1 / 17

The Budgetary Family

The Budgetary Family. Paul Clair Rebecca Kimbrough Samuel Patula Emily Gung Philip Wilkerson. VS. Special Education Programs. Valdosta City Schools. $6.1 Million Budget Approximately 7,000 Students K-12 Roughly 840 Students in Special Education. Lowndes County Schools.

Télécharger la présentation

The Budgetary Family

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Budgetary Family • Paul Clair • Rebecca Kimbrough • Samuel Patula • Emily Gung • Philip Wilkerson

  2. VS Special Education Programs

  3. Valdosta City Schools • $6.1 Million Budget • Approximately 7,000 Students K-12 • Roughly 840 Students in Special Education

  4. Lowndes County Schools • Budget: Unobtainable • Unlisted Number of Students • 33 Special Ed Students Graduated in 2001 • 28 Special Ed Students Graduated in 2002

  5. Valdosta Revenues • State Monies • Local Funds • Federal Grants • SPLOST and Similar Programs

  6. VCS Revenue Pros & Cons • Ensure Student Success Through Purchase of Necessary Materials • Possible Mixing of the Various Revenue Sources May Cause Certain Grants to be Discontinued, (Loss of Funds Needed to Continue Certain Programs

  7. Lowndes County Schools • State Funds • Grant Monies

  8. LCS Revenue Pros & Cons • Easy to Devise Annual Budget • Set Guidelines for School’s Success • Narrow Scope for Obtaining Funds, Particularly from a Volatile State Government

  9. VCS Expenditures • Servicing Special Education Students Age 3-21 • 1,097 Students; Over 60 Professionals & 39 Paraprofessionals • $8,000 Overall Cost Per Pupil • Cost of Special Education Rises Each Year

  10. VCS Pros • VCS is Highly Inclusive and Students Receive Good Education

  11. VCS Cons • Increases in Spending Does Not Yield an Increase in Student Achievement

  12. LCS Expenditures • Number of Students Served is Unavailable • 101 Teachers, 31 Paraprofessionals, 2 Occupational Therapists, 4 Psychologists, & 4 Special Education Coordinators • 61 Total Special Education Graduates Over the Past 2 Years

  13. LCS Pros • Decrease in Dropout Rate • Increase in Accommodations • Increase of Special Ed Students Obtaining Regular Diplomas • Decrease in Performance Gap • Increase in Parental Satisfaction • Decrease in Disciplinary Problems • More Students Meeting Their Goals • Improving Representation of Special Ed Students

  14. LCS Cons • Certification and Training of Teacher is Expensive • Dropout Rate is Difficult to Calculate • One-on-one Time is Too Expensive • Accommodation May Outweigh Adaptation • Overall Success is Difficult to Quantify • Student Goals are Broadly Divergent • Parent Involvement May Hinder the Programs Success

  15. Conclusion • Two Fairly Successful Programs Operate on a Widely Different Scale • Budgets May Need to be Monitored and Maintained More Closely

More Related