Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Maryland's Blueprint Promotes Students As Commodities

 From Jan at The Easton Gazette:

There are many issues with the Blueprint for Maryland's Future education funding law, formerly called the Kirwan Plan. School districts struggle to fill some non-classroom positions while having to get rid of classroom teachers, in some cases hundreds of classroom teachers. They attempt to structure their budgets to support all the changes.

County governments struggle to fund education under the Blueprint while still providing other basic services and not increasing local taxes beyond the capacity of their constituents. The total bill statewide potentially will be 3.8 billion dollars, pre-inflation, by 2032. And that number may be low since it was determined years ago

Each pillar has a specific cost on its own:

Pillar One - Early Childhood - 1.1 Billion

High Quality Educators - 1.1 Billion

College and Career Readiness - 1.1 Billion

Resources for At-Risk Students - 0.5 Billion

What many citizens of Maryland don't know is that not only does each pillar have a specific price, but so does each student enrolled in the public school system based on certain "characteristics." Maryland officials try to spin this as giving counties the most money for those students who need the most assistance.

While that may be true in some progressive theory, the simple fact is that some students will be "worth" more than others. If a child is average or above and comes from a middle class or higher family, that student only brings the system the "Foundation" or base amount of $8310.00 (as of FY 2023)

The stark reality is that this "funding formula" is the commoditization of our children. Here are profiles of three hypothetical students and their associated "income" to the systems where they are enrolled. Notice how the base amount can double if student's have certain designations. (Read more.)


Share

No comments: