Education No. 158. PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS, BY LEVEL-STATES AND OTHER AREAS: 1971 [Schools classified by type of organization, rather than by grade-group; elementary excludes kindergarten and secondary includes junior high school. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series H 243-244, for totals] Combined ELEMENTARY SECONDARY public INSTITUTIONS STATE OR OTHER AREA elemen Schools tary, secondary teacher United States... 1,780 264, 020 2 1,815 14,372 2 23,572 3,770 1,089 1,467 721 Alabama. Arizona. 43 13 22 Arkansas. 100 164 28 806 California. 58 445 14 1,234 1,425 333 Indiana. Iowa. Kansas. Kentucky. Louisiana.. Maine.. Maryland... Massachusetts. Michigan.. Minnesota. Mississippi.. Missouri. Montana. Nebraska. New Hampshire. New Jersey. 43 52 1 135 49 50 50 1,337 354 563 3,406 1,053 1, 111 1,601 373 541 704 1,258 524 217 356 890 322 320 748 146 981 1,915 11 477 518 2,503 1,359 1,223 401 644 640 166 702 (NA) (NA) 1, 619 674 181 396 171 74 364 104 U.S. service schools.. (X) (X) Other areas.. 203 Puerto Rico. 1,638 (NA) 202 American Samoa. 1, 543 339 (NA) Canal Zone. (NA) 21 Guam (NA) (NA) 25 Virgin Islands. (NA) (NA) X Not applicable. 1 October 1968. Not affiliated with colleges and universities. Compiled from data supplied by the National League for Nursing, Inc., New York, N.Y. Public elementary one-teacher schools included in total public elementary schools. * Includes estimates for States that did not report. • Combined public elementary, secondary schools included with public secondary schools. Source: U.S. Office of Education, Digest of Educational Statistics, 1972. No. 159. School Enrollment and Expenditures 107 SCHOOL ENROLLMENT, BY TYPE OF SCHOOL: 1930 To 1970 [In thousands. Prior to 1960, excludes Alaska and Hawaii. Beginning 1964, data as of fall of preceding year] Excludes subcollegiate departments of institutions of higher education, residential schools for exceptional children, and Federal schools, except that, for kindergarten, available data are included in the totals. 2 Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports, series P-20. * Estimated. Includes subcollegiate departments of institutions of higher education, not shown separately. Schools for the blind, deaf, mentally deficient, epileptic, and delinquent. * 1927 data. 7 1946 data. Estimate based on 1958 survey. Source: U.S. Office of Education, Biennial Survey of Education in the United States, chapter on Statistical Summary of Education; Digest of Educational Statistics, annual; and unpublished data. No. 160. SCHOOL EXPENDITURES-PUBLIC AND PRIVATE, BY TYPE OF CONTROL AND LEVEL OF INSTRUCTION: 1930 To 1973 [In millions of dollars, except percent. Prior to 1960, excludes Alaska and Hawaii. Estimates for school years ending in year shown; data for 1971-1973 are projections] 1 Excludes expenditures for schools of nursing not affiliated with colleges and universities. Excludes higher education current expenditures for auxiliary enterprises and other noneducational currentfund expenditures. Excludes expenditures for residential schools for exceptional children. Includes expenditures for Federal schools for Indians and Federal schools on Federal installations that are excluded from breakdown. Source: U.S. Office of Education, Biennial Survey of Education in the United States, chapter on Statistical Summary of Education; Digest of Educational Statistics, annual; and Projections of Educational Statistics, annual. No. 161. ENROLLMENT IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS: 1960, 1970, AND 1972 [In thousands of persons 3 to 34 years of age, except as noted. As of October. Elementary includes grades 1-8; high school, grades 9-12 and postgraduates. See headnote, table 157] Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports, series P-20, No. 222, 241, and unpublished data. No. 162. SCHOOL EXPENDITURES-PUBLIC AND PRIVATE, BY SOURCE OF FUNDS: 1960 To 1973 [In billions of dollars, except percent. Estimates for school years ending in year shown] Z Less than $50 million or less than 0.05 percent. Includes residential schools for exceptional children, Federal schools for Indians, and federally operated elementary and secondary schools on military posts. Source: U.S. Office of Education, Projections of Educational Statistics to 1981-82. No. 163. SCHOOL ENROLLMent-ElemenTARY AND SECONDARY, 1972, AND INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 1971, BY STATES AND OTHER AREAS [In thousands. As of fall of year. For levels, see headnote, table 181] Represents zero. Z Less than 500. NA Not available. X Not applicable. Estimated. Excludes data for private residential schools for exceptional children and subcollegiate departments of institutions of higher education. 2 See headnote, table 211. Source: U.S. Office of Education, Fall 1972 Statistics of Public Schools: Opening Fall Enrollment in Higher Education, 1971; and Digest of Educational Statistics, 1972. 494-660 O-73-9 No. 164. SCHOOL ENROLLMENT, BY SEX AND BY LEVEL: 1950 TO 1990 1950. 1960. 1970. 1972. Percent increase: Series C-1: 1975. 1980. 1985. 1990. Series C-2: 1975. 1980. 1985 1990. Series E-1: 1975. 1980. 1985. 1990. 1980. 1985. 1990. Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports, series P-20, and series P-25, No. 473. No. 165. SCHOOL ENROLLMENT, BY RACE, LEVEL OF SCHOOL, AND AGE: 1960, [In thousands, except percent. As of October. See headnote, table 167] grades 9-12; college includes professional schools. Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports, series P-20, and unpublished data. |