Title: Growing Pennsylvanias Economy By Investing in Education
1Growing Pennsylvanias Economy By Investing in
Education
February 4, 2009
Edward G. Rendell, Governor
Dr. Gerald L. Zahorchak, Secretary of Education
2Pennsylvanias economic recovery depends on
education
- Pennsylvania is facing a 2.3 billion budget
shortfall - 19 states slashing k-12
- 26 states reducing public higher ed support
- Pennsylvanias recovery strategy depends on
continuing to invest in education - every high school student graduates ready for
success - every family can afford to send their child to
college
2
3and success in the global economy demands it
- 70 of jobs in next 10 years will require
postsecondary education/training - Unemployment rate for PA residents with no
college degree is 4 times higher than college
graduates - HS graduate earns 37 more in a lifetime than a
HS dropout - PA college graduate earns twice as much in a
lifetime as HS graduate - Those with a postsecondary degree will earn 3 to
4 times more in a lifetime than a high school
dropoutÂ
3
4Pennsylvanias plan has 3 parts
- Increase investments in Pre-k-12 to ensure all
students in all communities have the resources to
learn and graduate with a diploma that means they
are ready for college or career - It is urgent to provide tuition relief to
Pennsylvania families - Enact common-sense government reforms to save
taxpayers money and improve public education
4
5Increase investments in Pre-k-12 to ensure all
students in all communities have the resources to
learn and graduate with a diploma that means they
are ready for college or career.
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6Pennsylvania is moving in the right direction
with 30 more students on grade level than in 2002
6
7Pennsylvanias public schools face two challenges
- 30 of students are still below grade level and
inadequate resources limit the ability of schools
and students to make the gains we need - 68 of students below grade level attend schools
where the adequacy gap is at least 2,000 per
pupil - Too many students graduate from high school
without the skills to succeed in college and the
workforce
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8The 2009-10 budget grows our investment in
student achievement
- 8.6 million increase in Pre-K Counts to bring
the total number of young children served to
12,850 -
- 300 million to make the 2nd year investment in
helping all school districts reach adequate
resources through Pennsylvanias new school
funding formula
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9Early childhood education is the foundation of
academic success
- Pennsylvania moved from 1 of 9 states failing to
invest in pre-k before 2003 to a national leader
today - But 2 in 3 young children still lack access to
high-quality pre-school - The 2009-10 budget will enable school districts
and quality community providers to serve 1,050
more children
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10Adequate funding is critical to student success
- Districts with the largest funding gaps average
78 more students below grade level than
districts with adequate resources
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11The 2009-10 budget continues Pennsylvanias
historic funding formula
- Last year, the Legislature enacted a school
funding formula to move all school districts
towards adequate funding levels - The 2009-10 budget provides 300 million for the
second year of phasing in Pennsylvanias funding
formula - The school funding formula is fully maintained
and carried forward for its second year - Reducing the adequacy target based on the cost of
living in certain counties has been eliminated in
the proposed budget at the request of school
districts
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12Students must leave high school ready for global
success
America is losing ground because its educational
outcomes have mostly stagnated while those in
other countries have surged. Benchmarking for
Success Ensuring U.S. Students Receive a
World-Class Education, NGA/CCSSO/Achieve 2008
- International test scores for American students
have remained flat since late 1990s other
countries continue to improve - PA trails 26 other states in the percentage of
students passing AP exams - Only 56 of PA graduates proficient on PSSA
- 1 in 3 PA high school graduates enrolled in a
state university or community college needs to
pay for make-up courses for material they should
have learned in high school
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13Average PISA math scores of 15-year-olds by
country
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14Pennsylvania must continue strengthening its high
schools
- 22 million to expand the successful Classrooms
for the Future program - 10 million to sustain Dual Enrollment programs
that will allow high school students to take
25,000 college level courses next year - 5 million to accelerate the creation of a model
state curriculum - 8.6 million to give teachers tools to identify
and help struggling students - 9.8 million to create high quality standard
final exams that districts can use in place of
existing final exams
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15It is urgent to provide tuition relief to
Pennsylvania families
15
16The 2009-10 budget will help make college
affordable
- Sustain our commitment to supporting higher
education institutions -
- Provide 20,000 more students with grants
- Ensure every family can afford college
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17PA will sustain a commitment to state-related and
private institutions
- Funding for state-related universities
maintained at post-budgetary reserve levels - State-related universities receive capital
allocation of 90 million - Significant ongoing funding for private
institutions
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18Public colleges and universities will receive
additional support
- State System of Higher Education
- Appropriation maintained at current funding level
- Capital funds doubled65 million increase
- Pennsylvanias Community Colleges
- 5 million increase in appropriation
- 2 million increase in capital funds
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19PHEAA grant cuts are restored and grants are
expanded
- 35 million increase to PHEAA will avoid cuts to
the grants upon which 11,500 private,
state-related and public college students depend - 10 million increase in grant aid to cover an
additional 10,000 community college students
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20Pennsylvania families need help to send
their kids to college
- The recession has caused double-digit losses in
families college savings - It is harder than ever for students and parents
to get loans to pay for college - Pennsylvanias long-term economic outlook depends
on a well-educated, highly skilled workforce
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21Three out of four public university students
leave school with debt averaging more than 19,000
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22One in three community college students leaves
school owing an average of more than 7,000
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23Provide tuition relief to make college affordable
for Pennsylvania families
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24Pennsylvanias Tuition Relief Fund
- New grant program for state university system and
community college students - All will pay somethingbut only what they can
afford - Eliminates reliance on student loans and private
bank loans - All first-time students with annual family
incomes of 100,000 or less will be eligible in
Fall 2009 - Program will expand to include new students each
year - In four years, all students enrolled at state
universities and community colleges who qualify
will be eligible
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25Families will pay what they can afford
- For families that currently receive PHEAA grants
- Families earning up to 100,000 a year will
receive a grant for half the cost of tuition
(2,700)
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26Tens of thousands of students will benefit
- Approximately 175,000 students at the
Pennsylvania System of Higher Education and
community colleges will be eligible - Starting this fall, enrollments will increase by
20,000 students as those who otherwise would not
have had the chance to attend college, or who
would have attended college elsewhere, will do so
in Pennsylvania
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27Pennsylvania can make college affordable without
a tax increase
- Video poker in bars, taverns and private clubs
will enable the state to pay for tuition relief - The program will cost about 130 million in fall
of 2009 and increase to more than a half-billion
dollars in tuition relief in four years - The crisis demands action the sooner the law is
passed, the sooner students and their families
can benefit
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28Enact common-sense government reforms to save
taxpayers money and improve public education
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29State government is making tough decisions in
tough times
- The PDE budget includes 205 million in cuts and
the elimination of 20 programs - The state and school districts have to be
accountable for every taxpayer dollar and invest
them wisely to increase student achievement
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30Pennsylvania can increase efficiency and drive
more money into classrooms
- The budget proposes a legislative commission to
determine the optimal school district size and
consolidate districts to achieve that goal - School employee health benefits should be
purchased through a single statewide system to
save millions of dollars while preserving quality
health care
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31Real school choice high quality options for all
public school students
- Overhaul persistently failing schools
- Replicate the practices of high performing
charter schools - Drive public dollars into the classroom
- New subsidy dollars spent on proven practices
- Restore public confidence that charter schools
are spending taxpayer dollars on instruction
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32A recovery through educational investments
- Education is crucial to building our economy
- Our ongoing investments in pre-k-12 can ensure
every child is successful - Accessible and affordable higher education is
essential to building a world-class workforce - Pennsylvania taxpayers deserve accountability
and efficiency for their investments
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33Investing in education matters
- For individuals
- Increased lifetime salary
- Improved health
- Longer life
- For society
- Lower criminal justice costs
- Lower healthcare costs
- Increased economic growth
- Fewer remedial costs
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34The mission of the Pennsylvania Department of
Education is to lead and serve the educational
community, to enable each individual to grow into
an inspired, productive, fulfilled lifelong
learner.