What Comes After Lunch?
eBook - PDF

What Comes After Lunch?

Alternative Measures of Economic and Social Disadvantage and Their Implications for Education Research

  1. 204 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

What Comes After Lunch?

Alternative Measures of Economic and Social Disadvantage and Their Implications for Education Research

About this book

Faced with the problem of how to measure the magnitude of economic disadvantage in the populations served by schools or districts, researchers addressing school finance topics have invariably turned to the fraction of students eligible for free- or reduced-lunches (FRPL). But the facile dependence on FRPL may be problematic. A large and growing literature in learning sciences and in the field of education itself has pivoted towards studies that explore the relationship between social/emotional health and the learning of children. The growing body of research on social/emotional health and learning (e.g. Gershoff, Aber, Raver, and Lennon, 2007) suggests that more refined measures of wealth, income and hardship more fully account for the effects of economic disadvantage than does FRPL. Historically, research in school finance has not utilized these refined measures but instead has depended on FRPL.

The Community Eligibility Provision (CEP), a recent change in how student eligibility for free lunch is determined, may have the unintended, and yet fortuitous, consequence that it will force school finance researchers to use more sophisticated measures of student hardship. The CEP makes it possible for schools serving low-income populations to classify all students as eligible for free- or reduced-price lunch. Koedel and Parsons (2021) argue that, while FRPL might have been a workable measure of student disadvantage prior to CEP, post-CEP the extent of a school's or a district's population that is disadvantaged is no longer measured accurately by FRPL. The CEP made accurate FRPL counts less critical for many schools and districts; post-pandemic legislation (Vock, 2023) in a number of states to make school meals free for all students in those states has increased the number of districts for which accurate counts are unimportant. Fazlul, Koedel, and Parsons (2023) go on to argue that, even prior to CEP, FRPL failed to provide an accurate measure of a school or district's poverty. This new policy environment makes it imperative to explore alternatives to FRPL and the implications for school finance.

The book aims to provide a timely collection of new research on a measurement issue that is central to much research on K-12 education finance. The book is meant to serve scholars in education finance and policy who need a refined perspective on the context of schooling. The book is also meant to serve students and faculty from programs in public administration, public policy, community development and applied economics, education administration, educational leadership and policy studies who are studying content related to education policy, the economics of education, state and local public finance, and taxation. Some upper-level undergraduate students may also benefit from this resource.

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Information

Year
2024
Print ISBN
9798887305622
9798887305639
eBook ISBN
9798887305646

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. What Comes After Lunch?
  3. Series
  4. What Comes After Lunch?: Alternative Measures of Economic and Social Disadvantage and Their Implications for Education Research
  5. Copyright
  6. Contents
  7. Introduction
  8. 1. Measuring Family Income and Student Risk in Public Schools: A Conceptual and Empirical Comparison of Options
  9. 2. Measuring Economic Disadvantage in Schools in the Post-CEP Era
  10. 3. Understanding School-Level Funding and Student Poverty: An Assessment Using Traditional and New Measures of Student Need
  11. 4. Beyond Binary Indicators: Measuring Socioeconomic Status and Capturing Socioeconomic Heterogeneity in High-Poverty Contexts
  12. 5. Weighted Student Funding With Alternatives to Free and Reduced-Price Lunch Eligibility Data
  13. 6. Does the Measure Matter?: The Sensitivity of Cost Function Estimates to the Choice of Measure of District Poverty
  14. About the Contributors

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Yes, you can access What Comes After Lunch? by Thomas Downes,Kieran M. Killeen, Thomas Downes, Kieran M. Killeen in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Didattica & Vita studentesca. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.