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More State Money, Smaller Classes Have Failed to Improve Massachusetts Schools; Wasting $2 Billion per Year A new study by the Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University shows that new spending undertaken by the state under the aegis of the 1993 Education Reform Act has not improved the performance of public schools. Commenting on the study, David G. Tuerck, Executive Director of the Institute, said that the legislature and the judges simply don’t understand the problem and are wasting $2 billion a year. “The state legislature and now the state judiciary have been spending more and more on education with a blind eye to ineffectiveness of new spending on school performance,” he said. “This study, like our earlier studies, shows that more money and smaller classes are not helping kids learn. Until the state and the courts absorb this lesson, education reform will amount to nothing more than a $2-billion-a-year annual drain on the state budget.” Under the Act, the state has increased education spending by $2 billion a year, permitting schools to raise teachers’ salaries and reduce class size. Yet more money, higher salaries and smaller classes have not improved performance on the state’s MCAS tests (Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System). The finding comes at a time when the state is under a new court order to increase funding of poorer districts.
Factors that do explain performance are property values of homes, participation in the free/reduced price lunch program (a measure of poverty) and past test scores. Authors Sanjiv Jaggia and Vidisha Vachharajani wrote the study, “Money for Nothing: The Failures of Education Reform in Massachusetts,” for the Institute, where both serve as economists. Jaggia is also Professor of Economics at Suffolk University. The findings were obtained by applying the Beacon Hill Institute Education Assessment Model (BEAM) to 2003 MCAS scores and to a number of policy and socioeconomic variables that explain performance on the MCAS. BEAM, which was developed by Jaggia, is a “value-added” model that focuses on how changes in explanatory variables affect contemporaneous test scores at the school district level. The model was estimated for English and Mathematics tests administered for grades 4, 8 and 10.
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