> Inner city schools do not get less of the funding.
These are all based on the public records, please consider why you stated that the funding is equal? Federal funding for education has also been less and less.
http://www.openpagov.org/education_revenue_and_expenses.asp
(My city) Allentown SD per student = $13,949
(Next town over) Sailisbury SD per student = $21,519
(Highest in the state) Lower Merion SD per student = $28,495
Screen Shot of Data:
https://imgur.com/a/DMjl7
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/pa-high-court-revives-scho...
"Here is ti challenge this statistics: Data from the National Center for Education Statistics shows that high-poverty school districts spent 15.6 percent less than those in the group with the least poverty.
In Pennsylvania, that difference was 33 percent"
Federal Funding title 1 for Inner City Schools funding per student is quite low, averaging about $500 to $600 a year. 50% of public schools qualify for federal money and the 14 billion works out to much less than most people believe. It amounts to a 5% increase in funding for some schools.
https://www.brookings.edu/research/why-federal-spending-on-d...
Here is the Heritage Foundations paper on how Inner City racial groups get more money and so there is no unequal funding problem based on race. This is just crazy statistics gymnastics. http://www.heritage.org/education/report/the-myth-racial-dis...
My point is not race it is socioeconomic disparity at the school district level and Heritage wants to say school in districts favor the poorer schools. Poorer schools in School District isn't the problem it is school districts getting under funded.
Funding isn't the answer but why should my daughter or son have 9 gym classes a year (School doesn't have a gym, nor a library room, and certainly no art class room) She also gets 9 art classes and 9 Music classes a year.
They also don't get recess due to funding problems for monitors. My daughter in kindergarten got no recces from August till January. Though she had 2 hours of reading and 2 hours of math per day. http://www.macon.com/news/local/article28555831.html