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Which states have the best education systems?  

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Which states have the best education systems?  

By
Brandon Dutcher

There are any number of education rankings (Education Week, U.S. News & World Report, WalletHub, et al.) which measure many different variables. But in their new ranking of the quality of states’ education systems, scholars Stan Liebowitz and Matthew Kelly at the University of Texas at Dallas focus on what really matters: student learning.  

The UT-Dallas scholars use data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP, often called “the nation’s report card” and widely recognized as the gold standard of student assessments) and also take into account the differences in the demographic makeup of student populations in the states. Virginia is tops in this “Quality Rank,” followed by Massachusetts, Florida, and New Jersey. Oklahoma ranks 41st.  

Increased government spending on education does not guarantee educational results. Consider: New York spends more than $22,000 per student to achieve a quality ranking of 31st—while Tennessee ranks 30th yet spends under $8,800 per student. With that in mind, the UT-Dallas scholars also explore how well students are performing in relation to how much taxpayers are spending. The result is a separate “Efficiency Rank.” Unsurprisingly, New York falls to 49th in this ranking

and Tennessee rises to 12th.

The top 10 states are:  

Florida

Texas

Georgia

Arizona

North Carolina

Indiana

Virginia

South Dakota

Utah

Colorado

By now, of course, Florida’s success is no secret. It was 20 years ago that reform-minded Gov. Jeb Bush predicted that his student-centered policies would bring “a renaissance in public education.” Certainly Oklahoma’s governor has noticed. “I look at Florida, some of the success they’ve had moving up in the rankings,” Gov. Kevin Stitt told OCPA.

“In the span of a generation, Florida has gone from 10 percent of students attending something other than assigned public schools to 47 percent,” former OCPA research assistant Patrick Gibbons pointed out in the Tallahassee Democrat (“Florida’s making progress as school choice expands”). “And guess what? At the same time choice has been expanding, Florida has been making some of the biggest academic gains in the nation.”

This comes as no surprise. “School choice policies are better supported by empirical evidence than any other kind of education reform,” education researcher Dr. Greg Forster reminds us.