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Instruction by Category and Instructional Support
WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING ATThese charts remove two large categories, Operations and Leadership, in order to assess the costs directly related to supporting the child, the teacher, or the classroom. These charts includs an aggregate of all five Instruction subcategories:
And Instructional Support, including:
The per-pupil expenditure includes all students, in general education as well as programs targeted to specific populations such as English-language learners and students with disabilities. The charts do not represent 100% of the total per-pupil expenditure, but graphically shows the actual cost of each of the above subcategories. The charts are re-sorted once again, high to low, by per-pupil expenditure, for Instruction and Instructional Support. WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FORYou are looking to get a comparative sense of the state’s investment, specifically in teaching and learning, in the child, the teacher, and the classroom. Bear in mind that district educational decisions such as class size, the presence of teacher aides, reading specialists, the specific needs of their students, and so on will affect these numbers. More questions than answers These charts are not answers or proofs but merely lenses that offer us fresh perspectives. Since we have no standards or ideal expenditures, the charts raise some questions that should not go unanswered at the state level, questions such as: Why do certain districts have such high costs for substitute teachers? The way In$ite works is to allocate the money spent on substitutes hired to cover a teacher engaged in professional development to the Instructional Support subcategory of professional development. Those substitutes, then, are not included in the Instruction category. The substitute-teacher costs represented in the In$ite Instruction and Instructional Support charts apply only to absences due to illness, personal days, and the like.
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