ThatOwlWoman
Not Nice
Money is obviously important but from the article, "Repeated increases in school funding in recent years have not slowed calls for more money".
To me this is the exact reason why our education doesn't change and improve. We stick with the status quo, ask for money and when then that doesn't work continue to ask for more money. Rinse, wash and repeat.
The issue isn't so much the amount of money but its distribution, eh? Most school districts are very top-heavy on management and that's where a lot of educational dollars are flowing. In addition, wealthier locales obviously have better tax bases and therefore better funding for the local school districts. Shouldn't those districts receive less state funding so that more than be channeled to the lower-income areas where buildings are falling apart, textbooks are years out of date, and enrichment and early childhood programs are scarce?
(R)s' answer is to use taxpayer $$ for unaccredited religious and charter schools, thus robbing public schools of viability.