The stimulus proposal recently released by the House of Representatives includes a lot of money for education. That’s a good thing, unless you subscribe to the Petrilli school bankruptcy theory of education reform. But while Mike and his colleagues are wrong to think that financial stress will induce more reform-mindedness, they’re right to point out that there are better and worse ways to pump out billions of new federal education dollars. In that vein, I have a proposal for how Congress should spend the extra $13 billion in Title I funds:
1) Good general aid programs in states with equitable funding systems (funding systems being defined as the totality of state aid and local property taxes) that would be become more equitable with more general aid funding. These we should feel good about funding.
2) Bad general aid programs in states with inequitable funding systems that would be become more inequitable with more general aid funding. These we should feel bad about funding.
3) Good general aid programs in states with inequitable funding systems that would be become more equitable with more general aid funding. In other words, it’s possible to have a bad overall funding system but a well-designed general aid program that just doesn’t get enough money to overcome local property-tax based inequities. Indeed, the under-funding is probably the main source of the inequity, and as such pumping more money into the general aid program would be a good thing.
The problem is that it can be hard to figure out from the outside which states with inequitable systems are a #2 state and which are a #3 state, because most analyses measure (as they should) the overall inequitableness of a given state’s funding system as a whole. Congress should keep an eye on this issue as it crafts stimulus policy.


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