http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/inside-school-research/2009/09/spending_disparities_tracked_a.htmlSpending Disparities Tracked Among Charter and Regular School Districts
By Debra Viadero on September 9, 2009 9:24 AM | No Comments | No TrackBacks
It's no secret that school districts vary widely in how much they spend per pupil. Among the 100 largest public school systems, for example, per pupil spending in 2007 ranged from a low of $5,048 in Alpine, Utah, to $19,435 in Boston.
http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2009338 . . . It's also clear from the report that charter schools in these special districts seem to operate, for the most part, on far less money than regular schools in traditional districts. Check out the full report here and let me know what this data says to you. You won't find any interpretations of the results from the feds.
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Interesting example of money and education I stumbled across: (Pennsylvania)
http://www.commonwealthfoundation.org/research/detail/budget-facts-2009-state-education-spending# K-12 Public Education spending has skyrocketed:
* Since 1970, public school spending increased from $2.3 billion to $24 billion—a 956% increase.
* Over the past 25 years, per-pupil spending has increased 364% (vs. inflation of 141%).
* Under Gov. Rendell, state spending on K-12 education has increased 43%.
# Taxpayers saved approximately $3.622 billion from other school choice options in the 2007-08 school year.
* Charter schools saved taxpayers $80.03 million in the 2007-08 school year.
45,560 students were served at an average savings of $2,589 per student.
* Cyber charter schools saved taxpayers $94.14 million in the 2007-08 school year.
19,715 students were served at an average savings of $4,775 per student.
* Private and nonpublic schools saved taxpayers $3.15 billion in the 2007-08 school year.
260,000 students were served, with an average savings to taxpayers of over $12,000 per-pupil.
* Home schooling saved taxpayers $297.5 million in the 2007-08 school year.
22,316 students were served at virtually no cost to the taxpayers.
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Here's a good "factcheck" source - it's from NC - and fairly indicative of how charter funding "works" - though each state has their own specific rules (yeah, it's a pro-charter source, but they're not just making this up. )
FACTS: Public Charter Schools are not taking any money from the traditional public schools, but rather are relieving the traditional schools of the burden and expense of providing a building, teachers, textbooks, etc. when students enroll in a Public Charter School. The Charter Schools do not “take” any of the traditional school’s money for
school construction or maintenance.
Each school system receives a designated amount of “operating” money from the state and the county for each child living in the county who attends a school in that system.
Each school reports its actual enrollment during the first 20 school days each year. The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction determines the total number students in each school system and provides a set amount of funding for each student in the system for operating each school.
The county likewise determines the number of students attending each school and provides per capita funding for school operations for each student in the system.
The county also provides “capital” funds for school construction for the local school system. The state may also provide some capital funding for school construction, but the primary source of capital funding is the local government.
The “operating” money the state and local government allocate for each child follows the child to the charter school, but the charter school, not the traditional school, then has the responsibility to provide an education for that child, including providing school buildings.
Public Charter Schools also receive the same state and local “operating” money for each student attending its school along with the responsibility to provide an education for that child. However, unlike traditional schools, Public Charter Schools receive no “capital” fund-ing for school construction or maintenance from the State or Local County.
When a student attends a Public Charter School instead of a traditional public school, the Charter School receives the state and local “operating” money that would have gone to the traditional public school had the child attended that school. The Public Charter School has to provide a building, teachers, textbooks and administrative support, in short everything the traditional school provides except that unlike a traditional school, the Charter School must build or rent its facilities without any “capital” funding from the state or county.
Most Public Charter Schools spend around 20% of the money they and the traditional schools receive for operating each school in order to fund their facilities because they receive no capital funding for buildings.
Public Charter Schools use private capital funding to construct buildings and facilities so that each charter school building costs the taxpayers nothing.