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School & District Management

A Big Gap in K-12 Leadership Prep: Teaching School Finance Skills

By Denisa R. Superville 鈥 July 12, 2022 4 min read
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With billions of dollars in federal pandemic aid swirling around school districts鈥攏ot to mention their own multimillion- or billion-dollar local budgets鈥攎any school-level and district leaders are not prepared to do the heavy lifting when it comes to school finance.

But with principals, especially, putting their primary focus on instructional leadership, does that even matter?

School finance expert, Marguerite Roza, the director of the Edunomics Lab at Georgetown University, thinks that both school and district leaders should have that knowledge.

There鈥檚 still debate over how deep educator-preparation programs should go into school finance. Principals are expected to be more focused on instruction and instruction-related tasks that help teachers improve.

But Roza says that school leaders鈥 financial knowledge can help them not only become better stewards of public money, but also make decisions that would bolster their students鈥 education.

鈥淚f you look at the job of a principal鈥攖hey are in a building, they supervise, often, in the neighborhood of $5 [million] to $20 million worth of public investment in children, and those investments also take the form of staffing,鈥 Roza said.

鈥淭hey know a lot about what kids need, what is and isn鈥檛 working in that staff. They should then turn around and tell the district, 鈥楴o, this isn鈥檛 working, we can鈥檛 do this again, or this has to change.鈥 鈥

An of education leadership programs, which prepare principals, superintendents, and other district-level administrators, from 30 top universities, released in February, found that while more than half鈥54 percent鈥攃overed things like revenue structures and compliance issues, the majority left their graduates with huge knowledge gaps in key financial areas they鈥檙e likely to wrestle with in the real world.

Building financial literacy

Fewer than half covered how to read financial documents, such as budgets; understand cost-benefit analyses; create and manage the district鈥檚 or school鈥檚 budgets; how allocation and spending formulas work and how spending decisions intersect with equity, according to the survey.

In fact, fewer than a quarter of the programs covered how district allocations work, and just 15 percent delved into budget cuts and calculating tradeoffs, according to the survey.

The data were based on course descriptions, syllabi, and curriculum reviewed for the preparation programs. At least one of the universities included in the review and that scored high used the school finance programs offered by Edunomics Lab.

Edunomics looked at whether eight finance-related areas appeared in course syllabus and curriculum. They included topics such as the connection between finance and equity and understanding cost drivers like labor and benefits.

And when the programs covered finance, it wasn鈥檛 always in the way that was most helpful to educators.

For example, they tended to focus on revenues鈥攖he money districts and schools receive from the state and other sources鈥 over which school and district leaders often have little control, and not necessarily 鈥渢he decisions about how to spend it once it gets to districts,鈥 Roza said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of interesting when really what they need to know is the part that relates to their job,鈥 she said.

The problem, Roza said, is that many principals do not know how much the staff is costing them or that they can make better staffing decisions to meet their individual school鈥檚 needs if they understood the financial calculations behind it.

A principal who understands spending decisions, for example, can mount a more robust case to district officials for a counselor to work with disengaged students if that鈥檚 an emergent issue at their school.

鈥淭hey are the stewards at that building over those millions of dollars and to not have them have that skill and be fluent in that and be able to participate in those conversations, it鈥檚 like they are operating behind a curtain,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are not passing information back and forth.鈥

Roza thinks this needs to change.

Organizations such the AASA, the School Superintendents Association, and some big districts like Dallas have created opportunities for school and district leaders to deepen their financial knowledge.

States can also invest in building financial literacy among K-12 leaders by requiring traditional university-based preparation programs to include a base body of financial knowledge as part of their programs, Roza said.

Professional development programs such as the Texas-based Holdsworth Center offer school and district leaders a chance to gain a deeper understanding of finance among other leadership qualities outside of the traditional-preparation environment.

鈥淚f we build that financial fluency early on, I think people will just pick up and learn more along the way as well,鈥 Roza said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 care if they get the training through us or somebody else, but I do think we need to put more emphasis on financial skill building.鈥

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