Schools

Map: How Public Education Ranks In Wisconsin

What's standing in the way of Wisconsin's public education system? Safety, according to this new report.

WISCONSIN — Students will be going back to school in a few weeks, but where they live often determines the quality of their education, according to a new study that ranks the states with the best and worst school systems. Our state ranked No. 9 in the country, meaning more than half the states in the country have better schools than us.

Wisconsin’s score didn’t take a hit over test scores or drop out rates like some other states did, but it ranked No. 9 in quality and a low No. 27 in safety.

Gov. Scott Walker signed his $100 million School Safety Plan into law in March, which creates a grant program for school districts to enhance school safety resources. Every Wisconsin school is eligible for the grant program.

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"Our $100 million School Safety Plan will help ensure that every student, parent, and teacher feels safe at school," Walker said. "This bill provides important grant funding that will allow districts to invest in safety measures that will help protect against all threats. This will help protect our students and their future."

Provisions of Gov. Walker's School Safety Plan:

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  • Creates an Office of School Safety within the Wisconsin Department of Justice to work with law enforcement and schools to establish best practices for school safety and provide training opportunities and other relevant resources to schools.
  • Provides $100 million to fund a new grant program for security upgrades to school buildings and other eligible costs.
  • Mandates reporting for any threats of school violence.
  • Allows grant funding to implement Trauma-Informed Care and Adverse Childhood Experiences in Schools.
  • Strengthens school safety plan requirements by requiring all schools to consult with local law enforcement and conduct on-site assessments of all pupil occupied areas.

Related Reading:

Scott Walker Drops $100M Bombshell Wisconsin School Safety Bill

What Does Walker's $100M School Safety Plan Mean For Waukesha?


Source: WalletHub

Wisconsin shares honors with Illinois and Missouri for the highest median SAT score, 613.33, which is 1.5 times higher than in the District of Columbia, whose median score is 396.67.

The study by the personal finance website WalletHub compared public school systems in 50 states and the District of Columbia across 25 measures of quality and safety, ranging from the pupil-to-teacher ratio to the dropout rate to median standardized-test scores.

WalletHub looked beyond academic performance and financing and took a deep dive into school safety, including cyberbullying; class size; and instructor credentials.

Test scores still play a big role in student performance under the federal Every Student Succeeds Act, but states can determine how that takes place. Opportunities aren’t equal in all of the states, and that often comes down to the amount of money state and local governments are willing to spend for public education, according to the analysis by WalletHub.

Instructor quality may be the most important factor affecting public education, according to Laura Hsu, an assistant professor at Merrimack College. Recruiting and retaining strong teachers should be a priority for every district, she wrote in comments accompanying the study, but that’s tied to funding.

“Often, teachers report they feel overworked and overpaid,” Hsu wrote. “What undergirds this is the value placed on the teaching profession in our country, as opposed to other countries who compensate their teachers significantly more, such as Finland. A change in perception is important if any changes in compensation will occur.”

The best schools are concentrated in the Northeast, where the top five schools — Massachusetts, New Jersey, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Vermont, respectively — are all located. The bottom rankings were in New Mexico, Louisiana, the District of Columbia, Alaska and Arizona.

The quality of public education often comes down to the level of funding from the federal, state and local governments, according to the authors of the study. States contribute nearly as much as local governments, and the federal government contributes the smallest share.

Money matters, according to a study by Rutgers Professor Bruce Baker, whose findings were published by the Albert Shanker Institute. He said that “on average, aggregate measures of per-pupil spending are positively associated with improved or higher student outcomes,” while “schooling resources which cost money … are positively associated with student outcomes.”

Some additional findings from the study:

Iowa has the lowest dropout rate, at 8.7 percent, which is 3.5 times lower than in the District of Columbia, where the dropout rate is 30.8 percent.

Vermont has the lowest pupil-to-teacher ratio which is 2.2 times lower than in California.

The District of Columbia has the lowest share of students who were bullied online, at 8.90 percent, which is 2.4 times lower than in Louisiana, where 21.20 students report cyberbullying.

You can read the full report here.

Image via Shutterstock

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