State student enrollment up 12,260 kids from last year

Published: Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009 10:13 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

One look at Kaysville Junior High School's hallways between classes brings the word "sardines" to mind.

The school is packed with 1,330 kids, 130 more than last year. Two more portable classrooms were brought in this fall for a total of 11.

The school added more lunch tables and scheduled three lunch sessions that run like clockwork. But seventh-grader Tiffany Carlton, 12, says it's still crowded. "Some kids sit on the floor," she said.

Kaysville Junior High and many other schools in Utah are feeling claustrophobic as state enrollment continues to escalate.

Utah's K-12 student population grew by 12,260 kids for a total 563,273 students this fall, a slightly more than 2 percent increase, according to preliminary data released Wednesday afternoon by the State Office of Education.

Utah charter school enrollment grew about 24 percent to 34,166 this fall from 27,369 last year and accounts for about 6 percent of the total public school enrollment.

The statewide data for the 2009-10 school year is based on the number of students enrolled on Oct. 1, or on the first full day of school after that date.

Story continues below

Enrollment numbers are used for state education funding via the weighted pupil unit formula. The Legislature held the WPU amount at $2,577 for this school year, the same amount as it distributed the previous year, despite student growth.

Ethnic minority student enrollment grew to 20.7 percent this fall from 19.8 percent last year. San Juan, Salt Lake and Ogden school districts are now majority-minority districts at 55.8 percent 55.3 percent and 54.3 percent, respectively.

School districts across Utah are experiencing and dealing with the growth in different ways.

Davis School District officials counted 65,452 students this fall, up 438 kids. And that was with a new charter school opening in the district and taking 475 students "which is really nice for us, actually, because it helps pull down our student population," said Superintendent Bryan Bowles.

Washington School District, down 573 kids, isn't as thrilled to lose roughly 600 students to a new charter school in the district. Student growth was actually up almost 2 percent but other factors weighed heavily in bringing the total down, such as emerging online high schools. The small growth, as compared to an 18 percent increase a few years ago, is due to the poor economy, according to Marshall Topham, assistant superintendent over secondary education. "We've had very little growth in our area," he said.

Recent comments

Just kudos to our AMAZING Kaysville Jr teachers. They do an awesone...

Lisa | Nov. 10, 2009 at 12:10 p.m.

The last quarterly report I got from the URS said that my retirement...

Anonymous | Nov. 6, 2009 at 4:51 p.m.

Describing it as a Walmart economy is exactly what I have been...

Utah Republican | Nov. 6, 2009 at 12:27 p.m.

Image

The first of 3 equally attended lunch periods crowd into the cafeteria at Kaysville Junior High last month. Davis School District officials counted 65,452 students this fall, up 438 kids.

previousnext

Latest comments

Considering that Kelia Ohai is going to be playing for the defending...

Max Hall wants to look ahead

Your post cracked me up. I'm with you all the way. Ute and Cougar fans unite!...

Palin signs books, chats with fans

Ya betcha!Not. Do you worshipers understand what I mean? Ha, Ha.

You Delta people need to quit living in the Past, its Now time and I am...

You guys act like the world is going to end. Look out! The drunks are...

Jazz go up against 'the best'

Miles, Do not blame me and Houdini. It is you going on and on about CJ, it...

Why is it that everyone assumes that if you don't like Sarah Palin, you must...

Many seek to wipe clean misdeeds

I called Mr. Higbee, who is quoted in this article, and he said expungement...

I read parts of the book and have read better, however bashing Sarah as I...

All I see here is U fans trying to play victim because Hall said somthing...

Advertisements