New study shows wisconsin's rural students still face inequity

New study shows wisconsin's rural students still face inequity

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Many students in rural areas in Wisconsin and across the country are still facing inequity, according to a new study from the Rural School and Community Trust, a national nonprofit that


helps rural schools and communities. The report looks at the more that 9 million students who attended a rural school last year. That is roughly 1 in 5 students in the United States, more


than the nation’s 85 largest school districts combined. “While some rural schools thrive, others and their communities continue to face devastating obstacles in the education and well-being


of children,” said Robert Mahaffey, the executive director of the Rural School and Community Trust, in a statement. STAY CONNECTED TO WISCONSIN NEWS — YOUR WAY Get trustworthy reporting and


unique local stories from WPR delivered directly to your inbox. While the report found numerous states provide a disproportionately large share of funding for rural school districts,


Wisconsin was among 12 states that provided less. In Wisconsin, rural districts get less state funding per student than urban and suburban districts. It typically costs rural district more


to serve each student. “What that suggests is the state may not be making up the difference for a lot of rural schools and their budgets,” said Alan Richard, a board member of the Rural


School and Community Trust. “There are some rural or smaller school districts in Wisconsin that are in a budget squeeze and that limits the kinds of resources they are able to raise on their


own because there may not be a local tax base.” On Tuesday, residents in Wisconsin’s Palmyra-Eagle School District voted in an advisory referendum to dissolve the district. The state


Department of Public Instruction has four public hearings about the district’s proposed dissolution scheduled for the remainder of the month and one in December. Kim Kaukl, director of the


Wisconsin Rural Schools Alliance, told WPR that many rural schools across the state are stuck under revenue caps and are still working to return to pre-recession funding levels in some


cases. He said he isn’t surprised by the findings in the Rural School and Community Trust report and that they’ve been pushing for additional funding for years. “Many rural school systems


have a hard time raising that tax money locally to supplement state funds for education,” Richard explained. “If a rural community just has fewer businesses and homes and doesn’t have much


of a local tax base, it creates a lot of inequities that the state is responsible for stepping in and helping make up.” The report listed Wisconsin as the 44th highest-need state. Although


the state only has around 160,000 students that live in rural areas, the majority of Wisconsin’s schools are considered rural, according Richards. Nearly one in five Wisconsin students


attend school in a rural district. The state also had the 16th highest poverty disadvantage in the report. Despite the lack of funding, Wisconsin’s rural students are more likely to take


Advanced Placement exams and enroll in early college programs than their peers around the country. The study measured states’ condition of rural education using five gauges: importance of


rural education in the state, student and family diversity, educational policy, educational outcomes and college readiness. Data was compiled from information collected by the National


Center for Education Statistics, the U.S. Department of Education and the U.S. Census Bureau. _Wisconsin Public Radio, © Copyright 2025, Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin


System and Wisconsin Educational Communications Board._