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Murphy, Peter – Empire Center for Public Policy, 2019
School districts across New York are constrained from fully exploiting a potential source of revenue to help offset pressure on local taxes. The revenue source in question is commercial advertising--including signs, sponsorships and facility naming rights, especially for athletic facilities. Experience in other states suggests New York school…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Income, Taxes, Advertising
Universities UK, 2024
In the second of a series on graduate outcomes, Universities UK analysed a range of data sources looking at employment and earnings of graduates, to show the impact of graduate skills across the country, how patterns differ across regions and industries, and comparisons to non-graduates and wider employees. This includes use of official government…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Employment Opportunities, Salary Wage Differentials, Outcomes of Education
Universities UK, 2024
Despite evidence to the contrary, there is a continuing charge of 'poor quality courses' -- or that higher education provides little benefit to individuals -- some parts of the media and government. The Office for Students (OfS) acknowledges that 99% of students in England are on courses where employment outcomes satisfy requirements. There is a…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Higher Education, Risk, Educational Benefits
Center for Law and Social Policy, Inc. (CLASP), 2021
Food Stamp work requirements for college students date back to the 1960s and '70s when public perception fueled the belief that students from middle- and upper-income families, who should support them, were taking advantage of government. This was coupled with a belief that students had made themselves "voluntarily idle" by removing…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Two Year College Students, Federal Legislation, Federal Aid
Jessie Mandle; Alison Paxson; Lena O’Rourke; Shawna Dippman, Contributor; Jenny Millward, Contributor; Sasha Pudelski, Contributor; Phyllis Wolfram, Contributor; Elleka Yost, Contributor; Christine Cupaiuolo, Editor – AASA, The School Superintendent's Association, 2025
Medicaid is the fourth largest federal funding source for K-12 schools, supporting over $7.5 billion of school-based health services every year. If Congress cuts Medicaid, states -- and school districts -- will receive less funding. This will force states and local communities to increase taxes and reduce or eliminate various programs and…
Descriptors: Health Insurance, Public Policy, Retrenchment, Taxes
Eric A. Hanushek; Matthew Joyce-Wirtz – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
School finance court cases have proceeded one or more times in all but two states. Plaintiffs ask the courts to rule that the existing funding formula is unconstitutional under state constitutions, and the defendants call for continuation of the existing finance formula. By compiling and analyzing the universe of such cases, we can accurately…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Court Litigation, Funding Formulas, State Aid
Childs, Joshua; Taylor, Zachary – Journal of School Choice, 2022
As open enrollment public charter school districts have continued to grow in Texas, researchers and policymakers have continued to question how these public charter school districts spend public taxpayer dollars. Although extensive research has addressed how public charter school districts spend money to recruit teachers, complete capital…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Expenditures, Public Schools, Comparative Analysis
Madison Marino Doan; Benjamin Scafidi – Heritage Foundation, 2024
This brief explains why concerns over an impending "fiscal cliff" for public school districts as federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds near their expiration are misplaced. Due in part to federal pandemic aid, most state budgets are flush with cash, with record-high rainy-day funds, positioning them to absorb any…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Aid, Grants
Hodges, Jaret; Mun, Rachel U.; Jones Roberson, Javetta; Flemister, Charles – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2021
Policy changes are an ever-present part of education. In 2019, legislators upended over two decades of gifted education policy in Texas with the removal of direct funding for gifted education. In its wake, the removal of funding shook educator morale and created uncertainty as to the future of gifted education in the state. In this article, we…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Educational Change, Gifted Education, Educational Policy
Ward, James Dean; Weintraut, Benjamin; Pisacreta, Elizabeth Davidson – ITHAKA S+R, 2021
Increased college-going and attainment comes with a host of benefits for individuals and society. A college credential is associated with increased civic engagement, volunteering, happiness, life satisfaction, and better health and wellness, as well as lower incarceration rates and reliance on social services. In this paper, the authors examine…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Educational Attainment, Two Year Colleges, Colleges
Butcher, Jonathan – Heritage Foundation, 2019
In 2019, Congress is considering a proposal to give children from military families more quality learning options through education savings accounts. Washington does not need new taxpayer spending to create these learning options for children in military families. Congress should repurpose existing spending from duplicative and ineffective…
Descriptors: Taxes, Military Personnel, Money Management, Federal Government
Kim Key; Emer Mulligan – Advances in Accounting Education: Teaching and Curriculum Innovations, 2019
This chapter explains a group assignment implemented for the United States and Irish students where the goal was to reflect real-world teams and communication addressing a global tax ethics issue. Students first completed a case on a corporation's tax avoidance strategy and submitted individual write-ups. Then they were assigned to groups with the…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Group Activities, Assignments, Foreign Countries
Jacksonville Public Education Fund, 2020
In November 2020, Duval County voters will decide on a half-penny sales tax to fund upgrades to public school buildings across the district. Revenue will be spent to improve public school buildings for traditional and charter schools. Following the 2020 passage of House Bill 7097, revenue from the sales tax will be allocated to charter school…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, School Taxes, Educational Facilities Improvement, School Buildings
Scafidi, Benjamin – EdChoice, 2023
The Indiana Choice Scholarship Program (ICSP), which began in fall 2011, is a state taxpayer-funded financial aid program that helps low and lower-middle income Hoosiers to send their children to the private K-12 school of their choice. This voucher program has been extremely popular among families, as the number of students receiving scholarships…
Descriptors: School Choice, Scholarships, Taxes, Student Financial Aid
Laderman, Sophia; Kunkle, Kelsey – State Higher Education Executive Officers, 2022
The State Higher Education Finance (SHEF) report is produced annually by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association (SHEEO) to broaden understanding of the context and consequences of public policy decisions in each state that contribute to public higher education funding levels and funding distributions across states and…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, Higher Education, Public Policy