Enrollment in Minnesota's public schools dropped by 2% for this school year, as many parents chose private school, home schooling, or postponed their students' first year because of pandemic-related concerns.
The decline, which was most pronounced among younger students, has major budget implications for districts already struggling with the added and unexpected costs of operating this year. Because each student accounts for about $10,000 in state funding, even relatively small enrollment losses add up to big budget gaps.
Districts that saw double-digit percentage declines in their student populations are now making plans for major cuts to staff, class offerings and school programs. Many are hoping for some relief from the Legislature but expect that even a multimillion-dollar aid package may not be enough to fill in the holes or account for uncertainty about how many students will return.
The Menahga Public School District, northwest of Brainerd, saw the most precipitous enrollment drop in the state: 20%. Superintendent Kevin Wellen said his district has already had to drain much of its reserve fund and expects to cut about 10% of its staff next year. Facing uncertainty about the pandemic, extra state funding, and how many students will return in the fall, Wellen said planning is harder than ever.
"It is a wild roller coaster," he said.
Before the pandemic, the Minnesota Department of Education had projected enrollment for the 2020-21 school year would be up from the previous year, though not growing quite as fast as in recent years. But the data released by the department Friday show that many families, especially those with younger students, and white students, adjusted their plans.
Kindergarten divergence
Statewide, kindergarten enrollment at public schools fell by 9%, as private schools reported a 12% increase. Many kindergartners were unaccounted for because Minnesota's mandatory age for school enrollment is 7. That means families who turned to home schooling or are waiting to start with first grade did not need to report those plans to the state.
Families who passed on public school were often looking for very different options. Some, especially with younger students, sought schools they thought would remain open for in-person instruction during the pandemic. Others wanted to sidestep the potential for unpredictable swings between distance, hybrid and in-person learning models — or avoid the possibility of in-person learning at all, until the pandemic had subsided.