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Will Most Mid-Michigan Students Be Required to Wear Masks This Ye

Will Most Mid-Michigan Students Be Required to Wear Masks This Ye
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How much money 22 local school districts will get in historic K-12 funding bill

How much money 22 local school districts will get in historic K-12 funding bill Mark Johnson, Lansing State Journal © Matthew Dae Smith/Lansing State Journal East Lansing High School math teacher Maggie Moore, top right, works with students in her Algebra 2 class, Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2020. More than $28 million in new money is coming to Greater Lansing schools following the approval of a historic state K-12 funding bill.  The bill will help close a district funding gap, an effort that started with the 1994 approval of Proposal A, which replaced property taxes with state taxes as the main source of school funding. The bill means an increase in base funding from $8,100 per student in some districts to $8,700 per student in all schools.

How much 22 local school districts will get in K-12 funding bill

View Comments More than $28 million in new money is coming to Greater Lansing schools following the approval of a historic state K-12 funding bill.  The bill will help close a district funding gap, an effort that started with the 1994 approval of Proposal A, which replaced property taxes with state taxes as the main source of school funding. The bill means an increase in base funding from $8,100 per student in some districts to $8,700 per student in all schools. The bill will bring millions of dollars in extra funding to Greater Lansing schools as they rebound from a year of remote learning amid COVID-19 concerns. Lansing School District alone could see more than $4 million in new state education funding. 

Some Michigan schools allow students to say no thanks to M-STEP tests

A lot of Michigan students won’t be taking the standardized tests, which are given in grades 3-8 and 11. Because of the pandemic, many families are being given an option by districts to take the normally mandatory test, or just say no. The result will not only mean far fewer test-takers, but far less useful data emerging from the scores. Districts are in the midst of testing, with makeup dates available through early May. It will be weeks before there is a clear picture of how many took the tests, but school officials who spoke to Bridge Michigan said they anticipate a large dropoff from the about 700,000 who took the tests in 2019. 

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