Georgia "spends in the top 10 nationally on education, yet, most of our education metrics hover in the bottom five." — Former DeKalb County school board member Nancy Jester in an Oct. 10 op-ed
Since Nancy Jester’s departure from the DeKalb County school board, she has kept busy. She hosts a radio show focused on education. And she’s still a fixture on the DeKalb education scene, with an active website and blog about the district’s issues and all things education related.
Earlier this month, Jester took her ideas to The Marietta Daily Journal for an op-ed about the controversial Common Core national education standards.
“Our state spends in the top 10 nationally on education, yet, most of our education metrics hover in the bottom five,” Jester said. “… Georgia has a long road ahead but Common Core is not a path to prosperity.”
It is important to note that Georgia was the ninth most populous state in the nation, at the last census count in 2010. And the Peach State also had the eighth most K-12 students in the country. So, having a lot of students would equal more education spending.
We wanted to determine whether Jester was correct on the state’s education finances and student achievement, so we hit the books for answers.
Jester, who is considering a run for state school superintendent, told us she got her information from 2010 census reports.
We reviewed the Census Bureau’s public education finance report for that year, which included public school spending data by state. Using the aggregate spending figure, Jester was correct. Georgia spent the 10th most on education in fiscal 2010, at $15.7 billion.
A census researcher also led us to the 2011 education finance report for more recent figures. Again, on aggregate spending, Georgia ranked 10th.
Jester’s claim is based on overall education spending, but Georgia’s rank drops substantially in those years, to 33rd and 35th respectively, when per-pupil spending is considered. When adjusted for regional costs of living, Georgia ranked worse at 38th nationally for per-pupil spending in 2012.
We next turned to education metrics. Jester didn’t mention specific benchmarks, but generally ACT and SAT scores, and graduation rates are used to measure state performance through student achievement.
We checked the U.S. Department of Education’s state-by-state graduation rates for the 2010-2011 school year (the most recent available). Georgia’s four-year graduation rate was 67 percent that year, lower than every state except Nevada and New Mexico.
The low rate that year was partly attributed to the DOE’s new four-year calculation, based on how many ninth-graders graduate with a standard diploma within four years. Before the new calculation, some states included students who took longer to receive their diplomas. Under the old calculation, Georgia had an 81 percent graduation rate in the 2009-2010 school year.
We then looked at ACT scores. In 2013, about 51 percent of Georgia graduates took the ACT, combining for a state composite score of 20.7, out of a possible score of 36. (The national average composite score for that year was 20.9.) Georgia’s scores were not in the bottom five among other states this year, nor in 2012 when the state’s students also achieved a 20.7 composite score.
We also examined Georgia’s scores on the other popular college admissions test, the SAT, administered by the College Board. On that test, Georgia’s average score from 2012 to 2013 was flat, at 1452 out of 2400 possible points. The state score was below the national SAT average score of 1498 for both years.
The Commonwealth Foundation, a free-market think tank in Pennsylvania, compiled SAT data for 2013, which listed Georgia as 45th in the nation based on its scores. Georgia is considered a high-participation state for the SAT, with 75 percent of students taking the test this year.
We also considered the Education Weekly’s annual Quality Counts reports that focus on state efforts in education. This year, Georgia ranked seventh among states with a B- rating of 81.0 out of a possible 100 points. (The 2013 national average was a C+, 76.9 rating.) Georgia received the same rank and letter grade in 2012.
So does Jester’s claim earn a passing grade?
She is correct that Georgia spends in the top 10 nationally for public K-12 spending. But Georgia is also in the top 10 nationally for the number of K-12 students in the state, so a high level of spending is expected. It is also important to note that Georgia’s ranking drops significantly, to the bottom third of all states, for per-pupil spending.
National results of college readiness exams and graduation rates ranked Georgia among the bottom in most reports. Georgia did rank in the top 10 states nationally in a survey touted by state education officials. But even in that report, Georgia scored low marks in key areas, including student achievement.
Jester’s statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details about education funding that could give the reader a different impression.
We rate Jester’s claim Half True.
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