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New Pa. data shows how the pandemic gave a big boost to cyber charter schools

While public schools in urban and suburban counties have lost students, schools in more rural counties have largely tread water.

  • Avi Wolfman-Arent/Keystone Crossroads
FILE PHOTO: In a Jan. 18, 2018 photo, nineteen-year-old student Chryssoula Stavropoulos, right, with her mother Elaine, uses her family's laptop to complete lessons for the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, one of the nation's largest online charter schools, from her kitchen, in Blacklick, Ohio.

 Kantele Franko / AP Photo

FILE PHOTO: In a Jan. 18, 2018 photo, nineteen-year-old student Chryssoula Stavropoulos, right, with her mother Elaine, uses her family's laptop to complete lessons for the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, one of the nation's largest online charter schools, from her kitchen, in Blacklick, Ohio.

(Philadelphia) — New data from Pennsylvania’s Department of Education shows that the pandemic has caused a small, but significant enrollment decline at traditional public schools, while increasing the share of cyber charter students.

It’s also revealed an interesting divide. While public schools in urban and suburban counties have lost students, schools in more rural counties have largely tread water.

Overall, preliminary enrollment data shows a 1.7% drop in total public school enrollment, which equates to about 30,000 students statewide. The dip was more pronounced in kindergarten, where enrollment fell from 115,275 students last year to 110,803 students in 2020 — nearly a 4% decline.

One type of public school has gotten more popular, though: the state’s cyber charter schools. Enrollment in the publicly funded but privately managed online schools jumped from 38,266 to 60,890. That’s a 59% enrollment spike.

Enrollment in brick-and-mortar charter schools, meanwhile, was almost completely flat, increasing by about 100 students.

Enrollment declines in Pennsylvania’s public schools were largely concentrated in the state’s suburban and urban areas.

Keystone Crossroads analyzed traditional public school enrollment from the state’s 10 most-densely populated counties.* In those 10 counties, enrollment in traditional public school districts fell by 6.9%.

In the rest of Pennsylvania’s 57 counties, enrollment in traditional school districts actually grew by 0.4%.

That stark split is significant because an analysis by the PLS Reporter found that schools in Pennsylvania’s rural counties largely offered some sort of in-person learning this year. Schools in suburban and urban areas were much more likely to offer virtual learning only.

Every year, Pennsylvania’s Department of Education releases preliminary enrollment numbers that can shift before they’re finalized

The student counts matter for a couple reasons.

First, they help illuminate how parents have navigated an unprecedented disruption to public schools during the COVID-19 pandemic. They suggest some families have left the public system and a greater number have delayed their kids’ entry into public schools.

But they also show that the exodus has not been overwhelming. The vast majority of public school parents in Pennsylvania did not withdraw their children.

That does not mean parents simply stayed put.

The unprecedented interest in cyber charter schools shows that thousands of families did seek an alternative. If these enrollment patterns remain after the pandemic, it would represent a significant change in how thousands of Pennsylvania students learn. It could also have financial implications, since school districts pay a per-student tuition fee for each district resident attending a cyber charter school.


* Pennsylvania’s most densely populated counties are Philadelphia, Delaware, Montgomery, Allegheny, Bucks, Lehigh, Northampton, Chester, Lancaster, Dauphin. This count only includes students enrolled in school district schools. It does not include students at technical schools, IUs, or charter schools.

Keystone Crossroads is a statewide reporting collaborative of WITF, WPSU and WESA, led by WHYY. This story originally appeared at https://whyy.org/programs/keystone-crossroads.

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