Public Schools Must Face the Reality of Shrinking Enrollment
Post-pandemic enrollment isn’t likely to rebound anytime soon.

Three and a half years after the onset of the pandemic, enrollment losses are still hampering public schools, who depend largely on student counts to sustain their budgets and pay their staff. Data published in May 2023 by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) show that nationwide public school enrollments fell by 3 percent—around 1.4 million students—in the first year of the pandemic and remained at that lower level in the 2021–2022 school year. While national figures for the 2022–2023 school year aren't available yet, state-level data from California, Illinois, New York, and others show public school rolls still trending downward.
At this point, there's every indication that the initial public school enrollment shocks from the pandemic won't rebound any time soon. Educators need to be prepared for a new normal where school choice programs are widespread, families are increasingly choosing options outside of traditional public schools, and public school spending has to be reined in to serve smaller student populations.
Several factors explain why public school student populations are shrinking. Parents were dissatisfied with the prolonged periods of online learning and forced masking at their schools during the pandemic, and the negative effects on students of keeping schools closed have been well-documented. One analysis from the Associated Press found that from 2019 to 2022, "the average student lost more than half a school year of learning in math and nearly a quarter of a school year in reading." Many of the deep-blue districts that kept schools closed the longest paid the biggest price for that decision, in terms of both enrollment losses and academic backsliding.
Meanwhile, the private education market seems to be booming. According to a study published in February 2022 by the Urban Institute, the pandemic exodus of students from public schools coincided with a sustained increase in private schooling and homeschooling. The 33 states (plus D.C.) with available data saw a more than 4 percent enrollment jump at private schools between fall 2019 and fall 2021—which is unsurprising, given that private schools returned to in-person learning much more quickly than public schools did.
The private education market is also evolving away from traditional classroom formats. The same Urban Institute study found that the 21 states (plus D.C.) with available data saw a more than 30 percent increase in homeschooling in the same timeframe. "Microschools"—tiny private schools that operate in nontraditional settings such as libraries and churches—have also grown substantially. Mike McShane of the pro–school choice group EdChoice told The Wall Street Journal last month that microschools now likely serve between one and two million students.
If public school enrollment isn't rebounding after the pandemic waned, that's a sign that families are largely sticking with these new learning settings. This momentum will likely continue thanks to the flurry of school choice programs that were either adopted or expanded in the 2021, 2022, and 2023 state legislative sessions.
There is another critical piece behind the decline in public school enrollment that shouldn't be overlooked. NCES projections of stagnating and declining school-age populations in many of the nation's large and coastal states actually predate both the pandemic and the recent surge of school choice. These two factors seem to have accelerated population changes that many school systems were going to soon confront anyway.
Unfortunately, public school systems have a poor track record of reining in spending and staffing when student populations decline. States that already had declining enrollment before the pandemic—places like California, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts—have invariably kept hiring more staff rather than making reductions and are spending at record-high rates per student.
Even now, public schools are refusing to deal with the financial effects of their pandemic-era student losses. Rather than using strong state tax revenues and billions of federal stimulus dollars to gently pare down budgets, some of the biggest enrollment losers, such as New York City Public Schools and Los Angeles Unified School District, have used their funds to stave off budget cuts altogether.
Those extra federal funds will be drying up soon, and public schools will soon face reality. Between the pandemic, school choice, and long-term population shifts, they will finally have to exercise some fiscal restraint.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"state-level data from California, Illinois, New York, and others show public school rolls still trending downward."
Yeah, like those are representative states.
Aren't those states also losing population in general?
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning 16,000 US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply. Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome7.com
My last salary was $8750, ecom only worked 12 hours a week. My longtime neighbor estimated $15,000 and works about 20 hours for seven days. I can’t believe how blunt he was when I looked up his information See My Name Check Visit
.
.
.
For Details►——➤ http://bigmoney8.store
Send them some more immigrants. That'll fix, amirite?
English as a Second Language learner cost schools on average 3x more. Sounds like a win win for public teachers unions.
Not at all, it's a lot more work and work is the last thing education unions want. They want fewer hours, more money, and no accountability.
Another deterrent is schools coming up with extremely creative interpretation of reasonable rules.
https://ethicsalarms.com/2023/09/14/that-bomb-finger-gun-should-have-never-been-made-at-all-how-did-we-end-up-with-finger-gun-4/
This was not an enforcement of a zero tolerance policy. The criticism of zero tolerance policies is that it led to rigid enforcement of stupid rules. This situation was an completely unreasonable, out-of-touch interpretation of a completely reasonable rule.
I graduated High School in 1982. There were 824 in my graduating class. This past year the graduating class was 348. Nothing really changed except that the large families of the 60's and 70's have been replaced by the smaller families of the 90's and 00's.
The local district has been shutting down schools and consolidating students for 40 years. They reduced the number of teachers by not replacing teachers that retired and offering early retirement to others.
I was thinking the same.
We are past the millennial boom. Kids in high school today are children of GenXers, and we were a significantly smaller generation who had fewer kids, the millennials generally have fewer still. Way more one child and, occasionally, two child families.
Plus, Kids These Days aren't forming families in nearly the numbers they used to. Marriage rates are falling precipitously. Lots of men just don't bother with dating because it's such a pain in the ass for no reward.
I expect schools to have far fewer kids in the future because there should be fewer kids, period. Unless we import the whole third world like Reason thinks we should, of course.
We gave both our kids ultimatums last year about getting us some grandkids. Nothing. The boy has found a girl we like and has talked about getting a house. But still, no kids. We even had my brother's and sisters talk to him about it as he is the last male to carry on the family name.
"public schools will soon face reality"
Bwahahaha!! Facing reality is NOT something government agencies will EVER do! Houston Public School District was recently taken over by the state of Texas and they are STILL in total denial that there was any kind of problem that needed to be addressed!
"Between the pandemic, school choice, and long-term population shifts, they will finally have to exercise some fiscal restraint."
Fat chance!!!
And nothing else happened.
close the conformity factories. but since they won't, fill the conformity factories with the immigants.
Watch it burn. It's beautiful man.
It's interesting to watch all these teachers try to turn kid into people who later won't have kids of their own, and will have even less need for public schools and ... teachers. Good plan.
Yes, push your ideology towards the anti-natalist, sex positive, a-sexuals. Darwin will work out the rest.
Those extra federal funds will be drying up soon
lol. "dry up" just like those federal funds to Ukraine keep "drying up"
Turley lays out the impeachment evidence.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/five-facts-compel-biden-impeachment-inquiry-turley
Before anybody starts jumping with glee at this article, please remember that in the vast majority of states, private and charter schools are required by law to teach the same government-approved subjects and curricula as in the public schools. In addition, quite a few states mandate home-schoolers to be taught the same subjects as in the public schools.
(OT, but IMHO, a lot of home-schooled kids I know may be bright as all get-out but they're woefully unequipped to deal with the real world outside their four walls in Yayhoo, Alabama... you know, like *Negroes* and *Homosexuals* and *Differing Opinions*.
Yeah, those poor homeschooled kids will be devastated by the lack of porn and lapdances by creepy maniacs.
Before anybody starts jumping with glee at this article, please remember that in the vast majority of states, private and charter schools are required by law to teach the same government-approved subjects and curricula as in the public schools.
This is correct, and all the teachers and educators in the charter and private schools go through the same ed-school miasma that public school teachers do. Those institutions are captured and gone.
Not in my experience. Maybe my state is weird. Private Schools and Charter Schools had to meet the same basic minimum curriculum requirements as the public schools, and pass the same standardized tests.
But what I had available for classes, and what my private high school required, was quite different than what my friends were able or allowed to take on a subjects in public schools. Also, almost none of my teachers had education degrees. They were usually coming from the fields they were teaching. Or at least had degrees in those subjects.
I'm qualified to teach in Missouri, and the closest I have ever been to an ed school course is watching my college roommate clown his way through group projects in his PJ's.
Charter schools similarly in my area tend to have a lot more focus on an area of art, or vocation, or science than what's available at public schools. Probably less than half of their day is spent learning the kind of BS they teach in public high schools these days.
Darn right. "Education" is not a major..it is a joke. Most of my kid's elementary teachers were the kind of dumb chicks you picked up at a frat party. I had to teach my kids math. One elementary teacher said to me "I'm not very good at math"...one actually thought leprosy was from lepers (I'm not kidding). I'd make elementary teachers have a 2-year degree in a hard science, math or economics and then student teach 3 years before they get a class. Middle and a high school, have a 4-year degree in what you are teaching, and student teach one year before you get a class. No teacher "certifications"...no "ed majors"
(OT, but IMHO, a lot of home-schooled kids I know may be bright as all get-out but they’re woefully unequipped to deal with the real world outside their four walls in Yayhoo, Alabama
I keep hearing this, and then I look at what's coming out of the public schools and I think, is it REALLY worse?
"woefully unequipped to deal with the real world outside their four walls in Yayhoo, Alabama… you know, like *Negroes* and *Homosexuals* and *Differing Opinions*."
Ya, and unfortunately for the kids in progressive school districts, citing allyship to the above is the only thing they are capable of. Well, and labeling any actual *differing opinion* than the church orthodoxy as racist or bigoted.
Good luck building a bridge with kids that think 2+2 = oppression.
Ill take the Asian and Hispanic legal immigrants who aren't brainwashed by your new scientology cult, please and thanks
Yeah..pushing sterilization to treat kids' mental illness is very progressive. And the "system" doesn't like merit does it? Asian kids doing well isn't acceptable because well the other "tribes" just can't achieve no matter how much money you pour in. Culture isn't the problem right? It is those darn Italian and Irish Americans who are the problem.
Diversity, Inclusion, Equity and sexual mutilation of the million kids with gender confusion is the goal..math is racist, reading is racist, hard work is racist...
Got it..Trotsky would be proud.
"...(OT, but IMHO, a lot of home-schooled kids I know may be bright as all get-out but they’re woefully unequipped to deal with the real world outside their four walls in Yayhoo, Alabama… you know, like *Negroes* and *Homosexuals* and *Differing Opinions*..."
You should temper your opinions with facts; this is bullshit.
Enrollment isn't likely to rebound ever. Between the horrible job public education is doing and the declining birth rate, enrollment growth has no place to come from.
LOL. Book banning is good when the left does it.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/peel-school-board-library-book-weeding-1.6964332
'Empty shelves with absolutely no books': Students, parents question school board's library weeding process
Books published in 2008 or earlier removed from school library amid confusion around new equity-based process
Welcome to the year zero.
On the left, well-intentioned policies seem to have created a "murky layer of jargon". On the right, however...
People who try to dismantle public schools -- especially those motivated by a desire to direct children toward nonsense-teaching, bigot-friendly schools -- are un-American slack-jaws who deserve the stomping they continue to get from their betters in our culture war.
These disaffected clingers can't be replaced -- by their betters -- soon enough.
Heil Hitler!!!! /s
It's refreshing when leftards refrain from their projection games and spout some good old honesty with themselves. The [WE] mob RULES! /s
Fuck off and die, asshole bigot.
centralized schools started the problem. go back to small school districts where a head master is hired with a real degree (not "education") and have a small staff of folks who have real degrees (hard science, engineering, business, and technical vocations). Total enrollment maybe 500 kids...each parent has to put in 2/3 of the expense per year with the general population providing the rest. Time parents pay to education their kids...if they do they will be much more careful in spending.
The Public School must face the fact that they haven’t been doing their freaking JOBS for something like forty years. They need to be told that inclusiveness, gender concerns, and all the rest of the fashionable drivel must be put aside until they get the literacy and numeracy numbers to a respectable level. And if that means disbanding the teachers unions and hiring people who can actually read, write, and do math, so be it.
Concerning the teacher's unions, and public sector unions in general:
The problems with public sector unions is their members sit on both sides of the negotiation table when contracts are up for renewal. That is, unions can, and do, provide monetary support for the politicians with whom they negotiate.
A possible solution is to disallow public union members from voting in elections for the level of government they work for. So, federal union employees would not be eligible to vote in federal elections, state union employees would not be able to vote in state elections, and so on thru the local level.
Implementing this change would likely be highly contentious, but it would be fair.
SMH at someone who thinks inclusiveness is "fashionable drivel".
Good luck to you down there in Yayhoo, Alabama.
You're forgetting the most important part.
With public schools declining, the education system will have to turn to merit-based teacher hiring again. If people are going to pay for education, they're going to demand something for their dollars.
The twink whining about his pronouns won't be able to compete. Nor will the overweight minority insisting on social justice while she reads to grade-schoolers from a porno comic.
^^^ THIS ^^^.... Well Said.
It’s a nice thought, but I don’t think political reality works that way at all. Wokies already control the private alternatives, including accreditation standards for homeschooling in many places. The administrations and colleges cranking out the employees are toast.
Voters are half retarded. We had a straight up “stop indoctrination” ticket (in a red county) for school council last year. The establishment side just changed their slate name to something almost exactly the same and accused the other side of wanting to get rid of art, music, sports, etc. They virtually swept the election.
My wife’s a middle school teacher in a fairly rural conservative area and she brings home tales of the creep daily.
The “get woke go broke” thing is probably overrated even in private circles thanks to Blackrock and co. It’s even less realistic in the public space.
Thank Goodness Commie-Education is FAILING.
Now if the ‘guns’ can stop STEALING/INDOCTRINATING then the private education market could boom even faster and the people can finally get the well/needed education they want/deserve to have a successful competent life planned by themselves (LEARN responsibility) instead of planned by some gov-god dictator they don’t even know.
Then the USA can become competent again instead of raising a bunch of incompetent “Gov-Gods packing ‘guns'” will save me from my Commie-Education incompetence.
Seriously; 2-Weeks of job training teaches more competence than 12-years of Commie-Education.
It's almost like Commie-Education teaches dependency, incompetence and laziness.
The obvious solution here is to vote the schools more money!
Not yet. Millions of illegals children will be filling those seats soon. Expansion will be needed. They will reproduce like rabbits for a few generations.
Centralized school districts putting teacher unions, administrators, and far left wing "experts" from university "education" schools destroyed public education.
In my central NY suburban district the graduating classes have decreased 25% in the last 15 years but continue to spend more money, build more facilities, and hire more "specialists" including now a Diversity, Inclusion, and Equity VP at $200K a year. Most parents drive their kids to school yet a hundred buses drive around with a few kids riding. And the idiots voted to buy more buses. I'm leaving for SC in two months and free to this insanity.
Let's be honest..PTA moms getting elected to school boards have only accelerated these problems. school boards should be abolished and the local town or village mayor should run the schools as part of the general budget and all teacher unions should be abolished. This would be a good start.
Just throw out all the gov-gods and their ‘guns’ and make the ‘administration’ void. Then the *real* ‘teachers’ can home-school for a fee (like daycare). Consider this; A teacher working at home charging $200/month per student teaching 45-kids makes $108K/yr. Considering the same 6hr-day that’s darn good wages. And what parents couldn’t afford that after property tax (school funding) is gone? Any who can’t manage that cost can visit their local welfare office where welfare should’ve stayed to begin with.
The free-market would run-out all the Commie-Education BS and only the best of the best would exist delivering the most competent.
By moving education and training online, organizations can also significantly reduce costs. Edtech helps administrators automate repetitive tasks such as registration, grading, collecting feedback and more. I'm excited that edtech will become more prevalent in 2024, these costs will likely be reduced even further with services like Oxagile as online learning becomes more accessible to students and organizations.
Opigno LMS is an absolute game-changer when it comes to online learning platforms! I recently had the pleasure of using this incredible tool, and let me tell you, it has completely transformed my learning experience. From the moment I started using Opigno LMS, I was blown away by its user-friendly interface and extensive features, find more on https://www.connect-i.ch/en/opigno-lms . One of the standout features of Opigno LMS is its comprehensive course management system. Whether you're a student or an instructor, you'll find everything you need to create, manage, and track courses. The platform offers a wide range of tools for content creation, including multimedia integration, quizzes, and assessments. As a student, I found these features incredibly engaging and interactive, making my learning experience all the more enjoyable. Another aspect that sets Opigno LMS apart from other platforms is its robust reporting and analytics capabilities. The platform provides detailed insights into learner progress, allowing instructors to monitor individual performance and identify areas for improvement. This personalized approach to learning ensures that each student receives the support they need to succeed. As a student, I found this feature incredibly motivating, as it allowed me to track my own progress and set goals for myself.