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Education Statistics Quarterly
Vol 4, Issue 3, Topic: Elementary and Secondary Education
Characteristics of the 100 Largest Public Elementary and Secondary School Districts in the United States: 2000–01
By: Beth Aronstamm Young
 
This article was originally published as the Discussion in the Statistical Analysis Report of the same name. The universe data are from the NCES Common Core of Data (CCD).
 
 

Introduction

This publication provides basic descriptive information about the 100 largest school districts (ranked by student membership) in the United States and jurisdictions (Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of Defense schools, and five outlying areas: American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Marianas, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands). When discussing characteristics, the term "United States and jurisdictions" is used to refer to all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of Defense schools, and five outlying areas. This is different from most National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) reports, which include only the 50 states and the District of Columbia in national totals.

Almost one in every four public school students in this nation is served by one of these 100 districts (table A). They are distinguished from the average school district by characteristics in addition to sheer size of membership, such as average and median school size, pupil/teacher ratios, number of high school graduates, number of pupils receiving special education services, and minority enrollment as a proportion of total enrollment.

The tables in this publication provide information about the characteristics cited above. To establish a context for the information on the 100 largest districts, national school district data are also included, as are basic data on the 500 largest school districts.

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Overview of the 100 Largest Districts

In the 2000–01 school year, there were 16,992 public school districts, 95,366 schools, and 48.1 million students in public education in the United States and jurisdictions. There were just over 3.0 million full-time-equivalent teachers in the 2000–01 school year and more than 2.6 million high school completers in the 1999–2000 school year. The 100 largest school districts make up less than 1 percent of all public school districts but serve 23 percent of the total number of public elementary and secondary school students (table A). The 100 largest school districts represent 16 percent of schools and employ 21 percent of all teachers. The 500 largest districts make up 3 percent of all school districts, represent 32 percent of schools, and serve 20.6 million students, or 43 percent of the total public elementary and secondary school student population in the United States and jurisdictions (table A).

All of the 100 largest school districts have at least 45,000 students, and 25 of these school districts have over 100,000 students. The largest school district is the New York City Public Schools, with 1,066,516 students enrolled in 1,213 schools. The second largest school district is Los Angeles Unified, with 721,346 students in 659 schools (table B). The enrollment in each of these two largest school districts is greater than the enrollment in each of 26 individual states and the District of Columbia, each of the 5 outlying areas, the Bureau of Indian Affairs schools, and the Department of Defense schools.1


Table A.-Selected statistics for the United States and jurisdictions, the 100 largest, and the 500 largest school districts: School year 2000-01
Data item
National
total1
100 largest districts1 500 largest districts1
Total Percentage of
national total
Total Percentage of
national total
Districts
16,992 100 0.6 500 2.9
Schools
95,366 15,615 16.4 30,205 31.7
Students
48,067,834 11,050,902 23.0 20,631,006 42.9
Teachers (full-time equivalent)
3,002,947 641,333 21.4 1,195,445 39.8
High school completers (1999–2000)2
2,625,325 498,252 19.0 985,990 37.6
Pupil/teacher ratio
16.0 17.2 () 17.3 ()
Average school size
504.0 707.7 () 683.0 ()
High school completers2 as percentage
of all students
5.5 4.5 () 4.8 ()

Not applicable.

1The universe for this table includes outlying areas, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Department of Defense schools. The 500 largest school districts include 27 school districts that are some other configuration besides PK or K-12, although all of the 100 largest school districts are PK or K-12.

2Includes high school diploma recipients as well as other high school completers (e.g., certificates of attendance).
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, "Local Education Agency Universe Survey," 2000-01, and "State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education," 2000-01.

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Where Are the 100 Largest School Districts?

There are 33 states and jurisdictions that have at least one of the 100 largest school districts (table B). Texas has 15 districts among the 100 largest, Florida has 13, and California has 12. Several other states have more than one district represented in the 100 largest: Georgia has 6; Maryland has 5; Louisiana, North Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, and Virginia each have 4; Ohio has 3; and Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, and New York each have 2. The following states and jurisdictions each have one school district among the 100 largest: Alabama, Alaska, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Washington, and Wisconsin. (The District of Columbia, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico each have only one school district for their entire jurisdiction.)

As expected, these 100 largest districts tend to be in cities and counties with large populations, with administrative offices typically located in large cities and their environs. Many of the districts are in states where the school districts have the same boundaries as counties. However, caution should be used when interpreting the areas that these school districts cover. School district boundaries are not necessarily the same as county, city, or town boundaries. Over 70 percent of these districts are located in coastal and gulf coast states.


Table B.—Selected statistics for the 100 largest school districts in the United States and jurisdictions: School year 2000–01
Name of reporting district
City
State
County Number of
students1
Number of 
full-time
equivalent
(FTE) teachers
Number of
1999-2000
completers2
Number
of schools
Total
 
11,050,902 641,333 3498,252 15,615
 
New York City Public Schools
Brooklyn
NY
Kings
1,066,516 65,242 40,827 1,213
Los Angeles Unified
Los Angeles
CA
Los Angeles
721,346 35,150 27,439 659
Puerto Rico Department of Education
San Juan
PR
San Juan
612,725 37,620 30,856 1,543
City of Chicago School District
Chicago
IL
Cook
435,261 23,935 14,875 602
Dade County School District
Miami
FL
Dade
368,625 18,608 15,750 356
 
Broward County School District
Fort Lauderdale
FL
Broward
251,129 11,822 10,651 243
Clark County School District
Las Vegas
NV
Clark
231,655 11,769 9,630 259
Houston Independent School District
Houston
TX
Harris
208,462 11,197 7,735 289
Philadelphia City School District
Philadelphia
PA
Philadelphia
201,190 11,266 9,873 261
Hawaii Department of Education
Honolulu
HI
Honolulu
184,360 10,927 10,666 261
 
Hillsborough County School District
Tampa
FL
Hillsborough
164,311 10,031 7,546 210
Detroit City School District
Detroit
MI
Wayne
162,194 8,557 263
Dallas Independent School District
Dallas
TX
Dallas
161,548 10,637 5,837 221
Fairfax County Public Schools
Fairfax
VA
Fairfax
156,412 11,574 10,187 195
Palm Beach County School District
West Palm Beach
FL
Palm Beach
153,871 8,084 6,986 177
 
Orange County School District
Orlando
FL
Orange
150,681 8,410 6,700 174
San Diego City Unified
San Diego
CA
San Diego
141,804 7,403 6,449 180
Montgomery County Public Schools
Rockville
MD
Montgomery
134,180 8,561 7,748 192
Prince Georges County Public Schools
Upper Marlboro
MD
Prince George's
133,723 7,648 7,435 194
Duval County School District
Jacksonville
FL
Duval
125,846 6,445 4,777 179
 
Memphis City School District
Memphis
TN
Shelby
113,730 7,486 4,341 164
Pinellas County School District
Largo
FL
Pinellas
113,027 6,389 5,111 164
Gwinnett County School District
Lawrenceville
GA
Gwinnett
110,075 7,187 5,392 85
Baltimore County Public Schools
Towson
MD
Baltimore
106,898 6,834 6,545 169
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
Charlotte
NC
Mecklenburg
103,336 6,562 4,764 135
 
Baltimore City Public School System
Baltimore
MD
Baltimore City
99,859 6,057 3,742 183
Wake County Schools
Raleigh
NC
Wake
98,950 6,389 4,825 120
Milwaukee School District
Milwaukee
WI
Milwaukee
97,985 6,039 3,279 206
Jefferson (KY) County
Louisville
KY
Jefferson
96,860 3,248 4,851 174
De Kalb County School District
Decatur
GA
De Kalb
95,958 5,818 4,637 123
 
Cobb County School District
Marietta
GA
Cobb
95,781 6,409 5,323 94
Long Beach Unified
Long Beach
CA
Los Angeles
93,694 4,466 4,248 89
Jefferson (CO) County
Golden
CO
Jefferson
87,703 4,548 5,731 161
Albuquerque Public Schools
Albuquerque
NM
Bernalillo
85,276 5,478 4,745 131
Fort Worth Independent School District
Fort Worth
TX
Tarrant
79,661 4,746 3,291 141
 
Polk County School District
Bartow
FL
Polk
79,477 4,779 3,617 137
Fresno Unified
Fresno
CA
Fresno
79,007 3,867 3,686 99
Austin Independent School District
Austin
TX
Travis
77,816 5,160 3,496 109
Orleans Parish School Board
New Orleans
LA
Orleans
77,610 4,629 3,813 128
Virginia Beach City Public Schools
Virginia Beach
VA
Virginia Beach City
76,586 5,176 4,345 84
 
Cleveland City School District
Cleveland
OH
Cuyahoga
75,684 5,625 5,784 125
Anne Arundel County Public Schools
Annapolis
MD
Anne Arundel
74,491 4,325 4,324 119
Mesa Unified District
Mesa
AZ
Maricopa
73,587 3,613 86
Jordan School District
Sandy
UT
Salt Lake
73,158 3,093 5,509 81
Granite School District
Salt Lake City
UT
Salt Lake
71,328 3,369 4,666 98
 
Denver County
Denver
CO
Denver
70,847 4,178 2,571 129
Brevard County School District
Viera
FL
Brevard
70,597 3,785 3,524 108
District of Columbia Public Schools
Washington
DC
District of Columbia
68,925 5,044 2,916 165
Fulton County School District
Atlanta
GA
Fulton
68,583 4,415 3,245 71
Nashville-Davidson County School District
Nashville
TN
Davidson
67,669 4,820 2,857 125
 
Mobile County School District
Mobile
AL
Mobile
64,976 4,102 3,542 100
Columbus City School District
Columbus
OH
Franklin
64,511 4,090 2,266 146
Northside Independent School District
San Antonio
TX
Bexar
63,739 4,269 3,669 84
Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District
Houston
TX
Harris
63,497 4,103 3,477 54
Guilford County Schools
Greensboro
NC
Guilford
63,417 3,957 3,055 98
 
Boston School District
Boston
MA
Suffolk
63,024 5,519 3,059 131
El Paso Independent School District
El Paso
TX
El Paso
62,325 4,078 3,247 86
Tucson Unified District
Tucson
AZ
Pima
61,869 3,446 123
Volusia County School District
Deland
FL
Volusia
61,517 3,745 2,898 92
Seminole County School District
Sanford
FL
Seminole
60,869 3,356 3,076 68
 
Santa Ana Unified
Santa Ana
CA
Orange
60,643 2,837 2,145 53
San Francisco Unified
San Francisco
CA
San Francisco
59,979 3,261 3,676 116
Greenville County School District
Greenville
SC
Greenville
59,875 3,763 3,238 93
Davis School District
Farmington
UT
Davis
59,578 2,642 4,567 83
Arlington Independent School District
Arlington
TX
Tarrant
58,866 3,884 2,746 71
 
Lee County School District
Fort Myers
FL
Lee
58,401 3,066 2,760 75
Atlanta City School District
Atlanta
GA
Fulton
58,230 3,950 2,056 98
San Antonio Independent School District
San Antonio
TX
Bexar
57,273 3,560 2,619 104
Washoe County School District
Reno
NV
Washoe
56,268 3,323 2,588 92
Oakland Unified
Oakland
CA
Alameda
54,863 2,834 1,716 96
 
Prince William County Public Schools
Manassas
VA
Prince William
54,646 3,158 3,044 70
East Baton Rouge Parish School
Baton Rouge
LA
East Baton Rouge
54,246 3,746 2,857 105
Fort Bend Independent School District
Sugar Land
TX
Fort Bend
53,999 3,254 3,391 53
Portland School District
Portland
OR
Multnomah
53,141 3,073 2,881 110
Sacramento City Unified
Sacramento
CA
Sacramento
52,734 2,513 2,395 77
 
Aldine Independent School District
Houston
TX
Harris
52,520 3,497 2,024 63
San Bernardino City Unified
San Bernardino
CA
San Bernardino
52,031 2,396 1,984 62
Knox County School District
Knoxville
TN
Knox
51,944 3,755 2,861 88
Chesterfield County Public Schools
Chesterfield
VA
Chesterfield
51,212 3,452 3,249 59
Jefferson Parish School Board
Harvey
LA
Jefferson
50,891 3,395 2,535 84
 
North East Independent School District
San Antonio
TX
Bexar
50,875 3,456 2,893 65
Cumberland County Schools
Fayetteville
NC
Cumberland
50,850 3,047 2,594 81
Garland Independent School District
Garland
TX
Dallas
50,312 3,088 2,500 65
San Juan Unified
Carmichael
CA
Sacramento
50,266 2,435 3,020 86
Pasco County School District
Land O' Lakes
FL
Pasco
49,704 2,799 2,057 61
 
Anchorage School District
Anchorage
AK
Anchorage
49,526 2,738 2,334 99
Minneapolis
Minneapolis
MN
Hennepin
48,834 3,314 1,784 141
Garden Grove Unified
Garden Grove
CA
Orange
48,742 2,098 2,574 65
Wichita
Wichita
KS
Sedgwick
48,228 3,003 2,148 92
Elk Grove Unified
Elk Grove
CA
Sacramento
47,736 2,290 2,405 53
 
Seattle
Seattle
WA
King
47,575 2,550 2,482 119
Plano Independent School District
Plano
TX
Collin
47,161 3,375 2,571 59
Alpine School District
American Fork
UT
Utah
47,117 2,015 2,906 58
Shelby County School District
Memphis
TN
Shelby
46,972 2,608 2,633 46
Clayton County
Jonesboro
GA
Clayton
46,930 2,662 1,741 48
 
Cincinnati City School District
Cincinnati
OH
Hamilton
46,562 2,923 1,273 77
Ysleta Independent School District
El Paso
TX
El Paso
46,394 2,979 3,052 60
Buffalo City School District
Buffalo
NY
Erie
45,721 3,471 1,857 76
Omaha Public Schools
Omaha
NE
Douglas
45,197 3,023 2,335 82
Caddo Parish School Board
Shreveport
LA
Caddo
45,119 3,023 2,327 74

—Not available.

1Count of students receiving educational services from school district may differ somewhat from the counts in tables 3 and 5, which reflect the count of students from the schools aggregated up to the school district.

2Includes high school diploma recipients as well as other high school completers (e.g., certificates of attendance).

3Total is missing the Detroit City School District, Mesa Unified, and Tucson Unified District graduate counts.

NOTE: The universe for this table includes outlying areas, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Department of Defense schools.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, "Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey," 2000-01, and "Local Education Agency Universe Survey," 2000–01.

Table C.—Number and percentage of districts and students by district membership size for regular public elementary and secondary school districts in the United States and jurisdictions: School year 2000–01
District size
(number of
students)
Districts Students Cumulative totals
Number Percentage Cumulative
percentage
Number Percentage Cumulative
percentage
Districts Students
Total1
14,864 100.0 ()
47,278,715
100.0 () () ()
 
100,000 or more
25 0.2 0.2 6,312,905 13.4 13.4 25 6,312,905
25,000 to 99,999
217 1.5 1.6 9,415,964 19.9 33.3 242 15,728,869
10,000 to 24,999
584 3.9 5.6 8,795,953 18.6 51.9 826 24,524,822
7,500 to 9,999
323 2.2 7.7 2,788,149 5.9 57.8 1,149 27,312,971
5,000 to 7,499
713 4.8 12.5 4,356,093 9.2 67.0 1,862 31,669,064
2,500 to 4,999
2,060 13.9 26.4 7,235,089 15.3 82.3 3,922 38,904,153
2,000 to 2,499
806 5.4 31.8 1,800,934 3.8 86.1 4,728 40,705,087
1,500 to 1,999
1,071 7.2 39.0 1,857,358 3.9 90.0 5,799 42,562,445
1,000 to 1,499
1,571 10.6 49.6 1,938,731 4.1 94.1 7,370 44,501,176
800 to 999
805 5.4 55.0 723,656 1.5 95.7 8,175 45,224,832
600 to 799
971 6.5 61.5 677,076 1.4 97.1 9,146 45,901,908
450 to 599
955 6.4 68.0 499,880 1.1 98.1 10,101 46,401,788
300 to 449
1,152 7.8 75.7 427,266 0.9 99.0 11,253 46,829,054
150 to 299
1,471 9.9 85.6 324,387 0.7 99.7 12,724 47,153,441
1 to 149
1,794 12.1 97.7 125,274 0.3 100.0 14,518 47,278,715
Zero2
166 1.1 98.8 0 0.0 100.0 14,684 47,278,715
Not Available
4 98.8 100.0 14,688 47,278,715
Not Applicable
176 1.2 100.0 () () 100.0 14,864 47,278,715

— Not available.

Not applicable.

1Not included in this table are local supervisory unions, regional education service agencies, and state and federally operated agencies.

2Membership may be 0 in two situations (1) where the school district does not operate schools but pays tuition for its students in a neighboring district, and (2) where the district provides services for students who are accounted for in some other district(s). The number of regular districts represented in this table differs from table A, which represents all districts.

NOTE: The universe for this table includes outlying areas, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Department of Defense schools. Detail may not add to totals because of rounding.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, "Local Education Agency Universe Survey," 2000–01.

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How Do These Districts Compare With the Average School District?

General characteristics

By definition, the 100 largest school districts are large, and when compared to the membership distribution of all school districts, they are considerably larger than most. In the 2000–01 school year, 74 percent of all regular school districts2 had fewer than 2,500 students while all of the 100 largest school districts had at least 45,000 students (tables B and C). Although 13 percent of regular school districts had 5,000 or more students, 67 percent of students (or 2 out of 3) were served by these districts (table C).

The average school district in the United States and jurisdictions has 5.6 schools compared to the 100 largest school districts, which average 156.2 schools per district (derived from table A). Two of the largest school districts, New York City Public Schools and the Puerto Rico Department of Education, each have over 1,200 schools (table B). The 100 largest school districts, on average, serve considerably more students (110,509 compared to 2,829) and employ more teachers (6,413 compared to 177) per district than the average school district in the nation (derived from table A).

School characteristics

The 100 largest school districts have more students per school than the average school district, 708 compared to 504 (table A). In fact, 11 of the 100 largest school districts have an average regular school3 size of over 1,000 students. In addition to larger school sizes, the 100 largest school districts also have a higher mean pupil/teacher ratio, 17.2 to 1 compared to 16.0 to 1 for the average school district (table A). Across the 100 largest districts, Jordon School District, Utah, has the largest median4 pupil/teacher ratio at 24.7 to 1 and Minneapolis, Minnesota, has the smallest at 12.5 to 1.

High school completers. The number of high school completers (diploma recipients and other high school completers) as a percentage of all students is lower in the 100 largest school districts than in the average school district: 4.5 percent of students are graduates in the 100 largest school districts compared to 5.5 percent for the average school district (table A).

School staff. At the national level, 52 percent of staff were teachers5 compared to 54 percent among the 100 largest districts. In 6 of the 100 largest school districts, 60 percent or more of all staff were teachers (this does not include the City of Chicago, Illinois, or the Greenville County, South Carolina, school districts because the nonteaching staff categories may be underrepresented in these districts). Twenty of the 100 largest districts had 1 percent or more of their staff assigned to district administration.

Title I participation. Ninety of the 100 largest school districts reported data for Title I eligible schools and programs for the 2000–01 school year. The percentage of Title I eligible schools in the 90 districts varied widely, from 8.9 percent in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District, North Carolina, to 100 percent in the Philadelphia City School District, Pennsylvania.

Charter schools. There were 327 charter schools administered by the 100 largest school districts in the 2000–01 school year. The largest number of charter schools were in the Los Angeles Unified (36), Puerto Rico (36), and District of Columbia (33) school districts.

Student body

The 100 largest school districts are not homogeneous, and certain student characteristics, such as race/ethnicity, poverty level, and disability status, vary across the districts.

Race/ethnicity. American Indian/Alaska Natives, Asian/Pacific Islanders, Hispanics, and Black, non-Hispanics make up the minority groups when assessing race at the national level. For some districts, these groups have become the majority population of students. The 100 largest districts, with 23 percent of the United States and jurisdictions' public school students, serve 39 percent of the 19.2 million minority public school students (derived from tables A and D).6 In the 100 largest school districts, 69 percent of students are minority students compared to 40 percent of students in all districts (table D). In fact, approximately one-third (33 percent) of the 96 districts where minority membership was available have over 75 percent minority student membership and 8 of the 10 largest school districts have this minority student membership percentage.

Even with the relatively high minority membership in the 100 largest school districts, 34 of the 96 districts report 50 percent or more of their students as White, non-Hispanic. Of these 34 districts, 9 report minority representation of less than 25 percent of their student body. In 18 of the 100 largest districts, half or more of the membership is Black, non-Hispanic. Thirteen districts report that the majority of students are Hispanic; 3 of these are among the 5 largest districts. In Hawaii, which is one district, and San Francisco Unified, California, the majority of students are Asian/Pacific Islander.

For comparison purposes, data from the 2000 Decennial Census are presented in the complete report. These data provide racial and ethnic breakouts of the population less than 18 years old in the district boundaries for the 100 largest school districts.

High school dropouts. For the 1999–2000 school year, 60 of the 100 largest school districts were in states that could report dropouts using the NCES definition of dropouts.7 The 9th- through 12th-grade dropout rate in those 60 districts ranged from less than 1 to 26 percent. Thirty-five of the districts had a 9th- through 12th-grade dropout rate between 3 and 10 percent.

Free and reduced-price lunch eligibility. The 100 largest school districts have a disproportionate percentage of students eligible for the free and reduced-price lunch program relative to all public school districts. Among schools that reported free and reduced-price lunch eligibility, 53 percent of students in the 100 largest school districts are eligible, compared to 39 percent of students in all districts (table D). Among the 92 of the 100 largest school districts that reported data on free lunch, 43 districts report over 50 percent of their students eligible for the free and reduced-price lunch program.

Students with disabilities. There are over 1 million students with individualized education programs (IEPs) in the 100 largest school districts. They make up 12.5 percent of all students in these districts. In the largest school district, New York City Public Schools, 14 percent, or 149,525 students, are reported to have IEPs. About 2 percent of schools in the 100 largest school districts are special education schools.

Revenues and expenditures for fiscal year 19998

In the 1998–99 school year (fiscal year 1999), $350 billion were collected for public elementary and secondary education in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and outlying areas; 23 percent ($79 billion) of this revenue was collected by the 100 largest school districts. Of the $79 billion in revenue to the 100 largest school districts, a little less than one-third ($24 billion) was received by the 5 largest school districts (New York City Public Schools, Los Angeles Unified, Puerto Rico Department of Education, City of Chicago School District, and Dade County School District). The revenues from the federal government received by 99 of the 100 largest school districts comprised between 2 and 17 percent of all revenues to the district, the exception being the Puerto Rico Department of Education (28 percent).

The 100 largest school districts spent $68 billion (22 percent) of the $305 billion in current expenditures spent in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and outlying areas in 1998–99. The two largest school districts, New York City Public Schools and Los Angeles Unified, spent one out of every five dollars expended by the 100 largest school districts. All but 1 of the 100 largest school districts devoted 50 percent or more of their current expenditures to instruction (the District of Columbia spent 45.3 percent). Of the 100 largest school districts, New York City Public Schools spent the greatest proportion, 72 percent, on instruction.

The current expenditures per pupil were $6,508 for all districts in the 50 states and the District of Columbia, slightly higher than the $6,278 in the 100 largest school districts. Of the 100 largest school districts, 20 districts spent more than $7,000 per pupil (with the Boston School District, Massachusetts, spending the most at $11,040 per pupil).

Changes in the 100 largest school districts between 1990 and 2000

While there has been a lot of movement within the 100 largest school districts over time, between the 1990–91 and 2000–01 school years, the 100 largest districts remained very similar. Only 11 of the 100 largest districts in the 2000–01 school year were not in the 100 largest in the 1990–91 school year. Clark County School District, Nevada, was the only district to move into the 10 largest districts between these years (it moved from a rank of 14 in 1990–91 to 7 in 2000–01). Clark County includes the Las Vegas metropolitan area, which was the fastest growing metropolitan area in the country between 1990 and 1998 (U.S. Bureau of the Census 2000).

The number of students in the 100 largest school districts increased by 15 percent between 1990–91 and 2000–01, the number of teachers increased by 24 percent, and the number of schools increased by 10 percent. However, while the numbers of students, teachers, and schools in the 100 largest school districts have increased between these years, the proportion of the national total these numbers comprised was essentially unchanged. For example, the number of students in the 100 largest school districts went from 22.9 percent of the students in all districts in 1990–91 to 23.0 percent in 2000–01 (table E).


Table D.—Percentage of students eligible for free or reduced-price lunch and percentage of minority enrollment in the 100 and 500 largest school districts, and in the United States and jurisdictions: School year 2000–01
 
100 largest school
districts
500 largest school
districts
All school districts
Percentage of schools reporting free and reduced-price lunch
90.1 89.1 86.1
Membership eligible for free or reduced-price lunch
of those who reported free and reduced-price lunch
53.4* 47.3* 39.3*
Percentage of schools reporting minority membership  
97.3 97.9 98.3
Percentage minority enrollment
68.5 58.4 40.4
American Indian/Alaska Native
0.5 0.7 1.3
Asian/Pacific Islander
6.8 6.2 4.3
Hispanic
31.7 26.7 17.8
Black/non-Hispanic
29.4 24.8 17.0
Percentage White/non-Hispanic enrollment
31.4 41.5 59.6

*These percentages should be interpreted with caution; five states (AZ, CT, IL, TN, and WA), DOD (overseas), DOD (domestic), Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the Virgin Islands did not report free and reduced-price lunch eligibility and are not included in the national total. Also, states may not have reported students eligible for reduced-price meals, and a number of states reported participation instead of eligibility data which may not be strictly comparable. See Methodology section for further description. Percentages are based on those schools that reported.

NOTE: The universe for this table includes outlying areas, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Department of Defense schools. Detail may not add to totals because of rounding.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, "Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey," 2000–01, and "Local Education Agency Universe Survey," 2000–01.

Table E.—Number of students, teachers, and schools in the United States and jurisdictions and the 100 largest school districts: School years 1990–91 and 2000–01
  1990–911 2000–011
All districts2 100 largest
districts
100 largest districts
as a percentage of
national total
All districts2 100 largest
districts
100 largest districts
as a percentage of
national total
Students            
42,095,467 9,627,140 22.9 48,067,834 11,050,902 23.0
Teachers (full-time
equivalent)
2,286,589 515,175 22.5 3,002,947 641,333 21.4
Schools
86,277 14,206 16.5 95,366 15,615 16.4

1For 2000-01, includes outlying areas, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Department of Defense schools. In 1990-91 these jurisdictions are not included.

2The addition of Bureau of Indian Affairs and Department of Defense schools accounts for 0.3 percent more students, 0.3 percent more teachers, and 0.4 percent more schools.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, "Local Education Agency Universe Survey," 1990–91 and 2000–01, and "State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education," 1990–91 and 2000–01.

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Footnotes

1State enrollment can be found in Public School Student, Staff, and Graduate Counts by State: School Year 2000–01 (Young 2002).

2A regular school district is an agency responsible for providing free public education for school-age children residing within its jurisdiction. This category excludes local supervisory unions that provide management services for a group of associated school districts; regional education service agencies that typically provide school districts with research, testing, and data processing services; state and federally operated school districts; and other agencies that do not fall into these groupings (e.g., charter schools reported as "dummy" agencies).

3A regular school is a public elementary/secondary school that does not focus primarily on vocational, special, or alternative education.

4If all the pupil/teacher ratios were listed in order, the midpoint on the list would be the median.

5Staff data can be found in Public School Student, Staff, and Graduate Counts by State: School Year 2000–01 (Young 2002). The national staff ratio does not include Bureau of Indian Affairs schools.

6For the 100 largest school districts, the numbers of students in different racial/ethnic categories are reported at the school level and are aggregated up to the school district level. The total number of minority students (19.2 million) is from the "State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education." See also Public School Student, Staff, and Graduate Counts by State: School Year 2000–01 (Young 2002).

7The CCD defines dropouts as those students who were enrolled in school at some time during the previous school year; were not enrolled at the beginning of the current school year; have not graduated from high school or completed a state- or district-approved educational program; and do not meet any of the following exclusionary conditions: transfer to another public school district, private school, or state- or district-approved education program; temporary absence due to suspension or school-approved education program; or death. For a more detailed description of dropouts and dropout rates, see Public High School Dropouts and Completers From the Common Core of Data: School Years 1991–92 Through 1997–98 (Young and Hoffman 2002).

8National revenue and expenditure data were calculated from the state-level "National Public Education Financial Survey" (NPEFS) and can be found in Revenues and Expenditures for Public Elementary and Secondary Education: School Year 1998–99 (Johnson 2001). The percentage distributions are based on school district-level data found on the Census Bureau's "Annual Survey of Government Finances: School Systems" (F–33 survey). Department of Defense and Bureau of Indian Affairs schools are not included in these national totals.

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References

Johnson, F. (2001). Revenues and Expenditures for Public Elementary and Secondary Education: School Year 1998–99 (NCES 2001–321). U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics.

U.S. Bureau of the Census. (2000). Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2000. U.S. Department of Commerce. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Young, B. (2002). Public School Student, Staff, and Graduate Counts by State: School Year 2000–01 (NCES 2002–348). U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics.

Young, B., and Hoffman, L. (2002). Public High School Dropouts and Completers From the Common Core of Data: School Years 1991–92 Through 1997–98 (NCES 2002–317). U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics.

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Data sources:

NCES: The following components of the Common Core of Data (CCD): "Local Education Agency Universe Survey," 1990–91 and 2000–01; "State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education," 1990–91 and 2000–01; "Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey, "2000–01; and "National Public Education Financial Survey," 1998–99.

Bureau of the Census: "Annual Survey of Government Finances: School Systems," 1999.

For technical information, see the complete report:

Young, B.A. (2002). Characteristics of the 100 Largest Public Elementary and Secondary School Districts in the United States: 2000–01 (NCES 2002–351).

Author affiliation: B.A. Young, NCES.

For questions about content, contact John Sietsema (John.Sietsema@ed.gov).

To obtain the complete report (NCES 2002–351), call the toll-free ED Pubs number (877–433–7827) or visit the NCES Electronic Catalog (http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch).


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