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School Budget Cuts: Educators Fear Deepest Cuts Are Ahead

KIMBERLY HEFLING   10/24/11 12:24 PM ET  AP

LANCASTER, Pa. — Educators are bracing for a tough reality: As difficult as budget cuts have been on schools, more tough times are likely ahead.

Even in a best-case scenario that assumes strong economic growth next year, it won't be until 2013 or later when districts see budget levels return to pre-recession levels, said Daniel Domenech, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators in Arlington, Va. That means more cuts and layoffs are likely ahead.

"The worst part is that it's not over," Domenech said.

Already, an estimated 294,000 jobs in the education sector have been lost since 2008, including those in higher education.

The cuts are felt from Keller, Texas, where the district moved to a pay-for-ride transportation system rather than cut busing altogether, to Georgia, where 20 days were shaved off the calendar for pre-kindergarten classes. In California, a survey found that nearly half of all districts last year cut or reduced art, drama and music programs. Nationally, 120 districts – primarily in rural areas – have gone to a four-day school week to save on transportation and utility costs, according to the National Conference of State Legislators. Others are implementing fees to play sports, cutting field trips and ending after-school programs.

Districts have little choice but to put off buying textbooks and technology and training teachers, said Rob Monson, a principal in Parkston, S.D., who is president of the National Association of Elementary School Principals.

On a recent day at Abraham Lincoln Middle School in Lancaster, teenage girls in ponytails and boys in long athletic shorts dashed across the gym, pausing their game of indoor tennis to motion "Y-M-C-A" with their arms as the Village People's song blares from the loudspeaker. It's a scene happening less frequently these days. Budget cuts and teacher layoffs have forced the school to cut some P.E. classes, reduce library hours and eliminate small literacy classes for struggling readers and Spanish for sixth- and seventh-graders.

Principal Josh Keene says he's worried – not just about offering electives next year, but whether class sizes in core subjects will jump from around 25 to 35 or 40. His district received $6 million less from the state this year, which meant six staff positions in his school were cut. Even if state funding remains the same next year, the district expects to have from $5 million to $7 million less because of increased pension obligations and other expenses.

"I'm scared to death. As we continue to look at fewer and fewer non-classroom positions that are there, at some point it's going to impact core classroom positions and that's a very, very scary thing," said Keene.

Recognizing the reality districts face, President Barack Obama included $30 billion in his $447 billion jobs creation package to save teachers' jobs. The Senate rejected the jobs package as well as a separate measure focused on saving the jobs of teachers and emergency responders. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has said the plan resembles "bailouts" that haven't proven to work and only perpetuate economic problems.

Not everyone sees all doom and gloom in schools' budget woes. Some say many districts haven't wisely spent tax dollars or didn't adequately prepare for the end of the $100 billion in federal stimulus dollars for schools. And that while the number of students per teacher in America dropped from 22.3 in 1970 to 15.3 in 2008, according to the National Center For Education Statistics, they say the reduction hasn't made a noticeable difference.

Karen Hawley Miles, executive director of Education Resource Strategies, a nonprofit based in Watertown, Mass., that helps urban districts develop ways to more effectively use resources, encourages districts to use this time to make changes they have been reluctant to do. They include strategically raising class sizes to refocus on teacher quality and changing teacher compensation to be more tied to performance, she said.

"In tough days when it's incredibly urgent, sometimes these conversations can take place in a different frame. We see districts really thinking about how they can really do things differently and really focus in on their priorities," she said.

In Pennsylvania, at the urging of Gov. Tom Corbett, the legislature slashed public-education spending by roughly $900 million, or more than 10 percent, to avoid a state budget deficit for the year that began July 1 without raising taxes.

Seemingly overnight, thousands of education jobs in the state were lost. A survey of school districts by the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators and the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials found that leading into this school year, 44 percent reduced elective course offerings and 70 percent increased class sizes. More than 30 districts said they either reduced or eliminated full-day kindergarten or pre-K programs.

The cuts hit many of the poorer districts harder because they are more reliant on state dollars.

In York, Pa., about a 30-minute drive from Lancaster, full-day kindergarten was saved when administrators and teachers agreed to a pay freeze. But art, music, and physical education teachers in elementary schools were eliminated, forcing classroom teachers to incorporate the electives in their classroom teaching, said Kim Schwarz, 45, a teacher and president of the York City Education Association. High school class sizes now are in the upper 30s, she said.

Schwarz said the changes are tough for kids who really shine in art or physical education and it's been hard on the morale of teachers.

"The district has scrimped and pulled and did everything they could to find additional funds ... and I think the teachers are doing an absolutely phenomenal job of educating the students and giving them the attention that they need given the circumstances, which just adds more to the stress and the level of exhaustion that we're all feeling," Schwarz said.

At Keene's school in Lancaster, about 60 percent of the students are Latino and 80 percent are considered low income. Many are sent home on Friday nights with donated groceries and recipes for cooking them. Among the staff members cut was someone who did home visits to follow up on children who weren't attending class. The school was able to continue an after-school program only after a non-profit agreed to run it.

Keene said he wants his children to have a full life, and he thinks music, art and physical education are part of that. He just hopes those classes will be offered in the future.

"You know the old adage sometimes you need to work smarter, not harder? We're frankly at a point where we just need to work harder and more hours, and with the reductions in staff, that's what needs to happen because otherwise, kids are going to suffer, and that's unacceptable," Keene said.

_____

Online:

American Association of School Administrators: http://www.aasa.org

Compass Mark: http://www.compassmark.org/

Education Resource Strategies: http://erstrategies.org/

National Association of Elementary School Principals: http://www.naesp.org/

Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators: http://www.pasa-net.org/

York City Education Association: http://ycea.psealocals.org/

School District of Lancaster: http://www.lancaster.k12.pa.us/

_____

Kimberly Hefling can be followed at http://twitter.com/khefling

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LANCASTER, Pa. — Educators are bracing for a tough reality: As difficult as budget cuts have been on schools, more tough times are likely ahead. Even in a best-case scenario that assumes strong...
LANCASTER, Pa. — Educators are bracing for a tough reality: As difficult as budget cuts have been on schools, more tough times are likely ahead. Even in a best-case scenario that assumes strong...
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07:22 PM on 11/07/2011
There is something really wrong when one of our most pertinent elements of society suffers from cutbacks when rudimentary programs remain unaffected. We vote these people in office and once they get in they don't fight for what's important..they just go with the flow.
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11:12 PM on 11/02/2011
ALL of u NEED TO GO to ur SCHOOL BOARD MEETING to know what u are talking about.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
10:24 PM on 10/25/2011
Why don't we listen to people we all know are smart?


(6) Albert Einstein, speech on education and socialism in 1930.

This crippling of individuals I consider the worst evil of capitalism. Our whole educational system suffers from this evil. An exaggerated competitive attitude is inculcated into the student, who is trained to worship acquisitive success as a preparation for his future career.
I am convinced there is only one way to eliminate these grave evils, namely through the establishment of a socialist economy, accompanied by an educational system which would be oriented toward social goals.
In such an economy, the means of production are owned by society itself and are utilized in a planned fashion. A planned economy, which adjusts production to the needs of the community, would distribute the work to be done among all those able to work and would guarantee a livelihood to every man, woman, and child. The education of the individual, in addition to promoting his own innate abilities, would attempt to develop in him a sense of responsibility for his fellowmen in place of the glorification of power and success in our present society. Nevertheless, it is necessary to remember that a planned economy is not yet socialism.
09:01 PM on 10/30/2011
This is coming from a Jew...
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Dosadi
Political agnostic
05:38 PM on 10/31/2011
So? Good ideas are just that. It does not matter who came up with them.
12:39 PM on 10/25/2011
America's doing just fine, whingers.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:08 PM on 10/25/2011
Tell that to the unemployed teachers.
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roaddawg31
10:29 PM on 10/25/2011
Damn right. There are SO MANY unemployed teachers out there, who current (tenured) teachers seem to think are unworthy.
12:51 PM on 10/26/2011
They shoulda tried harder in school - then they wouldn't have had to become teachers.
12:35 PM on 10/25/2011
We are spending too much. Here is a two minute synopsis of the problem:

http://youtu.be/NDr7-_5Ulz0
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Janna03
01:27 PM on 10/25/2011
The school district where I live has an estimated operating budget of $157 million dollars for 2011/2012 and that's after millions in cuts to their budget since 2008. They maintain 34 school buildings and employ 3,262 people, 1,812 of them are teachers. Schools need more than teachers to run, and keeping schools open is costly. That is why many schools are shortening their school week or the length of their school day. Does our money need to be spent as wisely as possible sure it does. Schools cut costs by not replacing people who retire or leave and not hiring new staff but instead making existing staff take on more responsibilities. This has been going on for a while where I live. We also have buildings being closed and less classes being offered. Could districts do more to cut costs, they will probably have no choice.
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01:35 AM on 10/26/2011
Then you wouldn't mind getting all the competitive sports programs out because of their high cost and drag on academic performance.
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Janna03
08:26 AM on 10/26/2011
Actually, I wouldn't mind cutting sports programs at all in favor of academic programs but I do think, if that's the case, P.E. should be kept because being overweight has become a problem for many kids today.Many schools have reached the point of having to drop art, music and P.E. as a way to cut costs.
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Janna03
11:36 AM on 10/25/2011
The cost of a private school education typically runs between $6000-$16,000 per year depending on where the school is located, services provided and what kind of tuition assistance might be available. For the sake of argument, let's say we move away from a public school system and to private schools using vouchers. That means private schools will begin attempting to educate all students. Currently private schools can set their own criteria for which students they will accept. They don't have to accept students with behavior problems, emotional problems, learning disabilities, hearing problems, visual problems, basically any child with special needs who are much more expensive to educate by the way. Say that a private school does accept some special needs children but decides to set a quota on how many they will accept. Then the parents will need to find another school that will accept their child which hopefully is not too far away because transportation is an issue for them. You see where this is going when private schools begin to deal with educating all children, not just a chosen few, they begin to look more like public schools with the complex challenges public schools face.
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Janna03
11:45 AM on 10/25/2011
I would also add many people send their children to private schools to nurture specific talents or to receive instruction in certain beliefs but once all children are taken in to private schools, you will have more diversity with not all parents agreeing with each others beliefs. Enter the lawsuits, which you guessed it, your school district pays to defend. Slowly but surely private schools transforming in to public schools.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:12 PM on 10/25/2011
I agree to a certain degree. A multicultural (socio economic) mix can be good for society so tha all learn to get along. However, I don't seee a Catholic parochial school adopting Babtist practices.
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electrosef
Blue-green-purple Reality exposure
02:21 PM on 10/25/2011
Thanks for your informative exposition comparing private schools with public; well said. Sadly, eroding public value in American public education, along with a culture of greed among the wealthy along with worshipers of the greedy among poorer citizens, is eroding the fabric of our nation as a whole... there's just no way around it. Education is a bedrock for what has made the USA a superlative example of civilization, and now, for the love of money, we're letting it slip away. Superior education will always be a public trust.
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chelliza
09:33 AM on 10/25/2011
I see no comments about parenting. Schools have to do more and more to make up for lack of parenting. In many cases parents just don't participate but in others the homelife they provide is horendous
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Dosadi
Political agnostic
10:28 PM on 10/25/2011
Because that is the crux of the problem. I was sent to school to learn, not make friends or have a good experience, but to learn. If I acted up in class my father would ask the teacher why he/she didn't smack me, then he would when we got home.  If a neighbor caught me or any other neighborhood kid acting up in the neighborhood they would take us home where our parents would discipline us. We would be disciplined for causing this hard working neighbor to take time from his busy life to deal with us. Then we would receive punishment that fit the crime. I was never beaten but I did get spankings.  My kids were raised the same way. neither myself or my children have criminal records and I give my parents full credit for the discipline they dished out when necessary.
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roaddawg31
10:32 PM on 10/25/2011
I grew up in the same kind of situation. My parents had faith in whoever was in the classroom. Currently though, it's a case of chicken or egg. The fact is that parents no longer have faith in the person in the classroom... maybe because they aren't as respectable? And teachers think that parents are lacking in more ways than one, and they are the source of the problem.
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Teacher Trish
The Enlightenment was a good idea.
03:21 AM on 10/25/2011
Someone once told me "If the oil companies ran our schools you would see test scores go way up and at a lower price." My response was "So why don't they?" Education is not a for-profit enterprise. If one could get rich opening up a chain of for-profit schools they would be as ubiquitous as Starbucks. But they aren't are they? If you believe that public schools provide a service for the greater good then you probably should rally to continue their funding albeit with fair criticism of their performance. But, if you believe the free market will somehow "cure" the alleged ails of education the free market would have already addressed the problem. But they aren't are they?
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AERO
05:12 AM on 10/25/2011
HA HA! That's a great laugh. Just look at how cheap tuition is at all the private universities. Also consider how outsourcing and privatization has brought down costs in all other areas of government (think Haliburton, KBR, etc.)

Yeah, right. If schooling were so great as a profitable entity, that domain would be flooded with corporations setting up schools. Guess they'll have to stick with the prison industry.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:15 PM on 10/25/2011
There are many for-profit enteties behind the scenes; consider book sales and now computers and software - that is a huge market.
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Teacher Trish
The Enlightenment was a good idea.
06:46 PM on 10/25/2011
Those aren't schools. No one is opening up a chain of schools in order to make big bucks. Many companies sell products for schools to buy - because schools spend money on materials. No one is thinking "I would love to be rich, I think I will open a school."

It just is not happening.
original joanie
liberal teacher
12:06 AM on 10/28/2011
You are right about marketing. Education in America is for-profit and the text books and curriculum are largely determined by profit. Other countries count education as a necessary "utility" in a way and they don't make profits on it. Paperback well-written and illustrated texts at appropriate levels. National standards. And hopefully few if any revisionist histories. Look at our culture: it is becoming "everything-for-profit" and being sold as if that is the most efficient and most effective. No, it is just the one that gives the highest profit margin at the expense of teachers and children's learning.
12:42 AM on 10/25/2011
For years, it has been all about "support our troops" but when has it ever been about supporting education? Republicans say education is a waste of money but that is STUPID because the government has spent more money and time on National Security than it has on Education. Yes, National Security is important but if we have invested SO MUCH in it and we haven’t received anything good from it, then why keep supporting it? Instead of cutting off the Education Department, why not cut down on the National Defense and give Education a CHANCE!
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fozzi58
I want my country back
09:37 AM on 10/25/2011
Dumb children make great soldiers.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:20 PM on 10/25/2011
Bingo!
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:20 PM on 10/25/2011
That would make "too much sense."
I have not been able to scrutinize the No Child Left Behind Act, under Bush; but buried in a pile of gobledygook on could find a clause that mandated that schools provide name, address, phone number, etc. of students to military recruiters (cannon fodder) - In the clause was an "opt out," for parents. Howerver, parents were not made a aware of the opt out.
12:01 AM on 10/25/2011
I can't get over this statistic: "And that while the number of students per teacher in America dropped from 22.3 in 1970 to 15.3 in 2008, according to the National Center For Education Statistics, they say the reduction hasn't made a noticeable difference."

I teach 100 to 120 students per year in classes of 25 to 32. Even in the private schools where I have taught, the student load was as low as 70 or 80 kids, 18 to 23 per class. Elementary school "self-contained" classrooms may have one teacher per 25 or 30 kids, but departmentalized teachers in middle or high school will most certainly have more than 15 students per day!
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Teacher Trish
The Enlightenment was a good idea.
02:41 AM on 10/25/2011
This is because school districts play with the student/teacher ratio in order to manipulate contract negotiations with the unions. I was told that even though I had 35 kids in each of my classes I wasn't really teaching at a 35 to 1 student/teacher ratio. They average in anytime prep time, duty time, homeroom time that you have and average that into your student/teacher ratio. If you have an adult aide in your room for special ed kids then that reduces the ratio down even more. These numbers have nothing to do with how many kids are sitting in front of you. The numbers have to do with the politics of funding education. I have taught in a school in which I had 6 classes and 41 kids in each class. I would have gladly traded places with you with only 25 kids!
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Despyria
Promoting positive change and innovation
03:00 AM on 10/25/2011
Elementary schools aren't even doing self contained any more... preschool age and Kindergarten do but 1st-5th doesn't really do it anymore... at least not here. And yeah, I haven't seen a class size that small in the last 6 years.
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pappyvet
My God, it's full of stars!
10:11 PM on 10/24/2011
This is deplorable ! What do they want ? How much more do they have to have ?
What is the end product ? A human that has no depth and only one direction,thats what they want.
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wayne the pain
09:57 PM on 10/24/2011
The Republican dream is about to come true. Kill public schools that they have to pay for. Why should we pay to education of all those kids that they just want to work for their corporations. They don't want them to be well educated and critical thinkers! They want them just educated enough to do their jobs and accept their status of nonunion workers. If people are educated they will aspire to more than a minimum wage job with no benefits. Good schools should be reserved for the children of the rich. We don't need good public schools to educate all those poor and minority kids! They might get the idea that they are equal and want to share the wealth. We can't have that so kill the public schools!
04:10 AM on 10/25/2011
Those so called poor and minority kids are a leech in our system.

If all schools were made only for the rich we would so be better off.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:22 PM on 10/25/2011
If you din't have the leeches, you would'nt have the rich.
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JudgeMoonbox
09:49 PM on 10/24/2011
We need to improve our education system substantially if we're to compete in the Global marketplace. Most of the "doable" solutions for improving education--likely 9 out of 10--require money.

Do the Tea Partisans really think that keeping taxes low for millionaires is more important than not falling behind China?
08:54 PM on 10/24/2011
..."the number of students per teacher in America dropped from 22.3 in 1970 to 15.3 in 2008, according to the National Center For Education Statistics, they say the reduction hasn't made a noticeable difference."

California can pay for teachers if they abolish Redevelopment Agencies(RDA's), San Bernardino was declared 2nd poorest city in Nation after Detroit, by a Cal-Lutheran Study.

Yet 30 % of property tax base is diverted to such boondoogles as building restuarants, movie theaters, ballparks and $200 million for a San Bernardino International Airport.

Watching the Rev. Al Sharpton Show today, I realized how out of touch with local government the "DC Arena" is.

The article questions, why after $100 Billion in federal stimulus was spent on schools, why districts are not ready to cope with the loss of federal subsidy.

I ask why the second poorest city in the Nation just spent $6.3 million to build an In & Out Burger? Focus the lens.
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Wesley Holbrook
Retired-Marine
08:47 PM on 10/24/2011
The "dumbing-down" of America began in large part under Bush/Cheney Inc. Their "Leave No Child Left Behind," was purposely, greatly underfunded. When schools nowadays tutor students in passing minimal skills,minimal skills equals minimum wage jobs(they don't have time to teach the core subjects anymore). They have to take remedial classes in them in College. Add to that the drug culture environment and education becomes a moot point. So much for America's so-called, "War on Drugs." The peoples' of the Orient have surpassed us in Math and Science. They have humility, patience, integrity, discipline, and self respect. Too many Americans are into self gratification, narcissism, drug abuse and don't respect anyone or anything...no small wonder our Country in which people around the world use to admire and respect, shake their heads at us now.