the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, As the New Jersey Department of Education recently announced grant amounts to school districts from the American Rescue Plan, Newark-based non-profit Project Ready commissioned a poll by Change Research of 1,215 New Jersey voters to understand how residents want to see the funding used and how they’d like to see school districts engage community members to inform local decision making. By a large margin, parents want school districts to engage in an inclusive, transparent process.`
Unlike Ridgewood which voted for less transparency by , losing the ability to vote of school budgets . “School districts across New Jersey have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to help our children make up for lost learning time and take our schools to the next level,” said Project Ready Executive Director Shennell McCloud. “It’s vital that school districts set up a transparent, accountable, easily accessible process for allocating this funding – one that gives parents a seat at the table.”
Key findings include:
Voters favor an inclusive, transparent process for deciding how funding is used.
74% say it’s important that “parents, teachers, employers, and non-profit leaders have a seat at the table and a voice in how this funding is used, so that all perspectives in the community are incorporated” vs 18% who say “individual school districts know best. They should make these spending decisions on their own.”
55% say full transparency over how money is spent should be the top priority, compared with 36% accountability and 7% innovation.
63 percent of parents would take advantage of high quality tutoring for their children if it was made available to them.
These numbers are highest among Black and Hispanic parents, both at 78%, and among lower income (<$50k per year) parents, at 83%.
Overall, the idea of giving parents with one-time grants of $500 per child to be used for educational needs did not poll well, with 47% of parents saying it would have an impact compared with 49% who say it would not. However, there is a sharp divide along racial lines and urban/suburban lines, with 60% of urban parents, 66% of Black parents, and 75% of Hispanic parents saying this would have an impact, compared with 38% of white parents.
Other priorities among voters are supporting emotional/mental health needs (29%), expanding free pre-K and childcare for all children (29%), special funding for students with greater learning needs (28%), and expanding broadband access to underserved areas (28%).