Bruce Baker is really ticked about Erik Hanushek’s new video promoting the “education crisis” and asserting that money is definitely not the answer.

Hanushek holds up Florida as a model and points to Wyoming and New York to make his point that money doesn’t matter.

Baker doesn’t agree, and he assembles data to make the following points:

*States with weaker unions (higher number in ranking, meaning lower union strength ranking), have systematically lower state and local revenue per pupil and less competitive teacher wages.

*States with weaker unions have systematically lower average NAEP scores.

*States with higher reformy grade point averages according to Students First, have lower shares of children in the public school system, and have lower average NAEP scores.

*Average NAEP scores are most positively associated with state and local revenue and teacher wage competitiveness.

*Standardized NAEP gains over time are most positively associated with shares of 3 and 4 year olds enrolled in school programs/pre-school.

*Standardized NAEP gains are also positively associated with Students First grade point averages. But, standardized NAEP gains are pretty strongly related to starting point. That is, states showing greater gains are generally those who started lower.