“New austerity budgets passed by state legislatures are starting
to have a huge influence on direct services to children, youth, and families”
even as cash starved public schools come under more pressure to surrender
funding to private schools
[see which states have austerity budgets]
Starving America ’s Public Schools
How Budget Cuts and Policy Mandates Are Hurting Our Nation’sStudents
By Jeff Bryant
Campaign forAmerica 's Future
Campaign for
Critics of America ’s public schools always seem to start
from the premise that the pre-kindergarten-through-12th-grade public education
system in this country is failing or in crisis.
This crisis mentality is in stark contrast to years of survey research
showing that Americans generally give high marks to their local schools. Phi
Delta Kappa International and Gallup surveys have found that the populace holds
their neighborhood schools in high regard; in fact, this year’s survey found
that “Americans, and parents in particular, evaluate their community schools more
positively than in any year since” the survey started.
How could there be such a disconnect
between a national narrative about public education and opinions about local
schools? The two contradictory narratives draw on completely different sources
of evidence.
Debate about public education on the
national level generally draws on evidence from macro-sources of data: scores
from standardized testing, reports on the nation’s dropout rates, samplings
from various student populations, and comparative assessments in various
subject areas. But people get their school news from far more local, personal,
and qualitative sources — from hometown newspapers, from local
television and radio broadcasts, from neighbors, and from their own personal
observations and experiences.
The national data sources obviously add
value to the national discussion about reforming and improving public schools,
but getting a full and comprehensive view of American public education also
requires looking at the information flow and data from the local level.
This report looks at American pre-K-12
public schools from the perspective of what Americans are reading and hearing
in their local newspapers and media broadcasts. The intent is to see how this
bottom-up view of the system might further inform our discussions about
improving and renewing America ’s public schools.
Sifting through these on-the-ground
accounts from local news reports and other sources revealed that there is
indeed a growing crisis in America ’s public schools one that is far more
real and much more dangerous to our nation’s children than the prevailing
narrative suggests. This particular crisis, evident to some degree in nearly
every state in the country, hinges on two factors.
The first factor: New austerity budgets
passed by state legislatures are starting to have a huge influence on direct
services to children, youth, and families. There is widespread evidence that
the education funding cuts are leading to:
·
Massive cuts to early childhood education programs (pre-K and
kindergarten);
·
Huge class sizes in many subjects, reaching levels that are
upsetting parents and potentially damaging students’ education;
·
An end to art, music, physical education, and other subjects
considered to be part of a well-rounded education;
·
Cuts in specialized programs and/or hefty fees for them. Some of
these programs serve students with developmental issues or those who need more
individualized attention. They also include extra-curricular activities such as
band and sports as well as academic offerings in science, foreign language,
technology, and Advanced Placement subjects.
The second factor: As public schools
are grappling with these severe budget cuts to programs, they also are facing
enormous pressure to transfer tax dollars to targets outside traditional public
education. New policy mandates at the federal and state levels are forcing
public school systems to redirect tax dollars meant for public schools to
various privately held concerns such as charter schools, private and religious
schools, and contractors and companies tasked with setting up new systems for
testing and accountability.
This report confines its attention to
the emerging crisis in K-12 education only; although, the report authors
acknowledge that similar trends and issues are affecting higher education as
well. Furthermore, this report focuses on five states — Arizona , Florida , North Carolina , Ohio , and Pennsylvania — that perhaps epitomize the current
crisis in K-12 education systems.
The analysis in this report compels the
authors to conclude that the debate and discussion about public education
policy must both acknowledge the new realities in American public schools and
focus attention on the issue of adequately funding programs that serve all of America ’s public school students. The report
also recommends that states provide regulatory relief to local districts in
order to stanch the transfer of public education funds to privately held
entities.
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