This article was originally published in the June 23, 1999 edition of Los Angeles Times
© 1999 Los Angeles Times


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State's Public Schools Trail in U.S. Surveys of Spending
SACRAMENTO--California public schools are well below the national average in
per-pupil spending and the amount spent on teacher salaries, according to
new Census Bureau figures.
The statistics, available on the Internet at http://www.census.gov,
are for the 1995-96 school year and include detailed spending
comparisons.
The figures show that California spent $5,609 per student in 1995-96,
making the state 36th in the nation. The U.S. average was $6,450. States
vary in calculating per-pupil spending.
A survey by the National Education Assn. found that California's
per-pupil spending was $5,327 in 1997-98, ranking the state 41st. Gov.
Gray Davis' Finance Department says the per-pupil figure for this year is
$5,752, still well below average.
When personal income, a measurement of individuals' wealth and
standard of living, is factored in, California's per-pupil spending drops
to 48th.
Although average California teacher salaries have been among the
nation's highest, the state ranked 35th in total spending for teacher
salaries in 1996-97, according to the report released last week.
California's average teacher salary in 1996-97 was $43,474, the
ninth-highest in the country, according to the education association.
One reason the state can have high salaries but low total spending for
them is large class sizes, meaning California has been paying fewer
teachers than other states, proportionately. The state was second-worst
in the nation in class sizes in 1996-97, according to the NEA.
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