Planning to Finance Education

Planning to Finance Education
Author: National Educational Finance Project
Publisher: Gainesville, Fla. : National Educational Finance Project
Total Pages: 496
Release: 1971
Genre: Education
ISBN:

Structuring Inequality

Structuring Inequality
Author: Tracy L. Steffes
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 377
Release: 2024
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0226832260

"As in many American cities, inequality in Chicago and its suburbs is mappable across its neighborhoods. Anyone driving west along Chicago Avenue from downtown can tell where Austin turns into Oak Park without looking at a map. These borders are not natural, of course; they are carefully maintained through policies like zoning and school districting; some neighborhoods even annex themselves into distinct municipalities. In other words, they are all policy decisions. In Structuring Inequality, historian Tracy Steffes explores how metropolitan inequality was structured, contested, and naturalized through public policy in the Chicagoland area, especially through public education and state government. This metropolitan inequality deepened even amid civil rights mobilizations and efforts to challenge racial discrimination and promote equal opportunity. She argues that educational and metropolitan inequality were mutually constitutive: unequal schools and unequal places cocreated and reinforced one another. School districts not only reflected the characteristics and inequalities between places, but they also played an active role in shaping those communities over time. Throughout the Chicago metropolitan area, school districts defined community in part by reinforcing or undermining racial and economic segregation. Their perceived quality shaped the identity and value of the community, and schooling and its costs could drive development decisions, including what kind of property to allow and residents to attract. Decisions about school construction, student assignment, and school support were often important components of development strategy. By denaturalizing policy to explore the choices that have brought us here and looking at efforts to challenge them, this history helps us understand the inequality we live with today and inspire us to change it"--

Political Economy of Public Education Finance

Political Economy of Public Education Finance
Author: Nandan K Jha
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 143
Release: 2020-06-22
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1498590713

Political Economy of Public Education Finance takes a unique approach in examining distribution of public education spending across urban school districts in the USA. It provides a thorough and rigorous quantitative examination of the joint roles of school choice and political institutions in inequity in school district spending in the USA. This book additionally provides conceptual and empirical treatment to a topic within the vast school choice scholarship that has been studied the least so far: competition among school districts in the urban regional market. The author further offers insight into the role of political institutions in ensuring equity in public school spending. These institutions provide critical leadership in managing inter-school district competition in the regional context. Since equity in school finance is the outcome of interest in this book, it includes necessary and sufficient attention to the topic too.

Financial Assistance by Geographic Area

Financial Assistance by Geographic Area
Author: United States. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary, Finance
Publisher:
Total Pages: 602
Release:
Genre: Economic assistance, Domestic
ISBN: