Richard Bammer, Mercury News, April 1, 2019

The most recent state data for California’s K–12 public schools indicates that overall enrollment is down slightly, while the number of Hispanic/Latino and charter school students has risen slightly and the number of white and black students has dropped slightly.

The 2018-19 data, announced Thursday by state schools chief Tony Thurmond, breaks down enrollment by ethnicity and grade, along with English language acquisition status, and can be sorted by county, district, or school. The data can be found at https://dq.cde.ca.gov/dataquest.

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One important category updated for the current year is school-level data for free or reduced-price meals, an indicator of student poverty under federal guidelines. {snip}

Chief among the findings was enrollment by race/ethnicity as measured in a four-year span:

Overall enrollment is down from 6.24 million in 2014–15 to 6.19 million in 2018–19, a decrease of 0.8 percent. Also during that time, the percentage of white students decreased from 24.6 percent to 22.9 percent and the percentage of black students decreased from 6 percent to 5.4 percent.

However, between 2014–15 and 2018–19, the percentage of Hispanic/Latino students increased from 53.6 percent to 54.6 percent, a trend that has held for several years as California’s demographics continue to a shift the state toward a so-called “majority-minority” population.

Between 2014–15 and 2018–19, the percentage Hispanic/Latino students classified as English learners decreased from 83.2 percent to 81.3 percent. {snip}

For enrollment in charter and noncharter schools over a four-year span, the numbers broke down this way: While overall enrollment non-charter schools is decreasing between 2014–15 and 2018–19, enrollment in charter schools has increased from 9.2 percent to 10.6 percent of the public school population statewide.

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