NH High School Graduation Rates
The school funding model proposed by American Institutes for Research (AIR) and endorsed by the 2020 Commission to Study School Funding uses graduation rates among high schools as an important […]
The school funding model proposed by American Institutes for Research (AIR) and endorsed by the 2020 Commission to Study School Funding uses graduation rates among high schools as an important […]
The main purpose of schools is the formal education of our kids. Curricula, lessons, libraries, books, and teachers are the main tools that are part of that formal education. We […]
It’s a New Year, but New Hampshire still faces an old problem: deep and enduring inequities in educational opportunity and enormous differences in property taxes. The tremendous gap between what the […]
On behalf of the NH School Funding Fairness Project, Hart Research Associates conducted a phone survey of 500 New Hampshire registered voters from November 15 to 17, 2021. Respondents were […]
The New Hampshire Department of Education (DoE) recently published its first formal estimates of the adequate education grants cities and towns will receive in Fiscal Year 2023. Those estimates confirm […]
It’s that time of year again – property tax bills are beginning to arrive in homeowners’ mailboxes across New Hampshire. For many, their property tax bill is the single largest […]
According to the Education Law Center’s recent report Making the Grade 2021, which studies school funding fairness in all 50 states, New Hampshire has the second most regressive school funding […]
The gallery below features slides from a recent “School Funding and Property Taxes” presentation. NHSFFP is excited to talk about school funding and property taxes in your community. Click here to […]
In formulating its version of New Hampshire’s FY 2022-23 budget, the House Finance Committee identified an additional $100 million in resources for use within the Education Trust Fund. Rather than […]