By Yuxuan Xie, Daniel J. Willis, and John Fensterwald, EdSource, September 24, 2019
California school districts need to significantly increase their education spending to ensure that students have adequate resources and support to provide the state’s content standards and meet its academic goals. Based on 2016-17 numbers, funding schools adequately to meet these goals would have required a 38 percent increase in spending, or $25.6 billion. That would mean an average increase of $4,686 per student in that year, although the amount would vary by school district.
That’s the conclusion of a study conducted by the American Institutes for Research for Getting Down to Facts, a project that was published in 2018 by Stanford University and Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE).
For more on how the study was done, go to “What Does It Cost to Educate California’s Students? A Professional Judgment Approach.”
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