April 27, 2024
Education News Canada

FRASER INSTITUTE
Higher spending on K-12 education does not result in better student outcomes

March 27, 2024

Higher levels of per-student spending do not achieve higher student scores on standardized tests, either internationally or among the provinces, finds a new report published by the Fraser Institute, an independent, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.

"Just spending more on K-12 education does not lead to better student outcomes," said Derek J. Allison, Fraser Institute senior fellow and author of School Spending and Performance in Canada and Other High-Income Countries.

Provincial per-student spending (2018) compared to core PISA score

The study compares provincial per-student spending on K-12 education in 2018 (the last year of comparable data) to other high-income countries in the OECD and to performance on the OECD's Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).

It finds that higher per-student spending levels are not associated with stronger academic achievement. In fact, in 2018, 10 countries or one third of the high- income OECD countries included in the analysis spent more per student than Canada but achieved significantly lower PISA scores.

Similarly, among the provinces, Saskatchewan was the highest per-student spender among the provinces but ranked 8 th out of 10 on PISA scores. Manitoba was the second-highest per-student spender and recorded the lowest PISA scores nationwide. Conversely, British Columbia was the lowest spender per student in Canada and achieved the fourth-highest PISA scores.

"The evidence is clear simply spending more on established K-12 schools without finding new and better ways to help kids learn will not improve student outcomes," Allison said.

More from this study
Read the Full Report

For more information

Fraser Institute
401 – 1491 Yonge Street
Toronto Ontario
Canada M4T 1Z4
www.fraserinstitute.org


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