White students now make up less than half of all Americans enrolled in school
· Axios

White students now make up less than half of all Americans enrolled in school from nursery through graduate programs, according to an Axios analysis of new U.S. Census data.
Why it matters: America's future workforce and electorate are moving through schools strained by 20-year-low reading scores, teacher shortages and racial segregation at levels not seen since the 1960s.
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- How schools, colleges and policymakers respond to this demographic shift will define opportunity for a generation.
The big picture: White (non-Latino, non-multiracial) student enrollment fell from 46.7 million in 2000 to 36.6 million in 2024.
- White students account for 48.8% of all Americans enrolled in public, private and homeschool systems as of October 2024, according to the Census Bureau's School Enrollment Supplement reviewed by Axios.
- Latino enrollment rose from 10.2 million to 18.4 million over the same period. Latinos are now the second-largest group of students, at 24.4%.
- Total school enrollment in 2024 was nearly 1 million below the 76.1 million enrolled in 2019 and almost 4 million below the modern peak of 79 million in 2011, according to the Axios review of census data.
Zoom in: The demographic shift is most visible in early childhood and K-12 education.
- White non-Hispanic children are around 47% of the students at nurseries and kindergartens, and 48% at elementary and high schools.
- Higher education is the lone remaining sector where white students remain a majority (51.1%). This is likely to erode over the next decade as the more diverse K-12 pipeline ages into colleges and universities.
Friction point: Hispanic 3-and-4-year-olds enroll in nursery school at just 52.1% — the lowest rate of any major group. Early childhood education is where school readiness gaps are set.
- If Latino children — the largest and fastest-growing segment of tomorrow's student body — are least likely to access pre-K, the demographic majority in classrooms may arrive behind.
Between the lines: While Hispanic students enroll in all schools at high rates, college completion gaps remain significant: only 37.3% of Hispanic 20-to-21-year-olds are enrolled in college, compared to 53.9% of white students.
- It's 78.6% for Asian Americans in the same age group.
The bottom line: For years, the U.S. has experienced lower fertility rates, an aging population and slower growth among white Americans.
- Meanwhile, Hispanic, Asian American and multiracial populations have expanded through births, immigration and demographic change.
- The result is now visible in classrooms.