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by
Free Market
Duck
Public School Employment Far
Outpacing K-12 Student Enrollment
by Susan Meyers, Friedman Foundation for
Educational Choice
(Oct 24, 2012)
$24 billion in potential
savings could help teachers, kids.
“It’s astounding that billions
of dollars are wasted on personnel in American public schools who do not
produce educational results,” said Robert Enlow, president and CEO of the
Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice. “We need to rethink how we spend
our money including whether we would get better student outcomes if we
redirected these funds to parents so they could send their child to the
school of their choice.”
Indianapolis, IN
-- America’s public schools saw a 96 percent
increase in students but increased administrators and other non-teaching
staff a staggering 702 percent since 1950, according to a new study of
school personnel by the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice.
The report, “The School
Staffing Surge: Decades of Employment Growth in America’s Public Schools,”
found the seven-fold increase in administrators and other non-teachers in
the 50 states and the District of Columbia. Teaching staff, in comparison,
increased 252 percent.
This trend has continued in
recent years as well.
According to the study,
virtually all 50 states saw “bloat” or an excessive increase in the size of
non-teaching personnel compared to student population. Among the states with
the most disproportionate increases were:
-
Hawaii. Student enrollment
increased 2.7 percent while administrators and other non-teaching staff
increased 68.9 percent from FY 1992 to FY 2009.
-
Ohio. Student enrollment
increased 1.9 percent compared to a 44.4 percent increase in
administrators and other non-teaching personnel during the same period.
-
Minnesota. Student
enrollment increased 8.1 percent compared to an increase in administrators
and non-teaching personnel of 68.2 percent.
-
New Hampshire. Student
enrollment increased 11.7 percent while administrators and non-teaching
personnel increased 80.2 percent.
Some states actually had
decreases in student enrollment from FY 1992 to FY 2009, but only Montana
reduced the number of non-teaching personnel. Some states had dramatic gains
in personnel outside the classroom despite a loss in student population. For
example:
-
Maine had a decrease of
10.8 percent in student population yet increased its non-teaching staff by
76.1 percent.
-
South Dakota lost 3.9
percent of its student population yet increased non-teaching staff by 55.4
percent.
-
The District of Columbia
lost 14.8 percent of its students yet increased non-teaching staff by 42
percent.
The report was compiled with
statistics from the National Center for Education Statistics by Ben Scafidi,
an economist at Georgia College & State University and a senior fellow at
the Friedman Foundation.
“It’s astounding that
billions of dollars are wasted on personnel in American public schools who
do not produce educational results,” said Robert Enlow, president and CEO of
the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice. “We need to rethink how we
spend our money including whether we would get better student outcomes if we
redirected these funds to parents so they could send their child to the
school of their choice.”
The study also found that if
non-teaching personnel had grown at the same rate as student population,
American public schools would have an additional $24.3 billion annually.
Scafidi’s report concluded that $24.3 billion is equivalent to an annual
$7,500 raise per teacher nationwide or a $1,700 school voucher for each
child in poverty.
Despite the increase in
personnel, public high school graduation rates peaked around 1970, and data
show that reading scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress
fell slightly between 1992 and 2008. Math scores were stagnant during the
same period.
Note: The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice is a
501(c)(3) nonprofit and nonpartisan organization, solely dedicated to
advancing Milton and Rose Friedman’s vision of school choice for all
children. First established as the Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation in
1996, the Foundation continues to promote school choice as the most
effective and equitable way to improve the quality of K-12 education in
America. The Foundation is dedicated to research, education, and outreach on
the vital issues and implications related to choice and competition in K-12
education.
– FM Duck
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