On the 3rd Day of Decline, the Iowa GOP Gave Us… A Plummeting Public Education System
DES MOINES, IA – On the third day of Christmas, Iowa’s children didn’t get three French hens. Instead, they got a public school system going in the wrong direction thanks to failures in Des Moines.
Once Iowa’s crown jewel, our public education system has fallen 15 spots in less than 10 years — from #5 in 2018 to #20 in 2025.
From Pre-K to higher ed, our schools are slipping and Iowa kids and their parents are paying the price.
NAEP scores show Iowa is one of only two states (with Alaska) that got worse from 2022 to 2024 in all of 4th grade math and 8th grade math. Iowa also ranks 8th worst in 4th grade math, 13th worst in 4th grade reading, and 11th worst in 8th grade math.
KCCI noted the decline of Iowa’s public school system back in 2022, pointing out that Iowa had begun to fall behind on how much the state spent to educate each student. In the 1970s and 80s, Iowa spent more per pupil than the national average, but by 1990 that spending was $453 below the national average. By 2018 and 2019, the shortfall grew to $1,254.
Meanwhile, Iowa’s new unaccountable voucher program is sending $35 million to subsidize wealthy families that were already sending their children to private schools.
Margaret Buckton, who was with Iowa School Finance Information Services, explained: “It’s not that our education system has gotten worse. It’s that others have improved and we’re not statistically significantly different than about 15 states in that middle of the pack.”
As long as Republicans continue to ask Iowa teachers and students to do more with less funding and support, it’s clear Iowa’s public school systems will continue to decline. Iowans deserve leaders who will put our children first.
This December, instead of French hens and golden rings, we’re counting down the 12 Days of Iowa’s decline — a daily look at the rankings Iowa has tanked under a decade of one-party rule. Stay tuned tomorrow for Day 4.
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