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Research Articles and Books

Access, along with the Campaign for Educational Equity and the Campaign for Fiscal Equity, have researched the numerous school funding litigations and public engagement efforts across the country.

Books
Research Articles
Studies in Judicial Remedies and Public Engagement, case studies of nine states and articles on the education adequacy movement
Other articles and reports

Books

Moving Every Child Ahead: From NCLB Hype to Meaningful Educational Opportunity by Michael A. Rebell and Jessica R. Wolff In Moving Every Child Ahead Rebell and Wolff carefully examine the No Child Left Behind Act and its impact on education policy through the lens of educational equity. In line with their provocative concept of “meaningful educational opportunity,” they explore existing policies and programs and recommended steps to overcome historic inequities and current achievement gaps. January 2008
The Price We Pay: Economic and Social Consequences of Inadequate Education by Clive Belfield and Henry M. Levin This book highlights the private, fiscal, and public costs of educational inequities. Drawing from "The Social Costs of Inadequate Education," a summary of the 2005 Teachers College Symposium on Educational Equity, it also considers demographic trends and explores policy interventions. 2007

Research Articles

"Equal Opportunity and the Courts" by Michael A. Rebell In this article Rebell that the adequacy movement is "the only game in town" when it comes to advancing equal educational opportunity. The article defends the movement from critics’ charges that adequacy suits have not resulted in improvement in student performance and that the state courts’ have overstepped their proper constitutional boundaries in these cases. February 2008
"Poverty, 'Meaningful' Educational Opportunity and the Necessary Role of the Courts," by Michael A. Rebell This article argues for a commitment to “meaningful educational opportunity” that would require a comprehensive range of in-school and coordinated out-of-school services to the millions of children living in poverty. This theory of “meaningful educational opportunity” is rooted in federal equal educational opportunity laws and court decisions and in the state education adequacy cases. The needed reforms, which are feasible and affordable, cannot be achieved without the involvement of the courts to enforce constitutional education provisions. June 2007
"Professional Rigor, Public Engagement and Judicial Review," by Michael A. Rebell "A Proposal for Enhancing the Validity of Education Adequacy Studies." This article, which appeared in the Teachers College Record, provides the first detailed analysis of judicial critiques of the state of the art of “costing out” studies and recommends improvements to the current practice of costing out. October 2006
"The Social Costs of Inadequate Education," by Henry M. Levin A Summary of the 2005 Teachers College Symposium on Educational Equity. The article describes the consequences of inequality in education, the changing demographics in education, and the economic, social, and civic costs associated with inadequate education. October 2005
"Adequacy Litigations: A New Path to Equity?" by Michael A. Rebell

This paper is the final chapter in Bringing Equity Back, a book that examines the concept of educational equity and addresses the imperfect legacy of reform efforts since Brown v. Board of Education. This chapter argues that adequacy litigation offers a new path towards the ideal of equal opportunity and excellent education for all students. The author argues that adequacylawsuits contain immense potential for achieving the democratic principles that have characterized reform goals, but will only prove successful in realizing them when combined with public and community engagement.

May 2005
"Why Adequacy Lawsuits Matter," by Michael A. Rebell This article was written for Education Week to address inaccuracies in an article by Alfred A. Lindseth. August 2004
"'Highly Qualified' Teachers: Pretense or Legal Requirement?" by Michael A. Rebell and Molly A. Hunter The authors contrast the promise of the federal "No Child Left Behind Act" (NCLB) that only highly qualified teachers will be permitted to instruct the nation's youth with the Department of Education's regulations and actual state efforts, both of which are falling far short of that goal. The article argues that NCLB should require all states to adopt reforms to ensure highly qualified teachers in all classrooms and points to education adequacy litigations in many states that may compel that result even if NCLB does not. May 2004
"Of Course Money Matters: Why the Arguments to the Contrary Never Added Up," by Michael A. Rebell and Joseph Wardenski The authors review the academic findings and court holdings that have debunked one of the great school funding myths of our time: that money spent on poor and minority students is akin to throwing money away. The authors conclude that money spent on qualified teachers, smaller class sizes, preschool initiatives, and academic intervention programs boosts student achievement dramatically - especially for poor and minority students. February 2004

Studies in Judicial Remedies and Public Engagement

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Volume Two

"Building on Judicial Intervention: The Redesign of School Facilities Funding in Arizona," by Molly A. Hunter Analyzes the Arizona litigations that challenged the state education finance system for facilities and other capital items, examines a unique, three-day public engagement event, and documents an iterative decision-making process that led to enactment of a remarkably successful, innovative capital funding system and resulted from standards-based funding principles established by the Arizona Supreme Court. Also discusses current litigations that ask the courts to extend those principles to funding for English language learners and "at-risk" students. September 2003
"Inequitable Equilibrium: School Finance in the United States," by Jeffrey Metzler Examines relationship between changes in school finance systems for the purpose of improving equity and the actual degree of equity achieved; uses statistical analysis and voluminous data from all 50 states to determine such measures of equity as the wealth neutrality score, targeting score, coefficient of variation, and McLloone index; analyzes why even states that have, as the result of court orders, adopted full state funding or guaranteed tax yield approaches, have gradually regressed into inequity. June 2003

"Education Adequacy, Democracy and the Courts," by Michael A. Rebell

Surveys recent school finance litigations and finds core definition of an "adequate education" emerging across the nation; discusses elements of adequacy such as preparation to participate in democracy and obtain competitive employment, with emphasis on providing meaningful educational opportunities to all students; describes relationship between definition of adequacy and national standards-based reform movement. May 2001

"Moving Mountains in the Granite State: Reforming School Finance and Defining Adequacy in New Hampshire," by Drew Dunphy

Analyzes the Claremont decisions on school finance in New Hampshire and the sweeping change and heated debates they have brought on the issues of taxation and educational adequacy. It examines the role of public engagement in the state and the difficulty of implementing reform principles with a process that may require a more comprehensive public dialogue and change in political will before achieving a lasting solution. March 2001

"Rapid Response, Radical Reform: The Story of School Finance Litigation in Vermont," by Michael A. Rebell and Jeffrey Metzler

Analyzes one of the most far-reaching fiscal equity remedies in the nation; examines reform initiatives of legislature and rapid response to state court decision that also established important new precedents for defining an adequate education; looks at strong backlash against funding reform and examines potential benefits of public engagement in addressing school funding conflict. October 2000

"Who's in Control? The Courts, the Legislature and the Public in Colorado's School Finance Debate," by Christina Burnett and Drew Dunphy

 

Analyzes effects of three litigations on state school finance system even without a major plaintiff victory; examines effects of state constitutional amendments dramatically limiting school funding increases; describes advocacy efforts, new attention to capital funding problems, and growing awareness of the need for statewide public dialogue.

June 1999

Volume One

"Trying to Bridge the Gaps: Ohio's Search for an Education Finance Remedy," by Molly A. Hunter

Traces extensive public engagement work by a number of statewide organizations, including an advocacy effort spearheaded by Ohio's business leaders; details statewide forums and a number of influential television programs demonstrating inadqeuacy of schools; also examines on-going attempts to determine the actual costs of providing a 'thorough and efficient' education. February 1999

"Defining a ‘Basic Education’: Equity and Adequacy Litigation in the State of Washington," by Diane W. Cipollone

Charts on-going struggle to define a "basic education" in the state of Washington and efforts to determine the costs of providing such an education to all students; details influence of public dialogue on this process, as well as the work of a newly-formed organization; describes recent shift among some state legislators to a focus on standards reform.

December 1998

"Building Plans for Reform: Alabama’s School Finance Litigation," by Jeffrey Scott Berman and Drew Dunphy

Examines advocates and plaintiffs’ struggles to implement a sweeping court-ordered remedy; documents development of remedial plan and extensive campaign of public engagement to develop and support that remedy; examines changes in advocacy and public engagement strategies in light of recent decision vacating remedial order. July 1998

"All Eyes Forward: Public Engagement and Fiscal Equity in Kentucky," by Molly A. Hunter

Traces fifteen years of advocacy and public engagement to help implement a court decision and some of the most extensive education reforms ever enacted; provides a comprehensive overview of court orders and reform legislation; describes the work of advocacy groups whose activities have never before been significantly documented. April 1998

"Fiscal Equity Litigation and the Democratic Imperative," by Michael A. Rebell

Examines a trend toward plaintiff victories in fiscal equity decisions since 1989; provides an overview of these decisions and examines them within the framework of the "democratic imperative," a resurgent manifestation of the underlying principles of American political culture that will no longer tolerate inadequate educational opportunities for disadvantaged children. January 1998
"Gambling on a Settlement: The Baltimore City Schools Adequacy Litigations," by Diane W. Cipollone Discusses the recent Maryland adequacy litigations and the state’s education finance system; examines earlier court rulings and the state’s defense arguments; focuses on the intricate political developments that led to a major eve-of-trial settlement in the case. November 1997

Other Articles

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"Efficacy and Engagement: The Remedies Problem Posed by Sheff v. O’Neill -- and a Proposed Solution" by Michael A. Rebell and Robert L. Hughes

Reprinted from The Connecticut Law Review. Analyzes problems of remedies in Connecticut’s recent de facto segregation/fiscal equity suit; provides an overview of federal and state remedies in desegregation and fiscal equity cases; reviews past statewide public dialogue process in Connecticut; proposes a new public engagement-oriented remedy for Sheff and other statewide litigations.

1997

"Schools, Communities and the Courts: A Dialogic Approach to Education Reform," by Michael A. Rebell and Robert L. Hughes.

Reprinted from The Yale Law and Policy Review. Reviews history of recent education reform initiatives and judicial intervention in educational policy disputes; argues that effective reform requires a revitalization of community involvement; proposes a specific dialogic method for doing so; applies the dialogic method to controversies involving sex education, special education and fiscal equity reforms.

1996

"Fiscal Equity in Education: Deconstructing the Reigning Myths and Facing Reality," by Michael A. Rebell

Reprinted from The NYU Review of Law and Social Change. Provides a critical overview of recent fiscal equity litigations throughout the country from an advocacy perspective; proposes an approach to fiscal equity reform and a candid consideration of underlying political and legal issues.

1995