Overview


Our current funding system is unfair and hard to understand or explain. Two schools with the same number and mix of students can receive budgets that differ by more than $1 million.



Similar Schools, Different Funding

Elementary school A

Elementary school B

Enrollment

590

Enrollment

620

Poverty %

92%

Poverty %

98%

English language learners %

25%

English language learners %

29%

Tax levy general funds

$3,250,000

Tax levy general funds

$1,790,000

Tax levy general education per student

$5,860

Tax levy general education per student

$3,010


The difference between what school A and school B receive is $1,460,000.

This inequity has a real impact on students: The school with less funding is likely to have:
  • fewer teachers;
  • less experienced teachers;
  • less enrichment for students;
  • less enrichment for teachers; or
  • all of the above.

The reasons for the unfairness are complex, but two stand out. First, budgets often carry forward subjective decisions made long ago. Sometimes these decisions were made for legitimate reasons now outdated, sometimes because of politics. Whatever the reason, schools receive different levels of funding for reasons unrelated to the needs of the school’s current students.

The second factor is that we budget for most teachers in terms of positions rather than how much they actually cost. As a result, for example, two schools’ enrollment levels give them each 100 teachers, but if the teachers at one school have average salaries of $70,000 and teachers at the other school have average salaries of $60,000, then we will have provided $1 million less to the school with lower average teacher salaries. We know that across our system it is the neediest kids who have the least experienced teachers.

This system is wrong for our principals and teachers, whom we ask to meet the same high standards for improving student achievement. Even more important, it is wrong for the kids who haven’t gotten a fair chance for success.



How We Came Up With The Plan

We’ve based these budget reforms on extensive public outreach in New York City, conversations with school leaders in other cities, and research on education funding and results.


Public Input in New York City

Beginning in late January 2007, Department of Education leaders attended more than 100 meetings with almost 6,000 people in all five boroughs. These meetings included conversations with hundreds of principals, 27 Community Education Councils, roundtables with community groups in each borough, and discussions with faith and community leaders. The Department also trained all 1,400-plus parent coordinators in Fair Student Funding so they would be equipped to answer families’ questions. We also communicated with hundreds of additional parents, community and religious leaders, teachers, and principals by e-mail.

These interactions resulted in many modifications to improve the final FSF plan. Many of these changes are spelled out in the following chapters.

We conducted extensive analyses of our current budgeting practices, including the methodologies in current funding approaches: for example, use of staffing ratios and assumptions about breakage, coverage, and the “curriculum index.” We examined contracts and policies governing class sizes to ensure our compliance. And we studied the disparities among schools that have arisen from current funding patterns. Our “weights” — the additional dollars that will follow different types of students to their schools — reflect what we learned.



National and International Experience

We spoke with current or past leaders in several of the other communities that have implemented plans similar to Fair Student Funding, including officials or former officials in San Francisco and Oakland, California; Seattle, Washington; Edmonton, Canada; and Great Britain. We also consulted with researchers who have studied these funding reforms in these and other locations. We formed an external advisory group that helped us launch the initiative, including the following individuals:

Arlene Ackerman, former superintendent, San Francisco, and Washington, DC, and former assistant superintendent in Seattle; Chester Finn, president, Thomas B. Fordham Foundation; fellow, Hoover Institution; William Ouchi, professor, Anderson Graduate School of Management at UCLA; John Podesta, former White House Chief of Staff to President Clinton, and president and CEO, Center for American Progress; Marguerite Roza, professor, Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington; and Michael Strembitsky, former superintendent, Edmonton, Canada.



A Research Base

We examined various studies about the cost to ed ucate students, including Determining the Cost of Providing All Children in New York an Adequate Education (also known as the CFE Report), Standard & Poor’s Resource Adequacy Study for the New York State Commission on Education Reforms, and The New York State Commission on Education Reform’s Ensuring Children an Opportunity for a Sound Basic Education (also known as the Zarb Report). We also reviewed reports by school finance experts around the country. Although none of the studies provided a precise roadmap for New York City, all of them informed our work.



Going Forward

Fair Student Funding provides a flexible vehicle for public feedback and improvement over time. We have made tradeoffs and tough decisions clearer. We have provided extensive data about schools’ funding in more accessible form. We are committed to improving Fair Student Funding in the coming years through input from principals, teachers, parents, and school communities. A new advisory committee will review the impact of changes and make recommendations moving forward.