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School Funding and the Law

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Although the United States Constitution does not make any federal provisions for public education, every stateÆs constitution guarantees some level of free public schooling for its citizens (School, 2005). Each state governs its own public education system, and determines how it will be financed. The federal government, state governments, school districts, and schools all have some decision-making role in how the money is spent, with substantial variation from one school district to another. The percentage of school funding collected from different tax sources differs considerably from state to state, and traditionally, government funding for schools comes from local, state and federal sources (Sources, 2005). The American School Board Journal has estimated that 93 percent of financial support for public schools comes roughly 48.9 percent from state and 44.2 percent from local sources, with the federal government supplying only 6.9 percent of funding. Historically, the major source of funding for public schools has been property taxes (School, 2005). Most states get funding for education from state revenue sources such as the state sales tax, personal income tax, corporate income tax, excise tax or from a tax on the manufacture, sale or consumption of a commodity (Sources, 2005). Many states have a tax or revenue for education such as a general sales tax, severance tax, tobacco tax, motor vehicle license tax, gambling tax, utility tax, liquor tax, and the sale of lott

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Some common words found in the essay are:
Board Journal, Vermont Ohio, Montana Thirteen, Republican House, United Constitution, Educational Statistics, Public Schools, Utah Jersey, Retrieved Apr, Ohio Colorado, sources 2005, school districts, pupil expenditure, sales tax, public schools, property taxes, retrieved apr 30, school facilities, 30 2005, apr 30, retrieved apr, apr 30 2005, education revenue sources, 2005 retrieved apr,
Approximate Word count = 1185
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page)

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