1. Not Enough Adults to Go Around: Underfunded California Schools Provide Less Support for Kids
- Author
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Children Now, Blake, Stephen, Brown, Debra, Manwaring, Robert, Mercado, Efrain, Perry, Mary, Stewart, Vince, and Tran, Samantha
- Abstract
California has experienced a decline in adequate funding for the public education system that has created a jarring reality for its 6.2 million students. While recent investments have helped schools fully recover from the devastating cuts made during the great recession, that additional spending has not come close to what is needed to achieve the state's goals. Policymakers have adopted important education reforms in California in recent years, which are laudable, but leaders must also understand that the investments made to date have been insufficient to ensure students have enough caring adults on campus. This brief illuminates California's school funding shortfalls based on analysis in key areas like professional staffing and development, student-teacher ratios, per pupil spending, and student performance. Comparisons of three similar high schools in California, Illinois, and New Jersey bring the data to life by showing where dollars are spent and how that translates into actual experiences that benefit students and their success. This brief concludes, stating that state policymakers will need to use their political capital to invest more, so that students actually have what they need to support their success. [Additional support for this brief was provided by Adrienne Bell, Maya Kamath, Maria Mejia, Nima Rahni, Jessica Sawko, Ted Lempert, Kelsey Caldwell, Patrick Dorsey, Nancy Heffernan, and Xavier Roque.]
- Published
- 2019