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School Enrollment Shifts Five Years After the Pandemic

The pandemic induced a substantial enrollment shift away from public schools in fall 2020 and a partial return of students in fall 2021, leaving longer-term impacts unclear. We use Massachusetts state- and district-level data to explore enrollment patterns five years after the pandemic’s onset. Relative to pre-pandemic trends, fall 2024 enrollment is down 2% in local public schools, up 14% in private schools, and up 45% in home schools. The highest income 20% of districts have lost more public school students than the other 80% combined, with these lower income districts having largely recovered. White and Asian public school enrollments have stabilized at levels 3% and 8% below pre-pandemic trends, while Black and Hispanic enrollments have more than fully recovered. Public school losses are almost entirely concentrated in middle grades (5-8), where enrollment is down 8%, suggesting families place particular weight on those ages when making post-pandemic schooling choices. Five years in, the pandemic has had sustained effects on the size and demographic composition of public schools.

Keywords
COVID-19, Pandemic, Public school enrollment, Private school, Home school, Middle school
Education level
Topics
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/sbhy-ye73
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Francis, Abigail, and Joshua Goodman. (). School Enrollment Shifts Five Years After the Pandemic. (EdWorkingPaper: -1233). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/sbhy-ye73

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