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An examination of budget reductions in high-wealth property school districts and low-wealth property school districts in Texas

An Examination of Budget Reductions in High-Wealth
Property School Districts and Low-Wealth
Property School District in Texas
Dora E. Sauceda, Ed.D.
The University of Texas at Austin, 2012
Supervisor: Julian Vasquez Heilig
In June of 2011, The 82nd Legislature approved a reduction to Texas public
education funding in upwards of $4 billion. Districts, regardless of wealth, responded by
making budgetary reductions that affected personnel, programs, and services. The
reduction in funding is expected to continue into the next biennium. This study examined
the prioritization of budget reductions and process utilized by high-wealth and low-wealth property school districts to enact budget reductions to the various operating
expenditures and the inequities that surfaced as a result of the reductions.
The research questions included in the study were:
1. What budget-reduction options are prioritized at the district level for high-wealth
property school districts versus low-wealth property school districts?
2. What budget-reduction process was utilized at the district level by high-wealth
property school districts and low-wealth property school districts?

3. What district-level budget functions were slated for reduction at high-wealth
property and low-wealth property school districts and what are the equity
implications that surfaced as a result of the reductions?
The study utilized a mixed-methods design. A 5-point Likert scale survey and
semi-structured interview were used to examine the budget-reduction prioritization and process. An independent samples t-test was utilized to examine 2010-2011 and 2011-
2012 per-pupil expenditures by function (N=60). The sample included 30 high-wealth
and 30-low-wealth school districts.
The results of the qualitative data indicated that districts prioritize communication
with stakeholders and school boards when deciding on budgetary reductions.
Communication of the budget problem to all stakeholders was a high priority so as to
ensure buy-in once decisions on budget reductions were made. The semi-structured
interview revealed emergent themes that included maintaining the vision, transparency,
stakeholder participation, equity, and impact of budget reductions. The t-test revealed
statistical significance in the areas of instruction, security services, and payroll. The
results also revealed that programs and services aimed at assisting the students with most need were either decreased or eliminated.
Findings derived from this study will provide educational practitioners and
policymakers with a conglomerate of information on how school-district leaders are
examining their financial resources, areas designated for reduction, and areas they
perceive as vital for preservation. / text

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UTEXAS/oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5858
Date25 July 2012
CreatorsSauceda, Dora E.
Source SetsUniversity of Texas
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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