Indiana University

Media Relations

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Hoosiers slightly more pessimistic about school quality in annual survey

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State debates may have impact on public perception

The results of the fifth annual Public Opinion Survey on K-12 Education in Indiana by the Center for Evaluation and Education Policy (CEEP) at the Indiana University School of Education find public attitudes are slightly down regarding the overall quality of schools in the state. The survey gauged the attitudes and perceptions of a representative sample of Hoosiers on key educational issues.

Fifty percent of respondents answered that public schools in Indiana are "excellent" or "good," down 5 percentage points since the first survey in 2003. Sixty-one percent of Hoosiers responded that their own local schools are "excellent" or "good," but the number responding that their schools are "excellent" is down 6 percentage points from the 2006 survey. The percentage of respondents who said their local school was "poor" rose 2 percentage points in this year's poll.

Survey co-authors Terry Spradlin and Nathan Burroughs presented their findings to the Indiana State Board of Education during its January meeting in Indianapolis. CEEP Director Jonathan Plucker is also a co-author of the report. The new survey asked respondents 25 questions over seven categories: School quality, school funding and taxes, early childhood education initiatives, school choice and charter schools, teacher quality and compensation, familiarity and support of "No Child Left Behind" and Indiana accountability measures, and the achievement gap in Indiana.

Spradlin attributed the slight downturn at least in part to the intense debate over property taxes at the state level. "There was a high level of dissatisfaction in 2007 expressed by homeowners across the state about the sizeable increases in the property tax bills they received," he said. "Public-school spending is viewed as one of the reasons for these increases."

However, Spradlin pointed out that more respondents continued to perceive that public schools in Indiana have gotten better over the last five than those who think the quality of public schools has declined.

In response to the debate over property taxes, the survey authors added a new question for this year's survey, asking respondents about their preferred tax revenue source for funding schools. Only 15 percent prefer property taxes as the primary source of funding. A total of 35 percent prefer funding from income taxes, 29 percent prefer sales taxes as the source, while 22 percent say a combination of tax resources should be used.

Another new question on the 2007 survey revealed a split on the value of school consolidation. While 49 percent strongly or somewhat agreed with the idea that consolidating smaller school corporations will save tax dollars, 43 percent disagreed somewhat or strongly. But when asked whether they would support or oppose consolidating school districts in their community with another district if there was only a slight possibility it would lower their tax burden, 59 percent of Hoosiers said they would oppose such a move.

"These results suggest that such a large-scale consolidation plan, like that proposed by the Local Government Reform Commission, would be met with significant opposition," Plucker observed.

Last month, the Indiana Commission on Local Government Reform proposed consolidating school districts with fewer than 2,000 students, which would result in the elimination of nearly 50 percent of the school districts in the state.

Other findings of the 2007 survey:

The entire report is available at http://www.ceep.indiana.edu/projects/PDF/POS Ed IN 20080108.pdf.

CEEP promotes and supports rigorous program evaluation and policy research primarily, but not exclusively, for education, human services and non-profit organizations. Its research uses both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. More about CEEP, including complete reports of the 2007 Public Opinion Survey on K-12 Education Issues and the past four public opinion surveys, is available on the CEEP Web site, http://ceep.indiana.edu/.


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