16.1.2 Access to Education

Another global concern in education is universal access. This term refers to people’s equal ability to participate in an education system. On a world level, access might be more difficult for certain groups based on class or gender (as was the case in the United States earlier in the nation’s history, a dynamic we still struggle to overcome). The modern idea of universal access arose in the United States as a concern for people with disabilities. In the United States, one way in which universal education is supported is through federal and state governments covering the cost of free public education. Of course, the way this plays out in terms of school budgets and taxes makes this an often-contested topic on the national, state, and community levels.

Rank State Education Spending Per Student
1 New York $24,040
2 District of Columbia $22,759
3 Connecticut $20,635
4 New Jersey $20,021
5 Vermont $19,340
6 Alaska $17,726
7 Massachusetts $17,058
8 New Hampshire $16,893
9 Pennsylvania $16,395
10 Wyoming $16,224
11 Rhode Island $16,121
12 Illinois $15,741
13 Delaware $15,639
14 Hawaii $15,242
15 Maryland $14,762
16 Maine $14,145
17 North Dakota $13,758
18 Ohio $13,027
19 Washington $12,995
20 Minnesota $12,975
21 California $12,498
22 Nebraska $12,491
23 Michigan $12,345
24 Wisconsin $12,285
25 Virginia $12,216
26 Oregon $11,920
27 Iowa $11,732
28 Montana $11,680
29 Kansas $11,653
30 Louisiana $11,452
31 West Virginia $11,334
32 Kentucky $11,110
33 South Carolina $10,856
34 Missouri $10,810
34 Georgia $10,810
36 Indiana $10,262
37 Colorado $10,202
38 Arkansas $10,139
39 South Dakota $10,073
40 Alabama $9,696
41 Texas $9,606
42 New Mexico $9,582
43 Tennessee $9,544
44 Nevada $9,417
45 North Carolina $9,377
46 Florida $9,346
47 Mississippi $8,935
48 Oklahoma $8,239
49 Arizona $8,239
50 Idaho $7,771
51 Utah $7,628
Table 16.1 - How does state spending affect educational opportunities? (EducationData.org 2018)

A precedent for universal access to education in the United States was set with the 1972 U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia’s decision in Mills v. Board of Education of the District of Columbia. This case was brought on the behalf of seven school-age children with special needs who argued that the school board was denying their access to free public education. The school board maintained that the children’s “exceptional” needs, which included intellectual disabilities, precluded their right to be educated for free in a public school setting. The board argued that the cost of educating these children would be too expensive and that the children would therefore have to remain at home without access to education.

This case was resolved in a hearing without any trial. The judge, Joseph Cornelius Waddy, upheld the students’ right to education, finding that they were to be given either public education services or private education paid for by the Washington, D.C., board of education. He noted that

Constitutional rights must be afforded citizens despite the greater expense involved … the District of Columbia’s interest in educating the excluded children clearly must outweigh its interest in preserving its financial resources. … The inadequacies of the District of Columbia Public School System whether occasioned by insufficient funding or administrative inefficiency, certainly cannot be permitted to bear more heavily on the “exceptional” or handicapped child than on the normal child (Mills v. Board of Education 1972).

Today, the optimal way to include people with disabilities students in standard classrooms is still being researched and debated. “Inclusion” is a method that involves complete immersion in a standard classroom, whereas “mainstreaming” balances time in a special-needs classroom with standard classroom participation. There continues to be social debate surrounding how to implement the ideal of universal access to education.

The content of this course has been taken from the free Sociology textbook by Openstax