Great Recession -School Spending Cuts = Sizable Learning Losses for Students in Hardest Hit Areas
Substantial
school spending cuts triggered by the Great Recession were associated
with sizable losses in academic achievement for students living in
counties most affected by the economic downturn, according to a new study published today in AERA Open, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Educational Research Association.
The estimated declines in student math and English language arts
achievement in school districts with the most severe school spending
cuts represent a loss of approximately 25 percent of the expected annual
gains in achievement for students in grades 3 through 8, compared to
their peers in the districts least affected by the Great Recession.
According to the study, conducted by scholars Kenneth Shores of
Pennsylvania State University and Matthew Philip Steinberg of George
Mason University, the steepest declines in expected math and English
language arts achievement gains were in school districts serving the
poorest students—districts where an average of 72 percent of students
received free or reduced-price lunch—and in school districts serving the
most African American students—39 percent African American, on average.
As a result, the authors note, the Great Recession was associated not
only with declines in average academic achievement among counties most
adversely affected by the Great Recession but also with increases in
achievement gaps between poor and wealthy school districts and between
school districts with many and few African American students.
“Our results reinforce what other recent studies have demonstrated:
that there is a link between educational spending and student
achievement,” said Shores, an assistant professor of human development
and family studies at Pennsylvania State University. “What is different
about this study is that we show that divestments in educational
spending matter nearly as much for student achievement as do
investments.”
For their study, the authors used a dataset consisting of test scores
for 2,548 counties across the continental United States for the 2008–09
through 2014–15 school years, combining student achievement information
from the Stanford Education Data Archive, demographic information from
the U.S. Department of Education, and county-level economic data from
multiple sources. The study sample includes test scores for 86 percent
of the population of U.S. students who are annually tested in grades 3
through 8.
Although the authors found that the recession resulted in a decline
in per pupil revenues of nearly $900 on average for the entire U.S., the
consequences for school spending varied substantially among counties.
Comparing counties with employment losses in the top and bottom
quartiles, school spending declined at a faster rate in the hardest hit
areas—by about $600 more per pupil per year—for the first two years of
the recession (2007-08 to 2009-10).
In contrast, in the five years leading up to the start of the Great
Recession in December 2007—that is, 2002–03 through 2007–08—changes in
school spending differed little across the counties that were most and
least affected by the downturn. After the recession hit, school spending
continued to decline until the 2012–13 school year, but after the first
two years, it declined at similar rates across the two groups of
districts.
The resulting achievement gap between students in counties most and
least affected by the recession persisted for more than three years
following the 2009-10 school year.
“Our findings suggest that the first two years of differential
declines in school spending were enough to put those hardest hit
students at an academic disadvantage, even after spending levels began
to increase,” Shores said.
“The Great Recession’s effects varied significantly among U.S.
counties; yet the federal response, in the form of the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act of 2009, neglected this variation,” said
Steinberg, an associate professor of education policy at George Mason
University. “Our findings suggest that greater fiscal support should be
targeted to schools that not only serve the most vulnerable student
populations but that also are located in communities that are the most
vulnerable to the adverse consequences of an economic recession.”
The study also found that achievement decreased more for older
students than for younger students, a finding that surprised the
authors. Prior evidence had found that divestments in resources for
younger children tended to be more consequential than equivalent
divestments for older children.
“While our data do not speak to this, one potential explanation is
that teacher layoffs were concentrated in older grades,” Steinberg said.
“If true, parents with older children would rightfully be concerned
that schools’ responses to spending cuts were affecting those students
disproportionately. Improving the understanding of how districts
redistribute resources differently across schools and grades during
periods of districtwide spending declines in the wake of recessionary
events is an important line of future research.”
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