In the 2024-25 school year, the end of stimulus funding will be a historically negative shock to the industry and likely destabilize schools, predicts Marguerite Roza.
EdWeek Market Brief breaks down the results of its surveys of K-12 officials on how they are preparing for the drying up of billions of dollars in emergency federal aid.
In Their Own Words: How School Districts Are Preparing for the Loss of Stimulus Money
EdWeek Market Brief Asked K-12 Officials to Explain Their Strategies for Making Federal Emergency Aid Last -- or for Simply Scaling Back Programs
An EdWeek Market Brief survey invited district and school leaders to explain their strategies for dealing with the upcoming loss of federal stimulus funds.
The Programs Most Likely to Go Away When Stimulus Funding Ends
EdWeek Market Brief Surveyed K-12 Officials on Which Projects They'll Reduce, With the End of Federal Aid in Sight
EdWeek Market Brief asked district and school leaders which programs and services their systems will pare back as stimulus funding goes away.
School districts around the country are making progress when it comes to spending emergency federal funding, according to EdWeek Research Center survey data.
K-12 Budgets Should Be in Great Shape. But Inflation Is Taking a Toll
A Strong Economy and Stimulus Funding Is Being Offset by Rising Costs, According to an Expert on Education Spending
School districts are feeling the pain from rising costs that are gripping the overall economy, says longtime education budget expert Mike Griffith.
These Are School Districts’ Biggest Worries About Spending Federal Stimulus Aid
K-12 Leaders Have Access to an Historic Amount of Money, But There are Questions About the Best Use of It
K-12 leaders have access to an historic amount of emergency federal funding, but they have concerns about how they should put that money to the best use.
A new database from Education Week allows users, including companies, to dive into the finances of 12,000 school districts around the country and gauge whether they are likely to face budget cuts.
The Association of School Business Officials of New York has created a digital tool to highlight the positive economic impact of school districts throughout the state.
Cutting the nation’s suspension rate by even a small amount could yield a multi-billion-dollar economic impact by producing savings in public programs and higher wages for affected students, a new analysis finds.