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New Hampshire Fact Sheet

Background

Study Title: "Alternative Approaches for Determining a Base Figure and Pupil-Weighted Adjustments for Use in a School Finance System in New Hampshire"
   
Date Completed: November 1998
   
Calculated Base Costs: Method #1: $4,681 per pupil (elementary); $5,449 per pupil (secondary)
  Method #2: $4,447 per pupil (elementary); $5,487 per pupil (secondary)
  Method #3: $4,287 per pupil (elementary); $5,254 per pupil (secondary)
  Method #4: $4,145 per pupil (elementary); $4,722 per pupil (secondary)
   
Major Recommendations: State must decide between the four methods. The authors of the study calculated that using Method #1 or Method #4 as the base cost, adding in special education, vocational education, and at-risk pupil weights, and factoring in transportation, would result in a target revenue of $1.11 billion or $983 million for 1998-1999).
  State must decide what combination of state and local revenues will provide this money.
   
Special Features of the Study: Includes four sample scenarios of total non-capital revenue needed and "the ways the revenues might be generated."
   
Implementation:

The Commission that received the study removed the higher spending 50 percent of the identified districts in Method #4, calculated the average cost based only on the lowest spending 50 percent of the identified districts, and recommended that level of funding.

Legislature implemented Method #4 (lowest cost method based solely on outputs), with the Commission's modification, and applied an additional "discount figure" of 9.75% to account for "beyond adequate" activities such as sports, band, and culinary arts. The base cost figure calculated with 1999 data was $3,311. No provision was made for inflation in future years.

   
Methodology: Successful Schools
  Input measures: teachers per 1,000 pupils, other professional staff per 1,000 pupils, administrators per 1,000 pupils, starting teacher salary, and average teacher salary
  Output measures: attendance, drop-out rate, performance (average percentage scoring advanced, proficient, and basic across all applicable tests)
  Four different ways to use input and output measures to identify "successful schools":
 

Method #1: all input and output factors. Input factors, attendance, and performance at 20th percentile

 

Method #2: two input factors (teachers per 1,000, other staff per 1,000) and all output factors. Input factors at 20th percentile; output factors at 30th percentile

 

Method #3: two input factors and all output factors. Ceiling for input factors at 80th percentile (as an efficiency measure); output factors at 40th percentile

 

Method #4: one output measure (performance). Performance at 40 to 60 percent

  Calculated resources for pupils with special needs by applying existing special-education weights to new base cost and adding a 10% weight for at-risk students regardless of their concentration
   
Additional Factors: The study included consideration of transportation and efficiency (in method #3). The study did not consider facilities and food service.
   
Public Input: None
   
Prepared for: The Adequate Education Costs and Municipal Grant Distribution Commission of New Hampshire, authorized by state statute
   
Prepared by: Augenblick & Myers, Inc.