Dan Walters

Dan Walters

California’s K-12 schools and their nearly 6 million students received a multibillion-dollar additional infusion of cash in the budget that Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislators enacted last week, raising per-pupil spending to a record-high level.

In all, the budget will provide schools with an average of about $24,000 a year for each student, doubling what it was just a few years ago, with a formula that provides extra allocations to school districts with high numbers of poor and English-learner students.

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(3) comments

Terence Y

Most, if not all, of the extra money is going to pay for increasing pensions and benefits for those that no longer teach our students. So to answer your question, will the extra money make an academic difference? A big resounding NO, especially in CA.

John Baker

I can't say for sure more money to schools will lead to better outcomes -- certainly that is what every educator hopes for, and what new programs that money supports aim to do. But what it will do is slow the reduction in quality that happens when qualified educators leave the profession.

Local school districts have seen the accelerated flight of qualified but underpaid staff from high-cost areas like the Bay Area to lower-cost ones, or the flight from education altogether, over the past few years as housing (and everything else) costs rose quicker than their ability to pay. Teacher salaries can't rise at the same pace as inflation because school revenues can't rise as fast thanks to measures such as Prop 13. While the justification for Prop 13 can be debated, what can't be debated is that employees who aren't paid their value will leave. Hopefully extra state funding will help retain more educators.

Dirk van Ulden

Having two advanced degree teachers/professionals in my immediate family, I can only add that they believe that tenure is the main obstacle to quality education at an affordable cost to our State. As a senior citizen myself, I am reluctant to blame the seniority system for ossification of the teacher ranks. They have no incentive to excel and,if even given the opportunity, would likely take a buyout if offered. That would, in turn, make space and sufficient funding available for the new, highly educated and motivated teacher generation. Of course, the Teacher Union which dictates policy in Sacramento, would not be so enthused as many newer educators are not likely to join the corrupt union.

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