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School Finance Boot Camp

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Title: School Finance Boot Camp


1
School Finance Boot Camp
  • Margaret Buckton, IASB Assoc. Exec. Director,
    Public Policy
  • Larry Sigel, IASB School Finance Director

2
Welcome!!!
  • Introductions
  • Housekeeping breaks/restrooms, etc.
  • What do you expect/what are the burning questions
    you need to have answered before you leave?
  • Ground rules
  • No dumb questions
  • Please interrupt!

3
Packet Contents
4
Agenda
  • Basic school finance overview
  • Property tax basics
  • Topics in school finance
  • Counts (who, where, when)
  • Allowable growth
  • On-time funding
  • Budget guarantee
  • Special education
  • Instructional support levy
  • Spending authority

5
Agenda continued
  • Topics in school finance continued
  • Solvency ratio
  • Facility and other related levies
  • Categorical Funds
  • Funding professional development
  • Summary/wrap-up/reflection
  • Evaluation

6
School Finance Basics
7
School Finance - Background
  • Dillons rule
  • School districts only have those powers expressly
    authorized by the Code of Iowa
  • Home rule
  • Cities and counties can do anything not expressly
    prohibited

8
School Finance - Background
  • The Bright Line in School Finance
  • Educational program expenditures are funded and
    equalized by the state foundation formula.
  • Facility expenditures are not under the finance
    formula and may not be used for educational
    program expenditures (and vice versa).

9
School Finance - Background
  • The school foundation formula relies on two
    sources of revenue
  • State General Fund appropriations
  • Locally raised property taxes

10
School Aid - Basics
  • Purpose of the foundation formula
  • Code of Iowa, 257.31
  • equalize educational opportunity, to provide
    good education for all children of Iowa, to
    provide property tax relief, decrease the
    percentage of school costs paid from property
    taxes, and to provide reasonable control of
    school costs.

11
School Aid - Basics
  • Foundation formula - ceiling vs. floor
  • The foundation formula results in a maximum
    expenditure per pupil and therefore a maximum
    amount a district can raise and spend (note not
    every district has the same ceiling)
  • Other states school aid formulas have created a
    minimum spending per pupil
  • This has led to lawsuits nationwide
  • Iowas Constitution does not guarantee
    educational equity

12
Operation of Foundation Formula
  • Three components
  • Uniform Levy - Property tax levy of 5.40 per
    thousand of taxable valuation
  • State Foundation Percentage - Amount the state
    pays in excess of 5.40 - varies by district
    (87.5 of cost per pupil)
  • Additional Levy - Property tax levy which funds
    the difference between the Combined District Cost
    and the sum of the Uniform Levy and the State
    Foundation Percentage

13
Operation of Foundation Formula
14
Operation of Foundation Formula
  • Two factors affecting district Regular Program
    budgets
  • 1. Enrollment - increases or decreases in
    enrollment affect district budgets
  • 2. Combined district cost changes (Allowable
    Growth)
  • Changes in growth in valuations - uniform levy
    rate (5.40) or foundation percentage have no
    effect on Regular Program

15
School Aid - Basics
  • Basic Calculations - District Costs
  • Regular Program District Cost - budget enrollment
    times district cost per pupil. 608.4 students x
    5,546 3,374,186
  • Combined District Cost - sum of Regular Program
    plus special education, ELL, media services.
  • What happens if less is spent? Carries forward
    as unspent budget authority. Can be used in
    future (one-time).

16
Spending Authority
  • Schools must keep two sets of books
  • Normal Fund Balance set of books (think audit).
  • Spending Authority set of books
  • What controls school district spending cash or
    spending authority?
  • Both are important, but spending authority is
    vital.

17
Which scenario is best for Iowa school districts
  1. Legislature sets 4 percent allowable growth 18
    months in advance and due to low state revenues,
    an across-the-board cut reduces state aid, or
  2. Legislature sets 2 percent allowable growth 18
    months in advance and promises to increase it
    mid-year should state revenues exceed
    expectations, or
  3. Legislature waits to set allowable growth until
    revenues are known - 6 months before the start of
    the fiscal year.

18
  • Any questions before we transition into Iowas
    property tax system???

19
Understanding Property Taxes
  • Handout Chapter of New School Finance Manual
    Property Taxes
  • Taxing authorities
  • Taxing districts
  • Basic equation
  • Rate x Value Taxes Paid
  • Tax rates
  • Expressed in dollars per thousand

20
Understanding Property Taxes
  • Property Valuation
  • Assessed value
  • Classes of property
  • Residential
  • Agricultural
  • Commercial/Industrial
  • Gas and Electric
  • Railroad
  • Market value
  • Productivity value
  • Equalization
  • Taxable value
  • Rollbacks
  • Credits

21
Understanding Property Taxes
  • Figuring your property taxes
  • Assessed value
  • Times Residential Rollback Percent
  • Equals Taxable Value
  • Less Credits
  • Equals Net Taxable Value
  • Net Taxable Value x Tax Rate/1,000 property
    taxes levied.
  • Example - 100,000 home
  • (100,000 x .44545) - 4,850 39,695
  • 39,695 x 13.4120/1,000 532.39 property tax
    levied

22
Exercise 1
  • Figuring your property taxes

23
Understanding Property Taxes
  • Property valuation characteristic of school
    districts (why we care)
  • Property Rich
  • Property Poor
  • How is it calculated?
  • Total Property Valuation / Enrollment
  • Interaction
  • High value lower property tax rate
  • Low value higher property tax rate
  • A map, perhaps?

24
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25
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26
Understanding Property Taxes
  • Tax Increment Financing
  • Municipalities define an economic development
    need could be business, residential, or city
    property
  • TIF freezes a property tax base for length of
    the TIF (all recent TIFs sunset)
  • Taxes applied to all growth (increment) in the
    area pay for economic development improvements or
    provide revenue stream to municipalities

27
Understanding Property Taxes
  • Tax Increment Financing School Impact
  • Costs the state 36 million this year to pay for
    loss of taxes generated by 5.40 levy (looks
    like increased school funding)
  • Shifts taxes to other property tax payers in the
    district since TIF taxes on the increment go to
    the city (management, cash reserve, instructional
    support and additional levies)
  • Loss of revenue to districts with capped levies
    (PERL levy or levies capped by either board
    promise or politics)
  • Debt levy is exempt and PPEL levy may be exempt

28
Property Taxes what can you do?
  • Follow legislation and tell your districts
    story.
  • Lobby against eroding the property tax base.
  • Lobby for school district participation and
    accountability in the TIF process.
  • Explain school district limits on authority (the
    state made you do it).
  • Point out the difference between property tax
    relief and real school spending increases within
    the funding formula.

29
  • Questions about taxes before we go into the
    detailed topics in Iowa school finance???

30
Detailed Topics in School Finance
31
Counts/Enrollment
  • Why important?
  • Each enrollment category has associated revenue
  • Determines total spending authority
  • Terminology
  • Regular program
  • Weighted enrollment

32
Counts/Enrollment
  • Headcount October 1
  • Basic v. budget enrollment
  • Always use prior year enrollment for setting
    budget
  • Special education weightings
  • Levels
  • Weightings
  • Supplementary weightings
  • English Language Learners ELL
  • At-risk
  • Pre-school
  • Senior Year Plus

33
School Finance - Weightings
  • Why Weight?
  • Some populations have higher costs than others.
    Two choices pay more per student or count
    students at value greater than 1
  • Special education has three weightings .72,
    1.21, 2.74 depending on severity
  • These are in addition to the 1.0 weight

34
Special Education
  • Revenue determined by weightings
  • Iowas system is unique
  • If you spend less than the weightings generate
    have to send back (gt10)
  • What happens if spend more?
  • Creates a deficit
  • Does not cause long term spending from regular
    education
  • Deficits may be recouped from property taxes

35
Special Education
  • Are weightings sufficient?
  • No, special ed deficits growing statewide
  • Number of kids increasing
  • How solve
  • Adjusting weightings more state s
  • Adjust annually less sticker shock

36
Counts/Enrollment
  • Weighted enrollment
  • Budget enrollment
  • Supplementary weighting ELL
  • Supplementary weighting At-risk
  • Supplementary weighting PK, etc
  • Special ed weighting
  • 0.72 weight
  • 1.21 weight
  • 2.74 weight

37
Counts/Enrollment
  • Doing the math
  • Facts
  • October 1 (2), 2006 headcount 672.6
  • Special Education
  • 6 Level I
  • 9 Level II
  • 4 Level III
  • Supplementary weighting 12.82
  • What is my weighted enrollment?

38
Counts/Enrollment
39
Enrollment the Punchline
  • In preceding example, even though serving about
    672 children, the funding formula generated
    almost 712 children for the funding formula.
  • Why important? Remember the credit card analogy?
  • Our limit is being multiplied by 712 and not
    672. Thats 40 additional students.
  • Weighting of students provides additional dollars
    to cover their unique needs.

40
Allowable Growth
  • What is it?
  • Amount per pupil spending may increase
  • Percent increase gt increase
  • Generates spending authority
  • Tells us how much our credit card limit can go up
    by
  • What isnt it?
  • Doesnt differentiate funding sources
  • Doesnt guarantee budget increase

41
Allowable Growth
  • Current year state cost per pupil
  • 5,546
  • Allowable growth rate for FY 2010
  • 4.0
  • FY 2010 cost per pupil?

42
Allowable Growth
  • Basic Calculations - Allowable Growth
  • Last years minimum District Cost Per Pupil
    (e.g., 5,546)
  • Allowable Growth Rate 4.0
  • This years district cost per pupil growth
    5,546 x .04 221.84 (rounds to 222)
  • 5,546 222 5,768
  • If District Cost Per Pupil is higher than
    minimum, only get the fixed dollar - not 4.0.
    For example, 5,602 222 5,824
  • Not 5,602 x 4 5,826

43
Allowable Growth
  • Basic Calculations (cont.)
  • Differing District Costs Per Pupil
  • Slightly over 50 of districts have a cost per
    pupil above the minimum, although the deviation
    is less than 4.5.
  • Percentage differences will be reduced over time.

44
Allowable Growth
  • When is 4 allowable growth not 4?
  • Common perception is all districts receive 4
    increase in budgets.
  • FY 2004 2 allowable growth resulted in 32.4 M
    new money (1.4) of which 27.5 M was due to the
    budget guarantee.
  • FY 2005 2 allowable growth resulted in 39.2 M
    of new money (1.7), of which 31.1 M was due to
    the budget guarantee.
  • FY 2006 4 allowable growth resulted in 71.7 M
    of new money (3.0), of which 18.8 M was due to
    the budget guarantee.
  • FY 2007 4 allowable growth resulted in 88.3 M
    of new money (3.7), of which 18.8 M was due to
    the budget guarantee.

45
Exercise 2
  • Allowable Growth

46
On-time Funding
  • Basic Calculations - On Time Funding
  • Principle - Districts with increasing enrollment
    have a way of capturing growth. Due to a year
    delay in enrollment count in the formula -
    districts with increasing enrollment have
    shortfalls
  • Calculation

47
On-time Funding
  • Exercise 3

48
Allowable Growth
  • Basic Calculations - Budget Guarantee
  • Principle Districts receive what they received
    in the prior year for the Regular Program Budget
    regardless of enrollment changes.
  • Base Calculation

49
Budget Guarantee Phase-out
  • Legislature phasing out the 100 Budget
    Guarantee beginning in FY 2005 and completely
    phased out by FY 2014.
  • Created two alternate calculations
  • Scale Down calculation
  • 101 calculation
  • Not a choice, automatically get greatest of the
    two calculations.

50
Districts Receive
  • If a district is eligible for some form of
    Budget Guarantee in FY 2005 or thereafter
  • Greater of scale down v. 101 option

51
Big Picture
  • Scale down calculation was created to bring those
    with a lot of budget guarantee down slowly (soft
    landing/crash).
  • The 101 calculation gives an additional year
    when enrollment declines.
  • Relationship between allowable growth and budget
    guarantee Enrollment lost greater than
    allowable growth rate less guarantee.

52
Policy Implications
  • Districts must plan and forecast into the future!
  • Will result in decreases in budgets from one year
    to next especially coupled with low allowable
    growth
  • How do you plan?

53
Exercise 4
  • Figure New Money

54
Instructional Support Levy (ISL)
  • Local levy to increase regular program district
    cost per pupil
  • Two questions
  • How much do you want to increase (max 10)?
  • How are you going to fund (property tax, income
    surtax)?

55
Instructional Support Levy (ISL)
  • How do we get it approved?
  • Board action for up to five years
  • Subject to reverse referendum 30 of voters in
    last board election or 100 signatures whichever
    is greater
  • Voter-approved for up to ten years
  • Simple majority vote
  • Series of board actions and resolutions
  • Must be approved and in budget by April 15 work
    backwards to get timelines late January or
    early February is latest can start
  • Be attentive to special election date limitations

56
Instructional Support Levy (ISL)
  • Uses
  • Any General Fund purpose except cant supplant
  • Dropout prevention
  • Talented and Gifted
  • Physical plant and equipment levy (PPEL) uses
  • Management levy uses
  • Specifically prohibits under any circumstances,
    use to offset
  • Special education deficits
  • May be more restrictive in use, but not less
  • Check with auditor in advance

57
Instructional Support Levy (ISL)
  • Funding
  • Property tax not rate limited limited on
    amount of expenditure
  • Income surtax surtax on state income tax
    maximum combined surtax rate of 20
  • State aid frozen 14 million annually, thus
    prorated. Current shortfall is 46 million.
  • Split statewide 51 property tax, 41 income
    surtax, 8 state aid

58
Instructional Support Levy (ISL)
  • Who has it?
  • 339 of 362 districts have it in place
  • Generates 180 million
  • 80 of districts generate full 10
  • Increased use of income surtax
  • 284 out of 339 have the surtax
  • Average surtax is 6 to 7
  • Lightens load of property tax

59
New Special Elections Law
60
  • Any questions before we move on to spending
    authority?

61
Big Picture Spending Authority
  • Schools have to keep two sets of books
  • Normal fund accounting set of books (think Audit
    or Certified Annual Report)
  • Spending authority set of books (think credit
    card balance)

62
Spending Authority
  • Two key concepts
  • Spending authority
  • Is the maximum a district could spend in a year
    if it chose
  • Unspent balance (unspent budget authority)
  • Is the difference between a districts total
    spending authority for a year and what they
    actually spent

63
Spending Authority
  • Concept
  • State gives each child a credit card with 5,546
    for FY 2009
  • The funding formula decides the mix of property
    tax and state aid to pay the bill
  • If spend less, carries forward and added to next
    years credit card

64
Spending Authority
  • Spending authority is the sum of
  • Combined District Cost
    (property tax and state aid)
  • Miscellaneous income anything not above
  • Unspent balance from previous years
  • Why important?
  • Districts cannot exceed spending authority
  • Not a measure of cash
  • Phase 2 Financial Review

65
Building Blocks of Spending Authority
66
Comparing Spending Authority Cash Concepts
67
Unspent Balance vs. Cash
68
Solvency Ratio
  • What is it?
  • Unreserved/undesignated general fund balance
    divided by total revenues
  • Measures the ability to pay off an obligation at
    the end of the fiscal year
  • Good measurement for bondholders
  • Measure of cash and not spending authority
  • Only one part of the financial health of district
  • Consider trend to determine if health is improving

69
Solvency Ratio
  • Packet refer to handout on Solvency Ratio
  • Questions
  • Your district receives notice that state aid will
    be cut by 2.5 - reductions are impossible. What
    happens to your solvency ratio for the current
    fiscal year?
  • What does it mean for the upcoming fiscal year?

70
Facility Related Levies
  • Physical Plant and Equipment Levy (PPEL)
  • Debt levy
  • State Penny for School Infrastructure

71
Physical Plant and Equipment Levy
  • Two levies
  • Board approved PPEL maximum of 0.33 property
    tax approved annually by board (cannot borrow
    against)
  • Voter approved PPEL maximum of 1.34 property
    tax/income surtax approved by voters (50 simple
    majority)
  • Maximum 10 years
  • Can borrow against property tax portion of
    proceeds
  • Must have at least 1 of property tax

72
Physical Plant and Equipment Levy
  • Allowable uses
  • Purchase grounds, construct sidewalks, roadways,
    athletic fields, lighting, and demolition work
  • Construction of schoolhouses or buildings
  • Purchase, lease or lease-purchase of buildings or
    single unit of equipment or technology gt 500
  • Repair/remodel/reconstruct facilities
  • Transportation equipment
  • See Iowa Code Section 298.23 for full details

73
Debt Levy
  • Voter approved levy for construction and
    renovation of school buildings, sites and other
    school facilities
  • Two ballot measures
  • One-time election if want to go from 2.70 to
    4.05
  • Ballot language approving bond
  • Both require 60 super majority for approval

74
State Penny for School Infrastructure
  • Replaced the School Infrastructure Local Option
    Tax with State Penny effective July 1, 2008
  • Sunset 12/31/2029
  • Need a Revenue Purpose Statement vote prior to
    expiration of existing SILO ballot OR if district
    wants to borrow against time period between
    expiration and 12/31/2029
  • District election rather than county election.
  • 50 plus one simple majority to pass

75
State Penny for School Infrastructure
  • Current Revenue Purpose Statement or ballot is
    valid until expired or replaced
  • Law requires lowering certain levies if a RPS is
    not approved
  • Debt
  • Voted and Board PPEL
  • PERL
  • Schoolhouse Levy
  • Once levies are reduced, revenue can be used for
    any lawful purpose

76
State Penny for Infrastructure
  • Allowable uses
  • Original ballot language is binding until
    replaced by a Revenue Purpose Statement vote
  • Any permissible debt levy use
  • Payment of bonds either new or old property tax
    bonds
  • Can borrow against proceeds
  • Since 2003 Physical Plant and Equipment Levy
    (PPEL) or Public Education and Recreation Levy
    (PERL) uses and Demolition

77
State Penny for School Infrastructure
  • Full per pupil equity by 2014 after expiration of
    all grandfathered counties
  • Distributed monthly reconciliation payment in
    November
  • So, how does this help my General Fund?
  • Cannot spend on direct General Fund purposes
    except those authorized by Code (buses,
    technology, etc.)
  • Can use to reduce General Fund expenditures for
    example replace HVAC system with geothermal
    savings in natural gas and electricity accrue to
    General Fund but costs are paid through State
    Penny.

78
State Equity Funds
  • Supplement Funding
  • Starting in FY 2005, supplement funding
    appropriated along with funds from districts
    above the average which passed after 2004 to
    bring districts up to 560 (or to a level the
    fund can support). By 2014 every district is in
    pool and every child receives same per pupil
    amount.
  • The math
  • If funds are available to bring everyone to 560

79
State Penny for School Infrastructure Other Issues
  • Certificate of Need required for using
    supplemental funds for districts below 250
    enrollment or 100 in high school.
  • State Penny revenue must be on hand to lower debt
    cant anticipate next years revenue
  • Timing issues supplemental and reconciliation
    payments after June 30

80
Other Levies Available to Districts
  • Management levy
  • Levy amount determined annually by the board for
    following purposes
  • Unemployment benefits
  • Liability insurance/judgments/settlements
  • Early retirement benefits
  • Dollars levied go to Management Fund not General
    Fund

81
Other Levies Available to Districts
  • Cash reserve levy
  • Levy amount determined annually by the board for
    cash flow purposes
  • Used to fund spending authority but does not
    create spending authority
  • Limitation total cash reserves cant exceed 25
    of expenditures for the prior fiscal year

82
School Aid Formula Understanding the System
  • Remember

83
School Aid Formula Understanding the System
  • Observations
  • The foundation formula provides student equity on
    the instruction side of the equation
  • The foundation formula provides some taxpayer
    equity
  • The additional levy causes the most taxpayer
    inequity for the foundation formula

84
School Aid Formula Understanding the System
  • Is this all the taxpayer inequity?
  • Instruction side - ISL
  • Facilities
  • PPEL Debt service
  • PERL
  • Even though rate limited, because property taxes
    are not equalized, rates may be higher than
    otherwise would be the case
  • Other
  • Cash reserve levy
  • TIF

85
School Aid Formula Understanding the System
  • Student inequity
  • Regular program - Differing costs per pupil
    (about 4)
  • Facilities
  • Debt service, PPEL and PERL generate
    approximately six times the amount in the
    property richest district as property poorest

86
School Aid Formula Understanding the System
  • Helping make sense of all this
  • Data tools and calculators on IASB Finance
    Website
  • New Dashboard style reports
  • Video/DVD/Money Matters

87
Categorical Funds
  • Appropriations from the State
  • Strings must spend a certain way and account
    for the spending and report
  • Outside of bargaining
  • Dont tend to increase with inflation
  • LIFO last in / first out at risk during tight
    budget times.

88
Categorical Funds
  • ISL - 14 million (46 million short)
  • Educational Excellence Phase I II 52.5
    million
  • Class Size/Reading - 29.3 million
  • Teacher Compensation
  • Basic allocation salaries 210.1 million
  • Professional development - 20 million
  • Professional development Core Curriculum 8.5
    million
  • Total 322.5 million
  • Roll in to formula beginning in FY 2010 Teacher
    Compensation, Class Size, Phase II

89
Many competing needs staff, students, heat,
technology, buses, football, copiers, lockers,
etcHeres one of the most powerful ways you
should spend some money
How to Spend all that Money????
90
Quality teaching is the biggest factor
contributing to student learning.Quality
professional development is the best way to
improve the quality of instruction. Budget
pressures traditionally result in less resource
for professional development.
Funding for Professional Development Why?
91
How Much is Enough? Benchmarks
?
  • Iowa Schools
  • Phase III 744 per teacher (FY02), 306 per
    teacher (FY03) 0 (FY04)
  • TQ PD 750 per teacher (FY09)
  • NYC School District 2
  • 3 percent of budget (equivalent of 42.2 million
    or nearly double Iowas traditional Phase III
    allocation)
  • Japan new teachers have reduced class load and
    mentors 60 days of professional development

92
How Much is Enough? Benchmarks
?
  • National Staff Development Council
  • Recommends 15 days annually
  • Iowans for a Better Future/2010 goals 20 days of
    teacher PD
  • Teacher Quality/Student Achievement Act Added 1
    day two years ago, but originally proposed 2 days
    annually until 10, now its a goal
  • Each day approximately 10 million per diem
    (not including expenses)

93
Iowa Trend Line
  • Increase commitments to professional development
    days, despite loss of Phase III appropriations.
  • Use of the additional day
  • 309 Iowa school districts added an extra day.
  • 31 districts added extended existing days.
  • 25 districts added weekend time or multiple
    methods for separate buildings.
  • Average days of professional development
  • 2001 4.20 days
  • 2005 5.38 days
  • 2006 6.63 days
  • 2009 ?????

94
Where to look for
  • Your general fund set the expectation and keep
    it
  • Title I (Reading and Math) carve out portion of
    regular staff development for Title 1 teachers
  • Special Education TAG
  • Mentoring Program link to
    Professional Development
  • Early Childhood Intervention
    Class Size - State federal (K-3) Title V
  • Grants eg., Reading First federal


95
Where to look for
  • Vocational Education
  • Empowerment and Decat funds
  • Instructional Support Levy (board or vote)
  • Dropout prevention allowable growth (requires
    approved plan and SBRC request)
  • Direct teacher quality state appropriations (TQ
    Committee must agree)

96
Where to look for
  • Alter your schedule
  • Back-to-back pre/study group time
  • Double-up non-core classes so core teachers can
    work together
  • Team teach (allows practice, observation,
    modeling and feedback)
  • Early Outs (explain to parents it cannot be
    perceived as time off for teachers)
  • Late starts? Is this easier on
    kids/parents/teachers?

97
Free up General Fund
  • Use of State Penny PPEL buses,
    equipment, lease-purchases above 500
  • Use of management fund property, casualty
    loss insurance or early retirement
  • Review Master Contract in light of teacher
    quality law and elimination of Phase III
  • Make energy efficiency improvements
    w/energy bank loans
  • Participate in pooled purchasing
    programs

98
National Data School Spending on Professional
Development
  • Currently, the typical school spends only 0.5
    percent of its budget on raising the abilities of
    its staff while the typical private-sector
    company spends nearly four times as much. Klein
    et. al 1996 This disparity may explain why
    education has been slower in responding to
    changing technology and societal needs. For this
    reason, NSDC recommends that districts increase
    their spending on staff development to at least
    10 percent of the school budget.
  • Source A National Plan for Improving
    Professional Development, By Dennis Sparks and
    Stephanie Hirsh, http//www.nsdc.org/library/autho
    rs/NSDCPlan.cfm

99
Tough Choices
  • A is it better to preserve teaching jobs (class
    size) at the expense of quality professional
    development? or
  • B is it better to fund quality professional
    development at the expense of teaching jobs
    (class size)?
  • How do you know?

100
Why Professional Development?
A National Plan for Improving Professional
Development, By Dennis Sparks and Stephanie
Hirsh, http//www.nsdc.org/library/authors/NSDCPla
n.cfm is the source for the next 3 slides
  • The National School Boards Foundation even called
    investment in teacher learning, "the primary
    policy lever that school boards have to raise
    student achievement." National School Boards
    Foundation, March 1999
  • A study from NCES found that teachers who
    attended professional development activities
    focused on standards were much more likely to
    teach using reform activities that raise
    students achievement. Nearly two-thirds (65
    percent) of teachers with the professional
    development reported that they used three or more
    activities compared to only a third (35 percent)
    of those without professional development. In
    addition, three out of five (61 percent) of those
    without professional development reported using
    no reform activities compared to fewer than two
    out of five (39 percent) of those with the
    training. NCES Status, 1998

101
Why Professional Development?
  • A study by Greenwald, Hedges, and Laine found
    that student achievement goes up more for every
    500 spent on increasing teacher professional
    training than for spending the same amount on
    raising teacher salaries or reducing class size.
    Greenwald, R., L.V. Hedges, and R.D.Laine (1996)
    The Effect of School Resources on Student
    Achievement, Review of Education Research 66
    (3), pp. 362-396

102
Why Professional Development?
  • We cannot expect teachers to teach what they do
    not know, nor to use yesterdays training to
    prepare todays students for tomorrows future.
    We certainly cannot expect our teachers to share
    and learn from each others knowledge and skill
    unless we provide them with the research,
    structures, time, and money with which to do it.
  • Ultimately, quality staff development benefits
    students by channeling the talents and expertise
    of all the schools teachers in all the schools
    classrooms. By improving staff development, by
    creating schools optimized for learning, we will
    be helping all teachers to excel at helping all
    students reach the high levels of achievement
    they need to succeed.

103
IASB Recommended Priorities before the 2008
Delegate Assembly
Professional Development 2 Core Curriculum and
Assessment 3 Transportation Funding
5 Allowable Growth 11 ISL Funding Formula
Revision 13
104
Four Questions
  • Why do we have enough money to pave the parking
    lot but cant pay teachers?
  • Why cant we just levy whatever we need to
    support the school?
  • Why dont schools become more efficient?
  • Why dont property taxes ever decrease?

105
School Aid - Web Resources
  • IASB www.ia-sb.org
  • Dept. of Education www.state.ia.us/educate/index.
    html
  • Legislature - bills, amendments, etc.
    www.legis.state.ia.us
  • Legislative Fiscal Bureau http//staffweb.legis.
    state.ia.us/lfb/
  • Dept. of Revenue and Finance www.state.ia.us/gov
    ernment/drf/index.html

106
Summary/wrap-up/reflection
  • Lets do the Evaluation right now!!!

107
Please fill out open-ended evaluation on table
  • Thanks for coming have a great rest of
    convention!!!
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