Framingham School Enrollment Drops, A Potential Budget Problem
News
Framingham MA
11 November, 2020
4:24 PM
Description
FRAMINGHAM, MA — There are 348 fewer students than expected enrolled in Framingham schools this year, a loss that could mean a multi-million dollar drop in state funding. Superintendent Robert Tremblay presented the new enrollment figures to the School Committee on Nov. 4. According to a student count on Oct. 1, 10 out of the district's 14 grade levels — from prekindergarten to grade 12 — saw declines compared to Oct. 1, 2019. The biggest declines are in prekindergarten, kindergarten and 1st grade. Tremblay said the problem is not unique to Framingham: there's been a 50 percent kindergarten enrollment drop statewide due to parents holding children home due to coronavirus. "What we're seeing our district with a lower-than-expected enrollment is not surprising," Tremblay told the committee. Framingham has also seen many more students formally leave the district for homeschooling: 75 total in 2020 compared to 45 one year ago. At the kindergarten level, the two most common reasons for not attending Framingham school sin 2021 was 1) transferring to a private school (27 students), and 2) transferring to another public school system (26 students). Here's a look at the difference in enrollment between 2019 and 2020: GradeOct. 1, 2019Oct. 1, 2020Pre-K309196-113K696661-351st812661-1512nd707795+883rd747688-594th744722-225th772724-486th670624-467th638656+188th682628-549th684661-2310th567654+8711th568554-1412th492516+24TOTAL9,0888,740-348 The state funds school districts on a per-pupil basis. In Framingham, the state provides about $12,731 per-pupil. With 348 fewer students, that equals $4.4 million less in state funds. But Tremblay and Finance Director Lincoln Lynch told the School Committee that districts will be "held harmless" this year from the typical funding calculations — although no one at the state level has formally made that determination, they said. There's another problem: parents who kept their kids home from school this year due to coronavirus may come back in fall 2021, leading to a sharp enrollment increase. "We're watching this very, very closely," Tremblay said.
Discussion
By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.