David J. Armor is a professor emeritus of public policy in the School of Public Policy and Government at George Mason University, USA. John R. Munich is a partner at Stinson LLP, where he chairs the firm's Business and Commercial Litigation division and leads the Education Funding Litigation practice group. Aron Malatinszky is a PhD student in the Department of Economics at Boston University, USA.
“Sure, money matters in education—up to a point. Without some of it, we’d have no schools, but, as this fine book explains, putting in more doesn’t reliably yield stronger student achievement. What the U.S. needs—more urgently than ever, due to pandemic-induced learning losses—is more effective schools, not richer ones. That calls for strategies that produce learning, not shoveling resources in pursuit of a legalistic ‘school-adequacy’ chimera.” - Chester E. Finn, Jr., former Assistant Secretary of Education, President Emeritus of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Volker Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, USA. ""School Resources, the Achievement Gap, and the Law is a terrific book for anyone who wants to understand the effect of greater resources on academic achievement. It is compact, very readable, and a volume every policymaker, lawyer, and researcher who deals with education should have on hand. It does not settle the perennial question, “does money matter?” – no book is likely to do that – but it provides significant evidence that the answer is “probably not as much as you think.” - Neal McClusky, Director, Center for Educational Freedom, Cato Institute, USA, and author of The Fractured Schoolhouse Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society. ""This accessible volume offers positive suggestions for how schools could improve. And, yes, those interventions, like all policies, cost money. But simply giving additional money to schools in the hopes that they will find and successfully implement effective reforms has failed over and over again, as this book persuasively demonstrates. The question addressed by this book is not whether money matters but whether blank checks for schools are wise."" - Jay P. Greene, Senior Research Fellow, Heritage Foundation; Former Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Education Reform, University of Arkansas, USA. “Sure, money matters in education—up to a point. Without some of it, we’d have no schools, but, as this fine book explains, putting in more doesn’t reliably yield stronger student achievement. What the U.S. needs—more urgently than ever, due to pandemic-induced learning losses—is more effective schools, not richer ones. That calls for strategies that produce learning, not shoveling resources in pursuit of a legalistic ‘school-adequacy’ chimera.” - Chester E. Finn, Jr., former Assistant Secretary of Education, President Emeritus of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Volker Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, USA. ""School Resources, the Achievement Gap, and the Law is a terrific book for anyone who wants to understand the effect of greater resources on academic achievement. It is compact, very readable, and a volume every policymaker, lawyer, and researcher who deals with education should have on hand. It does not settle the perennial question, “does money matter?” – no book is likely to do that – but it provides significant evidence that the answer is “probably not as much as you think.” - Neal McClusky, Director, Center for Educational Freedom, Cato Institute, USA, and author of The Fractured Schoolhouse Reexamining Education for a Free, Equal, and Harmonious Society. ""This accessible volume offers positive suggestions for how schools could improve. And, yes, those interventions, like all policies, cost money. But simply giving additional money to schools in the hopes that they will find and successfully implement effective reforms has failed over and over again, as this book persuasively demonstrates. The question addressed by this book is not whether money matters but whether blank checks for schools are wise."" - Jay P. Greene, Senior Research Fellow, Heritage Foundation; Former Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Education Reform, University of Arkansas, USA.