An Overview of American Education

views updated

Chapter 1
An Overview of American Education

American education has always faced challenges. Debates about the purposes of schools, the benefits of education, the best approach to teaching and learning, and calls for reform of the system have been common in the history of education in the United States. Since the 1980s the nation has been working to resolve such critical issues as low academic performance, high dropout rates, and drug use and violence in schools. Parents worry about the escalating cost of a college education. Political and community leaders question the ability of U.S. schools to produce high school graduates capable of competing in an increasingly technical and international environment. Educational leaders raise concerns about the impacts of poverty on education, and about the adequacy of school resources. Voters and legislators debate the merits of alternative schools, including whether parents who educate their children in private schools should receive federal or state subsidies. Calls for school accountability are heard from both taxpayers and elected officials.

Despite these problems, the United States remains one of the most highly educated nations in the world. According to the U.S. Department of Education, in fall 2003 approximately 79.7 million Americans were involved either directly or indirectly in providing or receiving formal education. About 70.7 million students were enrolled in schools and colleges, and 4.2 million instructors were teaching at the elementary, secondary, or college level. Another 4.8 million people were professional, administrative, and support personnel at educational institutions. (See Table 1.1.)

EDUCATION LEVEL OF POPULATION HAS GROWN

The number of school years completed among Americans age twenty-five and older has been increasing. According to the U.S. Department of Education, in 1940 about one in four Americans (24.5%) twenty-five and older had completed four years or more of high school, but almost one in seven (13.7%) had completed fewer than five years of elementary school. By 2002 in the same age group, 84.1% of Americans had completed high school, while only 1.6% had fewer than five years of formal education. In 1940 less than 5% of the population twenty-five and older had completed four or more years of college; by 2002 about 26.7% had done so. (See Table 1.2 and Figure 1.1.)

Among people ages twenty-five to twenty-nine, 86.4% had completed four years of high school or more in 2002, while 29.3% had completed four or more years of college. White Americans were more likely than African-Americans or Hispanic Americans to have completed both high school and college. (See Table 1.2.)

SCHOOL ENROLLMENT

Virtually all American children five to seventeen years old are enrolled in school. According to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2001 more than 95% of all young people in this age group attended school. The enrollment of three- and four-year-olds has increased substantially since 1980, from 36.7% in that year to 52.4% in 2001. (See Table 1.3.)

The proportion of people enrolled in school drops sharply after age eighteen. By this age young people either graduate from or leave high school and may not immediately go on to any form of higher education. However, the proportion of older teens attending school has increased since 1980. According to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2001 the proportion of eighteen- and nineteen-year-olds enrolled in school reached 61%, up from 46.4% in 1980. (See Table 1.3.)

Enrollment Numbers Change

The number of students enrolled in elementary and secondary schools and in colleges is roughly proportional to the birth rates of the previous two decades. After World War II and the Korean conflict, the nation experienced a "baby boom" (1946–64) as returning soldiers settled down to start families. Consequently, school enrollment grew rapidly during the 1950s and 1960s as these babies matured to school age. According to the U.S. Department of Education, total enrollment peaked at sixty-one million in 1975, a number not attained again until 1991. Elementary enrollment, which includes the figures for public pre-kindergarten through grade eight and private kindergarten through grade eight, reached a record high of 36.7 million in 1969, and high school enrollment peaked at 15.7 million in 1976. (See Table 1.4.)

TABLE 1.1
Projected number of participants in educational institutions, by level and control of institution, Fall 2003
[In millions]
ParticipantsAll levels (elementary, secondary, and degree-granting)Elementary and secondary schoolsDegree-granting institutions
TotalPublicPrivateTotalPublicPrivate
12345678
Note: Includes enrollments in local public school systems and in most private schools (religiously affiliated and nonsectarian). Excludes subcollegiate departments of institutions of higher education and federal schools. Elementary and secondary includes most kindergarten and some nursery school enrollment. Excludes preprimary enrollment in schools that do not offer first grade or above. Degree-granting institutions include full-time and part-time students enrolled in degree-credit and nondegree-credit programs in universities, other 4-year colleges, and 2-year colleges that participated in Title IV federal financial aid programs. Data for teachers and other staff in public and private elementary and secondary schools and colleges and universities are reported in terms of full-time equivalents. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
Source: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, "Table 1. Projected Number of Participants in Educational Institutions, by Level and Control of Institution: Fall 2003," in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt001.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
   Total79.760.953.96.818.914.34.6
Enrollment70.754.348.06.316.412.53.8
Teachers and faculty4.23.43.00.40.80.60.3
Other professional, administrative, and support staff4.83.12.90.21.71.20.5

Birth rates declined as the baby boom waned, and so did school enrollments in the 1970s. An "echo effect" occurred in the 1980s, when those born during the baby boom started their own families. This increase in birth rates triggered an increase in school enrollment in the early 1990s. In 1991 the enrollment of students at schools of all levels was 61.7 million. In the years following 1991, school enrollment grew about 1% to 2% annually, to 69.8 million in 2001. (See Table 1.4.)

After a high of 36.7 million in 1969, elementary enrollment in public and private schools gradually declined and leveled off in the late 1980s at around thirty-three million. Elementary enrollment then rose through the 1990s to about thirty-nine million in 2001. It is expected to stay fairly stable through 2013. (See Table 1.4.)

Public high school enrollment, which began to decline in the late 1970s, started to increase again in the 1990s and is expected to continue to grow until 2008, after which it will decline slightly until 2013. College enrollments, unlike elementary and secondary enrollments, have risen consistently and are expected to reach almost 18.2 million by 2013. (See Table 1.4.)

EDUCATIONAL DIFFERENCES

Race and Ethnicity

The marked difference in educational attainment that once existed between whites and minorities has narrowed, although there are still significant gaps. According to the U.S. Department of Education, about 88.7% of white adults age twenty-five and older were high school graduates in 2002, while 79.2% of African-Americans and 57% of Hispanics were graduates. The most significant advances can be seen among young adults ages twenty-five to twenty-nine, where 93% of whites, 87.6% of African-Americans, and 62.4% of Hispanics were high school graduates in 2002, compared to 41.2% of whites and 12.3% of blacks and other races in 1940. (See Table 1.2.)

In 1940 white adults age twenty-five and older were 3.7 times more likely than African-Americans and other minorities to have completed four years of college (4.9% versus 1.3%). More than sixty years later, whites twenty-five and older were 1.7 times more likely to complete four years of college than African-Americans and 2.6 times more likely to complete four years of college than Hispanics. According to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2002, 29.4% of whites, 17.2% of African-Americans, and 11.1% of Hispanics completed four or more years of college. More than one-third of white

TABLE 1.2
Percent of persons age 25 and over, by years of school completed, race/ethnicity, and sex, selected years, 1910–2002
Age and yearTotalWhite, non-HispanicaBlack, non-HispanicaHispanic
Less than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegec
12345678910111213
Males and females
25 and over
1910d23.813.52.7
1920d22.016.43.3
1930d17.519.13.9
April 194013.724.54.610.926.14.941.87.71.3
April 195011.134.36.28.936.46.632.613.72.2
April 19608.341.17.76.743.28.123.521.73.5
March 19705.355.211.04.257.411.614.736.16.1
March 19754.262.513.92.665.814.912.342.66.418.238.56.6
March 19803.468.617.01.971.918.49.151.47.915.844.57.6
March 19852.773.919.41.477.520.86.159.911.113.547.98.5
March 19862.774.719.41.478.220.95.362.510.912.948.58.4
March 19872.475.619.91.379.021.44.963.610.811.950.98.6
March 19882.476.220.31.279.821.84.863.511.212.251.010.0
March 19892.576.921.11.280.722.85.264.711.712.250.99.9
March 19902.477.621.31.181.423.15.166.211.312.350.89.2
March 19912.478.421.41.182.423.34.766.811.512.551.39.7
March 19922.179.421.40.983.423.23.967.711.911.852.69.3
March 19932.180.221.90.884.123.83.770.512.211.853.19.0
March 19941.980.922.20.884.924.32.773.012.910.853.39.1
March 19951.881.723.00.785.925.42.573.813.310.653.49.3
March 19961.881.723.60.686.025.92.274.613.810.353.19.3
March 19971.782.123.90.686.326.22.075.313.39.454.710.3
March 19981.682.824.40.687.126.61.776.414.89.355.511.0
March 19991.683.425.20.687.727.71.777.415.59.056.110.9
March 20001.684.125.60.588.428.11.678.916.68.757.010.6
March 20011.684.326.10.588.728.61.379.516.19.356.511.2
March 20021.684.126.70.588.729.41.679.217.28.757.011.1
25 to 29
1920d12.922.04.544.66.31.2
April 19405.938.15.93.441.26.427.012.31.6
April 19504.652.87.73.356.38.216.123.62.8
April 19602.860.711.02.263.711.87.238.65.4
March 19701.175.416.40.977.817.32.258.410.0
March 19751.083.121.90.686.623.80.571.110.58.053.18.8
March 19800.885.422.50.389.225.00.676.711.66.758.07.7
March 19850.786.122.20.289.524.40.480.511.66.060.911.1
March 19860.986.122.40.489.625.20.583.511.85.659.19.0
March 19870.986.022.00.489.424.60.483.411.54.859.88.7
March 19881.085.922.70.389.725.10.380.912.06.062.311.3
March 19891.085.523.40.389.326.30.582.312.65.461.010.1
March 19901.285.723.20.390.126.41.081.713.47.358.28.1
March 19911.085.423.20.489.826.70.581.811.05.856.79.2
March 19920.986.323.60.390.727.20.880.911.05.260.99.5
March 19930.786.723.70.391.227.20.282.613.34.060.98.3
March 19940.886.123.30.291.127.10.684.113.63.660.38.0
TABLE 1.2
Percent of persons age 25 and over, by years of school completed, race/ethnicity, and sex, selected years, 1910–2002 [continued]
Age and yearTotalWhite, non-HispanicaBlack, non-HispanicaHispanic
Less than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegec
12345678910111213
March 19970.887.427.80.192.932.60.686.914.24.261.811.0
March 19980.788.127.30.193.632.30.488.215.83.762.810.4
March 19990.687.828.20.193.033.60.288.715.03.261.68.9
March 20000.788.129.10.194.034.086.817.83.862.89.7
March 20010.887.728.60.293.333.00.187.017.84.763.211.1
March 20021.186.429.30.193.035.90.687.618.04.762.48.9
Males
25 and over
April 194015.122.75.512.024.25.946.26.91.4
April 195012.232.67.39.834.67.936.912.62.1
April 19609.439.59.77.441.610.327.720.03.5
March 19705.955.014.14.557.215.017.935.46.8
March 19803.669.220.92.072.422.811.351.27.716.544.99.2
March 19902.777.724.41.381.626.76.465.811.912.950.39.8
March 19952.081.726.00.886.028.93.473.513.710.852.910.1
March 19961.981.926.00.786.128.82.974.612.510.153.010.3
March 19971.882.026.20.686.329.02.973.812.59.254.910.6
March 19981.782.826.50.787.129.32.375.414.09.355.711.1
March 19991.683.427.50.687.730.62.077.214.39.056.010.7
March 20001.684.227.80.688.530.82.179.116.48.256.610.7
March 20011.684.428.00.688.630.91.780.615.99.455.611.1
March 20021.783.828.50.588.531.71.979.016.59.056.111.0
TABLE 1.2
Percent of persons age 25 and over, by years of school completed, race/ethnicity, and sex, selected years, 1910–2002 [continued>]
Age and yearTotalWhite, non-HispanicaBlack, non-HispanicaHispanic
Less than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegecLess than 5 years of elementary schoolHigh school completion or higherb4 or more years of collegec
12345678910111213
Note: Total includes other racial/ethnic groups not shown separately.
∗Rounds to zero.
—Not available.
aIncludes persons of Hispanic origin for years prior to 1980.
bData for years prior to 1993 include all persons with at least 4 years of high school.
cData for 1993 and later years are for persons with a bachelor's or higher degree.
dEstimates based on Bureau of the Census retrojection of 1940 Census data on education by age.
Source: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, "Table 8. Percent of Persons Age 25 and Over and 25 to 29, by Years of School Completed, Race/Ethnicity, and Sex: Selected Years, 1910–2002," in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt008.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Females
25 and over
April 194012.426.33.89.828.14.037.58.41.2
April 195010.036.05.28.138.25.428.614.72.4
April 19607.442.55.86.044.76.019.723.13.6
March 19704.755.48.23.957.78.611.936.65.6
March 19803.268.113.61.871.514.47.451.58.115.344.26.2
March 19902.277.518.41.081.319.84.066.510.811.751.38.7
March 19951.781.620.20.685.822.11.774.113.010.453.88.4
March 19961.781.621.40.585.923.21.674.614.810.553.38.3
March 19971.682.221.70.586.323.71.376.514.09.554.610.1
March 19981.682.922.40.687.124.11.277.115.49.255.310.9
March 19991.583.323.10.587.625.01.577.516.59.056.311.0
March 20001.584.023.60.488.425.51.178.716.89.357.510.6
March 20011.584.224.30.488.826.51.078.616.39.157.411.3
March 20021.584.425.10.588.927.31.479.417.78.357.911.2

young adults (35.9%) aged twenty-five to twenty-nine were college graduates, compared to 18% of blacks and 8.9% of Hispanics in the same age group. (See Table 1.2.)

Gender

Traditionally, women were slightly more likely than men to complete high school but less likely to go on to college. In recent years the differences in high school graduation rates have disappeared. According to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2002 more than 84% of both women and men age twenty-five and older had completed four years of high school or more. The proportion of women age twenty-five and older graduating from college has increased steadily, from 3.8% in 1940 to 25.1% in 2002. Nevertheless, the proportion of male students (28.5% in 2002) who completed four or more years of college was still higher. This does not hold true across race and ethnicity. White males (31.7%) were more likely than white females (27.3%) to have completed four or more years of college, but African-American and Hispanic males (16.5% and 11%, respectively) were less likely than African-American and Hispanic females (17.7% and 11.2%, respectively) to have completed four or more years of college in 2002. (See Table 1.2.)

PROJECTIONS TO 2013

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) estimates that the total public and private elementary and secondary enrollment will increase from 54.2 million in 2002 to 56.4 million in 2013. Enrollment in public pre-kindergarten through eighth grade was projected to hit its lowest level in 2005, and then begin a modest climb to 35.4 million. Public enrollment in grades nine through twelve is expected to rise through 2007, and then start to fall slightly. The number of people attending degree-granting institutions of higher learning is projected to increase from 16.1 million in 2002 to 18.2 million by 2013. (See Table 1.4.)

EDUCATION SPENDING

According to the U.S. Department of Education, expenditures for public and private education from pre-primary through graduate school rose to an estimated high of $780.1 billion for the 2001–02 school year. Expenditures for elementary and secondary schools reached $462.7 billion (59% of total education spending), and outlays for colleges and universities were estimated at $317.4 billion (41%). In 2001–02 the United States spent 7.7% of its gross domestic product (GDP—the total value of goods and services produced within the United States) on education. More than fifty years before, in the 1949–50 school year, the United States spent $8.9 billion, or 3.3% of its GDP, on education. (See Table 1.5.)

TABLE 1.3
Percent of the population ages 3 to 34 enrolled in school, by race/ethnicity, sex, and age, selected years, October 1980–October 2001
Year and ageTotalMalesFemales
TotalWhite, non-HispanicBlack, non-HispanicHispanic originTotalWhite, non-HispanicBlack, non-HispanicHispanic originTotalWhite, non-HispanicBlack, non-HispanicHispanic origin
12345678910111213
1980
  Total, 3 to 34 years49.748.854.049.850.950.056.249.948.547.752.149.8
3 and 4 years36.737.438.228.537.839.236.430.135.535.540.026.6
5 and 6 years95.795.995.594.595.095.494.194.096.496.597.094.9
7 to 9 years99.199.199.498.499.099.099.597.799.299.299.399.0
10 to 13 years99.499.499.499.799.499.499.499.499.499.399.399.9
14 and 15 years98.298.797.994.398.798.998.496.797.798.597.392.1
16 and 17 years89.089.290.781.889.189.490.781.588.889.090.682.2
18 and 19 years46.447.045.837.847.048.542.936.945.845.748.338.8
20 and 21 years31.033.023.319.532.634.822.821.429.531.323.717.6
22 to 24 years16.316.813.611.717.818.713.410.714.915.013.712.6
25 to 29 years9.39.48.86.99.89.810.66.88.89.17.56.9
30 to 34 years6.46.46.95.15.95.67.26.27.07.26.64.1
1985
  Total, 3 to 34 years48.347.850.847.749.248.752.647.547.446.949.247.9
3 and 4 years38.940.342.827.036.739.134.626.441.241.650.327.7
5 and 6 years96.196.695.794.595.395.694.595.397.097.697.193.7
7 to 9 years99.199.498.698.499.099.398.498.999.299.498.998.0
10 to 13 years99.399.399.599.499.299.299.199.199.499.399.999.7
14 and 15 years98.198.398.196.198.398.498.596.297.998.197.696.0
16 and 17 years91.792.591.884.592.492.992.088.990.992.291.680.0
18 and 19 years51.653.743.541.852.253.449.438.651.054.037.844.7
20 and 21 years35.337.227.724.036.538.829.920.334.135.725.827.4
22 to 24 years16.917.513.811.618.819.813.512.615.115.414.010.4
25 to 29 years9.29.67.46.69.49.75.88.29.19.48.74.9
30 to 34 years6.16.25.25.75.45.63.94.06.86.96.27.5
1990
  Total, 3 to 34 years50.249.852.247.250.950.454.346.849.549.250.347.7
3 and 4 years44.447.241.830.743.947.938.128.044.946.645.533.6
5 and 6 years96.596.796.594.996.596.896.295.896.496.796.993.9
7 to 9 years99.799.799.899.599.799.799.999.599.699.799.899.4
10 to 13 years99.699.799.999.199.699.699.999.099.799.799.899.1
14 and 15 years99.099.099.499.099.199.299.799.198.998.999.198.8
16 and 17 years92.593.591.785.492.693.493.085.592.493.790.585.3
18 and 19 years57.259.155.044.058.259.760.440.756.358.549.847.2
20 and 21 years39.743.128.327.240.344.231.021.739.242.025.833.1
22 to 24 years21.021.919.79.922.323.719.311.219.920.320.08.4
25 to 29 years9.710.46.16.39.210.04.74.610.210.77.38.1
30 to 34 years5.86.24.53.64.85.02.34.06.97.46.33.1
TABLE 1.3
Percent of the population ages 3 to 34 enrolled in school, by race/ethnicity, sex, and age, selected years, October 1980–October 2001 [continued]
Year and ageTotalMalesFemales
TotalWhite, non-HispanicBlack, non-HispanicHispanic originTotalWhite, non-HispanicBlack, non-HispanicHispanic originTotalWhite, non-HispanicBlack, non-HispanicHispanic origin
12345678910111213
Note: Includes enrollment in any type of graded public, parochial, or other private schools. Includes nursery schools, kindergartens, elementary schools, high schools, colleges, universities, and professional schools. Attendance may be on either a full-time or part-time basis and during the day or night. Enrollments in "special" schools, such as trade schools, business colleges, or correspondence schools, are not included. Begining 1995, preprimary enrollment was collected using new procedures. May not be comparable to figures for earlier years. Total includes persons from other racial/ethnic groups not shown separately.
Source: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, "Table 6. Percent of the Population 3 to 34 Years Old Enrolled in School, by Race/Ethnicity, Sex, and Age: Selected Years, October 1980 to October 2001," in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt006.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
1995
  Total, 3 to 34 years53.753.856.349.754.354.258.649.153.253.454.150.3
3 and 4 years48.752.247.836.949.451.152.440.848.153.543.432.7
5 and 6 years96.096.695.493.995.395.994.693.696.897.496.394.3
7 to 9 years98.798.997.798.598.999.098.198.898.598.997.298.2
10 to 13 years99.199.099.299.299.199.099.598.899.098.998.999.5
14 and 15 years98.998.899.098.999.098.999.698.498.898.798.399.4
16 and 17 years93.694.493.088.294.595.095.688.492.693.890.388.0
18 and 19 years59.461.857.546.159.561.959.247.459.261.856.144.8
20 and 21 years44.949.737.827.144.750.036.724.845.149.338.729.2
22 to 24 years23.224.420.015.622.824.120.614.823.624.819.516.6
25 to 29 years11.612.310.07.111.012.26.35.612.212.313.08.7
30 to 34 years5.95.77.74.75.45.06.94.56.56.38.34.9
2000
  Total, 3 to 34 years55.956.059.351.355.855.859.750.556.056.159.052.2
3 and 4 years52.154.659.835.950.854.158.031.953.455.261.840.0
5 and 6 years95.695.596.794.395.194.596.095.496.196.497.593.1
7 to 9 years98.198.497.597.598.098.198.296.698.298.696.798.4
10 to 13 years98.398.598.597.498.398.298.898.498.398.898.196.4
14 and 15 years98.798.999.696.298.798.899.696.998.699.099.695.4
16 and 17 years92.894.091.787.092.794.788.985.792.993.394.688.3
18 and 19 years61.263.957.249.558.361.251.548.064.266.762.251.1
20 and 21 years44.149.237.426.141.045.831.324.247.352.742.328.1
22 to 24 years24.624.924.018.223.925.022.015.225.324.825.821.6
25 to 29 years11.411.114.57.410.010.511.65.112.711.816.79.5
30 to 34 years6.76.19.95.65.64.78.55.77.77.411.25.5
2001
  Total, 3 to 34 years56.356.659.551.456.256.359.951.256.456.859.051.7
3 and 4 years52.455.260.539.951.754.556.743.053.156.064.336.6
5 and 6 years95.395.395.993.695.294.895.594.895.495.996.492.3
7 to 9 years98.298.597.997.498.598.898.697.997.898.397.196.9
10 to 13 years98.498.896.998.398.198.495.998.698.899.198.098.1
14 and 15 years98.198.297.997.898.197.899.198.598.198.696.797.2
16 and 17 years93.494.692.088.393.094.092.987.893.995.390.988.9
18 and 19 years61.064.060.445.658.862.458.739.863.265.762.151.3
20 and 21 years46.050.737.228.044.849.236.724.247.252.337.531.8
22 to 24 years25.425.627.115.624.023.823.614.626.727.430.216.7
25 to 29 years11.811.711.87.910.510.97.56.713.012.515.39.2
30 to 34 years6.96.411.74.45.85.48.63.57.97.414.35.3
TABLE 1.4
Enrollment in educational institutions, by level and control of institution, selected years, 1869–70 to Fall 2013
[In thousands]
YearTotal enrollment, all levelsElementary and secondary, totalPublic elementary and secondary schoolsPrivate elementary and secondary schoolsaDegree-granting institutionsb
TotalPrekindergarten through grade 8Grades 9 through 12TotalPrekindergarten through grade 8Grades 9 through 12TotalPublicPrivate
123456789101112
1869–706,8726,7928052
1879–809,8689,757110116
1889–9014,49114,33412,72312,5202031,6111,51695157
1899–190017,09216,85515,50314,9845191,3521,241111238
1909–1019,72819,37217,81416,8999151,5581,441117355
1919–2023,87623,27821,57819,3782,2001,6991,486214598
1929–3029,43028,32925,67821,2794,3992,6512,3103411,101
1939–4029,53928,04525,43418,8326,6012,6112,1534581,494797698
1949–5031,15128,49225,11119,3875,7253,3802,7086722,6591,3551,304
Fall 195944,49740,85735,18226,9118,2715,6754,6401,0353,6402,1811,459
Fall 196959,05551,05045,55032,51313,0375,500c4,200c1,300c8,0055,8972,108
Fall 197059,83851,25745,89432,55813,3365,3634,0521,3118,5816,4282,153
Fall 197160,22051,27146,07132,31813,7535,200c3,900c1,300c8,9496,8042,144
Fall 197259,94150,72645,72631,87913,8485,000c3,700c1,300c9,2157,0712,144
Fall 197360,04750,44545,44531,40114,0445,000c3,700c1,300c9,6027,4202,183
Fall 197460,29750,07345,07330,97114,1035,000c3,700c1,300c10,2247,9892,235
Fall 197561,00449,81944,81930,51514,3045,000c3,700c1,300c11,1858,8352,350
Fall 197660,49049,47844,31129,99714,3145,1673,8251,34211,0128,6532,359
Fall 197760,00348,71743,57729,37514,2035,1403,7971,34311,2868,8472,439
Fall 197858,89747,63742,55128,46314,0885,0863,7321,35311,2608,7862,474
Fall 197958,22146,65141,65128,03413,6165,000c3,700c1,300c11,5709,0372,533
Fall 198058,30546,20840,87727,64713,2315,3313,9921,33912,0979,4572,640
Fall 198157,91645,54440,04427,28012,7645,500c4,100c1,400c12,3729,6472,725
Fall 198257,59145,16639,56627,16112,4055,600c4,200c1,400c12,4269,6962,730
Fall 198357,43244,96739,25226,98112,2715,7154,3151,40012,4659,6832,782
Fall 198457,15044,90839,20826,90512,3045,700c4,300c1,400c12,2429,4772,765
Fall 198557,22644,97939,42227,03412,3885,5574,1951,36212,2479,4792,768
Fall 198657,70945,20539,75327,42012,3335,452c4,116c1,336c12,5049,7142,790
Fall 198758,25345,48740,00827,93312,0765,4794,2321,24712,7679,9732,793
Fall 198858,48545,43040,18928,50111,6875,242c4,036c1,206c13,05510,1612,894
Fall 198959,27945,74140,54329,15211,3905,198c4,035c1,163c13,53910,5782,961
Fall 199060,26946,45141,21729,87811,3385,2344,0841,15013,81910,8452,974
Fall 199161,68147,32242,04730,50611,5415,275c4,113c1,162c14,35911,3103,049
Fall 199262,63348,14542,82331,08811,7355,322c4,175c1,147c14,48711,3853,103
Fall 199363,11848,81343,46531,50411,9615,348c4,215c1,132c14,30511,1893,116
Fall 199463,88849,60944,11131,89812,2135,498c4,335c1,163c14,27911,1343,145
Fall 199564,76450,50244,84032,34112,5005,6624,4651,19714,26211,0923,169
Fall 199665,74351,37545,61132,76412,8475,764c4,551c1,213c14,36811,1203,247
Fall 199766,47051,96846,12733,07313,0545,8414,6231,21814,50211,1963,306
Fall 199866,98252,47546,53933,34613,1935,937c4,702c1,235c14,50711,1383,369
Fall 199967,66752,87646,85733,48813,3696,0184,7651,25414,79111,3093,482
Fall 200068,67853,36647,20433,68813,5156,162d4,875d1,287d15,31211,7533,560
Fall 200169,81853,89047,68833,95213,7366,202d4,880d1,322d15,92812,2333,695
Fall 2002d70,26054,15847,91833,94213,9766,2414,8851,35616,10212,3543,749
Fall 2003d70,65754,29648,04033,84314,1986,2564,8761,37916,36112,5463,814
Fall 2004d70,92354,45548,17533,66914,5066,2794,8711,40816,46812,6273,841
Fall 2005d71,29454,61548,30433,53414,7706,3114,8781,43316,67912,7863,893
Fall 2006d71,79454,90748,52433,58914,9366,3834,9331,44916,88712,9423,945
Fall 2007d72,06955,04948,64033,65414,9866,4094,9501,45817,02013,0423,978
Fall 2008d72,29255,12448,69033,79114,8996,4344,9751,45917,16813,1534,015
Fall 2009d72,59755,22348,76133,99414,7676,4615,0011,46117,37413,3084,066
TABLE 1.4
Enrollment in educational institutions, by level and control of institution, selected years, 1869–70 to Fall 2013 [continued]
[In thousands]
YearTotal enrollment, all levelsElementary and secondary, totalPublic elementary and secondary schoolsPrivate elementary and secondary schoolsaDegree-granting institutionsb
TotalPrekindergarten through grade 8Grades 9 through 12TotalPrekindergarten through grade 8Grades 9 through 12TotalPublicPrivate
123456789101112
—Not available.
aBeginning in fall 1980, data include estimates for an expanded universe of private schools. Therefore, direct comparisons with earlier years should be avoided.
bData for 1869–70 through 1949–50 include resident degree-credit students enrolled at any time during the academic year. Beginning in 1959, data include all resident and extension students enrolled at the beginning of the fall term.
cEstimated.
dProjected.
Note: Elementary and secondary enrollment includes pupils in local public school systems and in most private schools (religiously affiliated and nonsectarian), but generally excludes pupils in subcollegiate departments of colleges, federal schools, and home-schooled children. Based on the National Household Education Survey, the homeschooled children numbered approximately 850,000 in the spring of 1999. Public elementary enrollment includes most preprimary school pupils. Private elementary enrollment includes some preprimary students. Beginning in 1996–97, data are for degreegranting institutions. Degree-granting institutions are 2-year and 4-year institutions that were eligible to participate in Title IV federal financial aid programs. Data for degree-granting institutions for 1999 were imputed using alternative procedures. Some data have been revised from previously published figures. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
Source: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, "Table 3. Enrollment in Educational Institutions, by Level and Control of Institution: Selected Years, 1869–70 to Fall 2013," in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt003.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
Fall 2010d72,92755,38648,89034,24314,6486,4955,0401,45517,54113,4314,110
Fall 2011d73,34255,61849,08434,59714,4876,5345,0911,44317,72413,5664,158
Fall 2012d73,87355,94649,36735,00614,3616,5795,1481,43017,92713,7164,211
Fall 2013d74,51556,36449,73735,43014,3076,6275,2081,41918,15113,8834,268
TABLE 1.5
Total expenditures of educational institutions related to the GDP, selected years, 1929–30 to 2001–02
YearGross domestic product (in billions)School yearTotal expenditures for education (amounts in millions of current dollars)
All educational institutionsAll elementary and secondary schoolsAll colleges and universities
AmountAs a percent of gross domestic productAmountAs a percent of gross domestic productAmountAs a percent of gross domestic product
123456789
—Not available.
aPreliminary data for public elementary and secondary schools and estimates for colleges and universities.
bEstimated.
Note: Total expenditures for public elementary and secondary schools include current expenditures, interest on school debt, and capital outlay. Data for private elementary and secondary schools are estimated. Total expenditures for colleges and universities include current-fund expenditures and additions to plant value. Excludes expenditures of postsecondary institutions that do not confer associate or higher degrees. Data for 1995–96 and later years are for 4-year and 2-year degree-granting institutions that were eligible to participate in Title IV federal financial aid programs. Some data revised from previously published figures. Detail may not sum to totals due to rounding.
Source: Thomas D. Snyder, Alexandra G. Tan, and Charlene M. Hoffman, "Table 29. Total Expenditures of Educational Institutions Related to the Gross Domestic Product, by Level of Institution: Selected Years, 1929–30 to 2001–02," in Digest of Education Statistics, 2003, NCES 2005-025, U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington, DC, December 2004, http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03/tables/dt029.asp (accessed July 26, 2005)
1929$103.71929–30$6320.6
193992.01939–407580.8
1949267.71949–50$8,9113.3$6,2492.32,6621.0
1959507.41959–6023,8604.716,7133.37,1471.4
1961545.71961–6228,5035.219,6733.68,8301.6
1963618.71963–6434,4405.622,8253.711,6151.9
1965720.11965–6643,6826.128,0483.915,6342.2
1967834.11967–6855,6526.735,0774.220,5752.5
1969985.31969–7068,4596.943,1834.425,2762.6
19701,039.71970–7175,7417.348,2004.627,5412.6
19711,128.61971–7280,6727.150,9504.529,7222.6
19721,240.41972–7386,8757.054,9524.431,9232.6
19731,385.51973–7495,3966.960,3704.435,0262.5
19741,501.01974–75108,6647.268,8464.639,8182.7
19751,635.21975–76118,7067.375,1014.643,6052.7
19761,823.91976–77126,4176.979,1944.347,2232.6
19772,031.41977–78137,0426.786,5444.350,4982.5
19782,295.91978–79148,3086.593,0124.155,2962.4
19792,566.41979–80165,6276.5103,1624.062,4652.4
19802,795.61980–81182,8496.5112,3254.070,5242.5
19813,131.31981–82197,8016.3120,4863.877,3152.5
19823,259.21982–83212,0816.5128,7253.983,3562.6
19833,534.91983–84228,5976.5139,0003.989,5972.5
19843,932.71984–85247,6576.3149,4003.898,2572.5
19854,213.01985–86269,4856.4161,8003.8107,6852.6
19864,452.91986–87291,9746.6175,2003.9116,7742.6
19874,742.51987–88313,3756.6187,9994.0125,3762.6
19885,108.31988–89346,8836.8209,3774.1137,5062.7
19895,489.11989–90381,5257.0230,9704.2150,5552.7
19905,803.21990–91412,6527.1248,9304.3163,7222.8
19915,986.21991–92432,9877.2261,2554.4171,7322.9
19926,318.91992–93456,0707.2274,3354.3181,7352.9
19936,642.31993–94477,2377.2287,5074.3189,7302.9
19947,054.31994–95503,9257.1302,4004.3201,5252.9
19957,400.51995–96529,5967.2318,2464.3211,3502.9
19967,813.21996–97562,7717.2339,1514.3223,6202.9
19978,318.41997–98594,8497.2361,4154.3233,4342.8
19988,781.51998–99634,2327.2384,0384.4250,1942.8
19999,274.31999–2000682,8387.4411,5384.4271,3002.9
20009,824.6a2000–01737,9187.5442,6184.5295,3003.0
200110,082.2b2001–02780,1007.7462,7004.6317,4003.1

More From encyclopedia.com

About this article

An Overview of American Education

Updated About encyclopedia.com content Print Article

You Might Also Like