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June 22, 2012Better Schools, Fewer Dollars We can improve education without busting the budgetMarcus Winters via a kind Rick Kiley email: Here's what looks like a policy dilemma. To attain the economic growth that it desperately needs, the United States must improve its schools and train a workforce capable of competing in the global economy. Economists Eric Hanushek, Dean Jamison, Eliot Jamison, and Ludger Woessmann estimate that improving student achievement by half of one standard deviation--roughly the current difference between the United States and Finland--would increase U.S. GDP growth by about a full percentage point annually. Yet states and the federal government face severe budgetary constraints these days; how are policymakers supposed to improve student achievement while reducing school funding?Related: State Income Tax Collections Per Capita, Madison's 4.95% Property Tax Increase, http://www.schoolinfosystem.org/archives/2012/05/madison_schools_79.php and 60% to 42%: Madison School District's Reading Recovery Effectiveness Lags "National Average": Administration seeks to continue its use. Posted by Jim Zellmer at June 22, 2012 7:54 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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