69传媒

Budget & Finance

If You Gave Elementary School 69传媒 $2K, How Would They Spend It?

By Denisa R. Superville 鈥 April 28, 2023 6 min read
Second grade students on the steering committee at Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School take a break from assisting with polling on April 14, 2023.
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A new bathroom mirror. Sports equipment. A game room. A vending machine that dispenses healthy snacks鈥攚ith proceeds funding future field trips.

That鈥檚 some of what students in the Roosevelt Elementary school district, a K-8 school system of about 7,500 students in Phoenix, voted to invest in when the district gave about half its schools $2,000 to spend as part of a pilot program in student participatory budgeting.

Participatory budgeting is more often used in older grades, in middle and high schools. But the pilot program in Roosevelt allowed students as young as kindergarteners to make their opinions known about changes they鈥檇 make if they got the chance.

鈥淵ou are asking the students essentially, 鈥榃hat can make my learning experience, my school experience better?鈥 And adults can鈥檛 always answer that,鈥 said Tara Bartlett, a doctoral student at Arizona State University and research assistant at Center for the Future of Arizona, which helps school districts implement participatory budgeting.

What younger students want

Nearly all of the projects the students in Roosevelt voted to approve this month were ones that would improve their learning environment, with a focus on beautification and鈥攗nsurprisingly鈥攆un.

That鈥檚 not uncommon in elementary schools, Bartlett said. When young students get to vote, they often chose projects like school gardens, trees, murals, outdoor seating spaces, refillable water stations, and playground equipment.

A second grader on the steering committee helps a younger student with voting on April 14, 2023.

Three connective threads seem to run through such choices: social-emotional learning, connecting with nature, and sustainability, she said.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the trend we are seeing with the youngest students鈥攖hey want that connection to outside, and play, and wellness,鈥 Bartlett said.

Ariana Cavarez, 14, a member of the student steering committee that ran the project at John R. Davis Elementary School, was not surprised that sports equipment beat out comfortable seating鈥攅ven though there鈥檚 a need for both at her school, she said.

鈥淚 was expecting it to win because a lot of people love playing sports, and they鈥檙e always complaining about not having enough equipment, and that they wished they could play another sport,鈥 she said. 鈥淓veryone was so excited; so, I knew it was going to win.鈥

There was also an active campaign on campus among different proponents for all of the proposals, which also included a mural.

When students were unofficially polled last year, adding comfortable seating appeared headed for a win, said David Gochuco, who teaches 7th and 8th grade math and was the project鈥檚 sponsor at the school.

鈥淭he ones we have are broken and they are uncomfortable,鈥 Cavarez said of the chairs, adding that sitting in them for hours hurts. 鈥淢ore comfortable chairs would have been a great idea, and a lot of kids liked that.鈥

But buying more basketballs, volleyballs, soccer balls and sports equipment won by a landslide. As Cavarez predicted, lots of students seem to have been swayed by the idea of giving more students a chance to play.

Making the process work in the lower grades

The Roosevelt school district gave each participating school $2,000, pulled from funds already set aside for desegregation efforts.

69传媒 initially thought $2,000 was a lot of money and started to brainstorm big-ticket items, like a covering one of the outdoor basketball courts, said Sabrina Orta, an English/language-arts teacher at Southwest Elementary School, where students voted to add a new game room.

But after an experiment in which they were given a gift card to buy snacks for an after-school activity, they soon realized that $2,000 wouldn鈥檛 go that far and adjusted their expectations. They learned that while they had choices, they also had limitations, she said.

With her direction, students compiled a list of things that could enhance their experience during the school day.

The $2,000 budget also led to a larger discussion between Orta and her students about how adults stretch their monthly salaries, she said.

The Center for the Future of Arizona, which provides curriculum materials, trains teachers, and other assistance to schools implementing participatory budgeting, had to modify teaching materials to make it work for younger students, while still ensuring that teachers were able to connect the project to democratic principles and voting.

KaRa Lyn Thompson from CFA teaches the SPB process to the student steering committee at Ed and Verma Pastor Elementary School in Phoenix in January 2023.

In elementary school, teachers cover a lot of subject areas and may not necessarily have deep understanding of social studies, civics, or teaching about democratic principles, Bartlett said. Teachers also have to understand that students are still the leaders in the budgeting despite their ages.

The center has found that in elementary schools鈥攚here there can be varying levels of maturity鈥攖he youngest students weren鈥檛 necessarily left out of the process, Bartlett said.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think they ever felt as though they weren鈥檛 being heard or their voice wasn鈥檛 being valued,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think that comes inherently from the onset, from the design of the process鈥攖hat this a schoolwide initiative and everyone is leading it.鈥

Megan Gestson, the executive director of leadership and learning in Roosevelt, said schools opted to participate in the pilot.

鈥淥ne of the things that was really appealing about it was that there鈥檚 so much flexibility in how it works, and that it really can be something that can fit any campus and their current capacity,鈥 she said.

Some schools incorporated it into their student governments, while others added it as an elective or an after-school club.

One of the things Gestson learned this year was that teachers probably should be compensated or given a stipend for the additional duties. She鈥檇 also add time for professional development to help teachers.

鈥淏ut what we saw was encouraging,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s I was out and about during the different vote days, every teacher that I interacted with, every sponsor, was ecstatic about their experiences. I heard some version of, 鈥業 can鈥檛 wait until next year 鈥︹ Certainly it was powerful, and I see huge benefits for students.鈥

There was also the unintended benefit of getting departments that don鈥檛 often engage with students鈥攕uch as finance, maintenance and purchasing鈥攚orking with them.

Maintenance workers had to explain why a proposal for a new hydration system might not work in a building with old plumbing. Those in the purchasing department helped students understand why they couldn鈥檛 buy an item from a company that wasn鈥檛 an approved district vendor.

There are a lot of lessons for students, too. They get to see democracy in action and learn that every vote and voice matters, Orta said.

鈥淭hey realized it takes a village鈥攊n this case, a school鈥攖o make something happen,鈥 Orta said.

鈥淔or me, the teamwork is there,鈥 Gochuco said. 鈥淭eamwork is very important. It鈥檚 not possible if only one person works for it. They also learn how to be a leader.鈥

On voting days, for example, older students manned the polling places and helped those in kindergarten navigate the process.

Both Orta and Gochuco, a first-year teacher from the Philippines, said they鈥檇 volunteer for the program next year. Cavarez wants to participate again, too.

鈥淚t feels amazing [that] everyone could have a chance to vote and know that their voice matters in our school,鈥 she said.

Seventh grade students at John R. Davis School participate in the district鈥檚 first Vote Day on April 4, 2023.

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