In 2010, Virginia spent an average of $10,597 per public grade school
student, like those shown here, compared to $7,848 spent per pupil in
Arizona in the same year. (Photo courtesy Arlington, Va., Public
Schools)
By RYAN CLARK
Cronkite News Service
WASHINGTON – Arizona had the third-lowest per-pupil spending on
public elementary schools in the country in 2010,topping only Utah and
Idaho, according to a recent Census Bureau report.
Arizona schools spent an average of $7,848 per grade school student
in that year, well below the national average of $10,615 per pupil,
according to the Census report released in late June.
But Arizona school officials defended what they called efficient use
of education dollars, noting that the state has posted some of the
biggest gains on national standardized test scores despite the
relatively low spending.
Since 2009, the state’s fourth-graders have posted the nation’s
highest gains in the math section of the National Assessment of
Educational Progress, said Molly Edwards, a spokeswoman for the Arizona Department of Education. She said Arizona schools have to determine how to deliver a quality education to students based on the funds available.
“We are always on the lookout for ways to bring in additional
dollars, but we also have a responsibility not to give up just because
we aren’t getting as much money as other states,” she said.
In addition to spending less per student, state funds also made up a
smaller portion of total school spending in Arizona than in most other
states, the report said. Nationally, state funding makes up 45 percent
of school spending on average, with the rest coming from local and
federal sources; in Arizona, state support makes up just 35 percent of
the $8.8 billion that was spent on elementary education in 2010.
That’s just not enough, said David Garcia, a professor of education at Arizona State University.
“Education is a state responsibility, and each state, in its
constitution, decides how they are going to fund education,” Garcia
said.
The Arizona Constitution
says the state will ensure and fund a “general and uniform” education
for all students. But all that guarantees is that each school district
gets the same amount of funding per pupil, Garcia said, not that
students get a good education.
With 65 percent of school funding generally going to teacher
salaries, schools in underfunded states can face a difficult choice
between raising teacher salaries or reducing class sizes, said Mike
Griffith, a finance analyst for the Education Commission of the States.
“In states that have higher funding, you often will see both smaller
class sizes and higher pay,” Griffith said. “But if you walk into a
class room in a lower-funded state, often you will see larger classes
and lower-paid teachers – it’s an indirect correlation between spending
and student achievement.”
But he cautioned that higher spending does not automatically result in schools that are getting the results they should.
“You can also find districts that don’t have as much money but have
high achievement – it’s all about how they spend the money,” Griffith
said.
Garcia said that the first step in solving the funding problem in Arizona is recognizing that there is a problem.
“And for anyone in education, Arizona being one of the lowest-funded states, isn’t going to be news,” he said.
DO THE MATH
States and the amount the spent in 2010 on public elementary school
education, per pupil, ranked from lowest to highest spending.
1. Utah $6,064
2. Idaho $7,106
3. Arizona $7,848
4. Oklahoma $7,896
5. Tennessee $8,065
6. Mississippi $8,119
7. North Carolina $8,409
8. Nevada $8,483
9. Florida $8,741
10. Texas $8,746
11. Colorado $8,853
12. South Dakota $8,858
13. Alabama $8,881
14. Kentucky $8,948
15. South Carolina $9,143
15. Arkansas $9,143
17. California $9,375
18. New Mexico $9,384
19. Georgia $9,394
20. Washington $9,452
21. Indiana $9,611
22. Oregon $9,624
23. Missouri $9,634
24. Kansas $9,715
25. Iowa $9,763
26. Montana $10,497
27. Virginia $10,597
National average $10,615
28. Louisiana $10,638
29. Michigan $10,644
30. Minnesota $10,685
31. Nebraska $10,734
32. North Dakota $10,991
33. Ohio $11,030
34. Wisconsin $11,364
35. West Virginia $11,527
36. Illinois $11,634
37. Hawaii $11,754
38. Maine $12,259
39. Delaware $12,383
39. New Hampshire $12,383
41. Pennsylvania $12,995
42. Rhode Island $13,699
43. Maryland $13,738
44. Massachusetts $14,350
45. Connecticut $14,906
46. Wyoming $15,169
47. Vermont $15,274
48. Alaska $15,783
49. New Jersey $16,841
50. New York $18,618
51. District of Columbia $18,667
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