Test Scores Are Plummeting Despite California Spending Wildly on Education
State officials seem to delight in how much money they "invest" in different priorities, without worrying too much about outcomes.

I've recently been investing in some long-deferred maintenance at my home and it should be no surprise to anyone that I've sought to receive as much quality work done for as little money as possible. When people spend their own hard-earned money on such projects, they measure success by results, such as a sparkling new kitchen. They don't brag about how much they spent, but how much they got in return.
By contrast, state officials seem to delight in how much money they "invest" in different priorities, without worrying too much about outcomes. Sure, they sometimes pay lip service to results—but they don't care enough about them to actually change the way they provide public services. (They're not about to annoy the public-sector unions, which represent the people paid to provide those services.)
I'm not the only one to have noticed. State Sen. Steve Glazer (D–Orinda), in a July column about the $310-billion budget, complained that "we've already spent billions of dollars on the same problems—with very little to show for it." He called on his fellow Democrats to ensure that the spending "actually improving the lives of the people we say we are committed to helping." What a novel idea.
This dynamic is most pronounced in public education, which consumes more than 40 percent of the state's general fund budget—plus local bond measures. Although lawmakers slowed education funding increases to close a $32-billion budget deficit this year, as of last year—during an unprecedented $97.5-billion budget surplus—they lavished public schools with money.
"The revised budget directs a total of $128.3 billion to education, lifts up the most critical needs including historic funding for school mental health, recruitment and retention of teachers," boasted Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, following last year's budget deal.
The state spends nearly $24,000 per student a year (including funding from all sources, including the feds). Consider the educational opportunities we would have if parents could spend that much money on private schools, which would compete for tuition. Each class of 25 students would have a budget of $600,000. The governor likes to blather about a re-imagined school system, but in a competitive system we wouldn't have to just imagine it.
By contrast, let's look at what we've actually accomplished after a decade of steadily increasing expenditures. The Public Policy Institute of California reported last year that "pandemic disruptions reversed nearly six years of academic progress." It found only 35 percent of low-income students met the state's English-language standards and only 21 percent met California's math proficiency standards. These are horrifying numbers.
Here's some other news: EdSource reports that nearly a third of the state's public school students are chronically absent. The Independent Institute reports that fewer than half of the state's students are functioning at their grade level and that 70 percent of incarcerated Californians lack even a high school diploma. There might be a connection between those dismal statistics.
But no matter how much the state "invests" in education, it's never enough for the public school establishment. The California Teachers' Association complains that California's per-student school funding lags behind other states—and it, of course, blames 1978's tax-limiting Proposition 13 for the problem and bemoans "our faulty tax structure, which is currently benefiting the wealthiest corporations over Californians themselves."
Does anyone really believe that if California, the highest-taxed state, dramatically increases its property taxes (through a "split roll" that denies Prop. 13 protections to corporations or other erosions of the 1978 tax measure) that California's education system will suddenly become America's finest? Name one instance where throwing more money at an encrusted, union-controlled bureaucracy has done anything other than fund the same old, same old.
Another underreported education story: school budgets are soaring even as enrollments are on a downward trajectory. The state's population is falling and also is aging. Immigration is slowing. Birth rates are declining. As noted above, a lot of students are dropping out or disappearing. Two studies last month from PACE, a research center led by faculty directors at top California universities, found that enrollments have fallen 6 percent since 2007 and are expected to fall more steeply. The impact, it notes, falls hardest on poor and minority students.
"There are many ways districts can reduce programs or services, but they can only operate severely under-enrolled schools for so long before the situation becomes financially untenable," PACE explains, noting the many fixed costs in maintaining a traditional school. The declining schools are losing funding because the state bases its spending on average daily attendance rates.
Not to be overly harsh, but who cares about the plight of school systems trying to fund their overly costly infrastructure of buildings and employees? But once again, California's educational establishment is all about spending more money—rather than getting the best educational outcomes for students. Until that attitude improves, don't expect test scores to improve, either.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
They aren't spending wildly on education. They are spending wildly on teachers, administrators, and teachers unions.
Yeah. While it fits under the budget heading of "Education", the spending has little to actually do with education.
Do not forget the graft associated with administrators and teacher's unions.
10% for the big guy seems to be the current rate.
That is over the union donation to democrat campaigns, of course.
This. Hell, I was getting in arguments with people about this very topic twenty years ago, when the local schools were putting up advertising yard signs, "Vote for Bond C!" and I was trying to get people not to.
"They'd have enough money if they fired the dead weight at the top!"
"Fuck you, I'll always vote for more money for schools, no matter how terrible of a job they're doing!" (Close to an exact quote.)
I'm entirely certain that tendency hasn't gotten any better since then.
I've said this before, but my private high school, which educated students for about 1/3 the price of our local public school district, and blew them away in test scores and college acceptance and just about every other metric - They had maybe 6 employees total who did not teach classes. Principal, couple secretaries, lunch ladies, janitor. That's it. That's all the overhead.
Oh, and it didn't hurt that the teachers had degrees in their fields (like they do in college) instead of in Education. And weren't unionized.
And probably not DEI-certified.
Our Spanish teacher was a white lady from Indiana, if that gives you any idea.
Students do better at private schools, in part, because the parents are more involved, because they are paying tuition. Educational outcomes would greatly improve across the board, and funds wasted on non-educational outcomes would be reduced, if we closed all the public schools tomorrow, laid off all the employees, and sold the buildings to the highest bidder. Then let private and religious schools compete to recruit students and their tuition dollars.
Most people are horrified by such a suggestion — what about low income kids? But there are so many people horrified they could easily set up charity to provide scholarships to low income families. Or worst case, pass a bill for taxpayer-funded vouchers to parents to choose the school.
Then let private and religious schools compete to recruit students and their tuition dollars.
And stop making it mandatory. In my district the worst students are the ones whose parents see the district as the Enemy and really don't care that their kid keeps getting expelled for lighting things on fire.
According to the article above nearly a third are already chronically absent from FREE public schools. Could it get any worse?
"It will be a great day when schools have all the money they need and the Air Force has to hold a bake sale to buy a new bomber."
At least I haven't seen that idiotic bumper sticker for a while, though that still sums up popular belief where schools are concerned. Somehow, no matter how much is spent vs. how poorly students perform, they just need more...[The states that spent the most per pupil in FY 2021 were New York ($26,571); the District of Columbia ($24,535), which comprises a single urban district; Vermont ($23,586); Connecticut ($22,769); and New Jersey ($22,160).May 18, 2023]
Hey man, I'm sure DC graduates are just amazing scholars.
Though, I do wish the MIC would at least give us more value for the money we spend. I'm not even saying we should spend less, although we undoubtedly should, just that it would be nice to spend money on various programs and get equipment that actually fucking works out if it, delivered vaguely on time, and at somewhat less usurious rates so that we get more if them for the money.
Ok, soapbox moment over.
Government = waste and corruption. It's the nature of the beast.
Baltimore spends $21,000/student and the results are the worst outcomes that eclipse every other school district.
“Fuck you, I’ll always vote for more money for schools, no matter how terrible of a job they’re doing!”
Which tells you right away this person has not the slightest clue what they're talking about.
The bonds do not, and can not cover operating expenses. If your district is asking for a bond it's for construction. Not one red cent of that money is going to go to educating anybody other than the kids of the consultants who get hired to manage the construction (who will go to private schools).
When you have the Teacher's Unions sponsoring candidates for the School Board the whole negotiation bit is rigged. I had a guy who was running for a spot on the School Board tell me that since I didn't have a child in the school system the I should just shut up about the schools. I told him that as soon as they stop taking my Property Taxes and 2% of my paycheck, I would shut up. He didn't get elected.
They are spending wildly on teachers, administrators, and teachers unions.
Don't forget construction! We need new, highly-designed, high-tech, well-finished, union-construction facilities for those teachers and administrators to not do their jobs in.
Well, I don't complain about that because I work in the Architecture / Design / Construction industry.
I do, too, and yeah - my income has been paid by bond money more years than I care to think about.
As in the past, States said create tests but universities may not teach what’s on the test!
Math is racist, science is racist...teachers only need a degree in education focsed on gender studies, promotion of gay sexual preferences, and identifiying and convincing youngsters they are really the opposite sex and to be sexually mutilated. Oh and normalization of "minor attractive persons." And a good dose of DIE indoctrination. Come on Steve..get with the program..school isn't about learning math or reading...what do you think its the 1980s?
asd
The Independent Institute reports that fewer than half of the state's students are functioning at their grade level and that 70 percent of incarcerated Californians lack even a high school diploma. There might be a connection between those dismal statistics.
We need to hand out diplomas to every person upon reaching the age of twelve. This will reduce our incarceration rate by up to 70%!
Yeah, the correlation is that "communities" of demographics that elevate "dat thug lyfe" over high-trust functioning societies and blame whypipo for anything that doesn't go their way tend to have lower scholastic attainment and end up in jail more often.
Why do you think attaining victim status is so desirable? If you are a hapless victim of "systemic" and historical oppression, you don't have to do a damned thing to improve your situation, just blame somebody else and insist that THEY do something about it.
That's literally the answer. Seriously.
Oregon has just done that very thing, by removing all achievement standards for HS diplomas. Next step: Issue the diploma with the birth certificate.
“It found only 35 percent of low-income students met the state’s English-language standards and only 21 percent met California’s math proficiency standards. These are horrifying numbers.”
I have it on good authority that “English language standards” and “math proficiency” equals white supremacy [from the SF Board of Education, no less].
https://reason.com/2021/02/08/san-francisco-school-board-renaming-racism-merit/
Yup. Just like with crime rates, we can reduce all sorts of societal failures by eliminating standards and laws.
"OMG, guys, I just had a true genius moment. If we change the law so that killing people isn't illegal, our murder rate drops to zero, instantly!"
I suppose it could then be open season on woke morons and other undesirables. Like natural selection, but with some oomf to it.
There would be some compensating upsides to such a policy...
Especially in "gun-free" zones.
You are, however, rather naively assuming consistent, non-hypocritical application of the law. Which is something the wokies are tirelessly seeking to eliminate as an expectation or a practice.
You start taking out "woke morons and other undesirables" and they'd find a crime somewhere. And be much more diligent in prosecuting it than they are now for anything.
Shoplifting is way down in SF. Officially.
Are there any places left to steal from?
The suburbs! Which, I am pretty sure, are chock-full of the kind of well-meaning, virtue-signaling, "I can't vote for a...a...Bible Thumper!" kinds of people who think this is in no way their fault.
Little more commute for the thugs and I'm sure the woke Californian suburbanites will apologize for that as they are being car-jacked, assaulted and having their stores emptied.
I knew someone who taught at Thousand Oaks school district, elementary grades. The last year she taught nearly every student knew little to no English. She retired .
Who cares how well the students are doing as long as those students are the right race, sex, gender, socio-economic status, political affiliation, national origin, or speak the right languages?
I mean, what is education for if not to cater to kids' identities?
Grades are totally racist anyway.
Unless the grades are determined by anti-racist equity experts.
The kids would do really well, if the testing was all about how many mommies Heather has, or how many genders there are.
Heather? You mean Shanequa.
There, FTFY
Everyone [with the correct creds, at least] gets a pass. Even if it means graduating into a life of crime.
Cities are hopeless shit holes; meanwhile they keep electing more Democrats; that way we can all eventually be equal by living in one big shit hole, except of course for those "rich men North of Richmond;" the ones the Rev thinks we should be listening to and taking orders from.
Right, but the Rev enjoys being a donkey show performer, so I think anything he says should probably be taken as off-base from what anyone even vaguely sane would want.
They are our "betters," you know.
And yes, he is either an idiot or a shill, though those things certainly are not mutually exclusive.
The only thing Artie is anyone's better in is hiding donkey cock in his colon.
Rev is a racist and conservative-baiter. More money to education REDUCES correspondingly the outputs. Fully documented years ago by Thomas Sowell.
Having left California, I experience schadenfreude, not horror. These people voted for it, and they should suffer the consequences of their choices to the fullest extent.
Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.
My daughter has been working as a travelling medical professional in California over the past year. Quickly learned to avoid urban areas and corridors for the horde of wondering vagrants that frequent the highways and byways of that State. She runs into a variety of political attitudes, but cannot comprehend the mentality of those who keep voting for dystopia. It’s as though they read things like the NYT and WAPO and listen to MSM and actually believe what they are told. Can’t seem to get enough taxes [for others to pay] and regulations [for others to obey].
People keep voting for it because, individually, it’s rational: the vast majority of Californians are government-dependent in some way, whether it is tech workers, tech billionaires, drug addicts, state employees, welfare recipients and single mothers, homeless, healthcare workers, lawyers and legal staff, green energy company employees, union workers, etc.
In addition, most of them have never been outside the progressive enclaves they live in; they really do believe the propaganda that most of the country is full of violence and racism, not realizing that they are actually living in a violent, racist sh*thole.
Don't forget, the homeless and even drug addicts get to vote. Those on welfare especially get to vote two or three times.
Even the dead vote.
Yes, and that is why Democrats like to create more homeless, more drug addicts, more government workers, and more welfare recipients.
She runs into a variety of political attitudes, but cannot comprehend the mentality of those who keep voting for dystopia.
Our electoral system is completely broken is why. Most everyone recognizes that our legislators are on the insane-to-moron spectrum but our "only the top two from the primary in the general" approach to elections means you get a choice between the Party-selected Dem and some even more whacko flake who you wouldn't so much as let mow your lawn.
At the same time, the Republicans seem to have completely given up on the state. They ran that recall campaign against Newsom and then couldn't even be bothered to endorse anyone when the actual election came around. In the last Senate campaign the Republican nominees were all just random folks running on their own as essentially independents with no signs of any support from the party at all. One Dem candidate pushed from every direction and about a dozen random Republicans no one ever heard anything about.
People are getting sick of it, but the Dems have the system locked up pretty tightly. It will be interesting to see what happens in the next few years - in spite of all of this I won't be surprised to see a Republican mayor of SF and a Republican governor within the next five years.
Nobody has come up with a better system.
In other systems around the world, you mainly just vote for the party and they pick all the morons for you. The US system may not be great, but at least you get to run and vote in primaries and the main election.
So you don't like the party system, except when you do like the party system?
And that's the kind of outcome that only a US-style system can produce. Be happy that it does, because the alternatives are far worse.
“There are two reasons why I don’t vote: Number one, it’s meaningless……. Number two: I believe if you vote, you have no right to complain. If you vote and elect stupid, dishonest people into office and screw everything up, you caused the problem, you voted them in, you are responsible for what they have done, you have no right to complain, while I, who did not vote , who did not even leave the house that day, have every right to complain about the mess you caused that I had nothing to do with.” George Carlin/ Why I don’t Vote
Correct: the main elections are meaningless. They give you a pick between two candidates that most people dislike equally. That's the way the US system is designed. It's a good system.
Carlin thought life itself was meaningless, I don't think he's in any grounds to get mad at us for disagreeing with that worldview.
The only "outcome" these sick, evil fucks care about is spending more money. it flows into the teacher's unions and back into the Democrat Party who gets elected to spend more money on "education". it's a vicious cycle of corruption.
If the public education establishment did a good job then they couldn't complain that we aren't spending enough money. By constantly producing poor to mediocre results, they always have that card to play.
If the public education establishment did a good job then they couldn’t complain that we aren’t spending enough money. By constantly producing poor to mediocre results, they always have that card to play.
I think you give them too much credit for having a plan.
Clue to libertarians: Anybody who uses the term "Democrat Party" is a Republican troll and can safely be ignored.
Real American is correct though--the ones that are spending vast amounts of money on education with less than stellar results are the Democrats, not "Republican trolls". Do not ignore the truth. Be deceived no more!
Left out of the discussion so far are the long-term effects of Newsom's lockdown; those kids lost something close to two years of what passes for education in CA.
One kid, who is whip-smart, had to take remedial math classes on entering college, regardless of the Zoom classes. She simply wasn't prepared for the engineering math requirements.
She's now back where she should have been, but she's at the top of learning abilities; others are not going to recover anything like as quickly as she did.
I bet those LaPlace Transforms must have had her head spinning.
""The revised budget directs a total of $128.3 billion to education, lifts up the most critical needs including historic funding for school mental health, recruitment and retention of teachers," boasted Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, following last year's budget deal."
"historic funding for school mental health" So not the 3 Rs
"recruitment and retention of teachers" So give themselves raises and hire more union members.
Occasionally I mention how the Constitution might have been improved at the time of the Founding with a few simple additions. For example, if new laws and regulations required a Constitutional approval from the Supreme Court; or, in this case, if new laws and regulations were required to list objective criteria by which they could be assessed for success in accomplishing the purpose of the law or regulation. They would automatically sunset by the termination date (no later than two years) if the OMB was unable to certify the goals having been achieved before then. All spending would be cut off and all officials, employees, and contractors would be discharged at that point. If only each state had a similar provision in the state Constitutions, government would be a lot smaller, less powerful, less corrupted, less intrusive and less expensive.
Huh. That sounds reasonable. Effective. Might even have a positive effect on the citizens for whom the whole governmental extravaganza is put on.
However. The structure of federal and local governments is exactly what one would expect it to be, IF it were constructed for the benefit of the "officials, gov't employees and contractors" who benefit (*SURPRISE*) from the current ineffective, counter-productive system we now have.
I have always, from a very early age, been anti-authoritarian and frequently been proud of how justified my blindly iconoclastic stance has been. I haven't always been right, which I mostly excuse by noting that my younger self could not possibly have been cynical enough to imagine the amorality of the people slavering at the public trough.
The Founding Fathers did something much better: they had a very limited federal government. It simply didn't matter much what Congress did because they could do so little.
This was undermined in the 20th century by the progressive movement and we have never recovered. And the incorporation doctrine indirectly further put states under the thumb of a centralized federal government.
The solution is not to make a centralized government work better (like you suggest), the solution is indeed to go back to the kind of government the Founding Fathers envisioned.
You almost have it but you lose it in the telling.
Police powers and almost all societal and common good outcomes were left EXPLICITLY to the state. Yes, in colonial times, the states were issuing money, electing jerks, and fracturing the consensus that existed but....then came to breakthrough: seeing the states as a whole as "the laboratories of democracy".NY and CA are losing citizens by the millions, if we leave that alone , the necessary power will be there.
" In 2022, more than 817,000 people left the Golden State for somewhere else in the U.S." Florida and Texas were the chief destinations. Do you see it ?
MWAodoc was talking about how to redesign the federal system of government; I was saying that it should go back to what it was originally intended to be.
I have no idea what you are trying to get at. California voters made their bed, now they need to lie in it. I don't see a problem with democracy in that.
Just cleanse America of the progressive movement, and eliminate Marxists I’m general.
I don't know where you got the idea that those additions to the Constitution would have made government better. The problem is that the Constitution no longer limits government action, which means that the Constitution never did limit government action, it just took officials a while to find the loopholes. My suggestions would, I think, make the Constitution more effective at limiting government scope.
Who cares MOST about a child's education? The Parents.
Hence the answer has always been out in the open
Watch...
TEACHERS
Across the country, roughly 10% of students attend a private school while American public school teachers enroll their children at nearly twice that rate, 21.5%
LAWMAKERS FOR SCHOOLS
41% of representatives in the House and 46% of U.S. senators send or have sent at least one of their children to a private institution. That contrasts with the rest of the country, where only 10% of families send kids to private schools.
Okay, now 'stipulate, all you false pundits....IF IF IF the above is true what follows.... I'll give you a few minutes so you can lie to yourself before lying to others 🙂
Most "teachers" are just unbearable low IQ mentally ill prison guards. Avoiding them is not only beneficial but necessary. Giving them more welfare checks only worsens the problem.
I am making money from home with facebook. i received $15000 in this month for doing easily home job. I work in my part time only 3 to 4 hours a day on facebook. Everyone can earn more cash easily from home. For more information visit below this website…….
This Website➤———–➤ https://www.dailypro7.com
In one of the southern states, it was either Alabama or Louisiana, the majority of teachers never passed their state exams.
California has reduced the number of teacher certification tests.
What does that tell you?
Rainbow flags for the classroom, pornography for the library, and all that blue hair dye and tattooing doesn't come cheap.
All it will take is for 40% of all families to choose private schools or even home schooling and see how fast the public school system lasts.
This nation will not survive with even one generation of poorly educated people who will not be able to maintain infrastructure, work in the health fields, or anything else that requires a real education not just handed a diploma/participation trophy. We are headed for a real melt down. If this isn't turned around America will assume third world status.
But then, maybe that's the plan after all. Minneapolis is one example.
That cannot happen because those 40% cannot afford to pay twice for education (once in school taxes and again for the private schools) and because most Americans couldn't care less whether their kids get a good education or not and wouldn't know what a good education even looked like.
I believe that education should be accessible and of high quality, but problems of inflated prices and low returns from education do exist. The government is doing nothing. For example, I constantly used the writing service, I found https://edubirdie.com/ for this. The quality of knowledge we are provided with is simply minimal. Effective management of public funds and better allocation of resources in higher education are important.
The person teaching your child who doesn't care if the learn the three R's and only about imposing their social and political beliefs on your child is making $120,000/year. I bet if we pay them another $30,000/year they will quit the imposing and start teaching.
I am also a part time real estate sales agent and I got a bridge to sell you if you are interested.
It’d be nice if Reason stopped being lazy and simply reprinting all this guy’s columns. There are 49 other states, you know, and printing article after article about how awful California is just causes the right-wing MAGA trolls to come on here and do a bunch of illiterate California-bashing. States all across this nation are engaging in wanton spending binges with little or no positive outcomes, and it’d be nice if Reason focused on those for a while. (PS: I don't live in California!)
It’d be nice if Reason stopped being lazy and simply reprinting all this guy’s columns. There are 49 other states, you know, and printing article after article about how awful California is just causes the right-wing MAGA trolls to come on here and do a bunch of illiterate California-bashing.
There isn't anything "illiterate" about "California-bashing" with regards to their horrible education system. Has the thought ever occurred in your brain that maybe, just maybe, those "right-wing MAGA trolls" are actually right for once? The numbers do not lie; there is NO excuse for California schools to do so badly despite the vast amounts of money spent on them. Their criticism is completely warranted, yours is not.
States all across this nation are engaging in wanton spending binges with little or no positive outcomes, and it’d be nice if Reason focused on those for a while. (PS: I don’t live in California!)
No. Some states like Utah are very efficient with its education spending. Others like Baltimore and Chicago are disastrous despite billions of dollars for their education. Read this for a start:
https://reason.com/2023/09/19/chicago-teachers-union-boss-sends-son-to-private-school/
https://reason.com/2023/08/11/down-136000-students-in-just-four-years-new-york-citys-public-schools-manage-to-spend-billions-more/
Stop defending California and the failed public education system.
Culture..culture and culture. We tired spending money back int he 80s and certain tribes still did poorly..so it became about the tests being "racist"..so we dropped tests..now reading and math are racist. Every govt program is about enriching the folks who run it directly or indirectly. For education is is the educational/academic/non profit DIE complex...in many ways much more dangerous than the MIC. Time to call them out Steve and stop trying to make an argument for "gender disphoria
which is a mental illness and should not be treated by sexual mutilation of kids. just stop the degeneracy.
Sounds like a typical *Commie* - education (or any other) plan.
Because Commie doesn't work. Never has. Never will.
Artie has left the chat
Make extra profit every week... this is a great part-time job for everyone... best part about it is that you can work from your home and earn from $100-$2000 each week ... start today and have your first payment at the end of the week.
This Website➤---------------➤ http://Www.CareersHome.online