Idaho gets a D-plus in Education Week rankings

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You’ll notice that the rankings are based on per-student spending, not based on outcomes. 

Second, this is based on state spending, not local property taxes being added in (which are significant in Moscow). 

Third, there is an expectation that poorer states will spend the same amount per student as richer states do (percent of their revenues). Idaho could never keep up with New York!  

Idaho received one of the nation’s lowest grades Wednesday, as Education Week released its annual rankings of the states’ school systems.

Overall, Idaho’s grade came in at 67.6 — or a D-plus. Idaho topped only three states: New Mexico, Mississippi and Nevada, and its ranking was unchanged from 2016.

Several well-documented issues contributed to Idaho’s low grades:

  • Idaho received a failing grade for school spending — in part because of low per-pupil spending. Education Week based its rankings on 2014 data, when Idaho’s per-pupil spending exceeded only one state: Utah.
  • Only 29.6 percent of Idaho’s 3- and 4-year-old children attended preschool, the lowest percentage in the nation. Idaho is among only a handful of states that does not offer state-funded pre-K.
  • Only 35.9 percent of Idahoans over age 25 hold a postsecondary degree; only 10 states ranked lower. For several years, the state’s education, business and political leaders have rallied behind an ambitious and possibly unlikely goal. They want to see 60 percent of the state’s 25- to 34-year-olds hold some postsecondary degree, by 2020.

Via Idaho Ed News

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