Monday, September 24, 2018

Updated school finance information: funding increase, inflation adjustments, share of personal income and general state budget

Kansas school district expenditures hit a new high last year – but not after adjusting for inflation




The most recent update from the Kansas State Department of Education shows that total school district expenditures last year (20187-18) were $6.49 billion, or about $410 million more than 2017. About $325 million of the increase was state aid, and $130 million of THAT was to restore contributions for the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System that has been reduced the previous year.

Local funding increased by $94 million, party because an error in drafting the 2017 school finance bill reduced state aid for local option budgets, requiring more local funding, and party because of increased local funding for capital outlay and school bond payments.

Although $6.49 billion in total expenditures was the highest ever for Kansas school districts, when adjusted for inflation, it remains below the 2009 level. Total expenditures in 2018 were $124.3 million below inflation-adjusted 2009. That means total spending is less than it was a decade ago. (KASB adjusted for inflation using the Kansas consensus revenue estimate for inflation for 2018.)

Total expenditures include all dollars flowing through school district budgets.

KASB also tracks the total of school district general fund and local option budgets, plus special education state aid, which provide a basic state and local “operating” budget for educational programs. The final legal maximum budget reports posted by KSDE show these funds totaled $4.34 billion in 2018, up from $4.15 billion in 2017. That nearly $200 million increase was mainly due to higher base state and weightings as the Legislature responded to the Supreme Court’s decision on school finance.

When adjusted for inflation, general fund, LOB and special education in 2018 were $460 million below 2009. In fact, these funds in 2018 were lower than the 2007 level. The Legislature acknowledged this gap in its response to the Kansas Supreme Court in the Gannon school finance case. The Court ruled that the Legislature’s $500 million-plus, five-year school finance plan passed this session would be acceptable, but only if adjusted for inflation over the time it is phased-in.

School district general fund levels and special education is determined by the state through base aid, weighting factors and appropriations. The state also caps the amount of local option budgets.

Total expenditures include bond and interest payments approved by local voters, capital outlay funds raised by local mill levies (plus state aid for both programs); KPERS contributions which were underfunded in previous decades and now are increasing more rapidly as the Legislature tries to catch up; all federal funds; most food service costs; and other any local revenues like student fees for meals, materials and transportation. Most of these funds cannot be use for regular operating costs like teacher salaries.

A 10-year history of total expenditures statewide and for individual districts is available at KSDE’s Data Central School Finance Reports link. Select Total Expenditures from the drop-down menu.

 


Per pupil funding remains below 2006 and 2007 levels after adjusting for inflation




The latest information provided by the Kansas State Department of Education show that both total school district expenditures and the combined general fund, local option budget and special education state aid reached new high levels last year, following significantly increased state funding. However, when adjusted for inflation, both remain below previous high marks.

Because student enrollment has also increased in recent years, per pupil funding has increased less and remains farther behind inflation than overall spending. On a headcount basis (counting each enrolled student as one student), total expenditures per pupil was $13,106 in 2018. That remains below the level of $13,356 in 2007. General fund, local option budget and special education aid per headcount student was $8,771, lower than the 2006 level of $8,989.

In other words, even after substantial increases in funding last year, per pupil purchasing power is still less than it was 11 to 12 years ago.

In fact, total expenditures per pupil in 2018 was $962 below inflation-adjusted 2009, or a total of $476.5 million. General fund, LOB and special education aid operating funds were $1,444 per pupil below inflation-adjusted 2009, or a total of $715.3 million. That is a major reason the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that the Legislature’s $500 million-plus school finance proposal would be acceptable, but only if adjusted for inflation over the time it is phased-in.

In addition, the number of students with greater learning challenges due to poverty and disability has grown faster than the regular enrollment, and educational expectations on schools has also increased.

Note: KASB uses “headcount” enrollment to calculate a per pupil amount because until 2018, the full-time equivalent number reported by KSDE counted all kindergarten students as half-time students, even if they were attending full-time. The FTE number continues to count only preschool students funded by the state, not those funded by local districts. Because of the growth in such students, KASB believes the headcount number provides a more consistent comparison over the years and a more accurate count of the number of students the district is educating. Federal reports also use headcount.



School funding remains low compared to previous share of Kansans’ total personal income 



Kansas personal income is the total income the people living in the state receive from wages, proprietors' income, dividends, interest, rents, and government benefits. Comparing educational expenditures to that amount is an indicator of how much of people’s income is going to support public schools.

With increased state aid and more local revenue authority, in 2018 total school district expenditures increased to 4.51 percent of state personal income from 4.39 percent the previous two years. It was the highest level since 2011 (4.58 percent), but still well below the 20-year average from 1990 to 2010 (4.74 percent).

School district general funds, local option budgets and special education state aid were 3.02 percent of state personal income, up from 2.99 percent in 2017, but far below the 1990-2010 average of 3.65 percent.

This means that Kansans are currently spending or investing a lower percentage of total annual income to support public education than in previous decades, even after significant increases in funding last year.

Note: The 2018 levels are based on estimates of Kansas personal income growth projected by the state Consensus Revenue Estimating process. The April CRE projected Kansas personal income would increase 3.9 percent from $138.6 billion in 20127.



The share of state general funding spending going to K-12 state aid has remained stable for 25 years




Despite increases in state aid approved for 2018 and 2019, K-12 funding is not taking a larger share of the Kansas state general fund budget.

From the passage of the School District Equalization Act to the 1992 School District Finance and Quality Performance Act, the state constantly allocated about 40 percent of the general fund budget to K-12 aid. The 1992 law, fully implemented in 1994, raised state aid to reduce and equalize local property taxes for schools. As a result, K-12 aid increased from approximately 40 percent of the state general fund to approximately 50 percent.

Since 1994, K-12 aid has averaged 49.7 percent of the state general fund. In 2018, it was estimated to be 50.5 percent; in 2019, state aid is predicted to be 49.7 percent of SGF.

In other words, despite several decades of school finance litigation including the recent Gannon case, and increased state aid as result of these cases, school district aid is not taking a larger share of the state general fund budget.

Thursday, September 20, 2018

Mini-post: question about principals

After today’s post, a local board member sent me the following question from a constituent: “What has changed in the last 30 years requiring more asst. principals today than when I was in high school?” 

KASB doesn't have specific data back 30 years easily accessible, but we can dig deep if needed. We have Kansas staff data back to 1997, or 20 years, rather than 30. 

In 1997, Kansas had 1,673.5 principals and assistant principals and 466,368, or 278.7 students per principal/AP. 

In 2018, Kansas had 1,792.7 P/APs and 495,356 students, or 276.3 students per principal/AP. 
In other words, we have more principals because we have more students - the ratio has changed very little in 20 years. 

However, there are several other reasons for more principals (and other administrators): 

  • Schools have added many more teachers, paras, aides, and other positions working with students. Principals help supervise, evaluate and lead other staff members in the school building. 
  • Expectations for school leaders have changed. We expected more students to be successful; that means changing the way school operate. Principals have to be instructional leaders, not just facility managers. 
  • There are much greater concerns about non-academic issues facing students, from building security to bullying and suicide prevention, and effective discipline. These tasks usually fall to principals. 


Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Too many principals in Kansas schools? Not for successful students

A spokesperson for Kris Kobach’s campaign for Governor says that twelve principals and assistant principals for two Wichita schools is “clearly excessive.”

However, data shows that compared to state and national averages, those two schools actually have fewer principals than would be expected, based on enrollment.

According to reports requested from the Kansas State Department of Education’s Data Central (link), Wichita East and Wichita North High Schools have a combined enrollment of 4,508 (2,331 plus 2,177). That means 12 principals and assistant principals would be responsible for 376 students each. (4,508 divided by 12).

Statewide enrollment reports indicate a total of 518,712 headcount students in Kansas. State personnel reports show 1,187.5 principals and 606.2 assistant principals statewide, for a total of 1,793.7. That means on average, Kansas principals and assistant principals are responsible for 289 students. (518,712 divided by 1,793.7) In other words, if there are 12 principals with over 4,500 students in two high schools, those buildings have fewer building leaders for the number of students compared to the state as a whole (376 versus 289).



How does Kansas compare to national data? The most recent reports are from 2014-2015. At that time, Kansas had nearly 100 more principals and assistant principals (1,899) with lower total enrollment (496,444), or 261 students for every principal and assistant principal. Nationally, the ratio was slightly higher (287 student for every principal) than Kansas in 2015, but almost identical to what was last year. The national average was also far less that the average at Wichita East and North.

However, the top achieving states on 15 educational outcomes had an average student/principal ratio of 260, below that national average and Kansas. The ten lowest achieving states had an average ratio of 306, higher than the national average.

In other words, the top achieving states have more principals compared to their enrollment, and the lowest achieving states have fewer.

Why would more principals and assistant principals be associated with higher student performance?
Research shows school leadership makes a difference in student achievement. Scholars at McREL, a non-profit education and research center in Denver, analyzed 70 studies involving approximately 1.1 million students and 14,000 teachers, and found a substantial relationship between leadership and student achievement.

Principals have these key roles in school buildings: providing overall leadership for all staff in the building, guiding, evaluating and supporting teachers, and dealing with students in areas such as discipline, safety, policies and activities.

A first-person description of what assist principals do today in today’s public school system is provided here (link).

Here is most recent national data on the number of principals and other school staff. (Link) Here is national enrollment data. (Link)

It should be noted Kobach's initial claim during a debate broadcast live throughout the state was that one Wichita high school had 12 assistant principals. The Wichita Eagle found that to be incorrect. Kobach has yet to publicly acknowledge his mistake. But a campaign spokesperson after acknowledging the initial claim was wrong, still contended 12 principals and assistants for two large high schools was excessive. The question becomes, excessive compared to what? The facts show that the number is much lower compared to the rest of the state and nation.

Saturday, September 15, 2018

Kansas schools ALREADY spend less on non-instructional programs

Critics of Kansas public education sometimes claim that too little funding goes directly to teachers and too much to other programs. By cutting non-teaching programs and shifting that money to instruction, some say education could be improved without spending more money.

But national reports (link) show that Kansas already spends less on those programs than other states, including both the top states in student achievement and those most like Kansas.

This data supports the finding of the Legislature’s recent education cost study, conducted this earlier this year. The authors said Kansas schools are among the most efficient in the nation, producing nearly 96% of their potential output, on average. Kansas ranks in the top half of the nation on each of 15 student success indicators and ranks number nine overall, while total funding per pupil is 30th.

Most educators agree that “non-instructional” programs – principals, counselors, nurses, social services, speech pathology and audiology, libraries, food service and transportation, as well as operating school facilities and general administration – also have a big impact on student learning. The most recent data from other states (2016) finds Kansas spending trails other states in these areas.



Here is what Kansas spent on major parts of school operating budgets outside of instruction compared to other states, as reported by National Center for Education Statistics.  Kansas funding is compared to the U.S. average, the nine highest achieving states on 15 measures of student success, states bordering Kansas and other Plains states, “peer” states most similar to Kansas in population characteristics, and the 10 states with the lowest student success. (For details of the comparison states, see below.)

General Administration. It is the smallest item in every group. Kansas spent $242 per pupil, $20 more than the national average but lower than the highest achieving states, border/Plains states and peer states, and higher than the bottom performing states. (Note that the lowest spending states spend the least on general administration and the top performing states the most.)

School Administration. Republican candidate for Governor Kris Kobach has criticized some schools as being top heavy with principals, but Kansas spending of $583 per pupil on school building administration is less than any group except border/Plains states (which spent just $8 less). Research indicates that school principals are critical to student success.

Transportation. Kansas spent about $400 per pupil on transportation, less than any comparison group of states, including the U.S. average.

Operations and Maintenance. Kansas spent about $1,000 per pupil to heat, light, cool, clean, maintain, insure and secure school facilities – less than every group except border/Plains states.

Instructional support. This is funding for libraries, media centers, professional development, technology support, and assessment. Kansas spent less than $400 per pupil – much less than any other group.

Pupil support. This area includes counselors, social workers, attendance staff, health and other programs for students needing help outside of instruction. Kansas spent $519 per pupil, about the same as border/Plains states, less than every other group – and only about half what the most successful states provide.

Food service and all other. In addition to funding for student meals, this includes “central office” functions like bookkeeping, payroll and human resources. Kansas spent $579 per pupil, between $100 and $200 less than every comparison group.

Total. Kansas spent a total of just under $3,900 on these “non-instructional” programs, about $350 less than the nearest group (border/Plains states), $700 less than the national average and almost $2,000 less than the highest achieving states.

Impact of reducing non-instructional support

This data indicates that cutting non-instructional programs, which are already funded lower than most states, would not increase efficiency but reduce services. Among the consequences:


  • Closing school building to reduce operations, maintenance.
  • Reducing student services like counseling and health, which are not “academics” but critical to improving preparation for postsecondary education and addressing issues like suicide.
  • Cutting school administration, which reduces teacher supervision and feedback and resources to address discipline, bullying and other student issues.
  • Cutting professional development (continuing education) for educators, making it more difficult to redesign schools for improved student success and improve teaching.
  • Eliminating transportation for students where not required but provided for safety and attendance.
  • Consolidating school districts (which saves little funding because it is already the lowest area of expenditures). Closing small, rural districts reduces connections to local communities. Larger school districts actually begin to have higher costs as enrollment increases, according the Legislative study.


Comparison state definitions

The U.S. is the national average.
Top achieving states are nine states with higher overall achievement than Kansas on 15 measures of student success: Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota, Vermont.
The Plains states are North and South Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri, with the border states of Colorado and Oklahoma included.
Overall peers are states most like similar to Kansas in student demographics, adult population characteristics and geographic population distribution:  Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Washington, and Wisconsin.
Bottom achieving states are the ten lowest-ranked state on 15 measures of student success: Alaska, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Oregon.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Dollars to the Classroom

The issue of “dollars to the classroom” has been a topic for years, with critics charging that not enough education spending is reaching the classroom or students. The issue is back again in this fall’s election campaign for Governor.

In various statements, Republican gubernatorial candidate Kris Kobach has said he will push for requirement that 75 percent of school funding to be spent in the classroom. What would that mean for Kansas schools?

KASB has always maintained that school spending has impact on the classroom, and at least 75 percent of current spending directly supports student and teachers. What would change under Secretary Kobach’s proposal depends on two other questions: What is meant by “the classroom?” And, 75 percent of what?

Since 2005, there has been a state law that it is a “public policy goal” for the state – not an actual requirement on each district – that 65 percent of funds provided by the state should be spent “in the classroom” or “for instruction.”

Aside from the fact this law has never been a binding requirement on individual districts, there are two big questions.

“In the classroom”

First, that “or” suggests that “in the classroom” OR “for instruction” are two different things. If they are identical, why list both? But because “in the classroom” is not defined, the only thing that can be measured is “instruction,” which is defined using federal government school accounting guidelines for all states and school districts.

This definition of instruction includes spending on all teachers, aides and paraprofessionals, coaches, and materials and supplies directly dealing with the interactions of teachers and students, including co-curricular activities.

But the definition of instruction excludes all “student support” programs such as counseling, heath, social workers and special education services not provided by classroom teachers (such as speech pathology); libraries, media centers, technology support or professional development; transportation and food services; building operations (utilities, safety, maintenance, insurance), building construction, and all school or district administration, leadership and central support services.
In other words, if “in the classroom” only means “instruction,” all of those other activities are excluded. But all of those have an impact on students, teachers and learning.

65 percent – of what?

The second big question is that the law does not define “moneys appropriated, distributed or otherwise provided by the state to school districts.” As a result, it is unclear what funding this “goal” should apply to. There are at least three choices.

First, does it refer to all school district expenditures? When some say that only about half of school funding “gets to the classroom,” they are using the most expansive definition of expenditures under the law, and the narrowest definition of “classroom.” But considering all expenditures, includes federal funding not provided by the state, local tax revenues raised by school boards or approved by local voters, and non-tax revenues like student fees.

Second, does it refer to state aid? That seems to be the clear meaning of money “provided by the state.” But it can be argued that all local money is, in effect, provided by the state by authorizing local funding. However, many state funds cannot be spent on instruction, as will be explained later.

Third, does it refer only to “current” funding or “operating” dollars? The Kansas State Department of Education reports the percent operating budgets by function, which makes some sense because it would exclude “capital costs” like debt service and building construction that vary significantly among districts for reasons like enrollment growth, and age of buildings. But that is not clear from the law.

How are districts currently using their funding, and how do we know?

Federal and state accountability guidelines require school districts to report expenditures in several major categories called “functions” which are based on the various activities districts are required to do. The chart and table below contain these functions, the percent of all expenditures each function makes up and the total dollars spent in 2017, the last year data is available.





Those functions most directly involved with students and teachers (instruction, student and instructional support, transportation, food service and school administration) account for 74.2 percent of total expenditures. Functions associated with building and operating school facilities (operations and maintenance, facilities acquisition and construction, and debt service) account for 20.8 percent, and central office and general administration account for 4.5 percent.

Differences among school districts

These percentage are statewide averages. There are many factors which can cause major differences that are not simply management choices. These include:

Bond issues. Passing a bond issue for school construction or improvement due to growth or building replacement automatically raises the percent of funding for debt service and reduce for instructional and everything else, regardless of how the district allocates operating funds.

Maintenance. Older, less energy-efficient buildings may cause higher utility and maintenance costs.

Transportation. Districts with low pupil population density will likely have higher transportation costs, as will districts that transport more children for reasons of safety and other considerations.

Support services. Districts with more special needs students, such as high poverty rates, may need to spend more on social workers, resource officers, and special education.

Food service. High-poverty schools may have more students eating meals at school or choose to subsidize meals to keep costs lower for families.

District size. In small districts, a single superintendent or principal may “do it all,” so general and school administrative expenditures are higher but other costs are lower.

Individual district information

Each district’s budget at a glance document, available for all districts here. On page 2 is summary of total expenditures by function. For example, below the summary for Erie USD 101 for last year. On page 2 is summary of total expenditures by function. For example, below the summary for Erie USD 101 for last year.


 How much money could be shifted to “the classroom,” (however defined) and how much could not?

About 20 percent of current funding could not be shifted, at least under current law. That includes the following major areas:


  • Unless districts defaulted on debt, they would not be able to shift $589.7 in debt service payments.
  • Except for a limited amount of transfers from other funds, most of $248 million in food services spending could not be shifted because it is paid for by federal funds and student fees.
  • By law, districts must provide transportation services for students living more than 2.5 miles from school (over $100 million) and special education students and teachers ($68 million).
  • There are at least $45 million in federal funds earmarked for non-instructional programs like teacher professional development.
  • Districts provide $80 million from special education funds and $28 million in special education cooperative funds in student support services (not instruction) based on student individual education plans.


These areas account of over $1.1 billion, or 19 percent of total expenditures, and do not include the fact that most of $141 million in facilities acquisition and construction is funded by capital outlay revenue that could only be used for limited instructional purposes without a change in state law.

What would be required to reach 75 percent of funding to instruction only?

If a state law was approved that required 75 percent of school funding to be spent in the classroom and the law did not include student support programs, transportation costs and the cost of school buildings, then school districts statewide would have to shift $1.3 billion from other budgets areas.

As noted above, over $1.1 billion could not legally be shifted, so the change would have to made in the following areas:

As a result, most of the $1.3 billion would have to come from the following areas:

  • Student support – $294.9 million (minus $15 million of these expenditures from federal funds for non-instructional services)
  • Instructional support (libraries, media centers, technology support, professional development) - $202.9 million (minus $30 million of these expenditures are from federal funds that are earmarked for teacher support)
  • Transportation of students living less than 2.5 miles from school, activities - $80 million
  • Operations and Maintenance of Buildings - $532.6 million
  • School administration (principals, school office staff) - $296.9 million
  • Central services (human resources, payroll, etc.) - $147.3 million
  • General administration (superintendent, district leadership) - $125.9 million

If school districts could somehow eliminate ALL central office, district leadership and superintendent costs, which would be impossible both legally (districts are required to have superintendents, board clerks and treasurers) and practically (organizations cannot function without paying staff and other bills, for example), they would still need to shift more than $1 billion from the remaining $1.4 billion in all other available areas to comply with spending 75 percent of funds on instruction.

If it were somehow possible to reduce building operation and maintenance cost from $532 to $400 million by extensive school closing (which would certainly increase transportation costs), all other student support, instructional support and student transportation not required by law and school principal and school office costs would have to be completely eliminated.

How does Kansas compare with other states?

First, the most recent national data available (2016), Kansas ranks 30th among all states in revenue provided per K-12 pupil from all sources (state, local and federal), spending less than the U.S. average, the highest achieving states, and “peer states” most like Kansas.

Kansas ranks quite low in the percent of total revenue going to current operating expenditures (47th).

A major reason is that the state of Kansas and federal funding largely control how much districts can spend on operating budgets, but districts have not been limited on how much can be approved for local bond issues, which are not part of operating budgets. There is also a mill levy limit on capital outlay funding, but not a spending limit.

As a result, school district capital funding, which is mostly determined by local voters, has grown much faster than operating budgets, which is mostly controlled by the state. These capital funds can’t be switched to operating purposes (including instruction).

However, Kansas ranks much higher (18th) in the percent of current operating funds going to instruction (60.9%). That is a higher percentage than the U.S. average (59.5%), adjacent states (59.3%) or peer states (59.8%).

The Kansas percentage of current expenditures for instruction is slightly lower (0.4%) than the average for the nine top achieving states based on multiple student outcomes, but those states all provide a much higher total revenue per pupil (over $5,000 more).

The percentage of funding going to instruction compared to other states is likely to rise in 2018 and 2019 because of increased operating aid provided by the Kansas Legislature.

What is the current state law?

Here is a link to the full statute.

Friday, September 7, 2018

School Administrators Part 3: How the ratio of school management employees to all employees compares to the overall public and private sector in Kansas.


In Part 1 of this series, KASB looked at how school district superintendent numbers and salaries compare to all Kansas employees, both public and private sector. In Part 2, we looked at salaries of all employees, and how leadership salaries compare to all employee salaries in school districts and all Kansas public and private organizations. In this third part, we look at the ratio of “management” employees to all employees in school districts compared to the overall public and private sectors in Kansas. In other words, we wanted to see if school districts appear to be “top heavy” compared to all public and private organizations.

We use data from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, specifically the State Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for Kansas. The most recent report is from May 2017 (Link). The BLS estimated the total number of Kansas employees, public and private, was 1,369,110. Those positions are broken to 22 major occupational groups, including “management occupations” and hundreds of specific occupational titles within those groups.

We then compared that to data from the Kansas State Department of Education on school district employees and expenditures.

Here is what we found.

1.      Based on Bureau of Labor Statistics occupation titles, there are fewer school district management employees per 1,000 employees than for all private and public employees.

According to the BLS report, out of those 1.37 million total Kansas employees, 62,800 are in the “Management Occupations” group, or 45.871 per 1,000 total employees. In other words, 4.6 percent of Kansas employees are considered “management” by the BLS report.

Determining the comparable number of school district “management positions” is more difficult because the position titles do not exactly align with BLS positions. One approach is to simply use the BLS report, which said there are 2,370 employees in Kansas under the title of “Education Administrators, Elementary and Secondary School.” The position is defined as “Plan, direct, or coordinate the academic, administrative, or auxiliary activities of public or private elementary or secondary level schools.”

Using this BLS occupation category, there are 34.292 elementary and secondary school administrators  per 1,000 school employees, well below the 45.871 management employees per 1,000 in the state as a whole.

2.      A broader list of school management positions also remains below the overall average for all state employees.

However, the BLS number cannot be directly equated to public school district administrators for several reasons. First, a portion of these employees work for private schools rather than public schools. The Kansas State Department of Education lists approximately 150 private accredited and non-accredited schools with principals or other administrative positions. (There about ten times as many public schools.) Second, this description does not seem to include other district-level administrative positions. For example, school superintendents align with chief executives.

To address these issues, KASB identified the following district and school building level administrative positions from KSDE employee reports: Superintendents (252), Associate and Assistant Superintendents (86.6), Principals (1,188.5) and Assistant Principals (604.2), Directors or Supervisors of Special Education (224.2) or Career Technical Education (21.1), Director and Supervisors of Health (13.7), Curriculum Supervisors and Coordinators (224.2) and all other supervisors, directors and coordinators not specified (367.5).

The assumption is that these positions would include not only BLS “Education Administrators,” but also other positions that would fall into BLS “Management Occupations” categories such as Chief Executive, General and Operations Managers, and others.

These positions total 2,874, which would equal 38.838 management positions per 1,000 school district employees. That is over four more “management positions” per 1,000 school district employees than the BLS list, but still well below the 45.871 management occupation positions per 1,000 total private and public sector employees in Kansas.



3.      The numbers above exclude the following school district employees that are comparable to occupations not included by the BLS as “management occupations.”

The BLS report does not define “management occupations.” Instead, it simply lists 35 of such occupations under that category. However, this category clearly does not include ALL jobs with any kind of supervisory duties – because there are a number of occupation titles with supervising responsibilities that are NOT listed under management. These include the following BLS jobs which overlap with various school district positions:

·        BLS Food Preparation and Serving Related Occupations; Chefs and Head Cooks; First-Line Supervisors of Food Preparation and Serving Workers. Compare to School district food service directors/coordinators/supervisors (280.4).

·        BLS Building and Grounds Cleaning and Maintenance Occupations; First Line Supervisors of Housekeeping and Janitorial Workers, and BLS Installation, Maintenance, and Repair Occupations; First-line Supervision of Mechanics, Installers and Repairers. Compare to School District Operations and Maintenance Directors/Coordinators/Supervisors (409.0).

·        BLS Transportation and Material Moving Occupations; First-line Supervisors of Transportation and Material Moving Workers, Except Aircraft Cargo Handing Supervisors. Compare to School District Transportation Directors/Coordinators/Supervisors (173.5).

·        BLS Business and Financial Operations Occupations (various), BLS Office and Administrative Support Occupations (various). Compare to School District Business Managers and Business Directors/Coordinators/Supervisors (254.4)

·        BLS Computer and Mathematical Occupations (various). Compare to School District Technology Directors/Coordinators/Supervisors (252.2)

Matching school district positions to BLS occupations is, of course, somewhat subjective. Some individual school district employees in these non-management groups could be considered as part of “management,” depending on their actual job assignments. Likewise, some positions we included in the “management” group, especially “coordinators” would fall into non-management categories, depending on their actual duties. For example, the BLS reports 1,230 “instructional coordinators” in Kansas that are not considered “management occupations.” However, KSDE data does not breakout “coordinators” from supervisors and directors.

If all the school district positions listed above were considered school district managers, the number would be 61.404 per 1,000 school district employees. However, if such occupations are considered “management” for school district purposes, then similar non-school district occupations should also be considered “management” for comparison purposes. That would increase the number of “managers” in the overall economy as well.

Bottom line: the data suggests school districts have fewer total management positions compared to all Kansas organizations.



Thursday, September 6, 2018

School Administrators Part 2 – How school district employee and management pay compares to overall public and private organizations in Kansas

In Part 1 of this series, KASB looked at how school district superintendent numbers and salaries compare to all Kansas chief executives and employees, both public and private sector. In this part, we compare numbers and salaries of all employees, and how leadership salaries compare to all other employee salaries. We use data from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, specifically the State Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for Kansas. The most recent report is from May 2017 (Link). (Prior year data can be found here.) The BLS estimated the total number of Kansas employees, public and private, was 1,369,110. Those positions are broken to 22 major occupational groups, including “management occupations” and hundreds of specific occupational titles within those groups.

We then compared that to data from the Kansas State Department of Education on school district employees and expenditures.

Here is what we found.

1. On average, school employees earn about the same as all public and private employees, but their pay has increased less since 2001.

The BLS estimated an average annual wage of $44,570 for all Kansas employees, up from $31,010 in 2001, or 43.7 percent.

School districts had total “full-time equivalent” employment of 69,111 last year. The BLS glossary definitions of wages, salaries and earnings appear to exclude benefits, and its definition of benefits is “nonwage compensation.” If benefits are not included, Kansas school districts in 2017 paid $3.063 billion in salaries to 69,111 employees, or $44,325 per FTE employee. In 2001, 64,150 employees received total salaries of $2.048 billion, or an average of $31,918.

That means average school salaries increased 38.9 percent between 2001 and 2017, or about five percent less than all Kansas employees, and dropped from about $900 more than overall average salaries in Kansas to about $250 less.

By the way, the consumer price index increased 38.4 percent over that period, which means average school salaries just barely kept pace with inflation over that 16-year period, while overall Kansas salaries rose slightly more.

Note: KSDE reports the FTE number of employees. Because many school employees work less than full-time, salary per actual “headcount” employee would be somewhat higher than the FTE number, which means the average salary would be lower. These salaries do not include retirement contributions, such as KPERS for school employees or any pensions or 401(k) contributions in the private sector.

2. School administrators earn less than overall “management occupations” in the state.

One of the employment categories listed by the BLS is called “management occupations.” The annual average wage of the management occupations group in Kansas was $103,530 for May 2017. Within the main management group is “elementary and secondary school administrators.” The BLS reported 2,370 employees in Kansas in this occupation, with an average annual wage of $84,280.

Another occupation within the “management” group is “chief executive.” In Part 1 of this series, we compared chief executives with school superintendents.

Except for superintendents, the only specific salary for school administrators reported by KSDE is for principals. The average school district principal’s salary in 2017 was $87,111, which is $3,000 more than the BLS salary for all “elementary and secondary school administrators.” The average principal salary would likely be somewhat lower if assistant principals were included. In any case, it is over $15,000 below the average for all “management occupations” in Kansas.



3. Salaries for all managers, including chief executives, compared to all employees have risen much faster than school administrator salaries compared to all school district employees.

The average superintendent salary in 2001 of $78,662 was 247 percent of the average school district salary of $31,918. In 2017, the average superintendent salary of $113,245 was 256 percent of the average school district employee salary of $44,325 – a nine percent increase.

The average of Kansas chief executive salary of $105,140 in 2001 was 338 percent of the average Kansas employee earnings of $31,101. In 2017, the average CEO salary was $170,170 was 382 percent of average wages for all employees of $44,570 – a 43 percent increase.

The average principal’s salary in 2001 was $60,465, or 189 percent of the average district employee salary. In 2017, the average principal salary of $87,111 was 197 percent of all salaries – a seven percent increase.

The average Kansas “management occupation” salary in 2001 was $63,640, or 205 percent of the average for all employees. In 2017, the average management salary was $103,503, or 232 percent – a 27 percent increase.




In other words, the pay difference between all public/private sector chief executives and managers salaries and all employee salaries in Kansas is wider than the gap between school leaders and school employees. In addition, those gaps have widened since 2001.


Wednesday, September 5, 2018

School Administrators Part 1: How school superintendents compare to the chief executives in the Kansas economy


Among the most common questions about Kansas public schools is the number of administrators and their pay. Critics often say there are too many administrators and they make too much. That begs the question: compared to what?

To answer this question, KASB looked at how school district administrator numbers and salaries compare to all Kansas employees, both public and private sector. We started with data from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, specifically the State Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for Kansas. The most recent report is from May 2017 (Link). The BLS estimated the total number of Kansas employees, public and private, was 1,369,110. Those positions are broken into 22 major occupational groups, including “management occupations” and hundreds of specific occupational titles within those groups.

We then compared that to data from the Kansas State Department of Education on school district employees and expenditures.

This is part 1, which will start with school superintendents, the positions that seem to draw the most public scrutiny.

We compared superintendent data with the BLS position of chief executive, described as “Determine and formulate policies and provide overall direction of companies or private and public sector organizations within guidelines set up by a board of directors or similar governing body. Plan, direct, or coordinate operational activities at the highest level of management with the help of subordinate executives and staff managers.”

In other words, superintendents have the same responsibilities as other chief executives, and their “board of directors” – the local school board – is looking for the same management qualities as boards in the private sector or other public sector organization.

Here is what we found.

1.      On average, Kansas school superintendents earn less than other chief executives in Kansas, and their salaries have increased less.

The average annual wage of a Kansas CEO was $170,170 in 2017. According to KSDE, the average superintendent salary was $113,245 in 2016-2017, which means the average Kansas CEO makes about 50 percent more than the average school superintendent.

How have those numbers changed over time? KSDE reports superintendent salaries back to 2001. From 2001 to 2017, the Kansas average superintendent salary increased from $78,662 to $113,245, or 44.0 percent. According to BLS data for 2001, the average Kansas chief executive salary increased from $105,140 to $170,170, or 61.8 percent. That means public and private organizations have placed a much higher value on executive leadership. It also means Kansas CEO pay across all organizations increased over 40 percent more than superintendents since 2001.



Certainly, some USD school superintendents make much more than the average – but many make less. That is characteristic of any average. Superintendents of much larger districts, with much larger budgets and more employees, tend to make more. The same is true of executives in the private sector.

2.      There are more superintendent positions per school employee than overall chief executives, but the superintendent/employee ratio has been falling while the chief executive/employee ratio has been increasing.

The BLS estimated the total number of Kansas employees, public and private, was 1,369,110 in May 2017. Of that number, 4,210 were chief executives, or 3.075 per 1,000 employees.

In 2017-18, there were 252 “full time equivalent” school superintendents for 286 school districts. (Several districts share a superintendent, and many superintendents are not considered full time because they hold other duties.) With 69,111 FTE school positions, 252 school superintendents represent 3.646 positions per 1,000 school district employees, compared to 3.075 chief executives per 1,000 for all employees in Kansas.

However, the number of total Kansas employees was 1,321,040 in 2001 with 3,950 chief executives, so the ratio of chief executives to all employees rose slightly from 2.99 in 2001 to 3.075 in 2017. The FTE number of school employees was 65,150.4 in 2001, with 278.5 superintendents, so the ratio of superintendents to all employees dropped from 4.275 to 3.646.

In other words, while there are more superintendents per 1,000 school district employees than chief executives per 1,000 total employees in Kansas, the ratio of superintendents to employees has been dropping while the ratio of all CEOs to all employees has been rising.


To put it another way, there are about 18.6 percent more superintendents per employee than overall chief executives, but they make 33.5 percent less in annual salary.

School consolidation would reduce the number of school superintendents, but it would also likely increase average salaries because school districts would be larger and executive compensation is highly correlated with organizational size. It is not clear that spending on superintendents would decrease. In fact, if school districts were more like the overall public and private sector, there would be somewhat fewer superintendents, but they would be paid substantially more.