| Education Week
Published: September 4, 2007
Tighter Link Sought Between Spending, Achievement
in N.Y.
By Michele McNeil
As states look for ways to hold school districts accountable
for how they use big increases in K-12 funding, New
York’s experience may offer a test case in directing
the flow of that new money.
Under the state’s ambitious “Contracts
for Excellence” program, 55 of New York’s
705 districts will share $430 million in extra aid this
school year, but are required to file detailed plans
that limit the spending to five strategies intended
to raise student achievement.
The early signs are that districts are complying with
the new rules. According to a review by Education Week
of contracts available as of last week—representing
some three-quarters of the new funding—about half
the increase will be spent this year on reducing class
size, one of the five state-mandated categories.
Another quarter of the new money will go to increase
students’ time on task in those districts, usually
by lengthening the school day or year.
But other categories highlighted by the state were
proving to be less popular. About a sixth of the funding
will go to teacher- and principal-quality initiatives,
while an even smaller proportion—about one dollar
in 10—will be spent on restructuring middle and
high schools. And little of the new money will be spent
to expand full-day kindergarten and prekindergarten.
While it’s far too early to tell whether the
strings attached to the new aid will bring about results,
Helaine Doran, the deputy executive director of the
Campaign for Fiscal Equity, a New York City-based advocacy
group for school funding, said an increase in achievement
is crucial.
“Otherwise, you contribute to a conversation
that money doesn’t matter,” she said.
As with any new accountability system, however, there
are major kinks to be worked out in the sweeping improvement
plan designed by Gov. Eliot Spitzer, a Democrat elected
last November.
Chief among them is the four-month time frame for the
state education department to draft rules for the program
and for the 55 districts to craft their plans on spending
the money.
As of last week, with school openings just days away
in most of the state, the education department still
hadn’t approved any of the contracts but hoped
to do so this month.
‘Do This Right’
Johanna Duncan-Poitier, the department’s senior
deputy commissioner of education for P-16, said all
of the contracts had been reviewed and her staff was
working with some districts to fine-tune their plans.
“It was very important for us to do this right,”
said Ms. Duncan-Poitier, whose staff spent the summer
making presentations around the state and extending
their phone hours into the evening to help districts.
“This is about making a difference, and we have
really made a commitment to this.”
Districts, though, were frustrated by the tight deadline
to develop and submit their plans, and by the limit
on their spending to five categories—restrictions
that don’t apply to spending of general state
aid in the state’s other districts.
“There was a lot of scrambling, because we already
had our budget in place,” said John Abbott, the
deputy superintendent of the 3,500-student East Irondequoit
Central Schools in Rochester, which got an additional
$1.7 million, a nearly 18 percent bump. “At first,
we couldn’t even begin to spend this money. One
of the options was lengthening the school day, but you’re
not going to do that on the fly.”
School finance accountability has grown more important
in recent years as states ramped up their K-12 spending.
This budget year, total state spending on schools nationally
is expected to grow 10 percent, with at least 10 states—including
Texas and Connecticut—granting double-digit increases,
according to a survey by the Denver-based National Conference
of State Legislatures. New York’s increase was
nearly 10 percent.
Spending is likely to face even greater scrutiny now
that states face a projected downturn in their economies
for the rest of the decade, also foreshadowed in the
NCSL study. ("Fiscal Forecast for States Begins
to Darken," Aug. 15, 2007.)
Two school finance experts, Allan R. Odden, a professor
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s school
of education, and Lawrence O. Picus, a professor at
the University of Southern California’s education
school, urge constraints on spending so that money can
be directed, in particular, to the areas of instructional
coaches for teachers and certified teacher-tutors for
struggling students. Their research in Arkansas and
Wyoming has shown that district administrators, when
left to make their own decisions, often will spend much
of their state aid on course electives and higher teacher
salaries, rather than on improving core academic offerings.
("As Budgets Swell, Spending Choices Get New Scrutiny,"
March 21, 2007.)
Earmarking state money for certain programs,
or aiming it in certain directions, isn’t new.
Molly A. Hunter, the managing director the National
Access Network, which is based at Columbia University
and tracks school finance litigation, pointed to Kentucky’s
education finance overhaul in the early 1990s, which
largely dictated what money was to be spent on, such
as computers in classrooms.
But, Ms. Hunter said, “New
York is unique in that it builds on other things that
have been done.”
Mandated Increases
In all, New York state pumped an additional $1.76 billion
into pre-K-12 funding, bringing total school spending
to $19.6 billion. The spending increase was prompted
largely by the state’s highest court in a ruling
last year in a New York City case that declared the
school funding system unconstitutional. ("Aid Award
Cut in Suit Over N.Y.C.," Nov. 29, 2006.)
About a quarter of the increase is subject to the strings
set out in the Contracts for Excellence program set
up during the budget process, and New York City is getting
the biggest chunk, $258 million.
A district must file a contract detailing how the extra
money will be spent if it meets two criteria: an increase
of at least 10 percent or $15 million in school aid
over the previous year, and at least one school in need
of corrective action under the state accountability
law.
“Contract” money can’t be used on
existing programs or for across-the-board teacher raises,
but must go—with an exception for program experiments—to
launch or expand initiatives in the five specified areas.
Only a few districts sought to fund an “experimental”
approach, which required a separate application and
had to be accompanied by research and a partnership
with a college or university.
Districts also appeared reluctant to pour money into
potentially expensive new programs, or even into popular
but costly existing programs such as early-childhood
education, out of concern that the new funding stream
might eventually trickle out.
“We were leery. If we start doing this and the
state pulls the grant, then what?” said Bill Lynch,
superintendent of the 4,000-student Fulton City School
District near Syracuse, describing the dilemma posed
by creating new programs.
Greater Transparency
A primary goal of the Contracts for Excellence, as
outlined by Gov. Spitzer in an education speech in January,
is to bring transparency to plans for “serious
reform.” Yet how districts are embracing that
transparency varies greatly.
Education Week requested copies of the contracts from
all 55 eligible districts, and received about 40 percent
of them. Some didn’t respond to the request, and
at least two said, when first contacted, that they didn’t
keep copies of their contracts after submitting them.
Other districts didn’t want to make their contracts
public because they said the plans were incomplete,
even though the contracts govern spending during the
current school year, and all districts were required
to get public comment on their plans.
Yet several districts were very forthcoming. The 1.1
million-student New York City schools, the 2,280-student
Norwich City School District, and the 10,000-student
Arlington Central School District, for example, posted
their contracts online and outlined in detail to parents
and members of the community how the money would be
spent.
New York City has proposed a comprehensive plan to
reduce class size by hiring an additional 1,300 teachers
and to develop 40 high-quality new schools for students
who otherwise would attend low-performing schools.
The district also wants to use $40 million to establish
430 new team-teaching special education classrooms that
pair a general education teacher with a special education
teacher. And it plans to spend $14 million on more student
assessments throughout the school year.
“The Contracts for Excellence are based on the
recognition that we are accountable for delivering the
best possibility for success to the students furthest
from it,” said the city’s schools chancellor,
Joel I. Klein, in a statement. The district held five
public meetings to discuss the plan and set up an e-mail
address specifically for feedback.
The hearings were not without controversy, as school
advocates argued that the city’s plan was too
vague and its priorities skewed.
The Campaign for Fiscal Equity, which filed the finance
lawsuit in 1993, criticized the district for directing
more than 40 percent of the aid to high-performing schools.
The district is working with the state on making changes
to ease those concerns.
Varied Priorities
Elsewhere in the state, districts are finding a variety
of ways to cope with the restrictions on how their new
funding can be spent.
Buffalo’s 38,000-student public school system
is using about half its $11 million to increase “time
on task,” adding an hour of school each day, plus
another 20 days to the school year, for 16 of the district’s
most struggling schools.
The 2,600-student Public Schools of the Tarrytowns
is using nearly one-third of its $604,000 to double
middle-school instruction time in English and language
arts.
And the 10,000-student Schenectady City School District
is spending about $610,000 to hire an instructional
coach for each of 10 elementary schools.
While pleased with the extra funding, some districts
worry about how the state department of education will
provide oversight to school districts.
To measure compliance, state education officials say
they will examine whether individual schools have achieved
or surpassed adequate yearly progress, the key benchmark
under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. In addition,
Ms. Duncan-Poitier of the education department said
staff members will visit every district in the program
over the school year.
James P. McCarthy, superintendent of the 3,500-student
South Glens Falls schools, said his district is spending
most of its $1.2 million in contract money on class-size
reduction.
“I endorse the concept of accountability,”
he said. “But of greater concern will be the assessment,
and how our results are used.”
Library Intern Joie Sciremammano contributed to this
story.
Coverage of new schooling arrangements and classroom
improvement efforts is supported by a grant from the
Annenberg Foundation.
Vol. 27, Issue 02, Pages 1,20
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