Kindergarten enrollment has plunged across the Twin Cities metro, as families have sought alternatives to a first year of school spent at least partly in front of a computer screen during the pandemic.
Parents frustrated by online and hybrid lessons have opted for home schooling, private schools offering in-person instruction or even delaying the start of their children's grade-school education altogether. Meanwhile, school leaders who are just beginning to share their official enrollment counts with school board members and the state Department of Education are scrambling to sort out where the missing kindergartners are, whether it's likely they'll be back next year — and how much of a financial hit districts are likely to suffer in the meantime since funding is linked to student counts.
"It's obviously a challenge that I think all districts are facing right now," said Ron Meyer, executive director of finance and operations for Osseo Area Schools, where kindergarten enrollment is down by more than 13% from district projections.
Enrollment is down overall this year, but the decline is particularly steep among kindergartners. In Bloomington and Inver Grove Heights, this year's kindergarten enrollment is down 18% from the districts' projections. Minneapolis and St. Louis Park kindergarten classes are each 16% below projected enrollment. In Brooklyn Center and Wayzata, kindergarten enrollment is down by at least 20%. Even in Prior Lake-Savage, the metro's fastest-growing district in recent years, there's been a nearly 7% drop, according to a recent survey by the Association of Metropolitan School Districts.
Teresa Wagner's daughter is part of the wave of kindergartners pushed out of school by the pandemic. Wagner had planned to send her daughter to kindergarten in the South Washington County school district, just like she'd done when her two older children started school.
But then came the pandemic, and a spring of distance-learning preschool — a frustrating experience that no one in the family wanted to extend into kindergarten. So Wagner enrolled her daughter in a private school offering in-person instruction five days a week this fall.
"The kindergarten decision was different this year," she said.
A search for normal
Kindergarten is not required in Minnesota, and compulsory school attendance begins at age 7. So for families trying to avoid putting their children in a classroom this fall — or trying to get them in one every day — there are more options for 5- and 6-year-olds than for older students. The state does not release enrollment numbers until winter, so it's not yet clear how many students are being home-schooled, or how many have shifted from public to private schools.