Public expenditures and the production of education

The relationship between public education expenditures and student outcomes remains an important concern for policy analysts, educational administrators, and the public at large. While previous studies have failed to identify a consistent relationship between public investments in education and posi...

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Main Authors: Stephen R. Neely, Jeffrey Diebold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2016-08-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2441
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spelling doaj-e127e81ea24a434c8f2b05427d0530d72020-11-25T03:51:02ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412016-08-0124010.14507/epaa.24.24411533Public expenditures and the production of educationStephen R. Neely0Jeffrey Diebold1University of South Florida School of Public AffairsNorth Carolina State UniversityThe relationship between public education expenditures and student outcomes remains an important concern for policy analysts, educational administrators, and the public at large. While previous studies have failed to identify a consistent relationship between public investments in education and positive student outcomes, most analyses have not accounted for the different educational goals associated with various instructional expenditure categories. This study builds on prior research by using Pennsylvania’s public school districts to test proposed improvements in model specification for the traditional education production function. Using longitudinal, fixed-effects models, a detailed disaggregation of instructional expenditures is undertaken in order to account for the likelihood that different instructional subcategories (i.e. regular programming, special education, and vocational instruction) influence student outcomes in varying ways. The results suggest that the impact of expenditures may be understated in previous studies based on a failure to account for these distinctions, particularly in the case of Mathematics education.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2441education production functionschool financeeducation policyeducation finance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen R. Neely
Jeffrey Diebold
spellingShingle Stephen R. Neely
Jeffrey Diebold
Public expenditures and the production of education
Education Policy Analysis Archives
education production function
school finance
education policy
education finance
author_facet Stephen R. Neely
Jeffrey Diebold
author_sort Stephen R. Neely
title Public expenditures and the production of education
title_short Public expenditures and the production of education
title_full Public expenditures and the production of education
title_fullStr Public expenditures and the production of education
title_full_unstemmed Public expenditures and the production of education
title_sort public expenditures and the production of education
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The relationship between public education expenditures and student outcomes remains an important concern for policy analysts, educational administrators, and the public at large. While previous studies have failed to identify a consistent relationship between public investments in education and positive student outcomes, most analyses have not accounted for the different educational goals associated with various instructional expenditure categories. This study builds on prior research by using Pennsylvania’s public school districts to test proposed improvements in model specification for the traditional education production function. Using longitudinal, fixed-effects models, a detailed disaggregation of instructional expenditures is undertaken in order to account for the likelihood that different instructional subcategories (i.e. regular programming, special education, and vocational instruction) influence student outcomes in varying ways. The results suggest that the impact of expenditures may be understated in previous studies based on a failure to account for these distinctions, particularly in the case of Mathematics education.
topic education production function
school finance
education policy
education finance
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2441
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenrneely publicexpendituresandtheproductionofeducation
AT jeffreydiebold publicexpendituresandtheproductionofeducation
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