A Snapshot of African American School Enrollment in the United States

A new report from the U.S. Census Bureau gives a detailed look at school enrollment in the United States. The report found that nearly one-quarter of the entire U.S. population over the age of 3 was enrolled in school in 2021. In 2021, school enrollment included 4.1 million preschool students, 4.0 million kindergartners, 32.9 million students in first through eighth grades, 17.3 million high schoolers, 16.6 million undergraduate students, and 4.6 million graduate students.

African Americans made up a larger percentage of college and graduate students than was the case at all other lower grades of education. Here are the numbers:

* There were 483,000 Black students enrolled in preschool programs. They made up 11.8 percent of all preschoolers.
* There were 508,000 Black students in kindergarten. They made up 12.7 percent of all kindergarten students.
* Blacks were 12.6 percent of the nearly 16 million students in grades 1 to 4 and 13 percent of the more than 17 million students enrolled in grades 5 through 8.
* There were 2,234,000 Black students enrolled in high school in 2021. They made up 12.9 percent of all high school students.
* In undergraduate higher education, Blacks made up 13.9 percent of all students. At the graduate level, the 598,000 Black students made up 13 percent of all students.

High school dropout rates in the United States have declined about 6 percentage points from 12.5 percent in 2005. This decline has been particularly noteworthy among Black youth. The Black dropout rate declined from 14.2 percent in 2005 to 6.3 percent in 2021.

The report found that in 2019, about 53 percent of all Black children were enrolled in a preschool program. But the COVID-19 pandemic caused significant drops in enrollment either due to fears of contamination and/or families being less able to afford the expense of preschool education. By 2021, 46 percent of White children and only 39 percent of Black children were enrolled in preschool.

In 2011, there were more than 3.5 million Black students enrolled in higher education. In 2019, before the pandemic, there were just over 3 million Black students enrolled in higher education. Two years later in 2021, 2,882,000 Black students were enrolled at colleges and universities.

The full report, School Enrollment in the United States: 2021, may be downloaded here.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Three Black Scholars Taking On New Faculty Positions

The faculty appointments are James Haywood Rolling Jr. at Syracuse University in New York, Elias Towe at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, and Roderic Pettigrew at Texas A&M University.

Howard University Receives Record-Breaking 36,000 Applicants for Class of 2028

The class of 2028 applicant pool at Howard University increased by 4,000 applications compared to last year's class of 2027. This year, the university's acceptance rate was roughly 31 percent, down five percentage points from last year.

Laquala Dixon Honored by National Association of Student Personnel Administrators for Service as HBCU Liaison

A member of the NASPA since 2013, Dr. Dixon was honored with the 2024 Sankofa Award for her commitment and contributions to the organization as the HBCU liaison for the Black Diaspora Knowledge Community.

Alabama A&M University Becomes First HBCU to Establish Exclusively Online Doctorate in Social Work

In addition to the new doctorate in social work program, Alabama A&M University will launch a Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction and a master's degree in food science business for the upcoming fall 2024 semester.

Featured Jobs