Posted by George
It was standing room only at Tuesday’s meeting of the Basic Education Finance Task Force. As the Task Force bears down on the work of designing a better, more ample funding plan for schools, the room is filling with advocates, educators, print reporters and TVW. Soon we’re going to need a bigger room.
Most school advocates were encouraged by the sense that the Task Force is finally grappling with the rude question of what should be included in the cost of basic education. There were no academic discussions or presentations by visitors from out-of-state, just our own officials wrestling with the situation on the ground here in Washington.
Steve Aos, with the Washington Institute for Public Policy, the state agency that is staffing the Task Force, led off with his conclusions from the institute’s two major lines of research on compensation and class size. The state’s teacher salary schedule, which stretches incremental pay increases over 16 years, does not align well with the research that shows that the biggest gains in teacher effectiveness are in the first six years. A smarter system would aim to reward productivity gains, not simply years of service. On the issue of class size, the evidence is clear that reduced class sizes in grades K-3 matter. Mr. Aos even quantified the return on that investment: 10 to 16 percent over the lifetime of students.
That led to a vigorous discussion among members over the relative value of master degrees and years of experience. Experience won. Chair Dan Grimm was struck by Bremerton Superintendent Bette Hyde’s observation that her teachers all too frequently moved to other districts where they were paid more for the same job. How does that square with the state’s constitutional obligation to provide a “general and uniform” system of public schools?
Next, Rep. Ross Hunter presented his vision for a cost-based model for K-12 funding. He begins with a simple, bold—and unassailable—premise: build the K-12 budget around what kids need to meet the state’s high school graduation requirements. Because the State Board of Education is proposing to raise the minimum requirements so that high school graduates are prepared for college or meaningful employment, he starts there: fully fund 24 core credits, including three years of math and four years of English. At a minimum, this would mean funding six periods of high school instead of five.
Rep. Hunter would have the state build and cost out four model school programs (K-4, 4-5, 6-8 and 9-12) and then write the K-12 budget to fund them. He also proposes the state build and cost out model programs for English Language Learners, free and reduced-price lunch and special education students, programs reasonable people would agree are needed to provide all students with the opportunity to meet the state’s graduation requirements.
Rep. Hunter wants to require the Legislature to make explicit decisions about key cost drivers that are now obscure: class sizes, number of periods per day, and amount of teacher preparation time. He proposed further adjusting the high school model program costs to reflect four kinds of students: typical, struggling, honors and Career and Technical Education. And to avoid descending into the weeds, he imposes on each model school program the one-page rule.
Rep. Hunter wants the state to allocate funding for these model programs as a single block grant, and allow local districts to make actual spending decisions as they think best. To the extent districts choose to spend funds differently than the state allocation model, let them defend those choices to their parents and voters.
Next, Jennifer Priddy, finance guru at the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, presented a sobering snapshot of current financing trends in districts. Declining fund balances have become the norm. The bottom line is districts are too reliant on local funds ( levies and I-728 ) that don’t keep up with inflation to support their current staffing levels and salaries. Expect to see more and more districts facing financial insolvency.
Chair Grimm asked, how much of the problem is due to the State’s underfunding of basic education and how much to districts’ own spending decisions? Superintendent Hyde responded that districts are facing a perfect storm. The very year that students must meet the WASL graduation standards, all the superintendents she knows are being forced to make cuts. The responsibility for the problem falls squarely on the State.
Last up was Mary Jean Ryan, chair of the State Board of Education, who made a compelling case for raising graduation standards. Unlike the rest of the modern world, and every previous generation of Americans, today’s students will be less well-educated than their parent’s generation.
Chair Grimm asked, why not let local districts set their own graduation requirements? Ms. Ryan answered, in an increasingly globalized economy where our students need to compete with their peers from all over the world, local standards just don’t work.
Superintendent of Public Instruction Terry Bergeson noted that district superintendents are telling her they can’t imagine how to fund 24 core graduation requirements with current resources. But once the State Board adopts these requirements, it’s hard to imagine how the State can evade responsibility for providing the programs students will need to meet them—which is precisely Rep. Hunter’s point.
Next meeting, stakeholder groups and concerned individuals are invited to make presentations. The League of Education Voters plans to be one of them. Our focus will be ample funding and needed structural reforms.






6 comments
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May 9, 2008 at 10:26 pm
kmort
I have yet to see any news of plans to enhance revenue. In a situation where district’s budgets are at the fire wall, reallocation of existing revenues can’t meet the need. What’s going to happen with revenue?
May 9, 2008 at 11:23 pm
Dave
Enhancing revenue is one thing… Reducing unnecessary expenses is another. I’d like to see some exploration into the overlap between high school and college. For example, why fund college-level algebra classes in high school with school-district money, when college students (parents) pay tuition for it and/or receive federal financial aid or grants to cover it? What would the pros/cons be if we were to stop offering college-level algebra in high school, and let the child graduate that much earlier so they can move on to college sooner; or else find a way to get the child up onto a college campus or into an online college class; or otherwise, find a way to absolve the public high school from being responsible for funding that class?
May 10, 2008 at 4:11 pm
Kirk
“Less well educated?” Today’s students will be excruciatingly well educated in a very narrow range of subject matter because we have forced schools to focus limited resources thereupon. For example: I tried using calculus to balance my checkbook the other day and found that it is not a very useful tool. Basic adding and subtraction seemed to work pretty well, along with multiplication and percents. If we really intend to improve the end product–a well-rounded student with a high-school diploma–we need to start right now to invent the 21st century education model and stop trying to make a 19th century model work by applying a procrustean bed of a test and expecting better results.
May 10, 2008 at 6:54 pm
Shelby Rothstrom
How does Rep. Hunter’s request for the state to allocate funding for model programs as a single block grant meet “the state’s constitutional obligation to provide a “general and uniform” system of public schools?”
My school district administration does not believe research shows lower class sizes in K-3 make any difference (as evidenced by K, 1, and 2 classes overloaded, according to district collective bargaining agreement, at 26 students). Despite I-728, class sizes in K-3 have increased!
Rep. Hunter’s plan would put the burden back on parents and teachers to advocate for appropriate education resources at the district level.
If this task force does not tie the money to the intended purpose, it will have been a total waste. I would be extremely disappointed if Governor Gregoire and Mr. Grimm allowed this to happen!
May 12, 2008 at 5:55 pm
Don Nielsen
This committee is still not tackling the right issues. Yes, we have a funding problem, but the cause of the problem is not just money. It is the structure of the system that prevents efficient use of funds, prevents needed cost reductions and prevents talented people from entering the system.
First, we have system problem. Then, we have a funding problem.
Don
May 12, 2008 at 10:32 pm
Fred
1. Reliance on local levies and the varied amounts that can be collected by local districts has once again created an unconstitutional funding scheme in Washington state.
2. Needs to be a limit on the amount of money that can be spent on the TRI schedule. In districts such as Everett, Snohomish, Mukilteo, etc., Tri pay will account for 20 to 25% of a teacher’s compensaation. Unions push to the limit because they know school boards and communities will not accept a strike so District administrators have to agree to increases. This is where a majority of local levy dollars are spent.
3. Need a “no strike” statute in Washington. Teachers don’t ever really strike; they just do a labor stoppage that results in a “calendar adjustment”. Parents want there children back in school immediately – don’t care what it costs.
4. Without 2 and 3 above, the task force is just rearranging chairs on a ship that’s going down.