged. The academic “elites” have a freer hand to indoctrinate as much as they like, to create the victim class that they need to complete their power grab. They are also free to stuff as many kids as possible into special ed classes, which means more fed money to be had.
Want to save the country and your kids? Abolish the DOE and eliminate any interference from the fed. Give all responsibility for schools back to the states and put the parents (first) and teachers (second) in charge.
While I understand where you are coming from, had you said "at the expense of educable children" I would agree with you wholeheartedly.
The make up of the kids in my daughters advanced classes are pretty even between the whites and the blacks and hispanics. In the regular tier classes, the number of hispanics decreases, and in the lower tier classes it is nearly equal among the 3 groups.
The rescources definitely go to the bottom tier at the expense of the upper 2 tiers.
Absolutely.
**How much of a child's academic success is entirely due to the afterschooling that parents and children do in the home at the kitchen table and at the child's desk in the home? Where are the studies?
**Where are the studies that separate out what is learned in the classroom from that which is acquired at home?
** Is is possible that, for the most part, institutional schools are sending home a curriculum and the real work of teaching and learning is being done by the child and parent due to afterschooling in the home? Where are the studies?
Conclusion:
** These are important questions and to have the exact answer is important because we, as citizens, are spending TONS of money on government schools that may actually doing nothing at all!
** Typical government schools may very well retard the academic and social progress of children from functional homes. These children may do better if they spent less time in school and more time at home.
**If the real work of teaching and learning is happening in the home then the typical government school may be utterly and completely ineffective for children from dysfunctional families. These children may need a very different model of schooling. ( KIPP schools, by the way, seem to be helping these kids.)
Finally....It is my anecdotal observation that academically successful children, whether schooled at home or in an institution, spend **EXACTLY** the same amount of time studying at the kitchen table or child's desk in the HOME! My conclusion then is that the real work is being done by the children and the parents at home, and little learning happens in the classroom.
OK! I only had to read answers 3 & 4 to get all the answers necessary for the discrepancy in the scores and achievement. School vouchers and parental involvement are the main tools needed to rectify the poor performances by black children in America. They go hand-in-hand.
Parents who are concerned about their childrens’ education are the same group who want to have vouchers - because they care. It’s really very simple. But, such concepts seem to elude the liberals of today. They resist it because it implys that the problem is within the black community, which it is. Too many single-parent households who rely on the welfare state and have no father figures. Education is laughed as by many and scorned.
Since the mid 20th century, intelligent and ambitious black citizens in the USA have done amazingly well. They not only had opportunities for education, but those who were determined to get an education persevered and conquered all adversities. On-the-other hand, that part of the black population which has a chip on it’s shoulder, is not doing well, as they can justify their laziness and uncooperative study habits by saying “it’s too much like whitey”.
I think Daniel P. Moynihan was correct when he cautioned us about 40 years ago about the growing problems in the black community with dysfunctional families. Now, it has spread all across the spectrum of our country, only less so than in the black group.
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