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The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA...

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The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014
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Page 1: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

The Local Control Funding Formula

in LAUSD

Exploring key questions with

Professor John Rogers, UCLA and

Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley

April 2, 2014

Page 2: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

A few key questions

• What is supposed to happen under LCFF?

• What is LCFF trying to achieve?

• What should local mean?

• What should equity mean?

Page 3: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

I. What is supposed to happen under LCFF?

Page 4: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.
Page 5: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.
Page 6: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.
Page 7: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.
Page 8: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

II. What is LCFF trying to achieve?

Page 9: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Getting Down to Facts, 2007

• California Spends too Little – The state needs to spend 40%-50% more than it does

now to meet its current goals.

• High Poverty, High EL Schools Need More – The amount of resources needed to reach state goals

differs across schools.

Page 10: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

“Districts with high concentrations of poor children or of English learners and districts in high-wage labor markets do not currently receive enough funds to reach the same API targets as other districts. This situation is fundamentally unfair.”

Page 11: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.
Page 12: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

“In designing a finance system responsive to concentration of disadvantage, we note there is some evidence that poverty concentration begins to have a negative impact on achievement when FRPL students comprise more than 50% of school enrollment.”

Page 13: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Concentration Effects• Addressing social welfare needs of families takes increasing amount of

educators’ time.

• High concentration poverty schools face higher student mobility rates that disrupt schedules.

• Problems experienced in neighborhoods surrounding high poverty schools create additional costs (eg. around heightened security)

• Families in high-concentration poverty schools are more likely to experience extreme economic stress (unemployment, very low income)

• High poverty schools have less ability to draw upon parental funding.

• English Learners do not have sufficient language models.

Page 14: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

III. What should local mean?

Page 15: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Amidst important competing demands for new LCFF dollars …

Page 16: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Should decisions be made (and control over $ be held)

at district, at local schools, or at both levels?

Page 17: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Emerging examples from other districts

Page 18: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

IV. What should equity mean?

Page 19: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Three Models for LAUSD

• SAMENESS – Divide total LCFF funds by LAUSD enrollment and distribute same $ for each student in the district.

• PRO RATA – Divide total LCFF funds by # of qualifying students and distribute $ only to qualifying students.

• FAIRNESS – Distribute supplemental $ equally to each qualifying student AND distribute concentration $ to schools with highest % of qualifying students.

Page 20: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

3 Possible $ Flows for LCFF

QualifyingStudents

Model A:Sameness

Model B:Pro Rata

Model C:Fairness

Sunrise 95% $900,000 $1,342,474 $1,462,500

Beethoven 60% $900,000 $847,878 543,750

Kenter Cyn 5% $900,000 70,657 37,500

Page 21: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.
Page 22: The Local Control Funding Formula in LAUSD Exploring key questions with Professor John Rogers, UCLA and Professor Bruce Fuller, UC Berkeley April 2, 2014.

Other Considerations

• DEFINITIONAL – Should concentration funds be based only on % unduplicated students or on neighborhood poverty as well?

• RHETORICAL – How can we talk about significance of concentrated poverty while acknowledging strengths within low-income communities?


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