Property Tax Cap Policy in Indiana and Implications for Public School Funding Equity

Authors

  • Scott J. Bowling Crawfordsville Community School Corporation
  • Lori G. Boyland Ball State University
  • Kim M. Kirkeby Ball State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v15n9a881

Keywords:

School finance, School funding equity, Property tax caps, U.S. public education funding policy

Abstract

The purpose of this research was to examine funding losses experienced by preschool to grade 12 (P–12) public school districts in Indiana, U.S., from an equity standpoint after the implementation of statewide property tax caps. All Indiana public school districts (N = 292) rely on property taxes as a major source of revenue, but districts experienced widely varying losses after the tax reform. Analyses across an array of district characteristics revealed significant relationships between differential funding losses and demographic indicators, including total student enrollment and the percentages of certain minoritized students. Implications for policy and practice include the integration of findings with essential research on funding equity in public education and attention on leadership toward reducing funding disparities.

Author Biographies

Scott J. Bowling, Crawfordsville Community School Corporation

Superintendent of Schools, Crawfordsville Community School Corporation

Lori G. Boyland, Ball State University

Associate Professor, Department of Educational Leadership

Kim M. Kirkeby, Ball State University

Graduate Assistant, Department of Educational Leadership

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Published

2019-08-14

How to Cite

Bowling, S. J., Boyland, L. G., & Kirkeby, K. M. (2019). Property Tax Cap Policy in Indiana and Implications for Public School Funding Equity. International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 15(9). https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v15n9a881

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