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Study Shows Costs of a Basic Education are More Than Tennessee Bargained For

The Coalition for Tennessee’s Future recently released a costing-out study performed by Augenblick, Palaich, and Associates (APA) entitled “Calculation of the Cost of an Adequate Education in Tennessee in 2001-02 Using the Professional Judgment Approach and the Successful School District Approach.” The study combines the two most widely used methods of costing out to determine the cost of adequacy in school districts of varying size, as well as in the state as a whole. After analyzing their conclusions, the researchers assert that education spending in Tennessee during the 2002-03 school year was $1.109 billion less than the spending necessary to ensure adequacy.

The study was performed over six months, and did not consider costs associated with capital expenses, student transportation, or food services, which is typical of education costing-out studies. The Coalition for Tennessee’s Future, which commissioned the study, is an umbrella organization that unites educational groups such as the Tennessee Education Association and the Tennessee School Boards Association towards a common goal of adequate funding for Tennessee’s schools. As reported in The Tennessean, the group united because, though supportive of the equalizing effects of the Basic Education Program, Tennessee’s school funding system since 1992, they felt the funding provided to school districts was insufficient to ensure a high quality education. Additionally, the BEP mandates specific items in school district budgets, while the funding proposed by the Coalition for Tennessee’s Future would be awarded to districts as a block grant.

The cost study’s Successful School Districts method considered those districts that met 28 or more of 33 academic criteria, ultimately analyzing the basic spending of only 8 school districts during the 2001-2002 school year. The per-student spending for those districts averaged $4,949, with no figures available for specific expenditures related to special needs, including those of special education or low-income students, or English language learners.

The Professional Judgment portion of the study charged panels of experts on education and finance with determining the costs necessary to allow prototype school districts to meet “state and federal standards.” APA used several panels to contribute to their evaluation, including panels that focused on school-level, district-level, and state-level expenditures. Of these panels, each was charged with determining necessary funds for prototype school districts of different sizes, as district size varies widely across Tennessee. The panels determined both a base per-student cost of $6,200 and a series of adjustments that would allow the extra cost of special-needs students to be calculated.

In a separate analysis and report, issued in October of 2004, APA equates the $6,200 base per-student cost of education in Tennessee with the cost of achieving the goals of the federal “No Child Left Behind” Act (NCLB), which requires 100 percent student proficiency by the 2013-2014 school year. Other school funding experts have said it is virtually impossible to cost out 100 percent proficiency, which is itself a virtually impossible goal.

In order to reconcile these variant figures, APA proposes in their 2004 report that the state adopt a funding system that would gradually increase spending levels from the Successful School Districts level of $4,949 per student to the Professional Judgment level of $6,200 per student (adjusted for inflation) between 2005-06 and 2013-2014, when NCLB says 100 percent proficiency will be required. Though politically viable, a system that phases in funding at this rate seems unlikely to enable schools to achieve this level of proficiency the very first year they are provided with adequate funding.

APA also suggests a system for funding that would utilize a “second tier” of state funding to enable lower-wealth districts to match above-base spending by wealthier districts. This model would also expect that funding be adjusted for special-needs students according to the ratios proposed by the Professional Judgment panel.

This study illustrates the growing trend towards attempting to incorporate the costs of NCLB into the calculation of total education costs. Other studies that have tried to incorporate NCLB costs have been performed in Ohio and Texas.

Prepared by Nelly Ward, November 10, 2004