Opinion
School & District Management Opinion

Funding Students, Options & Achievement

By Tom Vander Ark — April 16, 2013 2 min read
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By Carri Schneider & Tom Vander Ark

Money matters. The way districts and states fund schools influences leadership behaviors. We need to create funding systems that encourage innovation,
power options, and promote achievement.

When Tom became a public school superintendent almost twenty years ago (after being the finance guy at a $5 billion retail chain), he was greeted by a
funding system focused on inputs and state and federal programs. It left almost no discretion for school leadership, and it promoted inequity despite
nominal efforts to the contrary. The budgets were indecipherable. Very little has changed for the majority of superintendents--their districts are funded
by a collection policies that are the sedimentary residue of decades of politics. It’s time for a total makeover based on the emerging opportunities of
digital learning.

Today with John Bailey we released a Smart Series paper called Funding Students, Options & Achievement. It addresses these archaic layers of funding
policy and calls for a full redesign that reorients the system around students to empower their access to the best in teaching and learning.

“The extent to which each student will be able to access innovations like digital learning will depend largely on the manner in which public resources are
allocated to schools and students,” said Marguerite Roza, school funding expert and technical advisor on the paper. “As state leaders re-examine their
finance systems, the current moment provides a key opportunity to look forward and design a system that’s suitable for our students over the next two
decades.”

Today’s current system was simply not designed to allow for the flexibility that will be needed as students seek out increasingly online and blended
learning opportunities. The paper and accompanying infographic Financing the Future of Education recommend
four design principles that will get us there.

A student-centered school finance system should be:


  • Weighted. Funding should reflect individual student needs by attaching “weights” to student funding amounts based on factors that affect the cost
    of educating certain students, such as poverty, special needs, ELL/LEP, or gifted.


  • Flexible. A flexible finance system does not restrict funds or designate them for particular uses such as salaries, and thus creates greater
    school-level autonomy.

  • Portable. The principle of portability ensures that dollars can follow students to the school or course that best suits their individual needs -
    including fractional funding for full-time or part-time options.

  • Performance-based. To ensure quality, a performance-based system creates incentives tied to student outcomes that reward performance and
    completion. Options include attaching a portion of provider payment and/ or eligibility to student achievement data.

The current system erects such a big barrier to universal student access to a growing slate of educational innovations that can personalize learning and
boost achievement. To address these policy barriers, we offer policy recommendations that build on Fordham’s 10 recommendations in the landmark Fund the Child report. The paper includes the student-centered
design principles, state and local examples of existing policies, and recommendations to guide policymakers. All that’s needed now is the commitment to
designing the new system with students at the core.

The answer is to sunset existing policies in 2015 and two take years to completely rewrite the education code to make funding weighted, flexible, portable,
and performance-based.

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The opinions expressed in Vander Ark on Innovation are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.