DULUTH — Duluth's private schools are making big changes to manage growth: adding teachers, increasing teacher hours and, in some cases, reconfiguring the way buildings are used.
Private school enrollment in Duluth is now 27% higher than the largely pre-pandemic 2019-20 school year, state data shows. It's more than the approximately 10% growth in private schools across Minnesota.
While Duluth Public Schools showed slight growth in student population since last year, the district of about 8,500 has declined in enrollment 4% since 2020, mirroring what's happened in public schools around Minnesota.
The bump in private schools may have started during the pandemic as some families sought in-person instruction, but most of the families have chosen to stay private, leaders say, meaning long-term changes are being made to accommodate them.
The Catholic Stella Maris Academy, with more than 500 students this year, has increased enrollment by 28% since 2020. Another projected increase of 15% means a host of changes for next year, as it adds to its new high school and other grades are shifted among its four buildings.
"COVID has forever changed society, and one of those changes is it allowed parents to know there were opportunities outside the public option that existed," said Andrew Hilliker, president of the academy. "We're seeing young parents shop around for school like they haven't in the past."
Duluth's private Marshall School has had its enrollment grow by more than 20% since 2020, and it now has nearly 440 students.
The addition of an outdoors-based elementary program contributed, with families taking full advantage of the now K-12 school, said Jamie Steckart, head of Marshall.