U.S. reluctance to do so is a likely reason for stagnant achievement scores over 30 years (NAEP, ACT, SAT) despite more than doubling
real spending per student.
Not exact matches
The Productivity Commission is correct that dollars
spent per student increased by 14 % in
real terms over the last decade.
Changes in
real state
spending per pupil are uncorrelated with changes in 4th - grade
student achievement in reading.
While inflation - adjusted public
spending per student increased 27 percent between 1992 and 2014, an EdChoice study found, teacher wages actually fell an average of 2 percent during that time (in
real dollars).
Public school
students saw a 27 percent increase in
real resources
spent on their education, so adjusted for inflation, public schools were
spending 27 percent more
per student in 2014 relative to 1992.
«Between fiscal years 1992 and 2014, inflation adjusted («
real»)
per -
student spending increased by 27 percent.