Title: Lecture 3: New Yorks School Aid System
1Lecture 3New Yorks School Aid System
- EDA 757/PPA 730
- Fall 2002
2Lecture 3 Outline
- Overview of NYs school aid system
- An alternative design of NY school aid to fund a
sound basic education. - NY school aid simulation (computer simulation
done in class)
3Importance of School Finance Systems
- 30 billion in total spending in NY, and 14
billion in state aid. Largest spending category
in most states. - Complex intergovernmental fiscal system that
affects fiscal health and behavior of local
school districts. - Politically controversial
- Tension between state standards and financing,
and local control. - Achieving equity goals will involve
redistribution.
4Overview of NYs School Aid System
- Politics of school aid formula design.
- Problems with NYs school aid system.
- Aid shares and trends by types of aid.
- Key measures used in aid formulas.
- Overview of specific formulas.
- Categorizing NYs school aid programs.
5Politics of School Aid Formula Design
- State-level politics dominate decisions over the
size and distribution of aid budget. - In NY, political negotiation over how much
upstate, NYC, and downstate suburbs get. - All districts get something. Many states have
minimum aid per pupil. - Minimum aid in NY is 400 per pupil for operating
aid. - No district is significantly worse off this year
than last year, commonly called hold harmless
provision. - In NY, there has been a transition adjustment
aid.
6Problems with NYs School Aid System
- There a many aid programs averaged between 25 to
50 aid programs in 1990s. - Have been several proposals to reduce the number
of aid programs by creating block grants. - Needlessly complex aid formulas. Difficult to
understand and predict future aid levels. - Transition adjustment effectively removed 93
of districts from operating aid formula in
2000-01. - Most aid in 2001-02, and operating aid in 2002-03
are not distributed by formula. - No required local tax effort- some large cities
have substituted school aid for local revenue.
7Aid Shares and Trends by Program
- Operating aid has declined to 50 of formula aid
(compared to 58 in 1994)grown at 60 of overall
rate. - Student need related aid has grown to over 25 of
aid budgetfastest growth in ERRSA, ENA, and
Excess Cost aids. - Capital grants for building have grown rapidly.
- Categorical grants for other school resources
represent very small levels of aidlarge
differences in growth rates by type of aid.
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92002-03 Enacted School Aid Distribution within
New York
- In general, aid goes up as need goes up (Figure
3-1). Exception is NYC with below average aid. - Rural districts have highest aid, due in part to
high building aid and operating aid. - Operating aid, ENA, excess cost aid are
redistributive, building aid is not. - ENA, which is targeted to high needs students,
represents less than 5 of total formula aid.
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11School Aid Trends Since 1994
- Total aid Upstate districts and large cities
(high need districts and rural districts)
generally above average growth, and downstate
districts are below average. - Operating aid Matters a lot whether trans.
adjustment is included in 1994 aid. With it,
fastest growth in high need districts (downstate
small cities, and Yonkers) except NYC and rural
districts. Trans. Adj. primarily benefiting
downstate suburbs. - Building aid is fastest growing aid program,
especially in rural districts (over 40 per
year). Also faster growth in average and low
need districts. - Extra. Needs Aid fastest growth in lower need
and rural districts. - Aid for special needs students has generally
grown fastest in large cities and upstate
districts.
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13Key Measures Used In Aid Formulas
- Fiscal capacity
- Property value index (pupil wealth ratio)
property value by pupil in district divided by
state average. - Income index (alternative pupil wealth ratio or
income wealth ratio) adjusted gross income (from
NY income tax forms) per pupil in district
divided by state average. - Combined wealth ratio (CWR)
- CWR 50 x pupil wealth ratio 50 x income
wealth ratio - Different pupil measures used to construct
ratios.
14Key Measures Used In Aid Formulas
- Pupil measures in general
- Average daily attendance (ADA) average students
present on each regular school day. - Enrollment Pupils registered to attend public
schools at a certain time (usually in fall). - Average daily membership (ADM) average
enrollment over the course of the year. - ADA and enrollment diverge the most in large
cities, where attendance rates are relatively low.
15Key Measures Used In Aid Formulas
- Pupil measures used in NY aid formulas
- Adjusted ADA ADA with half day kindergarten
weighted at 50. - Weighted ADA (WADA) 25 extra weight for
secondary students. - Resident WADA (RWADA) WADA for residents.
- Total wealth pupil units (TWPU) WADA for
residents of districts with extra weighting for
special needs, and at-risk students (special
educational needs). - Total aidable pupil units (TAPU) Same as TWPU
except for all students attending district
schools, with extra weight for summer school, but
not at-risk pupils.
16Key Measures Used In Aid Formulas
- Student need measures
- Poverty measure percent of students receiving
free and reduced price lunch (federal school
lunch program). - Limited English proficiency (LEP) students
percent of students in approved ESL (or similar)
programs. - Special needs student categories
- High cost students disabled students with
special education needs costing in excess of
10,000. - Students requiring placement in resource room 60
of time. - Students requiring placement in resource between
20 and 60 of time.
172000-01 Operating Aid Formula
- Aid (3,900 ceiling adjustment) x state
sharing ratio - per
- pupil Foundation level
Fiscal capacity - Ceiling adjustment1 (AOE/TAPU - 3,900) x
(.075/CWR) - AOE approved operating expenditure (previous
year) - State sharing ratio Use the highest among the
following - 1.37 (1.23 CWR) poor district
- 1.00 (0.64 CWR) low average wealth district
- 0.80 (0.39 CWR) high average wealth
district - 0.51 (0.22 CWR) rich district
- Rewritten like traditional foundation (low
average wealth) - E (3,900 ceiling adjustment)
- tV (3,900 ceiling adjustment) x 0.64 x
CWR - 1AOE/TAPU cannot exceed 8,000, CWR cannot exceed
1.
18Operating Aid Example for Syracuse (2000-01)
- Aidable expense per pupil (foundation level)
- 1998-99 AOE/TAPU 5,317
- CWR.5.498 (wealth).5.469 (income) .483
- Ceiling adj (5,317 - 3,900) X (.075/.483)
219.91 - Aidable exp. per pupil 3,900 219.91
4,119.9 - State sharing ratio (fiscal cap.) Use highest
of-- - 1.37 (1.23 CWR) .776
- 1.00 (0.64 CWR) .691 Use .776
- 0.80 (0.39 CWR) .612
- 0.51 (0.22 CWR) .404
- Aid per pupil 4,119.91 x .776 3,197.05
- Total aid 4,119.91 x 24,394 (TAPU)
77,988,838 - Aid actually received 72,632,021 (transition
adj.)
192002-03 Extraordinary Needs Aid (to assist with
at-risk students)
- Aid (3,900 ceiling adjustment)
- x (1 (.4 x Income wealth ratio)
- x ENA pupil count
- x Concentration factor
- ENA pupil count LEP students (enrollment x
of K6 students receiving subsidized
lunch)sparsity count - Sparsity count (enrollment x (25 pupil
density)/58) (for districts with pupil density
below 25) - Concentration factor 1 (concentration -
74.5)/38.7 - Concentration equals ENA count divided by
enrollment. - If 2000-01 is higher than calculated aid, use
2000-01 aid.
20Extraordinary Needs Aid Example for Syracuse
(2002-03)
- Aid (3,900 233.29) x 11
- x (1 (.4 x .82)
- x 18,150
- x 1.12764 7,814,914 (estimated
formula aid) - 2000-01 aid 8,142,382 Since this is higher,
use this. - ENA pupil count 1,275 (LEP) 16,874 (lunch) 0
(sparsity) 18,150 - Sparsity count 0 since pupil density is above
25. - Concentration factor 1 (79.44 - 74.5)/38.7
1.12764 - Concentration (18150 / 22846) x 100 79.44
21Building Aid (Example of open-ended matching
project grant)
- Aid per pupil Approved Building Expense x Aid
Ratio - Approved Building Expense To limit state cost,
use minimum of - Construction, lease or purchase of school
buildings, including incidental expenses approved
by Facilities Planning Unit of SED. - Pupil construction cost allowance multiplied by
pupil capacity of building. This is adjusted for
regional cost of living differences. - Aid ratio1 1 - ((1999 AV/2001 RWADA)/state avg.
x 51) - For average wealth district, state pays 49 of
costs. - 1Aid for a project approved after 7/2000.
District could choose instead 1999-00 aid ratio
minus 10. If district has high property wealth
but low income wealth, then it can use an
alternative calculation.
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23Designing an Aid Formula to Finance a Sound
Basic Education
- New York has chosen a performance adequacy
standard - Regents have required passage of 5 exams for
graduation. - NY Constitution interpreted as requiring sound
basic education. - Key issue How high should the standard be, and
how should aid be distributed to help districts
reach this standard?
24Impetus for Change the CFE Decision (January
2001)
- Justice Degrasse ruled
- The court holds that the education provided New
York City students is so deficient that it falls
below the constitutional floor set by the
Education Article of the New York Constitution.
(p. 4) - The court also finds that the States actions
are a substantial cause of this constitutional
violation. (p. 4)
25Reforming the Finance System Will Require State
Action
- the State is ultimately responsible for the
provision of a sound basic education (p. 114) - In the course of reforming the school finance
system, a threshold task that must be performed
by defendants is ascertaining, to the extent
possible, the actual costs of providing a sound
basic education in districts around the State.
(p. 115) - Once this is done, reforms to the current system
of financing school funding should address the
shortcomings of the current system. (p. 115)
26Key Steps in Designing Aid System To Achieve
Adequacy
- Select adequacy standard.
- Estimate required spending to have the
opportunity to reach adequacy in each district. - Develop aid formula to target aid effectively to
reach adequacy standard. - Develop local effort provisions.
27Step 1 Defining an Adequate Education CFE
Decision (1/31/01)
- Performance standard Productive citizenship
connotes civic engagementcapable voter needs the
intellectual tools to evaluate complex
issuesthat may require learning unfamiliar facts
and concepts Beyond voting and jury
service, productive citizenship implies
engagement and contribution in the economy as
well as public life. This is defined as
foundational skills to obtain productive
employment. (CFE decision, pp.14-15) - Resource standard Children are entitled to
minimally adequate physical facilities and
classroomsminimally adequate instrumentalities
of learning minimally adequate teaching of
up-to-date basic curricula by sufficient
personnel adequately trained (Court of Appeals,
1995, p. 317)
28Alternative Standard (Recent Appellate Court
Decision 6/25/02)
- The State submitted evidence that jury charges
are generally at a grade level of 8.3, and
newspaper articles on campaign and ballot issues
range from grade level 6.5 to 11.7Thus, the
evidence at trial established that the skills
required to enable a person to obtain employment,
vote, and serve on a jury, are imparted between
grades 8 and 9, a level of skills which the
plaintiffs do not dispute is being provided. (p.
14) - The term function productively does imply
employment. It cannot be said, however, that a
person who is engaged in a low-level service
job is not a valuable, productive member of
society. (pp. 12-13)
29Translating CFE Decision in NY (01/31/01) into
Possible Standards
- Determine what subjects, and what levels of
student performance are required to produce
productive citizens - School accountability system developed by SED
provides a framework for considering alternative
standards. - SED developed four levels of performance for 4th,
8th and Regents Examinations. - Level 1 serious academic deficiencies
- Level 2 require extra help to meet standards
- Level 3 meet standards, and should with growth
pass Regents - Level 4 exceed standards and moving to high
performance - SED developed a weighted average of percent of
students in Level 2, 3, and 4. Level 1 students
were weighted at zero.
30Select Student Performance Measures
Performance measures for each exam
x 1
x 2
x 2
Measure
Aggregate performance measure
Avg. 4th Math Eng.
Avg. 8th Math Eng.
Avg. Regents Math Eng.
x .25
x .25
x .50
Measure
31Figure 3-5 Comparison of Student Performance
Index (2000) by Region
180
169
160
156
160
148
145
140
120
107
103
96
100
Performance Index (state average159.5)
80
60
40
20
0
Downstate
Downstate
New York City
Yonkers
The Big Three
Upstate Rural
Upstate Small
Upstate
Small Cities
Suburbs
(upstate)
Cities
Suburbs
32Method for Estimating Cost of Adequacy
- Factors affecting costs
- Cost of doing business (teacher salaries)
- Sparsity (higher costs in smaller districts)
- Pupil needs (poverty, LEP, special needs)
- Estimate cost function
- Use coefficients to develop cost index and cost
of adequacy estimates.
33Determinants of Education Spending
Factors District Can Influence
Factors Outside District Control
Competitive
Salaries
Student
Performance
Poverty
Rate
Spending
Inefficiency
Factors
Per Pupil
Limited English
Proficiency
Severe
NoteRegression results reported in
Handicaps
Yinger (2001).
District
Enrollment
34Developing Comprehensive
Education Cost Index
a b
Average b
Average
Predicted
1
2
Spending
Performance
Efficiency
Per Pupil
Same for All Districts
b
Salaries b
Enrollment b
Student needs
3
4
5
Allowed to Vary Across Districts
Cost
(Predicted spending / Average spending) x 100
Index
35Figure 3-6 Comparison of Cost Indexes by Region
in New York
200
180
Cost of education index
160
Teacher cost index
140
120
Cost index (average 100)
100
80
60
40
20
0
Downstate
Downstate
New York City
Yonkers
The Big Three
Upstate Rural
Upstate Small
Upstate
Small Cities
Suburbs
(upstate)
Cities
Suburbs
36Developing Estimates of
Required Spending for Adequacy
Required
Spending required in district with average costs
to achieve adequacy
Spending
Per Pupil
X
Full cost index/100
Total
Required
Total
Required
Required
Spending
Required
Spending
x
x
Enrollment
Spending
Per Pupil
Spending
Per Pupil
37Figure 3-7 Required Per Pupil Spending to
Achieve Adequacy (1999-2000) (for districts with
performance below the standard)
38Advantages of a Performance Foundation Aid System
- Formula is built to achieve performance adequacy
standard - It is driven directly by the estimated cost of
adequacy. - Targets money to districts most in need. Can be
designed not to reward inefficiency. - Simple designfocuses debate on what factors
affect costs and their weights.
39Performance Foundation Formula
Required spending
Minimum local
Aid per
-
to meet adequacy
pupil
tax effort
standard
Minimum
Property
Minimum
local tax
x
values per
tax rate
effort
pupil
Set by State
40Figure 3-8 Comparison of Present Aid with
Performance Foundation Aid Per Pupil for
Different Adequacy Standards (15 per 1,000
minimum local effort)
1
41Impacts of Increased Aid on School District
Efficiency
- Rapid expansion of aid in large cities may
increase inefficiency by - Putting pressure on already strained teacher
labor markets. - Encouraging rapid expansion of teacher salaries
without accountability. - Putting pressure on local construction costs
through large building program. - Straining district capability to monitor
contracts and manage finances.
42NYS Comptroller and SED Can Play Crucial Role in
Efficiency Improvement
- By providing technical assistance on
- Personnel policies and practices
- Program evaluation and use of performance
measures - Financial management.
- By providing financial accountability systems.
- By helping to establish with NY School Business
Officers Association a clearinghouse for
strong business practices. - By sponsoring conferences and training courses
for new school business officers.