Chapter 18: Kansas
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Published:2019
David C. Thompson, Ed.D., S. Craig Neuenswander, Ed.D., John M. Heim, Ph.D., Randy D. Watson, Ph.D., 2019. "Kansas", Funding Public Schools in the United States and Indian Country, David C. Thompson, R. Craig Wood, S. Craig Neuenswander, John M. Heim, Randy D. Watson
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The Kansas Legislature began providing funding for public schools in 1937 when it established aid for elementary schools.1 Secondary schools were aided beginning in 1955.2 Additional emergency aid was added in 1959.3 Sweeping school consolidation occurred beginning in 1963, dramatically reducing the state’s approximately 2,800 school districts to only 311 by 1969.4 Legislative enactment of the state’s first true school finance formula likewise followed in this same timeframe, known as the School Foundation Act (SFA) of 1965.5
This formula broke conceptual ground in Kansas by creating a mindset supporting general state aid. Unique features were an adjustment per school district for teacher training and experience, along with a pupil-teacher ratio multiplier tied to each district’s position relative to the state average. These elements combined to establish a state duty to fund schools and acknowledged the need to better equalize educational opportunity among districts.
