Partly Cloudy
71°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Despite rough economy, school spending climbs in Illinois

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Higher per-pupil spending has not been conclusively linked to better student performance, said Glenn "Max" McGee, the former state education superintendent.

"There is really not a direct correlation between spending and achievement," said McGee, who has studied school finance in relation to gaps in achievement between white and minority students. "Money helps and money matters, but there is not a direct correlation between money and performance."

Stanford University scholar Eric Hanushek, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, agreed, saying that "money alone is not sufficient to get achievement gains." He, too, is critical of schools that he said are constantly on the lookout for more money.

"Spending on education is a political matter, and (districts) have found it very convenient to convince people that schools are being cut to the bone even when they're spending more, because that makes their case that we should put more money into schools," Hanushek said.

At Sunset Ridge School District 29, a two-school district in the north suburbs, per-pupil spending in 2010-11 was $21,606, the eighth-highest in the state — a slight decline from the year before, which the district attributed to a change in daily attendance figures that affect the per-pupil calculation.

One of the schools in the district is Middlefork School in Northfield, whose principal, Mary Frances Greene, said she believes money does matter. The K-3 school has only 186 students. Class sizes are small, all children get access to laptops and the school has been able to keep programs that struggling districts have been forced to cut, such as music, art and recess, she said. "This is a great, great little school," Greene said.

At Middlefork, 100 percent of third-graders passed the state achievement exam in reading last spring, and 98 percent passed the state math exam.

But in another high-spending district, Will County's one-school Union School District 81, students didn't perform as well. Union spent $19,479 per student in 2010-11, up from $18,379 the year before and more than double the per-pupil expenditures five years ago. But on last spring's state exams, just 78 percent of students passed.

The new Union school superintendent, Tim Baldermann, said the Joliet district has only 105 students and brings in substantial revenue from a nearby industrial park, which accounts for the high per-pupil spending figure.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all