<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><title>EdTribune MD - Maryland Education Data</title><description>Data-driven education journalism for Maryland. Every number verified against state DOE data.</description><link>https://md.edtribune.com/</link><language>en-us</language><copyright>EdTribune 2026</copyright><item><title>Nearly Half of Baltimore City Students Are Chronically Absent</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-04-07-md-baltimore-city-crisis/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-04-07-md-baltimore-city-crisis/</guid><description>Baltimore City&apos;s 48.7% chronic absenteeism rate is 22.0 points above the state average and nearly three times Frederick County&apos;s rate.</description><pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Correction (April 12, 2026):&lt;/strong&gt; An earlier version of this article reported the statewide chronic absenteeism average as 26.2%; the correct figure is 26.7%. The gap between Baltimore City and the state average has been corrected from 22.5 to 22.0 percentage points.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s chronic absenteeism data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In Frederick County, about 17 out of every 100 students are chronically absent. Sixty miles east on Interstate 70, in &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore-city&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore City&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, that number is 49.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 48.7% chronic absenteeism rate in Baltimore City Public Schools means that nearly one in two students misses at least 10% of the school year. No other Maryland county comes close. Dorchester County, at 38.3%, is the second-highest -- a distant 10.4 points behind. The state average sits at 26.7%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Baltimore City&apos;s rate is not just the worst in Maryland. It exists on a different scale. The gap between Baltimore City and the state average -- 22.0 percentage points -- is wider than the gap between the state average and the lowest-absence county in the state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-04-07-md-baltimore-city-crisis-rates.png&quot; alt=&quot;All 24 Maryland counties ranked by chronic absenteeism rate in 2023-24. Baltimore City leads at 48.7%, followed by Dorchester at 38.3%. Frederick and Howard anchor the bottom at 16.8% and 17.3%.&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A 31.9-point spread&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland is a geographically small state. The 60 miles between Frederick and Baltimore traverse one of the nation&apos;s wealthiest corridors, passing through Howard County -- the second-lowest absence rate at 17.3% -- on the way. The 31.9 percentage-point gap between Frederick&apos;s 16.8% and Baltimore City&apos;s 48.7% represents one of the widest county-level attendance divides in any state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Five counties exceed 30%: Baltimore City (48.7%), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/dorchester&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Dorchester&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (38.3%), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/allegany&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Allegany&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (36.4%), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/somerset&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Somerset&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (33.5%), and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (32.7%). Only three are below 20%: &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (16.8%), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/howard&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Howard&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (17.3%), and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/calvert&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Calvert&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (18.5%). The median county sits at 25.6%, meaning half of Maryland&apos;s counties have more than a quarter of their students chronically absent.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-04-07-md-baltimore-city-crisis-comparison.png&quot; alt=&quot;Baltimore City&apos;s chronic absenteeism rate compared to Maryland&apos;s other large counties. Baltimore City is 2.9 times Frederick&apos;s rate.&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What the web research shows&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Maryland State Department of Education&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://marylandpublicschools.org/stateboard/Documents/2025/0128/AM/Chronic-Absenteeism-A.pdf&quot;&gt;January 2025 State Board presentation&lt;/a&gt; provides context the statewide data cannot: at the high school level, Black students have a 40.9% chronic rate, Hispanic students 46.4%, economically disadvantaged students 49.9%, and multilingual learners 51.0%. These subgroup rates are available only from the presentation, not from the data package, and represent a single year (2023-24). They are editorial context, not verifiable R-package data.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But they sketch a picture of who, specifically, is missing school in Baltimore City: a district that is 76% Black and where 84% of students qualify for free or reduced-price meals.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;James McHenry Elementary/Middle School, according to &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.baltimorecityschools.org/&quot;&gt;Baltimore City Public Schools reporting&lt;/a&gt;, achieved the highest overall decrease in chronic absenteeism in the district through a home-visit program and attendance monitoring system. Poverty, the district has consistently identified, is the predominant root cause.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The shape of the crisis&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Baltimore City&apos;s 48.7% represents an improvement from its own peak. According to MSDE presentations, the rate reached approximately 58% in 2021-22, meaning the district has clawed back roughly 9 percentage points in two years. That is meaningful progress in absolute terms, faster than the state&apos;s pace of improvement.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But at 48.7%, Baltimore City still has nearly half its students chronically absent. The district is improving from a level that no other Maryland county has ever reached.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-04-07-md-baltimore-city-crisis-distribution.png&quot; alt=&quot;Distribution of chronic absenteeism rates across Maryland&apos;s 24 counties, showing Baltimore City as a dramatic outlier.&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s attendance challenge is often described as a statewide problem. The data says otherwise. It is a problem concentrated in one city, replicated at smaller scale in a handful of rural counties, and largely absent from the suburban corridor that dominates the state&apos;s politics and resources. Remove Baltimore City from the state average and the chronic rate drops to roughly 21%. Add it back and the rate jumps to 26.7%. One school district, 60 miles from the lowest-rate county, accounts for nearly half the gap between where Maryland is and where it wants to be.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>district-spotlight</category></item><item><title>Maryland&apos;s High School Safety Net Just Broke</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over/</guid><description>High school enrollment fell for the first time in a decade, joining K-8 in decline. The pipeline that sustained Maryland&apos;s secondary schools has run dry.</description><pubDate>Tue, 10 Mar 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;In this series: Maryland 2025-26 Enrollment.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;High school was supposed to be the good news. While elementary and middle schools hemorrhaged students after the pandemic, the secondary grades kept climbing, absorbing larger cohorts that had entered kindergarten before the state&apos;s birth rate fell. That buffer is gone.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s high school enrollment dropped by 4,096 students in 2025-26, landing at 273,893 and ending nine consecutive years of growth — the longest sustained streak in the dataset. It is the first time since at least 2016 that both K-8 and high school enrollment declined simultaneously. Together, the two levels produced Maryland&apos;s steepest non-pandemic enrollment decline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Nine years of growth, erased in the math&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s high schools added 25,094 students between 2016 and 2025, a 9.9% increase driven by large cohorts born in the late 2000s working their way through the grade pipeline. Even during the pandemic year of 2020-21, when K-8 enrollment cratered by nearly 20,000 students, high school enrollment still rose by 1,644.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;K-8 and HS enrollment trend&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That pattern made high schools the system&apos;s shock absorber. From 2021 through 2025, K-8 enrollment was essentially flat or falling while high school enrollment climbed by 10,206. The high school share of total K-12 enrollment rose from 29.8% in 2016 to a peak of 32.4% in 2025.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year changes by level&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In 2026, both bars turned negative for the first time. K-8 lost 5,289 students. High school lost 4,096. The combined loss of 9,385 is the largest single-year decline outside the pandemic year itself.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The 9th-grade bulge is gone&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The mechanics are visible in a single grade. Ninth-grade enrollment peaked at 83,081 in 2021-22, when the large pre-recession birth cohorts of 2007-08 reached high school. Since then, each entering freshman class has been smaller: 82,145 in 2023, 79,658 in 2024, 77,465 in 2025, and 75,813 in 2026.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;9th-grade enrollment over time&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The decline from peak to present is 7,268 students, an 8.7% drop in four years. The 2026 freshman class is now smaller than the 2020 class that entered during the pandemic. This is not a COVID anomaly. It is the pipeline catching up: the kindergarten class of 2017 (64,472 students) was smaller than the kindergarten class of 2016 (64,930), which was smaller still than the pre-2016 cohorts that fed the 9th-grade surge.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Grades 10 and 11 also declined, by 1,831 (-2.6%) and 1,160 (-1.8%) respectively. Only grade 12 grew, adding 547 students (0.9%), as the last of the large cohorts graduated.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Nobody was spared&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Twenty of Maryland&apos;s 24 school districts lost high school students in 2025-26. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Public Schools led the losses at 1,133 students (-2.2%), followed by &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Public Schools at 999 (-2.9%) and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Public Schools at 622 (-1.5%).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;District HS enrollment changes&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Only four districts gained high school students, all modestly: &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/howard&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Howard County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; added 77, Worcester 26, Queen Anne&apos;s 18, and Kent 1. The breadth of the decline, spanning suburban, urban, and rural systems alike, points to a demographic cause rather than a district-specific one.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Birth rates and the pipeline that could not last&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most direct explanation is straightforward arithmetic. Maryland births peaked above 77,000 per year in the late 2000s and have since declined to roughly 70,000, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;according to Baltimore Banner reporting&lt;/a&gt;. Those larger birth cohorts sustained high school growth for years as they moved through the pipeline. By 2025-26, the pipeline has emptied: the students now entering 9th grade were born around 2011-12, when births were already falling.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County Superintendent Thomas Taylor attributed his district&apos;s losses in part to &quot;a sustained reduction in resident births in the county, which translates directly to smaller incoming kindergarten classes,&quot; &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-public-schools-enrollment-drops-I7FPW6AIAJGNFDXFQDBMNMLME4/&quot;&gt;according to the Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;. That kindergarten effect is now, years later, a high school effect.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A second factor compounds the decline. Federal immigration enforcement has slowed the flow of newcomer students into Maryland schools. Montgomery County enrolled just 111 students new to the country by October 2025, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;compared to over 400 in the same period a year earlier&lt;/a&gt;. While the immigration effect is most visible in elementary schools, it removes students who would eventually have reached high school. The state does not track enrollment by immigration status, making the exact contribution impossible to isolate.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Funding in a system without a floor&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The timing collides with Maryland&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mabe.org/adequacy-funding/&quot;&gt;Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future&lt;/a&gt;, the landmark education reform law that distributes funding on a per-pupil basis. Every lost student reduces the revenue flowing to a district. When only elementary schools were shrinking, high school growth partially offset the fiscal damage. That offset no longer exists.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The state is already &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;bracing for a $1.4 billion budget shortfall&lt;/a&gt;. Districts that planned staffing and facility usage around continued high school growth now face a structural mismatch: high schools sized for 278,000 students serving 274,000, with the gap likely to widen.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-10-md-hs-peak-over-share.png&quot; alt=&quot;HS share of enrollment over time&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The share chart tells the story differently. High school&apos;s portion of total enrollment rose steadily from 29.8% in 2016 to 32.4% in 2025 as K-8 shrank and HS grew. In 2026, that share ticked down to 32.2%. The reversal is small but it signals the end of the compositional shift that districts used to justify high school investments.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &lt;a href=&quot;https://planning.maryland.gov/MSDC/Pages/s3_projection.aspx&quot;&gt;Maryland Department of Planning&lt;/a&gt; had anticipated high school declines beginning in 2026-27. The actual decline arrived a year early, which caught state forecasters off guard.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The question ahead&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The kindergarten classes entering Maryland schools today average around 59,000 students, compared to the 65,000-student classes that fed the high school boom. Those smaller cohorts will take nine years to fully work through the system. High school enrollment has not bottomed out. It has only just begun to decline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question for Maryland&apos;s school systems is whether the remaining large cohorts, currently in middle school, will provide one more year of relative stability before the pipeline narrows further, or whether the immigration slowdown and continued homeschooling growth will accelerate the decline beyond what demographics alone would predict. The COVID-era kindergarten class of 2021, just 58,391 students, will reach 9th grade in 2030. That cohort will set the floor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>grade-shift</category></item><item><title>Garrett County Has Not Grown in 7 Years</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral/</guid><description>Maryland&apos;s westernmost district has lost students every year since 2020, the longest active decline streak in the state, with no grade level spared.</description><pubDate>Tue, 03 Mar 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;No district in Maryland has declined as persistently as &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/garrett&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Garrett County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;. The state&apos;s westernmost school system has lost students every year since 2019-20, a seven-year streak unmatched by any of Maryland&apos;s other 23 districts. In 2025-26, Garrett enrolled 3,142 students, down 540 from its 2016 peak of 3,682, a 14.7% loss.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In a county of roughly 28,000 residents with a median age approaching 50, those 540 students represent something more than a budgeting inconvenience. They represent the difference between a school system that can sustain 12 buildings and one that may not be able to.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Garrett County enrollment trend, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Seven years, no reprieve&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Garrett&apos;s last year of growth was 2018-19, when enrollment ticked up by 12 students to 3,662. Every year since has been negative. The COVID years of 2020-21 and 2021-22 hit hardest, with losses of 138 and 140 students respectively. Those two years alone erased 278 students, roughly 7.7% of the pre-COVID total.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The losses have not stopped. Post-pandemic, Garrett has continued to shed 43 to 61 students per year. The 2025-26 loss of 51 students, or 1.6%, shows no sign that the decline is decelerating.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Garrett County year-over-year enrollment change&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The next-longest active decline streak in Maryland belongs to Baltimore County and Talbot County, each at six years. But Baltimore County&apos;s six-year loss of 7,043 students represents 6.3% of its base, while Garrett&apos;s seven-year loss of 520 students represents 14.2% of its much smaller starting point. Percentage-wise, Garrett&apos;s erosion is more than twice as severe.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A 15-point gap with the state&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Indexed to 2015-16, Garrett&apos;s enrollment stands at 85.3, meaning the district retains just 85 cents of every enrollment dollar it had a decade ago. Maryland statewide sits at 100.2 over the same period, essentially flat. The 14.9-point gap between Garrett and the state has widened every year since 2020.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral-indexed.png&quot; alt=&quot;Garrett vs Maryland enrollment indexed to 2016&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That divergence is not just a Western Maryland story. Garrett&apos;s neighbor Allegany County has declined 8.5% over the same period, and Washington County, the largest Western Maryland district, has been roughly flat at -0.8%. Garrett&apos;s trajectory is steeper than both.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;3,142&lt;/strong&gt; students spread across 12 schools. That is an average of 242 students per grade level, or roughly 262 per building. In any other context, those are small-school numbers. In Garrett County, they are the entire public school system.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The pipeline offers no relief&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What stands out about Garrett&apos;s decline is its uniformity. Between 2019-20 and 2025-26, every single grade level lost students. Seventh grade lost 65 students (-21.4%), the steepest drop. Ninth grade lost 57 (-18.9%). Even 12th grade, where students who entered years ago are aging out, fell by 21 (-7.8%).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral-grades.png&quot; alt=&quot;Garrett County enrollment change by grade, 2020-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Kindergarten enrollment, which signals the incoming pipeline, has been volatile but directionally down. Garrett enrolled 288 kindergartners in 2015-16 and 239 in 2025-26, a 17.0% decline. The K-8 segment has contracted from 2,561 students in 2016 to 2,155 in 2026, a loss of 406 students or 15.9%. High school grades (9-12) have fallen from 1,121 to 987, a 12.0% decline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The K-8 losses foreshadow what the high school will look like in four to five years, as those smaller elementary cohorts move upward through the system.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the students are going&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Garrett County&apos;s enrollment decline tracks closely with its population decline. The county&apos;s estimated population has fallen from 30,144 in 2010 to roughly &lt;a href=&quot;https://worldpopulationreview.com/us-counties/maryland/garrett-county&quot;&gt;28,175 in 2026&lt;/a&gt;, a 6.5% loss. The median age has climbed to 48.3 years, nearly a decade older than Maryland&apos;s statewide median of 39.8, reflecting a county where young families are leaving faster than they are arriving.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most likely driver is demographic: fewer births and sustained outmigration of working-age adults. Garrett is 95% white with no significant immigration pipeline to offset natural population decline. Unlike suburban Maryland districts that can attract families from neighboring jurisdictions or benefit from international migration, Garrett draws from a fixed and shrinking pool. Notably, the county&apos;s population has declined roughly 6.5% since 2010 while school enrollment has fallen 14.7% since 2016, suggesting that enrollment is dropping faster than the population itself, likely reflecting the county&apos;s aging demographic profile.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A secondary factor may be economic. A 2023 commentary in the &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/04/26/garrett-county-needs-better-schools-reader-commentary/&quot;&gt;Baltimore Sun&lt;/a&gt; described the county as caught between &quot;wealthy second homeowners&quot; at Deep Creek Lake and &quot;residents seeking social services,&quot; with a disappearing middle class. The author argued that Garrett&apos;s county commissioners provide only the legally required minimum funding for schools, despite a robust property tax base inflated by resort properties. Sub-par wages and a high cost of living driven by the vacation economy compound the difficulty of retaining families.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Whether school quality itself is contributing to outmigration is harder to establish. Garrett County Public Schools earned an average star rating of 3.45 on the &lt;a href=&quot;https://deepcreektimes.com/msde-2024-25-school-report-card-released-for-garrett-county-public-schools/&quot;&gt;2024-25 MSDE report card&lt;/a&gt;, slightly above the state average of 3.35. Five of its 12 schools earned four stars. Academic performance, at least by state metrics, does not appear to be the problem.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Funding in a shrinking district&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mabe.org/adequacy-funding/&quot;&gt;Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future&lt;/a&gt; allocates state education funding through a per-pupil foundation formula weighted for student characteristics. A key provision for declining-enrollment districts: the formula uses the greater of prior-year enrollment or a three-year moving average, providing a buffer against sudden drops.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That buffer helps with one-year shocks. It does less for a district in its seventh consecutive year of decline, where the three-year average is itself declining. Each year Garrett loses 50 students, the moving average catches up to reality, and the funding floor drops with it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &lt;a href=&quot;https://planning.maryland.gov/MSDC/Documents/school_enrollment/school_2024/Final-2024-Public-School-Enrollment-Projections-Report.pdf&quot;&gt;Maryland Department of Planning projects&lt;/a&gt; that Garrett will lose an additional 374 students, or 11.5%, between 2024 and 2033. If that projection holds, the district would fall below 2,900 students within the decade.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-03-03-md-garrett-spiral-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Garrett County vs other Maryland districts, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The homeschool unknown&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Enrollment data alone cannot distinguish between families leaving Garrett County entirely and families switching to homeschooling or private alternatives within the county. Maryland does not publish homeschool enrollment at the county level in a way that allows year-over-year comparison. In a county where 84% of residents live in rural areas, homeschooling may be a more viable option than in dense suburban districts.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The data also cannot capture the operational consequences of losing 242 students per grade level in a 12-school system. At what point does a building become too small to staff efficiently? At what point does a school close? Those are decisions that enrollment trends can inform but not make.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Watching the kindergarten line&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question facing Garrett County is whether the decline flattens or accelerates. The county&apos;s population is aging, and each year&apos;s kindergarten class reflects birth cohorts from five years earlier, when the county was already shrinking. The 2025-26 kindergarten class of 239 is 17% smaller than the 2015-16 class of 288.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;If Garrett&apos;s kindergarten enrollment continues at roughly 230 to 240 per year, the district is on a path toward 3,000 students by 2028 or 2029. At 12 schools, that is 250 students per building. The question is not whether the district is shrinking. It is whether 12 buildings can serve a district of that size, and what happens to the communities around them when they cannot.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>district-spotlight</category></item><item><title>Maryland&apos;s 9th Grade Bottleneck</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge/</guid><description>Every year, thousands more students enroll in Maryland&apos;s 9th grade than left 8th grade. The gap peaked at 13,775 during COVID and remains above 9,000.</description><pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In a state where every other grade transition moves students forward in predictable numbers, one stands out. Maryland&apos;s 9th grade enrolled 75,813 students in 2025-26, 14.1% more than the 66,456 eighth graders who preceded them. That is 9,357 students who were not in Maryland&apos;s public middle schools the year before but appeared in its public high schools.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The pattern is not new. It is not a one-year anomaly. For every year in the dataset going back to 2016, Maryland&apos;s 9th grade class has been larger than the 8th grade class that fed it. The surplus has never dropped below 6,500 students and, during the pandemic, it swelled past 13,000.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The one transition that breaks the pattern&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Look at the full pipeline of grade-to-grade transitions for the 2024-to-2025 school year and the 8th-to-9th jump is immediately visible. Every other step in the K-12 progression hovers between 99% and 103%. Kindergarten to 1st grade runs at 103.4%, reflecting students who delay kindergarten entry and enroll late. The 5th-to-6th transition, when students change buildings, holds at 99.7%. The 7th-to-8th transition is 101.0%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Then comes 8th to 9th: 117.0%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;Grade-to-grade retention rates showing the 8th-to-9th spike&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;No other transition in the system comes close. The two transitions that follow it tell the rest of the story: 9th to 10th drops to 89.2%, and 10th to 11th is 90.7%. Students flood into 9th grade, and then they begin disappearing.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A decade of surplus freshmen&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Over the past 10 years, the 8th-to-9th grade ratio has ranged from 109.7% (2020) to 119.9% (2021). The pre-pandemic average, from 2016 to 2019, was 112.5%. After COVID-19, the ratio jumped to nearly 120% and has remained elevated, sitting between 114% and 119% every year since.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge-ratio.png&quot; alt=&quot;Ratio of 9th grade enrollment to prior year&apos;s 8th grade&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In absolute terms, the surplus has totaled 98,161 students across the decade, an average of 9,816 per year. The 2021 peak produced 13,775 extra 9th graders in a single year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge-excess.png&quot; alt=&quot;Extra 9th graders each year&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the bulge is largest&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 9th grade bulge is not uniform across Maryland&apos;s 24 school districts. In 2025, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/dorchester&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Dorchester&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County had the highest ratio at 137.2%, with 123 more 9th graders than it had 8th graders the year before. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/talbot&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Talbot&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County followed at 131.5%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But the largest absolute numbers come from Maryland&apos;s urban and inner-suburban districts. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore-city&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore City&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; added 1,645 extra 9th graders (130.8%), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; added 2,585 (121.4%), and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; added 1,960 (119.9%). &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; added 1,327 (116.4%).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;District-level 8th-to-9th grade ratios&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;At the other end, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/allegany&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Allegany&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County barely registered a bulge at all: 100.6%, just four extra students. Garrett County (103.7%) and Kent County (104.4%) were similarly flat. These are small, rural districts where private school options are limited and interstate migration is minimal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The geographic pattern is revealing. Districts adjacent to Washington, D.C. and the Baltimore metro area show the largest bulges, consistent with students transferring from private K-8 schools into public high schools or families moving across state lines at the high school transition point.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What produces 9,000 extra freshmen&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Three mechanisms can inflate 9th grade enrollment beyond what the 8th grade cohort produces, and Maryland&apos;s data is consistent with all three operating simultaneously.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The first is grade retention. Students who fail to earn enough credits to advance to 10th grade are counted again as 9th graders the following year. Nationally, &lt;a href=&quot;https://youthtoday.org/2017/04/battling-the-ninth-grade-bulge/&quot;&gt;approximately one in five students repeats 9th grade&lt;/a&gt;, according to research cited by the National Center for Education Statistics. A &lt;a href=&quot;https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ711038&quot;&gt;2005 study by Boston College researchers&lt;/a&gt; Anne Wheelock and Jing Miao documented that the national 9th grade bulge had tripled from 4% in 1970 to 13% by 2000, driven by rising standardized testing requirements and stricter graduation standards.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The second is private-to-public transfer. Maryland has a large nonpublic school sector. Many private and parochial schools in the state operate K-8 programs, meaning their students naturally enter public high schools at 9th grade. This transfer pattern would be particularly strong in Montgomery County, Prince George&apos;s County, and the Baltimore region, where private school density is highest.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The third is interstate migration. Maryland shares borders with Virginia, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and the District of Columbia. Families who relocate for high school, or whose children commuted across state lines for middle school, would enter the count at 9th grade. The concentration of the bulge in D.C.-adjacent districts lends some plausibility to this explanation, though no state-level data tracks the origin of incoming 9th graders.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Baltimore City&apos;s outsized bulge, consistently above 120% and peaking at 147.9% in 2021, likely reflects a stronger role for grade retention than transfer. The district&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/situation-is-worsening-baltimore-citys-high-school-dropout-rate-hits-15-year-high&quot;&gt;high school dropout rate hit 20.8% in 2025&lt;/a&gt;, a 15-year high and a 67% increase since 2021.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What reporting suggests&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The pandemic amplified the bottleneck nationally. The 74 Million &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.the74million.org/article/exclusive-data-freshmen-held-back-during-pandemic-fuel-bulge-in-9th-grade-enrollment/&quot;&gt;reported in 2022&lt;/a&gt; that retention rates had doubled in some states and districts after COVID-era remote learning left students without enough credits to advance:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;Students were in ninth grade, and the COVID situation was so tough that more of them than usual didn&apos;t earn enough credits to be considered 10th graders yet.&quot;
— &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.the74million.org/article/exclusive-data-freshmen-held-back-during-pandemic-fuel-bulge-in-9th-grade-enrollment/&quot;&gt;The 74 Million, 2022&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In Houston, the article noted, 18% of 9th graders repeated the year, up from a pre-pandemic rate of 10%. Maryland&apos;s data is consistent with a similar dynamic: the statewide ratio jumped from 109.7% in 2020 to 119.9% in 2021, the largest single-year increase in the dataset.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In Baltimore City, the consequences have been visible. Per-pupil spending rose from $17,320 in 2021 to $23,147 in 2025, &lt;a href=&quot;https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/situation-is-worsening-baltimore-citys-high-school-dropout-rate-hits-15-year-high&quot;&gt;according to Fox Baltimore&lt;/a&gt;, yet the dropout rate surged simultaneously. The district launched credit recovery programs in 2022 to help students who had fallen behind, but the bulge persists.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The exit side of the bottleneck&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 9th grade bulge has a mirror image: attrition. In 2025, only 89.4% of 9th graders persisted to 10th grade the following year, meaning Maryland lost 8,212 students in the transition. That attrition rate has worsened over the decade, from 93.4% in 2016 to a low of 87.7% in 2022.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-24-md-9th-grade-bulge-attrition.png&quot; alt=&quot;8th-to-9th inflation vs. 9th-to-10th attrition&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The two trends move in tandem. When the bulge grows, attrition follows. The 2022 cohort that entered 9th grade at 119.9% of the prior 8th grade saw only 87.7% continue to 10th grade. The implication is that many of the surplus students who enter 9th grade do not make it to 10th.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Tracked over four years, the pipeline narrows further. Of the 83,081 students who enrolled in 9th grade in 2021-22, only 64,391 were enrolled in 12th grade four years later. That is a 77.5% persistence rate, the lowest in the dataset. For context, the 2016 cohort persisted at 87.8%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s enrollment data cannot distinguish retained 9th graders from transfer students or new arrivals. It cannot tell whether the students who vanish between 9th and 10th grade dropped out, transferred to private school, moved to another state, or earned a GED. The aggregate numbers reveal the shape of the problem without illuminating the lives inside it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The funding question&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Under the Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future, the state&apos;s $3.8 billion education funding overhaul, per-pupil foundation funding follows enrollment counts. An inflated 9th grade produces more funding for high schools in one year, then a deflated 10th grade produces less the next. For districts like Baltimore City, where the bulge adds over 1,600 students and the subsequent attrition loses roughly the same number, the fiscal whiplash is real. Staff hired for a surge of freshmen are not needed two years later.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question this data cannot answer is which fraction of those 9,357 extra 9th graders represents a policy failure and which fraction represents a structural feature of how families use Maryland&apos;s school system. If private-to-public transfers account for half the bulge, the system is working as designed: families choose private education through middle school and public education for high school. If grade retention accounts for most of it, then 9th grade is functioning as a bottleneck where thousands of students stall and many eventually leave.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2026-27 school year will test whether the post-COVID elevation is finally receding. The ratio has fallen from 119.9% in 2021 to 114.1% in 2025, moving back toward pre-pandemic norms. Whether it returns to the 111% range of 2016-2018 or settles at a higher new baseline will say something about how permanently the pandemic reshaped Maryland&apos;s high school pipeline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>grade-shift</category></item><item><title>Maryland&apos;s Kindergarten Classes Keep Shrinking</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline/</guid><description>Maryland kindergarten enrollment has fallen 8.8% in a decade, with 20 of 24 districts below pre-COVID levels and no recovery in sight.</description><pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Every September, a new kindergarten class walks through the doors of Maryland&apos;s public schools. Every September for four straight years, that class has been smaller than the one before it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland enrolled 59,204 kindergartners in 2025-26, down 8.8% from the 64,930 who started school a decade ago. The decline was not sudden. Before COVID-19, K enrollment had been drifting lower for three consecutive years. The pandemic&apos;s 10.3% crash in 2020-21 briefly masked the underlying trend, and the partial bounce in 2021-22 briefly suggested recovery. It was not recovery. Since that bounce, kindergarten enrollment has dropped every single year, shedding another 2,467 students. Twenty of Maryland&apos;s 24 school systems now enroll fewer kindergartners than they did before the pandemic.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The size of a kindergarten class is not just a data point about five-year-olds. It is a forecast. Each small cohort ripples forward through elementary school, then middle school, then high school, locking in 12 years of smaller classes. Maryland&apos;s elementary grades are already feeling it: grades K through 3 have all shrunk between 6.5% and 9.7% since 2015-16, while high school grades have grown 5.4% to 10.1% over the same period. The system is top-heavy, and the pipeline feeding it is narrowing.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Maryland K Enrollment: A Decade of Decline&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Fewer births, fewer kindergartners&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most direct explanation is demographic. Maryland births have declined steadily, from more than 77,000 per year in 2007-2008 to roughly &lt;a href=&quot;https://planning.maryland.gov/MSDC/Documents/pop_estimate/estimates-post2010/county/County-table2A.pdf&quot;&gt;65,600 in 2023-24&lt;/a&gt;. Those children born in the mid-2000s are now graduating high school. The children born in the leaner years since 2019 are the ones entering kindergarten now.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The math is straightforward but unforgiving. Donald Connelly, MCPS capital budget manager, &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;told WJLA&lt;/a&gt; that the birth decline &quot;translates five years later, six years later to kindergarteners.&quot; In &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; specifically, births fell from over 13,000 in 2014 to fewer than 11,000 by 2023. Montgomery&apos;s K enrollment has tracked that drop almost exactly: from 11,518 in 2019-20 to 9,877 in 2025-26, a 14.2% decline that brought the district to its all-time low.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Marguerite Roza, director of Georgetown University&apos;s Edunomics Lab, was blunt in an &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;interview with The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;Birthrates are cratering across the nation, and the decline will seriously remake education.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Birth rates are a national phenomenon, but Maryland&apos;s version carries a local twist. Between 2019 and 2024, Montgomery County &lt;a href=&quot;https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/11/04/mcps-enrollment-declines/&quot;&gt;added 15,925 housing units&lt;/a&gt;, yet MCPS enrollment fell by 6,085 students. New housing is not generating new students.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-Year K Enrollment Change&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The immigration factor&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Birth rates are not the only force at work. Federal immigration enforcement has introduced a second, more sudden pressure on kindergarten enrollment, particularly in districts with large immigrant communities.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;At the start of the 2025-26 school year, MCPS &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/mryland-school-enrollment-decline-numbers-SXOEMFHUAVHA7MZJVF4ZMQWAHU/&quot;&gt;welcomed just 111 newcomer students&lt;/a&gt;, defined as children who are brand-new to the country or returning after years abroad. By the same point in 2023-24, the district had welcomed more than 400. Statewide, Maryland schools served &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;4,033 fewer English language learner students&lt;/a&gt; than the prior year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2025/10/montgomery-county-schools-see-student-enrollment-drop-project-its-part-of-trend/&quot;&gt;attributed part of the decline&lt;/a&gt; to &quot;Trump&apos;s actions around deportation, where people have either already been deported or are worried about being deported.&quot; Disentangling immigration enforcement from the birth-rate trend is difficult with enrollment data alone. Maryland&apos;s enrollment files do not include demographic breakdowns, so the relative contribution of each force remains unclear.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What is clear is that both forces push in the same direction, and both are concentrated in the state&apos;s largest systems.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the losses are concentrated&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; together account for 2,673 of the 5,883 kindergartners lost statewide since 2019-20, or 45% of the state&apos;s K decline. Add &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/anne-arundel&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Anne Arundel&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/howard&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Howard County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, and the five largest systems account for 77% of the loss.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Three districts hit their lowest K enrollment on record in 2025-26: Montgomery (9,877), Howard (3,473), and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/carroll&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Carroll&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (1,648). Montgomery&apos;s K class has not been this small at any point in the data going back to 2015-16. Howard has declined four straight years.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The geographic pattern is not uniform. Only four of 24 districts enrolled more kindergartners in 2025-26 than in 2019-20: &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (+2.5%), Talbot (+5.9%), Wicomico (+2.6%), and Caroline (+0.5%). Frederick stands out as the sole large district bucking the trend, with K enrollment of 3,177, up 15.4% over the decade. Frederick&apos;s growth aligns with its status as &lt;a href=&quot;https://frederickcitymedia.com/2024/10/14/frederick-county-continues-to-be-marylands-fastest-growing-county/&quot;&gt;Maryland&apos;s fastest-growing county&lt;/a&gt;, with population rising 7.5% between 2020 and 2023 alone.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore-city&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore City&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; presents a different trajectory. Its K enrollment was already falling before COVID, dropping from 6,729 in 2015-16 to 5,980 in 2019-20. The pandemic accelerated an existing decline. At 5,517 in 2025-26, the city&apos;s K class is 18.0% smaller than it was a decade ago.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;K Enrollment Change by District&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The ripple through the grades&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Kindergarten is grade zero of a 13-year pipeline. When 58,391 students entered kindergarten during the COVID year of 2020-21, that cohort did not stay small. By the time those students reached fifth grade in 2025-26, the class had grown to 65,076, as students entered the system through transfers and late enrollment. First grade consistently exceeds the prior year&apos;s kindergarten by 2% to 5%, a pattern that held every year except 2020-21 itself, when COVID kept students out.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But the growth that occurs after kindergarten does not erase the starting deficit. Today&apos;s elementary grades tell the story: K through grade 3 are all smaller in 2025-26 than they were in 2015-16, with losses ranging from 4,462 (grade 3, down 6.5%) to 6,582 (grade 1, down 9.7%). Meanwhile, grades 9 through 12 are all larger, reflecting the bigger cohorts that entered kindergarten a decade ago. Grade 9 enrollment jumped 8.9% to 75,813. Grade 12 rose 10.1% to 64,391.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This inversion will eventually resolve itself. The smaller elementary cohorts will age into middle school, then high school. Maryland&apos;s total K-12 enrollment, which dropped more than 1% in 2025-26 alone, will face additional downward pressure as the bulge in upper grades graduates and is replaced by smaller classes from below.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline-grades.png&quot; alt=&quot;Elementary Grades Shrink, Upper Grades Grow&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What the funding formula sees&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future, the state&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://blueprint.marylandpublicschools.org/funding-2/&quot;&gt;$3.8 billion education reform law&lt;/a&gt;, funds schools on a per-pupil basis. The foundation amount rises each year, from $8,310 per student in 2022-23 toward a target of $12,365 by 2032-33. But per-pupil increases cannot fully compensate for falling headcounts, because many school costs are fixed: buildings still need heat, buses still run routes, and a classroom with 18 students requires the same teacher as a classroom with 22.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Baltimore Sun &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.baltimoresun.com/2024/06/24/blueprint-education-budget-cuts/&quot;&gt;reported&lt;/a&gt; that &quot;city schools with declining enrollment will struggle to pay teachers a higher salary and could potentially close.&quot; MCPS projects a &lt;a href=&quot;https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/11/04/mcps-enrollment-declines/&quot;&gt;loss of roughly 7,000 additional students&lt;/a&gt; over the next six years. If each student carries approximately $10,000 in state and local per-pupil funding, that projection implies $70 million in reduced revenue, even as the district operates 238 school buildings.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County Executive Elrich &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;acknowledged&lt;/a&gt; that the system &quot;won&apos;t have to hire additional teachers to maintain class size&quot; but warned that further declines &quot;can create issues in terms of class sizes if student populations fall too small,&quot; forcing a choice between undersized classes and consolidation.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-17-md-k-pipeline-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;K Enrollment: Largest Districts&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A forecast written in kindergarten rosters&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The National Center for Education Statistics &lt;a href=&quot;https://nces.ed.gov/programs/PES/current_tables.asp&quot;&gt;projects&lt;/a&gt; that Maryland will lose about 8% of its students by 2031. The kindergarten pipeline suggests the math behind that projection is already in motion. Maryland&apos;s births have not rebounded. The 2025-26 kindergarten class of 59,204 will become next year&apos;s first grade, and whatever kindergarten class enters in 2026-27 will almost certainly be drawn from an even smaller birth cohort.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The data do not show whether private school enrollment or homeschooling is absorbing some of the decline. Maryland superintendents &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;have cited both&lt;/a&gt; as contributing factors alongside birth rates, but neither MSDE enrollment data nor the Maryland Department of Planning projections separate these flows at the kindergarten level.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What the data do show, unambiguously, is the trajectory: eight of the last 10 years have produced a smaller kindergarten class than the year before. The two exceptions were a statistical blip in 2019-20 and a post-COVID bounce in 2021-22. Neither reversed the underlying trend. For every district planning its staffing, its facilities, and its budget, the kindergarten roster is the clearest leading indicator available. In 20 of 24 Maryland districts, that indicator is pointing down.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>demographics</category></item><item><title>One District Growing: Maryland&apos;s 12-District Reversal</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal/</guid><description>Twelve Maryland districts that gained students last year reversed to losses in 2025-26, leaving Kent County as the state&apos;s sole gainer.</description><pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A year ago, half of Maryland&apos;s 24 school districts were adding students. This year, one is.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Twelve districts that grew in 2024-25 reversed direction in 2025-26, flipping from collective gains to collective losses. The state shed 9,385 students, a 1.1% decline that pushed total enrollment to 849,698. That is the steepest single-year drop since the pandemic year of 2020-21 and leaves Maryland just 1,532 students above where it started a decade ago.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/kent&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Kent County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, with 1,609 students, is the only district in the state that added enrollment this year. It gained 18 students after losing 30 the year before.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The reversal, district by district&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The scale of the flip is unusual. In 2024-25, the state was evenly split: 12 districts growing, 12 declining. By 2025-26, the split was 1-to-23.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal-flippers.png&quot; alt=&quot;Twelve districts reversed from growth to decline&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; swung the hardest: from gaining 786 students to losing 1,324, a net reversal of 2,110 seats. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore-city&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore City&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; went from adding 1,101 students, its largest single-year gain in the dataset, to losing 329. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, which had posted gains in eight of the last ten years, lost 123 students after gaining 338 the year before.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Several suburban and exurban districts that had been buoyed by post-pandemic rebounds also reversed. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/anne-arundel&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Anne Arundel&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; went from +511 to -316. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/charles&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Charles County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; went from +274 to -296. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/wicomico&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Wicomico&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, on the Eastern Shore, swung from +501 to -176.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Even the smallest districts were not spared. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/carroll&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Carroll County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; had the sharpest reversal by rate: a system that was essentially flat (+17) a year ago lost 442 students, a 1.7% decline. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/caroline&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Caroline&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/somerset&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Somerset&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/worcester&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Worcester&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/queen-annes&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Queen Anne&apos;s&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; all posted modest gains in 2024-25 and modest losses in 2025-26.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The worst since COVID&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The statewide loss is the second-largest one-year decline in the dataset, exceeded only by the 18,291-student pandemic-year plunge in 2020-21. It erases four years of uneven recovery. After bottoming out at 853,307 in 2021-22, enrollment climbed back to 859,083 by 2024-25. The 2025-26 figure of 849,698 is now 3,609 students below that post-COVID low.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year enrollment change shows steepest non-pandemic drop&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The decade-long trajectory shows how fragile the recovery was. Maryland reached 876,810 students in 2019-20, a pre-pandemic high. It has now lost 27,112 students from that peak, a 3.1% decline. The current enrollment of 849,698 sits just 1,532 above the 2015-16 level of 848,166.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;State enrollment trend, 2015-16 through 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the losses concentrated&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Three districts account for more than half the statewide loss. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, already declining, nearly tripled its losses: from -997 to nearly triple that figure, a 1.8% drop that left it at 151,983 students. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; went from -583 to -1,913, also 1.8%. Prince George&apos;s, as noted, swung from growth to a 1,324-student loss.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Top 10 districts by enrollment loss&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery&apos;s trajectory is particularly consequential. The state&apos;s largest school system &lt;a href=&quot;https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/11/04/mcps-enrollment-declines/&quot;&gt;projects losing nearly 7,000 additional students by 2032&lt;/a&gt;, a forecast driven by declining births in the county. MCPS Capital Budget Manager Donald Connelly &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;told the school board&lt;/a&gt; that births in Montgomery County fell from more than 13,000 in 2014 to less than 11,000 in 2023.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Eleven districts hit all-time lows in the dataset (which begins in 2015-16): Allegany, Baltimore County, Calvert, Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Garrett, Harford, Montgomery, St. Mary&apos;s, and Talbot.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A convergence of pressures&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The mass reversal does not appear to have a single cause. Multiple forces converged on 2025-26, and the data available, which covers only total enrollment and grade-level counts, cannot isolate their individual contributions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most widely cited factor is a structural one: declining birth rates. Maryland recorded roughly 70,000 births in 2019-20, compared with more than 77,000 in 2007-08. Those smaller cohorts are now entering elementary school while the larger ones graduate. The arithmetic is straightforward, but it has been true for years. What changed in 2025-26 was the layering of additional pressures on top of that baseline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Immigration enforcement is one such pressure. Montgomery County Superintendent Thomas Taylor &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;cited drops in international student enrollment&lt;/a&gt;, along with &quot;skyrocketing housing costs&quot; pushing families with young children out of the county. In October 2025, MCPS welcomed just over 100 newcomer students, fewer than half the 400-plus during the same period a year earlier. State Board of Education President Josh Michael &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;told The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;: &quot;Never has there been an administration in the era of mass public schooling where we have treated immigrants this way.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;Never has there been an administration in the era of mass public schooling where we have treated immigrants this way.&quot;
— Josh Michael, President, Maryland State Board of Education, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That dynamic is most visible in Prince George&apos;s and Montgomery counties, which together are home to &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/maryland/2026/03/anticipating-an-ice-surge-county-leaders-in-md-ramp-up-immigrant-protections/&quot;&gt;more than half of Maryland&apos;s foreign-born population&lt;/a&gt;. The two districts combined lost 4,132 students this year. But immigration enforcement cannot explain the reversal in Carroll County, Washington County, or the Eastern Shore districts, where immigrant populations are much smaller.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Federal employment losses add another layer. Maryland is &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;losing federal jobs faster than any other state&lt;/a&gt; as the administration cuts positions, potentially forcing families to relocate. Homeschooling has also surged: Maryland now has roughly 42,000 homeschooled children, up 51% from 28,000 in 2020.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The enrollment data cannot distinguish between families who left the state, switched to private or homeschool, or simply never enrolled a kindergartner. It captures the outcome but not the mechanism.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;From split to nearly unanimous&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The direction chart tells the clearest version of the story. Pre-pandemic, Maryland routinely had 14 to 17 districts growing each year. Even in the recovery years of 2022 and 2023, seven and 16 districts, respectively, posted gains. The 2025-26 result, with a single district in positive territory, matches the near-unanimity of the pandemic year itself, when only two districts grew.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-10-md-mass-reversal-direction.png&quot; alt=&quot;Number of districts growing vs. declining, 2016-17 through 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The difference is that COVID was an acute shock with a visible cause. The 2025-26 reversal is not a single event but a slow-moving convergence: fewer births, fewer newcomers, fewer federal paychecks, more families choosing alternatives to public school. Each force is individually modest. Together, they produced the most geographically uniform decline in a decade.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The funding question&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Under the &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mabe.org/adequacy-funding/&quot;&gt;Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future&lt;/a&gt;, school funding flows through a per-pupil formula that uses the greater of prior-year enrollment or a three-year moving average. That buffer was designed for temporary dips, not a statewide reversal. If 2026-27 enrollment continues to decline, the moving average will catch up, and districts will face funding reductions proportional to their losses.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County&apos;s accelerating losses, on top of prior-year losses, will compress that buffer quickly. For Prince George&apos;s, which had been growing, the sudden reversal means 2025-26 funding was calibrated for a district that no longer exists at that size.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question facing Maryland&apos;s school systems is not whether to plan for smaller enrollment. The question is whether the 2025-26 reversal was a one-year convergence of unusual pressures, or the beginning of a structural shift in which growth districts no longer exist. The answer depends on factors, from federal immigration policy to interest rates to birth registrations, that no superintendent controls.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>enrollment</category></item><item><title>Baltimore County&apos;s Six-Year Slide Reaches a New Floor</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide/</guid><description>Baltimore County Public Schools fell to 104,031 students in 2025-26, its lowest on record. The 1,913-student drop was the steepest in five years.</description><pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Public Schools lost 1,913 students in 2025-26, more than tripling the previous year&apos;s decline and pushing enrollment to 104,031. It is the lowest figure in the district&apos;s records.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That single-year drop would be notable on its own. What makes it a structural story is context: it was the sixth consecutive annual decline, a streak matched by only two other Maryland districts, both rural systems with fewer than 5,000 students. Baltimore County, the state&apos;s third-largest school system, has shed 7,043 students since its 2020 peak of 111,074, a 6.3% loss that outpaces every other large district in the state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Baltimore County enrollment trend, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The losses slowed, then didn&apos;t&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The trajectory of the decline matters as much as its depth. The initial COVID-era loss in 2020-21 was severe: 2,867 students, a 2.6% drop in a single year. What followed looked like stabilization. Annual losses shrank to 582 in 2021-22 and 308 in 2022-23, suggesting the district might be finding a floor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It was not. Losses ticked back up to 790 in 2023-24 and 583 in 2024-25 before the 2025-26 plunge of 1,913, the worst single year since the pandemic&apos;s first hit. The pattern is not a slow bleed leveling off. It is a decline that paused, then re-accelerated.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year enrollment change in Baltimore County&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the students aren&apos;t&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The grade-level data reveals a district being hollowed out from the bottom. Elementary enrollment (K-5) fell 9.0% from 2020 to 2026, a loss of 4,685 students. Middle grades (6-8) dropped 10.3%, losing 2,663. High school enrollment, buoyed by larger cohorts working their way through, peaked at 34,656 in 2023 but has since turned downward, losing 1,345 students in the past three years.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Kindergarten tells the pipeline story. Baltimore County enrolled 8,420 kindergartners in 2016. In 2025-26, it enrolled 7,513, a 10.8% decline over a decade. Those smaller entering cohorts propagate upward each year, guaranteeing continued losses in the elementary grades for years to come.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2025-26 grade-level data carries an unusual signature. Grade 10 lost 771 students, the single largest grade-level loss by far, accounting for 40% of the total decline. Grade 12 lost 329 and grade 2 lost 267. The grade 10 drop is large enough to suggest something beyond normal cohort flow, though without school-level data, the specific cause is not identifiable.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide-grades.png&quot; alt=&quot;Grade band enrollment indexed to 2016&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Shrinking faster than the state&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Baltimore County&apos;s 6.3% loss since 2020 stands out even in a state where most districts are declining. Maryland as a whole fell from 876,810 to 849,698 over the same period, a 3.1% decline. In 2025-26 alone, every district in the state except Kent County lost students.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Among the state&apos;s nine largest districts, Baltimore County&apos;s percentage decline is the worst. Montgomery County lost more students in absolute terms (8,604), but from a much larger base, putting its rate at 5.4%. Frederick County, Baltimore County&apos;s neighbor to the west, grew 9.2% over the same period, adding 3,916 students.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That divergence captures a regional dynamic. Baltimore County&apos;s share of Maryland&apos;s total enrollment slid from 12.70% in 2019 to 12.24% in 2026. The district is not just losing students. It is losing its proportional weight in the state&apos;s education system.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Enrollment change by district, 2020-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Outmigration and the exurban pull&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most likely driver is domestic outmigration, families relocating from Baltimore County to lower-cost exurban counties. Census estimates show &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.baltimoresun.com/2024/03/14/2023-maryland-census-population-estimates/&quot;&gt;Baltimore County lost population in 2022 and 2023&lt;/a&gt;, while Carroll County and Frederick County gained residents. Maryland&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mdchamber.org/2025/12/18/maryland-is-losing-people-to-other-states/&quot;&gt;statewide domestic migration has been negative since 2020&lt;/a&gt;, with the Maryland Chamber of Commerce attributing the outflow to high taxes, rising housing costs, and regulatory complexity.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Falling birth rates are a contributing factor statewide. Maryland births declined from 74,316 in 2000 to &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.marchofdimes.org/peristats/data?reg=99&amp;amp;top=2&amp;amp;stop=1&amp;amp;lev=1&amp;amp;slev=4&amp;amp;obj=1&amp;amp;sreg=24&quot;&gt;65,594 in 2023&lt;/a&gt;, an 11.7% drop, and the kindergarten data in Baltimore County reflects this pipeline compression. But birth rates alone cannot explain why Baltimore County declined 6.3% while its neighbor Frederick grew 9.2%. Something is redistributing families across the region, and housing affordability is the most plausible mechanism, even if the enrollment data cannot prove it directly.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The mdschooldata package does not include demographic breakdowns, so it is not possible to determine whether the losses are concentrated among particular racial or socioeconomic groups. That is a significant gap in understanding the nature of the decline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;$169 million in cuts and counting&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The fiscal consequences have arrived. The Baltimore Banner &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/baltimore-county-public-schools-budget-challenges-IKO65LPFDBCIHD5E4ZLR5RTJH4/&quot;&gt;reported in December 2025&lt;/a&gt; that Superintendent Myriam Rogers has cut $169 million from the budget over two years, eliminating more than 400 positions, ending academic programs, and freezing central office hiring. Enrollment projections have been off by more than 2,700 students, compounding the budget uncertainty.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;Eliminating positions, potential salary reductions from prior negotiations, and supply and materials cuts are all on the table.&quot;
-- &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/05/12/baltimore-county-blueprint-expense-breaks-into-the-billions-3-years-early-enrollment-dropping/&quot;&gt;Conduit Street (Maryland Association of Counties), May 2025&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future, the state&apos;s $3.8 billion education reform law, adds a paradoxical layer. Baltimore County&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/05/12/baltimore-county-blueprint-expense-breaks-into-the-billions-3-years-early-enrollment-dropping/&quot;&gt;Blueprint costs reached $1 billion in fiscal year 2026&lt;/a&gt;, three years ahead of projections, even as the student population triggering that spending continues to shrink. The $1 billion figure exceeded updated state estimates by $123 million. Per-pupil costs are rising precisely because the denominator keeps falling.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Meanwhile, &lt;a href=&quot;https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/maryland-public-schools-add-10202-staff-members-since-2021-as-enrollment-drops&quot;&gt;staffing has grown statewide&lt;/a&gt; even as enrollment drops. Maryland public schools added 10,202 employees from 2021 to 2026 while losing 2,307 students. Non-instructional staff rose 25%, compared to 7% for teachers. Whether that reflects necessary investment in student support or institutional inertia is a matter of perspective, but the cost trajectory and the enrollment trajectory are moving in opposite directions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-02-03-md-baltco-six-year-slide-share.png&quot; alt=&quot;Baltimore County&apos;s declining share of state enrollment&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Unanswered&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Several questions remain outside the reach of enrollment counts. The grade 10 loss of 771 students in a single year could reflect families leaving for private school, transfers to career and technical programs in other counties, or simple cohort variation. Without school-level data or exit surveys, the mechanism is opaque.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The role of school quality perceptions is similarly unmeasurable from enrollment data alone. Baltimore County&apos;s four-year graduation rate has hovered near the state average, but parental decisions about where to enroll are shaped by factors that aggregate statistics do not capture: individual school reputations, program offerings, perceived safety, commute times. The data shows that families are leaving. It does not say why any particular family left.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The question for 2027&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2025-26 acceleration breaks a pattern that had looked like it might stabilize. If the 2026 loss was an anomaly, driven by a one-time factor like a large cohort graduating or a reporting adjustment, the district could return to the 500-600 annual losses of the preceding years. If it was the beginning of a new phase, with the pandemic&apos;s delayed effects compounding birth rate declines and outmigration, losses in the 1,000-2,000 range could become the norm.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Superintendent Rogers &lt;a href=&quot;https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/baltimore-county-public-schools-enrollment-declines-again-hits-10-year-low-myriam-rogers-maryland-covid&quot;&gt;told Fox Baltimore in September 2024&lt;/a&gt; that pre-kindergarten expansion would feed future enrollment growth, citing 2,000 full-time and 2,400 half-day pre-K seats. Whether pre-K students translating into kindergarten enrollment can offset the losses at every other grade level is the test. The kindergarten data so far is not encouraging: 7,513 kindergartners in 2025-26, essentially flat from the year before, and 10.8% below a decade ago.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For a district that has now lost the equivalent of roughly 280 classrooms of students since 2020, the question is no longer whether the decline will stop. It is whether the system can restructure around the enrollment it actually has.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>district-spotlight</category></item><item><title>The COVID K Class Hits Third Grade</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser/</guid><description>Grade 3 lost 2,470 students in 2025-26, more than any other grade. The pandemic&apos;s kindergarten disruption is now a rolling wave reshaping Maryland schools grade by grade.</description><pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The wave nobody staffed for&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Every grade in Maryland lost students this year except three. Grade 4 gained 2,103 students, Grade 12 added 547, and Grade 6 picked up 379. Grade 3 lost 2,470. Grades 3 and 4 sit side by side in elementary school hallways, and the contrast between them is not a coincidence. It is the same event, viewed from two angles.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The class that entered kindergarten in fall 2021, during the deepest trough of pandemic enrollment, is now in fifth grade. But the disruption it left behind did not end when families came back. The pandemic created an uneven sequence of kindergarten classes, some larger, some smaller, and that sequence is still moving through Maryland&apos;s grade structure like a pressure wave. Third grade absorbed the sharpest hit this year: a 3.7% decline, the largest at any grade level, as a relatively large cohort aged out and a smaller one took its place.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year enrollment change by grade in Maryland, 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;How cohort arithmetic works&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The mechanics are straightforward, once you trace each class to its kindergarten origin.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The students in third grade last year (2024-25) were the kindergarten class of 2021-22: 61,671 children who entered school during the first big bounce-back from the pandemic trough. That was the largest K class since COVID hit, and as it moved through the grades, it inflated each one in turn. Third grade in 2024-25 reached 66,787.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This year, that bounce-back cohort moved to fourth grade, which is why fourth grade gained 2,103 students. The cohort replacing them in third grade entered kindergarten in 2022-23: just 60,986 students, about 700 fewer. The swap produced the largest single-grade decline in the state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The pattern is predictable. Next year, when the K-2022 bounce-back class moves to fifth grade, that grade will likely see a gain. Third grade will receive the even smaller K-2023-24 class (60,514 kindergartners) and could shrink again. Each year, each grade experiences the pandemic&apos;s enrollment distortion on a slight delay.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A pipeline running dry&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The COVID trough is only part of the story. Behind it, the kindergarten pipeline itself is contracting.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland enrolled 65,087 kindergartners in 2019-20, an unusually large class and the highest in the dataset. By 2025-26, that number had fallen to 59,204, a decline of 9.0%. Even measured against the more typical 2018-19 class of 63,779, the current K class is 7.2% smaller. No post-COVID K class has come within 3,400 students of the pre-pandemic average. The average pre-COVID K class (2016 to 2020) was 64,463 students. The average post-COVID K class (2021 to 2026) is 60,055, a gap of roughly 4,400 students per year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;Kindergarten enrollment trend in Maryland, 2015-16 to 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The immediate cause is demographic. &lt;a href=&quot;https://cnsmaryland.org/2022/03/08/homeschool-private-enrollment-increases-as-public-enrollment-decreases-during-pandemic&quot;&gt;Maryland&apos;s birth rate has been declining since the 2007-09 recession&lt;/a&gt;, and &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;Montgomery County alone saw births fall from over 13,000 in 2014 to under 11,000 by 2023&lt;/a&gt;. &quot;We are continuing to see an enrollment decline because of those live births and you can see where we are headed in the next six years,&quot; MCPS Capital Budget and Projects Manager Donald Connelly &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;told the Montgomery County school board in October 2025&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But birth rates alone did not produce the jagged grade-by-grade pattern. The pandemic layered a one-time disruption on top of a long-term trend. The K-2021 class (58,391) was an anomaly, roughly 6,700 students smaller than the 2020 class (65,087). Many families delayed entry or chose homeschooling. When those families returned the following year, they created the K-2022 bounce-back. Now both the trough and the bounce are moving through the system simultaneously, producing adjacent grades that swing in opposite directions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the losses landed&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost more third-graders than any other district: 543 students, a 4.6% decline. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost 403 (-4.0%), and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/howard&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Howard&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost 201 (-4.7%). All three are large suburban systems where even modest percentage drops translate to hundreds of empty seats.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But the sharpest percentage declines hit smaller jurisdictions. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/dorchester&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Dorchester&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County lost 80 of its 361 third-graders, a 22.2% drop. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/worcester&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Worcester&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost 85 out of 491 (-17.3%). &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/carroll&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Carroll&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County fell 7.2%, and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; 5.2%. Only three of Maryland&apos;s 24 districts gained third-graders: Calvert (+31), Talbot (+24), and Allegany (+8).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Third-grade enrollment change by district, 2024-25 to 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The near-universality of the decline matters. When 21 of 24 districts lose students in the same grade in the same year, the explanation is structural. This is a cohort-size effect, not a policy failure in any single county.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Five cohorts, five trajectories&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Tracking individual K classes as they age through the system reveals how differently each cohort moves.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The K-2019 class (63,779 kindergartners) followed a conventional trajectory, gaining students as it aged through elementary school. The K-2020 class (65,087) entered kindergarten just before the pandemic disrupted everything, and its progression was relatively normal. The K-2021 class (58,391) started far below the others, but has gained students at every grade since, absorbing children who delayed school entry. By Grade 5 in 2025-26, it had grown to 65,076, nearly closing the gap with older cohorts. The K-2022 bounce-back class (61,671) has been the largest post-COVID cohort at every grade it has passed through. And the K-2023 class (60,986) is tracking below its predecessor, continuing the downward pressure.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser-cohorts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Five cohorts tracked from kindergarten through current grade&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The K-2021 trough cohort&apos;s ability to grow as it ages is notable. It started at 58,391 and reached 65,076 by fifth grade, an increase of more than 6,600 students. Some of that growth reflects late school entry by students whose families held them out during the pandemic. Some reflects transfers into the public system. The data does not distinguish between the two.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The funding question&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://blueprint.marylandpublicschools.org/funding-2/&quot;&gt;Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future&lt;/a&gt; distributes funding on a weighted per-pupil basis. When a grade shrinks, the funding tied to those students shrinks with it. A 2,470-student decline in a single grade, at a statewide average above &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;$17,000 per pupil&lt;/a&gt;, represents tens of millions in reduced per-pupil funding. Districts do not lose that money all at once, and some costs (building maintenance, administration) do not scale down with enrollment. The result is a structural mismatch between revenue that follows students and costs that follow buildings.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;One of the choices could be combining classes to make classes that are overly large or having classes that are smaller than we would normally prefer.&quot;
— &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich, WJLA, October 2025&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland superintendents have &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;asked the governor to &quot;hold harmless&quot; school funding&lt;/a&gt; for 2026-27, recognizing that the enrollment decline is accelerating. The state&apos;s 1.1% enrollment decline in 2025-26 was the largest since the pandemic&apos;s initial shock.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What comes next&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-27-md-grade3-biggest-loser-wave.png&quot; alt=&quot;K class sizes by year of entry with current grade level shown&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The COVID trough cohort (K-2021, now in fifth grade) will enter middle school in 2027-28. When it does, sixth grade will absorb a noticeably smaller class. But the bounce-back class (K-2022) will follow one year later, partly cushioning the blow. The problem is that every K class since the bounce-back has been smaller than the one before it: 60,986 in 2023, 60,514 in 2024, 59,562 in 2025, 59,204 in 2026.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland is not experiencing a single disruption that will wash through the system and leave normalcy behind. The pandemic created a sharp one-year dip, but it landed on top of a decade-long decline in births. Even after the COVID trough passes through high school and graduates, the classes entering behind it will be smaller than anything the pre-pandemic system was built to serve.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question for Maryland&apos;s 24 school districts is not when the wave passes. It is whether they can right-size operations for a system that, kindergarten class by kindergarten class, is becoming permanently smaller.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>grade-shift</category></item><item><title>Frederick&apos;s Growth Streak Breaks After Four Years</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks/</guid><description>Frederick County, Maryland&apos;s only large district consistently adding students, lost 123 in 2025-26, joining 22 other districts in decline.</description><pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County Public Schools lost 123 students in 2025-26. By itself, a 0.3% dip barely registers. But Frederick had been Maryland&apos;s lone large-district growth story — 4,310 students added between 2022 and 2025, faster than any other system in the state. The streak is over, and with it, Maryland&apos;s last engine of enrollment growth has stalled.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The loss leaves Kent County, a rural Eastern Shore system with 1,609 students, as the only one of Maryland&apos;s 24 districts that added enrollment this year. It gained 18.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The four-year run and what fueled it&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Frederick&apos;s growth streak began in 2022, when the district rebounded from a small pandemic-era dip of 271 students with a surge of 1,777 in a single year. That was the largest one-year gain in Frederick&apos;s recent history, and it pulled the district well past its pre-pandemic enrollment. The pace slowed each year after: 1,425 in 2023, 770 in 2024, 338 in 2025. The deceleration was steady enough that the 2026 reversal looks less like a sudden shock than the end of a fading tailwind.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Frederick County year-over-year enrollment change, 2017-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Over the full decade from 2016 to 2026, Frederick added 6,875 students, a 17.4% gain. No other Maryland district comes close. The next-best performer, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/anne-arundel&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Anne Arundel&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, gained 3,820 (4.9%). Frederick&apos;s share of statewide enrollment climbed from 4.65% to 5.45% during a period when the state total barely moved.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That growth was driven in part by the I-270 corridor, the interstate that connects Frederick to Montgomery County and the Washington, D.C., suburbs. As housing costs in &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County rose, families with school-age children moved north along the corridor, trading longer commutes for affordable homes and highly rated schools. Frederick County &lt;a href=&quot;https://lhslance.org/2025/news/frederick-county-schools-burdened-with-overcrowding-fast-tracks-production-of-new-elementary-school/&quot;&gt;has been building schools&lt;/a&gt; to keep up: some elementary schools have reached 170% capacity, and the district is opening an 882-seat elementary school in August 2026 alongside a new facility, Linganore Creek Elementary, with capacity for nearly 900 students.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The corridor divergence&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The I-270 story is most visible when Frederick and Montgomery are placed side by side. In 2016, Montgomery County enrolled 152,038 students, nearly four times Frederick&apos;s 39,470. A decade later, Montgomery sits at 151,983, essentially unchanged, while Frederick has grown to 46,345.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks-corridor.png&quot; alt=&quot;Indexed enrollment comparison of Frederick and Montgomery counties, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But the indexed comparison masks a sharper recent turn. Montgomery lost 2,808 students in 2025-26 alone, a 1.8% decline. &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2025/10/montgomery-county-schools-see-student-enrollment-drop-project-its-part-of-trend/&quot;&gt;WTOP reported&lt;/a&gt; that Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Thomas Taylor described the enrollment situation as a &quot;sharp decrease,&quot; with the system projecting a loss of 6,000 students by 2031. Montgomery&apos;s decline accelerated this year in part because international student enrollment &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;fell sharply&lt;/a&gt;, a pattern multiple Maryland superintendents attributed to federal immigration enforcement.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Frederick had been the beneficiary of Montgomery&apos;s decline. Whether Frederick&apos;s own reversal reflects a saturation of the spillover pipeline, a broader demographic shift, or something specific to 2025-26 conditions is not yet clear from the data alone.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A statewide shutout&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Frederick&apos;s loss is easier to understand in the context of what happened across Maryland. The state posted its largest non-pandemic enrollment drop in 2025-26, a 1.1% decline. Only one of 24 districts gained students, the worst ratio in at least a decade. In the pre-pandemic years of 2017-2020, between 14 and 17 districts were gaining students annually. Even in 2025, half of Maryland&apos;s districts were still growing.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Enrollment change by district in 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The three largest losses came from the state&apos;s three largest suburban systems: Montgomery, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;. Together, those three account for nearly two-thirds of the statewide loss. Frederick&apos;s 123-student decline looks modest by comparison, but it closed the last gap in a wall of red.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Baltimore Banner &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-public-schools-enrollment-drops-I7FPW6AIAJGNFDXFQDBMNMLME4/&quot;&gt;reported&lt;/a&gt; that the statewide decline nearly doubled initial projections. Superintendents pointed to declining birth rates, federal immigration enforcement, and a 51% increase in homeschooled students since the pandemic as contributing factors.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;It is dropping like a rock because people aren&apos;t having kids at the same rate.&quot;
— &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;Marguerite Roza, Edunomics Lab, Georgetown University, via The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The kindergarten signal&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Frederick&apos;s kindergarten enrollment offers a more specific warning. In 2022, 3,257 kindergarteners enrolled, the highest count in the dataset. By 2026, that number has fallen to 3,177, still well above the pre-pandemic level of 2,754 in 2016 but trending down from the post-COVID surge.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;Frederick County kindergarten enrollment, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The kindergarten pipeline is the leading indicator for total enrollment five to six years out. If fewer five-year-olds are entering Frederick schools, the growth that defined the district over the past decade cannot sustain itself through migration alone. Maryland&apos;s birth rate has been &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-public-schools-enrollment-drops-I7FPW6AIAJGNFDXFQDBMNMLME4/&quot;&gt;declining since 2016&lt;/a&gt;, and the children born during the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021, when births dipped further, are now entering kindergarten statewide.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Frederick is not immune to this demographic undertow. The district&apos;s kindergarten class remains 15.4% larger than it was in 2016, but the year-over-year trajectory since 2022 has been flat to declining.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;One year or a turning point?&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 123-student loss is small enough that it could reflect a one-year blip rather than a structural turn. Frederick&apos;s total enrollment in 2026 (46,345) is still 9.2% above its 2020 level, a cushion that only three other Maryland districts can claim: Wicomico (+1.2%), Carroll (+1.0%), and Charles (+0.5%). Frederick remains, by far, the state&apos;s best-performing district over the past decade.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What the enrollment data alone cannot answer is whether the I-270 migration pipeline has genuinely slowed, or whether 2026 caught an unusually weak year. Frederick County is still &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.wypr.org/wypr-news/2025-05-05/frederick-county-funds-several-school-projects-without-raising-taxes&quot;&gt;building schools and fast-tracking construction&lt;/a&gt; with $175 million in capital investment, a signal that local planners still expect growth. State enrollment projections from the Maryland Department of Planning &lt;a href=&quot;https://planning.maryland.gov/MSDC/Documents/school_enrollment/school_2024/Final-2024-Public-School-Enrollment-Projections-Report.pdf&quot;&gt;forecast&lt;/a&gt; Frederick adding 6,260 students by 2033, the largest projected gain of any district.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;If those projections hold, 2026 will be a pause, not a peak. If they don&apos;t, the state of Maryland will have lost its last district-level growth story, and the fiscal math of the Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future, which &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2022/10/06/whats-up-with-the-states-school-enrollment-count-and-why-does-it-matter/&quot;&gt;funds schools based on enrollment counts&lt;/a&gt;, will look different for every district in the state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-20-md-frederick-growth-breaks-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Frederick County enrollment trend, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>district-spotlight</category></item><item><title>Eleven Districts Hit Record Lows in a Single Year</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low/</guid><description>Eleven of Maryland&apos;s 24 school systems hit their lowest enrollment on record in 2025-26, spanning every region from suburban I-95 to rural Appalachia.</description><pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; enrolled 151,983 students this fall. It is the largest school system in Maryland, the employer of thousands of teachers and support staff, the institution around which suburban families organize their lives. It has never, in at least a decade of records, enrolled so few.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It is not alone. Eleven of Maryland&apos;s 24 school systems recorded their lowest enrollment on record in 2025-26. The list runs from the state&apos;s biggest district to its smallest, the Baltimore suburbs to the Eastern Shore, the I-95 corridor to the Appalachian foothills.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A decade of growth, erased&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s public schools peaked at 876,810 students in 2020. The state had been growing steadily, adding nearly 29,000 students between 2016 and that pre-COVID high. The pandemic reversed the trend, dropping enrollment by 18,291 in a single year. But schools partially recovered. By 2025, enrollment had climbed back to 859,083, and the trajectory looked stable.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Then came 2025-26. The state lost 9,385 students, a 1.1% decline that wiped out three years of post-pandemic recovery and dropped total enrollment to 849,698. That figure sits barely 1,500 above where Maryland started in 2016. A decade of growth, functionally erased.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year enrollment change in Maryland, 2017-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The loss is the steepest non-COVID drop in the available data, nearly double the 5,212-student decline in 2022 and an order of magnitude larger than the modest losses of 2024 (-488) and the slight gain of 2025 (+721). Twenty-three of 24 districts shrank. Only &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/kent&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Kent County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, the state&apos;s smallest district, grew.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The eleven&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 11 districts at all-time lows collectively enroll 360,793 students, 42.5% of the state total. Their losses account for 62.5% of the total decline among shrinking districts. The list spans every size category and every corner of the state:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;I-95 corridor:&lt;/strong&gt; Montgomery (now 5.4% below its 2020 peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-1,913, 6.3% below peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/harford&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Harford&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-415, 3.3% below peak)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Southern Maryland:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/st-marys&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;St. Mary&apos;s&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-314, 6.3% below its 2018 peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/calvert&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Calvert&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-166, 7.8% below its 2016 peak)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Eastern Shore:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/cecil&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Cecil&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-222, 8.3% below its 2016 peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/caroline&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Caroline&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-95, 5.0% below its 2019 peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/dorchester&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Dorchester&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-91, 8.6% below its 2017 peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/talbot&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Talbot&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-30, 7.1% below its 2020 peak)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Western Maryland:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/allegany&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Allegany&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-32, 8.5% below its 2016 peak), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/garrett&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Garrett&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (-51, 14.7% below its 2016 peak)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Percent decline from peak enrollment for all 11 record-low districts&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The range tells a story. Montgomery lost the most in absolute terms. Garrett lost 51. But in percentage terms, Garrett&apos;s situation is far more severe: at 3,142 students, it has shed nearly one in seven students since 2016. It has declined in seven consecutive years. Baltimore County has declined in six straight. Talbot has declined in six.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A COVID-level concentration&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The last time this many districts sat at record lows simultaneously was 2021, the COVID year, when 13 hit bottom. Before that, the count had been falling steadily from 2016 onward as most districts grew. In 2019, just five districts were at their lowest point. In 2020, six.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low-lows.png&quot; alt=&quot;Number of Maryland districts at record-low enrollment by year&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2026 figure of 11 is significant because it arrived without a pandemic. In 2021, the cause was obvious: schools closed, families left, the count collapsed. In 2026, schools are open, the economy is functioning, and enrollment fell anyway. The 2021 spike was a shock. The 2026 spike looks structural.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Zero districts set a record high in 2026. In 2025, five did. In 2020, 11 did. The asymmetry is total.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Three forces converging&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most likely driver of the statewide drop is a birth rate decline that is now working its way through the kindergarten pipeline. Maryland births fell from roughly 77,000 per year in 2007-2008 to about 70,000 by 2019-2020, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/mryland-school-enrollment-decline-numbers-SXOEMFHUAVHA7MZJVF4ZMQWAHU/&quot;&gt;according to Baltimore Banner reporting&lt;/a&gt;. In Montgomery County specifically, births dropped from over 13,000 in 2014 to under 11,000 by 2023, &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;according to WJLA&lt;/a&gt;. Those smaller cohorts are now entering elementary school while larger cohorts graduate out.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A second factor: homeschooling. Maryland&apos;s homeschool enrollment jumped from roughly 28,000 before the pandemic to over 42,000 today, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-public-schools-enrollment-drops-I7FPW6AIAJGNFDXFQDBMNMLME4/&quot;&gt;a 51% increase that has not reversed&lt;/a&gt;. Alfred Sundara, the state&apos;s Assistant Secretary for Data and Analysis, put it directly:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;The missing children in the public school system are in the homeschooling environment and they have not come back.&quot;
-- &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/09/18/optimistic-growth-projections-show-schools-30k-students-shy-of-blueprint-estimates-statewide/&quot;&gt;Conduit Street / MACo, Sept. 2025&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A third, more recent factor is immigration enforcement. Montgomery County, which lost the most students of any district in raw terms, saw its newcomer enrollment drop sharply. Between July and December, the district enrolled roughly 1,540 newcomer students, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/montgomery-county-schools-immigration-OUHWJVCS5JBD3JWYNQWA6TUKYM/&quot;&gt;about half the number from the same period in 2023&lt;/a&gt;. School board members in Montgomery County &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;have attributed the decline partly to immigration enforcement&lt;/a&gt;, saying some students simply disappeared from the rolls without explanation.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;These three forces explain different pieces of the picture. Birth rate decline is structural and affects every district. Homeschooling is a post-pandemic shift that appears sticky. Immigration enforcement is more concentrated in districts with large immigrant populations, particularly Montgomery County. No single cause accounts for a statewide loss of this magnitude.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where it hits hardest&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The percentage declines reveal a different hierarchy than the raw numbers. Dorchester lost 91 students, but that 2.1% drop is the steepest rate among the 11 record-low districts. St. Mary&apos;s fell 1.9%. Montgomery, Baltimore County, and Caroline all declined by 1.8%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low-regions.png&quot; alt=&quot;2025-26 enrollment change for 11 record-low districts, colored by region&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For the rural and small-county districts, the arithmetic is punishing. Garrett County&apos;s 3,142 students must sustain the same basic infrastructure that any school system requires: a central office, transportation, special education services, athletic programs. Cecil, at 13,843 students and 8.3% below its 2016 peak, faces the same fixed-cost squeeze. These districts cannot close a wing of a building or merge two schools the way a large suburban system can redistribute students across campuses.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For the large suburban districts, the scale of the losses translates directly into budget pressure. Montgomery&apos;s steep single-year decline, combined with Maryland&apos;s enrollment-based funding formulas, reduces the resources available to a system that is simultaneously managing rising costs. MCPS Capital Budget Manager Donald Connelly has projected &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;a loss of over 6,000 additional students&lt;/a&gt; in the next six years based on birth trends.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The Blueprint gap&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s enrollment decline has a specific policy consequence. The Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future, the state&apos;s landmark $3.8 billion education reform law, funds schools based on enrollment counts. The law was built on pre-COVID growth projections that assumed enrollment would continue rising. Instead, &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/09/18/optimistic-growth-projections-show-schools-30k-students-shy-of-blueprint-estimates-statewide/&quot;&gt;the state is now roughly 32,300 students short&lt;/a&gt; of the initial Blueprint estimates for 2025-26. That gap means less funding flowing through the formula than lawmakers anticipated when they designed the program.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;IAC Executive Director Alex Donahue suggested the state should focus on &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/09/18/optimistic-growth-projections-show-schools-30k-students-shy-of-blueprint-estimates-statewide/&quot;&gt;&quot;enhancing and maintaining existing schools where possible rather than significantly expanding the number of facilities,&quot;&lt;/a&gt; a tacit acknowledgment that the growth the law anticipated is not coming.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What remains uncertain&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The data cannot distinguish how much of each district&apos;s loss comes from which cause. Birth rate decline is well-documented at the state level but varies by county. Homeschooling data is not broken down by district in a way that maps cleanly onto enrollment losses. The immigration enforcement effect is likely concentrated in a few districts, but Maryland does not track enrollment by immigration status.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It is also unclear whether the 2026 drop represents a new equilibrium or an acceleration. The state had been roughly flat from 2023 to 2025, hovering around 858,000-859,000 students. The sudden drop to 849,698 could be a one-time correction, perhaps driven by the immigration enforcement shock, or the beginning of a steeper structural decline as smaller birth cohorts continue to enter the system.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-13-md-11-districts-record-low-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Total public school enrollment in Maryland, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Geoff Sanderson, Maryland&apos;s accountability chief, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;told the Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt; that the fall was &quot;a bit of a surprise to us.&quot; The state&apos;s own projections had anticipated around 861,580 students for 2025-26. The actual figure of 849,698 undershot even those reduced projections by nearly 12,000.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The one exception&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Kent County&apos;s 18-student gain stands out precisely because it is so small and so alone. Kent is Maryland&apos;s smallest district by enrollment at 1,609 students. It has been declining for years, losing 300 students since 2016. The 2026 uptick, a 1.1% increase, does not reverse that trend. But in a year when every other district shrank, it is the only data point running the other direction.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question for Maryland is whether 2026 marks the moment when post-pandemic enrollment stagnation tipped into sustained decline. The birth pipeline suggests it does. The National Center for Education Statistics &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-schools-enrollment-declines-C6FWKKHNYZH4DNJWAUOM4KLDGE/&quot;&gt;projects Maryland will lose about 8%&lt;/a&gt; of its students by 2031. If that trajectory holds, school systems that are at record lows today will need to make decisions about which buildings to keep open and which programs to fund, decisions that will define Maryland public education for a generation.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>enrollment</category></item><item><title>Only 4 of 24 Maryland Districts Have Recovered from COVID</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls/</guid><description>Five years after pandemic losses, 20 of Maryland&apos;s 24 school systems remain below 2019-20 enrollment. The gap is widening, not closing.</description><pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Five years after COVID emptied Maryland classrooms, the state expected students to come back. They did not. Of the state&apos;s 24 school systems, only four have returned to their 2019-20 enrollment levels: &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/carroll&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Carroll&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/wicomico&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Wicomico&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, and &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/charles&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Charles&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;. Together, those four districts enroll roughly 13% of the state&apos;s public school students. The other 87% attend school systems that remain below where they stood before the pandemic.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The deficit is not closing. It is growing. In 2025-26, Maryland posted its largest single-year enrollment drop since the COVID crash. The state&apos;s 849,698 students represent its lowest total since 2016, erasing a decade of growth in five years.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The plateau that wasn&apos;t&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Maryland enrollment trend&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s enrollment trajectory since 2020 tells a story of false hope. The state lost 18,291 students in the pandemic&apos;s first year, then partially recovered. A 5,543-student rebound in 2022-23 suggested the bottom had been found. State officials at the Maryland Department of Planning &lt;a href=&quot;https://planning.maryland.gov/MSDC/Documents/school_enrollment/school_2025/Table12.pdf&quot;&gt;projected modest growth&lt;/a&gt;, anticipating an increase of roughly 2,500 students in 2025-26.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Instead, enrollment fell by 9,385, a swing of nearly 12,000 students from projections. Geoff Sanderson, the state&apos;s schools accountability chief, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;told The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt; that the scale of the decline caught the state off guard:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;Admittedly, this fall was a bit of a surprise to us.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The surprise was not that enrollment fell. It was that the decline accelerated after three years of apparent stability. From 2023 to 2025, state enrollment held nearly flat, fluctuating within a range of 800 students. Then the floor dropped.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the students aren&apos;t&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;District recovery&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The five largest deficits account for 76.1% of the total gap between Maryland&apos;s 2020 peak and its current enrollment. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; leads the state, sitting 8,604 students below its pre-pandemic level, a 5.4% decline that has accelerated each year since 2023. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; is 7,043 below, a 6.3% drop. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; is 4,673 below. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore-city&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore City&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; is 2,127 below. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/howard&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Howard&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; is 1,892 below.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;These are not small, rural districts losing a handful of students. They are the state&apos;s population centers, its economic engines, the jurisdictions that receive the largest share of Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future funding. Montgomery County alone enrolls more students than the 16 smallest districts combined.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Among the smaller systems, the percentage losses are even steeper. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/garrett&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Garrett&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County, one of the state&apos;s smallest districts with 3,142 students, has lost 13.4% of its enrollment since 2020. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/calvert&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Calvert&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; is down 7.8%. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/kent&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Kent&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County, which registered the only enrollment gain in 2025-26, still sits 10.7% below its 2020 level.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;2026: every district lost students except one&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year changes&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2025-26 school year produced something Maryland has not seen in at least a decade: 23 of 24 districts lost students simultaneously. Only Kent County bucked the trend. The three largest suburban systems — Montgomery, Baltimore County, and Prince George&apos;s — accounted for nearly two-thirds of the total decline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The breadth of the decline is what distinguishes 2026 from earlier years. In 2022-23, when the state rebounded by 5,543, the gains were concentrated in a handful of growing suburbs. In 2025-26, the losses reached everywhere, from Frederick (down 123 after years of growth) to Carroll (down 442, losing its recovery status from the prior year) to the Eastern Shore.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Worcester County, which had clawed back above its 2020 level by 2025, fell below again. The recovery count dropped from five districts to four.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Why recovery keeps receding&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Three overlapping forces are suppressing enrollment, and none is temporary.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most direct is a birth rate decline that began in 2016 and deepened during the pandemic. Maryland recorded roughly 70,000 births in 2019 and 2020, compared to more than 77,000 in 2007 and 2008, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/mryland-school-enrollment-decline-numbers-SXOEMFHUAVHA7MZJVF4ZMQWAHU/&quot;&gt;according to The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;. Those smaller cohorts are now arriving in kindergarten. Statewide, K enrollment is down 5,883 students from 2020, a 9.0% decline, the steepest loss of any grade.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls-grades.png&quot; alt=&quot;Grade-level changes&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The grade-level pattern is stark: every grade from K through 8 shrank since 2020, while grades 10 through 12 grew as larger pre-pandemic cohorts aged through high school. Grade 12 is up 5.3%. Grade 1 is down 7.7%. When those larger high school classes graduate, they will be replaced by the smaller elementary cohorts working their way up, compounding the decline for years.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Homeschooling accounts for a second channel of loss. Maryland&apos;s homeschool population &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-homeschooling-increase-W3H2C7MRFVH5ZPQVYFFMVOO7LY/&quot;&gt;has grown 51% since the pandemic&lt;/a&gt;, from 27,754 students in 2020 to more than 42,000. That 14,000-student increase would fill roughly half of the statewide enrollment gap on its own. Private school enrollment, by contrast, has held steady at 12% to 13% of the K-12 population since 2017, suggesting the exits are going to kitchen tables, not competing campuses.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Immigration enforcement has introduced a third, more recent pressure, concentrated in Montgomery County. The district&apos;s newcomer enrollment, defined as students brand-new to the country or returning after years abroad, &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2025/10/montgomery-county-schools-see-student-enrollment-drop-project-its-part-of-trend/&quot;&gt;dropped from more than 400 by October 2023 to just 111 by the same point in 2024&lt;/a&gt;. Superintendent Thomas Taylor said international enrollments were &quot;sharply down.&quot; County Executive Marc Elrich attributed part of the decline to federal deportation actions. Montgomery County school board members attributed part of the decline to federal immigration enforcement, telling The Baltimore Banner that some students had simply vanished from enrollment rolls.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;No single factor explains why Montgomery, the state&apos;s largest system, has lost 8,604 students in five years. Birth rates, homeschooling, and immigration enforcement all contribute. The data cannot apportion the decline among them, and the state does not track enrollment exits by destination.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Frederick&apos;s exception proves nothing&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls-recovery.png&quot; alt=&quot;Recovery tracker&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; County is the only large district to recover, and it is not close. At 46,345 students, it sits 3,916 above its 2020 level, a 9.2% gain that makes it &lt;a href=&quot;https://lhslance.org/2025/news/frederick-county-schools-burdened-with-overcrowding-fast-tracks-production-of-new-elementary-school/&quot;&gt;the fastest-growing school system in Maryland&lt;/a&gt;. The district is building a new 882-seat elementary school to handle overcrowding. One campus, Oakdale Elementary, is operating at 170% of capacity.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Frederick&apos;s growth is real, but it is driven by suburban housing development along the I-270 corridor, a pipeline that does not exist in most of the state. The three other recovered districts, Carroll (+243), Wicomico (+180), and Charles (+127), are barely above their 2020 marks. A single bad year could push any of them back below, as it did to Worcester this year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The recovery tracker tells the story in miniature. In 2022, only one district was at or above 2020 levels. That number crept to three, then five. In 2026, it fell back to four. The trend line for recovery is not rising. It is oscillating at the bottom of the chart.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Funding in a shrinking system&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Enrollment decline collides with one of the largest education spending increases in state history. The Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future allocates funding on a per-pupil basis, with a foundation amount that rises from $8,310 in 2022-23 toward $12,365 by 2032-33. When enrollment falls, the total dollars flowing to a district fall with it, even as the per-pupil amount increases.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The timing compounds the pressure. The federal government &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/maryland-360-million-federal-fund-cuts-catastrophic-blow-education-state-superintendent-carey-wright-doe-department-committed-wiuthdrawn-covid-relief-finding-impacts-prince-georges-montgomery-county-baltimore-programs&quot;&gt;notified Maryland in early 2026&lt;/a&gt; that $360 million in COVID-era relief funds would not be reimbursed. State Superintendent Carey Wright called the decision &quot;catastrophic,&quot; noting the funds had already been spent. The districts hit hardest, Prince George&apos;s, Montgomery, and Baltimore City, are the same ones with the deepest enrollment deficits.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County is now discussing the possibility of &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2025/10/montgomery-county-schools-see-student-enrollment-drop-project-its-part-of-trend/&quot;&gt;school closures for the first time in 40 years&lt;/a&gt;. The district projects enrollment will continue falling to 149,706 by 2031, a loss of 15,561 from the 2019 peak. It maintains 238 school buildings.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What the pipeline signals&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s enrollment problem is not a COVID aftershock that will fade. The grade-level data makes that clear. Kindergarten, the entry point for the system, lost 9.0% of its students since 2020. First grade lost 7.7%. These are not students who left during the pandemic. They are students who were never born or never enrolled.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 18 of 24 districts whose gap from 2020 widened between 2024 and 2026 are not slowly recovering. They are falling further behind. Even Frederick, the state&apos;s growth engine, lost 123 students in 2025-26 after years of unbroken gains.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The question Maryland faces is not when enrollment will recover. The grade-level pipeline answers that: it will not, absent a reversal in birth rates or migration patterns that does not appear in any current projection. The question is what a school system built for 876,000 students does when it has 849,000 and shrinking.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>covid-impact</category></item><item><title>Montgomery County Hits All-Time Low: 151,983 Students</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low/</guid><description>MCPS shed 2,808 students in a single year, falling below its 2016 baseline. Declining births and a collapse in newcomer enrollment are converging.</description><pubDate>Tue, 30 Dec 2025 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Public Schools enrolled 151,983 students this fall — fewer than any year on record, including 2016, when the dataset begins. The 2,808-student loss is the district&apos;s worst outside of the pandemic year itself, and it dropped MCPS below even the 152,038 baseline that predates a decade of construction and hiring.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Between 2016 and 2020, the district had added 8,549 students, peaking at 160,587. That growth justified new schools, expanded programs, a capital plan built around more kids arriving. The trajectory reversed, and MCPS has now given back every student it gained plus 55 more.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;MCPS enrollment trend, 2016-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The acceleration no one budgeted for&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The year-over-year numbers tell a story of compounding losses. After COVID drove a 3,620-student drop in 2020-21, the district partially recovered in 2022-23, adding 1,654 students. That recovery has evaporated. Losses of 458 in 2023-24 became 997 in 2024-25, then nearly tripled to 2,808 in 2025-26.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;MCPS year-over-year enrollment change&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2,808-student decline is the largest outside of the pandemic year. It accounts for nearly a third of Maryland&apos;s statewide loss, despite Montgomery representing 17.9% of total state enrollment. The district is losing students faster than its share of the state would predict.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery is not alone. Twenty-three of Maryland&apos;s 24 districts lost students this year. Only Kent County, the state&apos;s smallest district, grew. But no district matched Montgomery&apos;s raw loss. Baltimore County (-1,913) and Prince George&apos;s (-1,324) were the next largest decliners. Together, the three districts account for 61.7% of the statewide drop.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Largest district losses in Maryland, 2025-2026&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Fewer babies, fewer kindergartners&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most straightforward explanation is demographic. Montgomery County births fell from roughly 13,200 per year in 2014 to about 10,900 by 2023, a pattern that flows directly into kindergarten classrooms five years later.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;MCPS kindergarten enrollment has dropped from 11,518 in 2019-20 to 9,877 in 2025-26, a decline of 1,641, or 14.2%. The kindergarten class is now the smallest in the dataset.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low-kinder.png&quot; alt=&quot;MCPS kindergarten enrollment trend&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Donald Connelly, MCPS capital budget manager, &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2025/10/montgomery-county-schools-see-student-enrollment-drop-project-its-part-of-trend/&quot;&gt;described the link directly&lt;/a&gt;: &quot;What that does is that translates five years later, six years later to kindergarteners.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The birth-rate effect is not limited to kindergarten. It cascades upward. Elementary grades (K-5) have shed 6,458 students since the 2020 peak, a 9.0% decline. Middle school (6-8) lost 2,369 students, or 6.3%. High school (9-12), still graduating the larger cohorts born before 2010, is essentially flat, up 223 students, or 0.4%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-30-md-montgomery-all-time-low-grades.png&quot; alt=&quot;MCPS enrollment by grade band&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That high school stability is temporary. The smaller elementary cohorts will reach ninth grade within three to four years, and the district knows it. MCPS projects enrollment falling to roughly 149,700 by 2031-32, a 9% decline from its 2019 peak, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-drop-5VZSNAMBUNARNH4Y2VSRKYIWPA/&quot;&gt;according to the Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The newcomer collapse&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Declining births alone would produce a gradual, predictable slide. What made 2025-26 different was a second, sharper force: a collapse in international student enrollment.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;MCPS enrolled 1,544 international students from July to December 2025, down from 2,787 during the same period in 2024, and 3,082 in 2023. That is a &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mymcmedia.org/even-while-international-enrollment-declines-mcps-needs-more-counselors-for-newcomers/&quot;&gt;50% decline in two years&lt;/a&gt;. Monthly newcomer enrollment, which had been running above 400, fell to &lt;a href=&quot;https://bethesdamagazine.com/2026/01/13/immigration-enforcement-crackdown-mcps/&quot;&gt;111 by October 2025&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Superintendent Thomas Taylor acknowledged the drop but was cautious about attribution. &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-drop-5VZSNAMBUNARNH4Y2VSRKYIWPA/&quot;&gt;He told the Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;: &quot;It may be causation, but it&apos;s definitely correlation.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Others were more direct. Brenda Wolff, vice president of Montgomery County&apos;s school board, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;told the Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;With what&apos;s going on with ICE, some of our students, we just don&apos;t know where they went. People are afraid.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Oscar Alvarenga, MCPS newcomer transition coordinator, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mymcmedia.org/even-while-international-enrollment-declines-mcps-needs-more-counselors-for-newcomers/&quot;&gt;described the operational reality&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;The volatility of the current immigration climate has significantly increased the demand of crisis intervention.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The connection between federal immigration enforcement and school enrollment is difficult to quantify precisely. MCPS does not collect immigration status data, and families who leave do not always explain why. What the enrollment data can show is that the timing of the newcomer decline aligns with the escalation of enforcement activity in 2025. Whether the effect is driven by departures, deterred arrivals, or families enrolling children elsewhere, the net impact on MCPS headcount is measurable.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A third pressure point: federal jobs&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County has one of the highest concentrations of federal workers in the country. &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mymcmedia.org/maryland-leads-in-the-most-federal-jobs-lost/&quot;&gt;Nearly 25,000 federal positions in Maryland were cut in 2025&lt;/a&gt;, with Montgomery and Prince George&apos;s counties absorbing a disproportionate share.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;Baltimore Banner reported&lt;/a&gt; that the loss of up to 15,000 jobs could have contributed to families relocating for other employment. Whether federal layoffs have already moved the enrollment needle in 2025-26 is uncertain. The effect may appear more clearly in next year&apos;s counts, as families exhaust severance and make longer-term decisions about where to live.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What the funding formula sees&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Superintendent Taylor &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-drop-5VZSNAMBUNARNH4Y2VSRKYIWPA/&quot;&gt;framed the situation as unfamiliar territory&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;This is an uncomfortable conversation for Montgomery County, because this has not been our experience for much of the past few decades. We&apos;ve added a lot of housing, and we&apos;ve added a lot of people, and we&apos;ve grown very fast, but something else has changed. The percentage of households that have children has dramatically reduced.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland funds schools on an enrollment basis. Under the Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future, the state&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mymcmedia.org/blueprint-future-at-mcps/&quot;&gt;$30 billion, 10-year education reform plan&lt;/a&gt;, enrollment-driven formulas mean fewer students translate directly to less revenue. The state is already &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;bracing for a $1.4 billion budget shortfall&lt;/a&gt;. Districts cannot reduce fixed costs, such as building maintenance, transportation routes, and administrative staff, at the same rate they lose per-pupil dollars.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;MCPS is attempting to turn the decline into an advantage. The superintendent &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.mymcmedia.org/amid-declining-enrollment-superintendent-proposes-smaller-class-sizes/&quot;&gt;proposed using declining headcount to reduce class sizes&lt;/a&gt; by at least one student per class at the elementary level, maintaining current staffing while enrollment drops. That FY27 budget proposal totals $3.775 billion, a 5% increase over the prior year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The district is also reconsidering its capital plan. Crown High School in Gaithersburg, originally scheduled to open in 2027 as a new comprehensive high school, &lt;a href=&quot;https://mocoshow.com/2025/10/16/mcps-may-use-crown-high-school-as-temporary-holding-site-before-opening-permanently/&quot;&gt;may instead serve as a temporary holding site&lt;/a&gt; while aging buildings undergo renovation, though a &lt;a href=&quot;https://mocoshow.com/2026/02/05/superintendent-recommends-moving-wootton-high-school-to-upcoming-crown-high-school-location-in-gaithersburg/&quot;&gt;February 2026 proposal&lt;/a&gt; would relocate Wootton High School there permanently.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Blind spots&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The enrollment data shows what happened but not why each family left. The birth-rate explanation is strong for elementary grades, where smaller cohorts are working their way through the pipeline year by year. The newcomer collapse is corroborated by MCPS&apos;s own intake data. Federal job losses are plausible but harder to trace directly to school enrollment.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What remains unknown is the role of housing costs. Montgomery County median home prices have risen sharply, and young families may be choosing to live elsewhere in the metro area. The &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;homeschool population in Maryland grew from about 28,000 in 2020 to more than 42,000 in 2025&lt;/a&gt;, though how much of that growth comes specifically from Montgomery County is not broken out in state data.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The question for 2027&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County&apos;s 2026 kindergarten class, 9,877 students, was born around 2020, when county births were still above 11,000. The children entering kindergarten in 2028 and 2029 were born during years when births dipped closer to 10,900. Unless newcomer enrollment recovers or families with young children begin moving into the county at rates that offset the birth decline, the pipeline suggests the current trajectory will persist.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The district&apos;s own projection of 149,700 students by 2031-32 assumes a steady glide. If the newcomer collapse deepens, or if federal job losses accelerate outmigration, the actual number could be lower. The 2026-27 count, due next fall, will be the first test of whether the forces that produced this all-time low are stabilizing or still gathering speed.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>district-spotlight</category></item><item><title>Maryland&apos;s 66,000-Student Ghost Class</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class/</guid><description>Maryland enrolls 66,244 fewer students than pre-COVID trends predicted. The gap grew by 16,171 in one year, and 23 of 24 districts lost students.</description><pubDate>Tue, 23 Dec 2025 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;If Maryland&apos;s pre-COVID enrollment growth had continued, the state would have 915,942 students this fall. It has 849,698. The difference — 66,244 students, or 7.2% of what should have been — is a ghost class larger than every school district in the state except Montgomery County.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;That gap widened by 16,171 students in 2025-26 alone, the biggest single-year increase since the pandemic opened it. Budgets, staffing plans, and the Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future were all built around a student body that no longer exists.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where Maryland was supposed to be&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Before COVID, Maryland&apos;s public schools were growing at a pace of roughly 6,800 students per year. From 2016 to 2020, enrollment climbed from 848,166 to a peak of 876,810. If that trajectory had continued, the state would have enrolled approximately 915,942 students this fall.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Instead, it enrolled 849,698. The gap between projection and reality: 66,244 students, or 7.2% of what should have been.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Actual enrollment vs. pre-COVID projected enrollment, showing widening gap&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is not a pandemic story. The pandemic opened the gap. What happened since has been worse. In 2022-23, the gap was 36,732 students. By 2023-24, it was 44,007. Last year, 50,073. This year, the gap widened by 16,171 students, the largest single-year increase since 2021.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The four-year plateau from 2022 to 2025 masked what was really happening. Enrollment appeared stable in absolute terms. But every year of flatness, while the projection line kept climbing at 6,787 students per year, added another 7,000 phantom students to the shortfall. The plateau was not recovery. It was the gap compounding in the background.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The year the floor dropped&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The 2025-26 decline stands out not just for its size but for its breadth. Of Maryland&apos;s 24 county-based school systems, 23 lost students. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/kent&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Kent&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, the smallest district in the state with 1,609 students, was the sole exception, gaining 18.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Enrollment change by district, showing 23 of 24 declining&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Three districts drove nearly two-thirds of the statewide loss. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/montgomery&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Montgomery County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost the most, 1.8% of its enrollment and nearly a third of the state&apos;s total decline. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost 1,913 (20.4% of the total). &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/prince-georges&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Prince George&apos;s County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost 1,324 (14.1%).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The pattern extended into mid-sized and small districts alike. Carroll County lost 442 students (1.7%), &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/howard&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Howard County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt; lost 417 (0.7%), and Harford lost 415 (1.1%). Even Dorchester County, with only 4,169 students remaining, lost 91, a 2.1% decline that was the steepest percentage drop in the state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year enrollment change showing the 2026 cliff&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the gap lives&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Zoom in with district-level projections and the ghost class is not evenly distributed. If pre-COVID trends had continued, Montgomery County would have 172,915 students. It has 151,983, a gap of 20,932 or 12.1%. Prince George&apos;s County is 14,827 below projection (10.5%). Baltimore County is 12,490 short (10.7%).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;These are the state&apos;s three largest systems, and they were all growing before the pandemic. Montgomery was adding roughly 2,050 students per year. Prince George&apos;s was adding 1,769. Baltimore County was adding 912. All three have been losing students since 2020, and the losses accelerated in 2025-26.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The exceptions are telling. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/frederick&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Frederick County&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, which was growing at 726 students per year pre-pandemic, is only 329 students below its projection, 0.7%. It is the only large system to nearly hold its pre-COVID trajectory. &lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/districts/baltimore-city&quot; class=&quot;district-link&quot;&gt;Baltimore City&lt;sup&gt;↗&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, which was losing roughly 1,127 students per year before the pandemic, is actually 5,127 students above its projected 2026 level. The pandemic did not cause Baltimore City&apos;s decline. It merely continued a pattern that had already been priced in.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;A system splitting in two&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The statewide numbers conceal a structural divergence that will define Maryland education for the next decade. Elementary and high school enrollment are moving in opposite directions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;Enrollment by grade band, indexed to 2016, showing K-5 decline and 9-12 growth&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Since 2020, K-5 enrollment has fallen by 23,343 students, a 5.8% decline. Kindergarten alone has dropped from 65,087 to 59,204, down 9.0%. Meanwhile, grades 9-12 have grown by 7,754 students (2.9%), as the larger pre-pandemic cohorts move through high school. Grades 10, 11, and 12 each gained students since 2020, even as every elementary grade lost thousands.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is a pipeline problem. The smaller kindergarten cohorts entering today will produce smaller middle school classes in five years and smaller high school classes in nine. Montgomery County&apos;s birth data illustrates the mechanism directly: the county recorded more than 13,000 births in 2014. By 2023, that number had &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;fallen below 11,000&lt;/a&gt;. Those children are just now entering kindergarten.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The high school enrollment bump is temporary. When the smaller K-5 cohorts reach grade nine, high schools will begin to decline too. Montgomery County Public Schools projects losing &lt;a href=&quot;https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/11/04/mcps-enrollment-declines/&quot;&gt;an additional 7,000 students by 2032&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What is driving the gap&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;No single factor explains 66,244 missing students. The most direct contributor is declining births. Maryland&apos;s birth rate began falling in 2016, and the children not born in 2016-2020 are the students not enrolling in kindergarten today. The data is structural and largely irreversible on a five-year horizon.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Homeschooling accounts for a measurable share. Maryland had 27,754 homeschooled students in 2020. That number is now &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-homeschooling-increase-W3H2C7MRFVH5ZPQVYFFMVOO7LY/&quot;&gt;approximately 42,000&lt;/a&gt;, an increase of roughly 14,000 students, or about 21% of the ghost class. Not all of those students would have been in public schools absent the pandemic, but the majority were enrolled in public schools before switching.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&quot;The missing children in the public school system are in the homeschooling environment and they have not come back.&quot;
-- &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/09/18/optimistic-growth-projections-show-schools-30k-students-shy-of-blueprint-estimates-statewide/&quot;&gt;Alfred Sundara, Assistant Secretary, Maryland Department of Planning&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A third mechanism emerged in 2025-26: immigration enforcement. Montgomery County welcomed &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;111 newcomer students as of October 2025, compared to more than 400 in the same period the prior year&lt;/a&gt;. Whether families left the state, pulled children from school, or simply did not enroll is not known. Montgomery County school board members &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;told The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt; that immigration enforcement had driven families out of the enrollment rolls, though the district could not track where they went.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Housing costs compound the problem in the state&apos;s most expensive counties. Montgomery, Howard, and Prince George&apos;s counties all border Washington, D.C. The loss of an estimated 15,000 federal jobs in Maryland, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;reported by The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;, could accelerate outmigration from the D.C. suburbs that anchor the state&apos;s enrollment base.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The fiscal arithmetic&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The gap between expected and actual enrollment is not abstract. The Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future allocates state funding based on per-pupil formulas. The Maryland Department of Planning&apos;s own projections showed schools &lt;a href=&quot;https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2025/09/18/optimistic-growth-projections-show-schools-30k-students-shy-of-blueprint-estimates-statewide/&quot;&gt;running 32,300 students below Blueprint estimates&lt;/a&gt; as of fall 2025. The actual shortfall, measured against the pre-COVID trajectory, is twice that.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;At the state&apos;s base per-pupil foundation amount of roughly $10,000 (scheduled to reach $12,365 by 2033 under the Blueprint), 66,244 missing students represent hundreds of millions of dollars in enrollment-driven funding that will not flow. The state does not simply lose this money; the formula was designed to fund schools that would be teaching these students. Districts are left with the fixed costs of buildings and contracts sized for a population that no longer shows up.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County Superintendent Thomas Taylor has proposed repurposing a high school under construction as a holding facility rather than opening it on schedule. Districts across the state face decisions about consolidating programs, reducing sections, and managing a teaching workforce that has &lt;a href=&quot;https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/maryland-public-schools-add-10202-staff-members-since-2021-as-enrollment-drops&quot;&gt;grown by 10,202 positions since 2021&lt;/a&gt; even as enrollment shrank.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-23-md-ghost-class-recovery.png&quot; alt=&quot;Gap between actual and projected enrollment growing each year&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The enrollment data tracks bodies in seats. It does not say where 66,244 students went — some were never born, some are homeschooled, some left the state. Maryland does not publish a comprehensive accounting, and the available numbers on homeschooling and private enrollment do not sum to 66,244. The gap has components that cannot be separated with the data the state collects.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The next five years&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;If enrollment stays near 850,000 and the pre-COVID trendline keeps climbing, the ghost class will surpass 80,000 by 2028. If it stays flat through 2030, the gap reaches 93,000.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The more immediate question is whether 2025-26 was a one-time correction after four years of artificial stability, or the beginning of a new trajectory. The kindergarten pipeline suggests the latter. With 59,204 kindergartners this year, down from 65,087 in 2020, the elementary system is feeding smaller cohorts into every subsequent grade for the next decade. The high school enrollment bump that has partially offset elementary losses will peak within two to three years and then reverse.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland passed the most ambitious education funding law in the country four years ago. The Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future was designed for a student body that no longer exists — and the gap is growing by 16,000 students a year.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>budget</category></item><item><title>Maryland Lost 9,385 Students in a Single Year</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff/</guid><description>After three years of apparent stabilization, Maryland&apos;s public schools lost more students in 2025-26 than in any year except the first year of COVID.</description><pubDate>Tue, 16 Dec 2025 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;This is part of The MDEdTribune&apos;s series on Maryland&apos;s 2025-26 enrollment data.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland&apos;s public schools lost 9,385 students in a single year. The 2025-26 headcount landed at 849,698, a 1.1% decline that ranks as the second-largest in at least a decade, behind only the 18,291-student COVID crash. Twenty-three of Maryland&apos;s 24 school districts lost students. Eleven hit all-time lows.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The drop landed after three years of near-flat enrollment that looked, briefly, like stability. Between 2022-23 and 2024-25, the statewide count fluctuated within a 700-student band. School leaders had reason to think the post-COVID freefall was over. It was not.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff-trend.png&quot; alt=&quot;Maryland public school enrollment, 2015-16 through 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Three years of false stability&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The plateau that formed between 2022-23 and 2024-25 now looks less like stabilization and more like a pause before a second contraction. The state averaged 858,765 students across those three years. The 2025-26 figure is 9,067 below that average.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland had been growing before the pandemic. Between 2016-17 and 2019-20, the state added 21,897 students, peaking at 876,810. If that pre-COVID growth rate had continued, Maryland would have enrolled roughly 908,800 students this year. The actual figure is 59,100 below that projection, representing six years of lost growth plus actual decline.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The state is now 27,112 students, or 3.1%, below its 2019-20 peak.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff-yoy.png&quot; alt=&quot;Year-over-year enrollment change in Maryland public schools&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Where the losses landed&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The decline was not distributed evenly. Three districts accounted for 61.6% of all losses: Montgomery (-2,808), Baltimore County (-1,913), and Prince George&apos;s (-1,324). These are three of Maryland&apos;s four largest school systems, and all three are now at or near all-time lows within the 11-year data window.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Kent County, with 1,609 students, was the only district to grow, adding 18 students. Every other district lost ground. Even Frederick and Anne Arundel, which had largely held steady through the post-COVID period, shed 123 and 316 students respectively.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff-districts.png&quot; alt=&quot;Enrollment losses by district, 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Montgomery County&apos;s loss of 2,808 students was its largest non-COVID decline. The system has shed 8,604 students since its 2019-20 peak, a 5.4% drop. Budget manager Donald Connelly &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;told WJLA&lt;/a&gt; that the district is &quot;anticipating a loss of over 6,000 students&quot; in the next six years. &lt;a href=&quot;https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/11/04/mcps-enrollment-declines/&quot;&gt;Bethesda Magazine reported&lt;/a&gt; the expected decrease has spurred proposals to close some schools.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Baltimore County has now declined for six consecutive years, losing 7,043 students, or 6.3%, from its 2019-20 peak. The district &lt;a href=&quot;https://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/baltimore-county-public-schools-passes-budget-with104-million-in-cuts&quot;&gt;cut $104 million from its budget&lt;/a&gt; and eliminated roughly 494 positions last year, partly in response to enrollment-driven funding reductions.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Eleven districts at record lows&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Nearly half of Maryland&apos;s 24 school systems are now at the lowest enrollment recorded in the 11-year data window. The list includes both the state&apos;s largest suburban system (Montgomery, at 151,983) and its smallest rural districts (Garrett, at 3,142). The gap between their percentage declines from peak is instructive: Garrett has lost 14.2% from its high-water mark, while Harford, also at an all-time low, is down just 3.3%.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff-lows.png&quot; alt=&quot;Districts at all-time enrollment lows, 2025-26&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The breadth of this list is the more telling signal. All-time lows at small rural districts like Garrett, Dorchester, or Allegany could be attributed to the long-running population drain from western Maryland and the Eastern Shore. All-time lows at Montgomery and Baltimore County cannot. These are large, economically diverse suburban systems, and their presence on this list reflects structural forces that affect the entire state.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Fewer children entering, more leaving&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Maryland is graduating more students than it enrolls in kindergarten, a pipeline inversion that guarantees continued enrollment decline even if every other factor stabilizes.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In 2016-17, kindergarten enrollment exceeded Grade 12 by 6,204 students. In 2025-26, the relationship has flipped: Grade 12 enrollment (64,391) exceeds kindergarten (59,204) by 5,187. The kindergarten class has shrunk 8.2% over nine years while Grade 12 has grown 10.5%, driven by the larger cohorts born in the mid-2000s now aging through high school.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/img/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff-pipeline.png&quot; alt=&quot;Kindergarten vs. Grade 12 enrollment in Maryland&quot; /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This inversion reflects falling birth rates. Montgomery County births &lt;a href=&quot;https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-enrollment-declines-birth-rates-down-maryland-school-system-trend-continues-budget-manager-donald-connelly-executive-marc-elrich-births-data-numbers-enrolling&quot;&gt;dropped from about 13,200 in 2014 to roughly 10,900 in 2023&lt;/a&gt;, a 17% decline. Statewide, roughly 70,000 babies were born in 2019-20, compared to more than 77,000 born in 2007-08, according to &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt;. The children not born in 2019 are the kindergarteners not enrolled in 2025.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Multiple forces, compounding&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Birth rates alone do not explain a 9,385-student loss in a single year. The size and suddenness of this drop suggest several forces converging at once.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The most visible new factor is immigration enforcement. Montgomery County welcomed just 111 newcomer students by October 2025, compared to more than 400 during the same period in 2023-24. Montgomery County school board officials &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;told The Baltimore Banner&lt;/a&gt; that families had disappeared from enrollment rolls amid federal immigration enforcement, with some administrators saying they had no idea where the students went. The state education board attributed a &lt;a href=&quot;https://wtop.com/maryland/2026/01/maryland-graduation-rates-for-hispanic-english-language-learners-drop-sharply-officials-cite-immigration-enforcement/&quot;&gt;4.4-point drop in Hispanic graduation rates&lt;/a&gt; to the same dynamic, with Board President Josh Michael noting: &quot;I&apos;ve never seen a drop or a gain that significant, year-over-year, in a relatively large subgroup.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Homeschooling remains elevated. More than 42,000 Maryland students are now learning at home, &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-homeschooling-increase-W3H2C7MRFVH5ZPQVYFFMVOO7LY/&quot;&gt;up from roughly 28,000 before the pandemic&lt;/a&gt;, a 50% increase. Enrollment peaked at nearly 45,000 in 2021-22 and has since settled around 42,000, suggesting the shift is sticky rather than temporary.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Federal workforce reductions add another layer. Maryland &lt;a href=&quot;https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/maryland-school-enrollment-shrinking-why-UDZRSMI5FZFC7GOYWCSVUCYDR4/&quot;&gt;lost 15,000 federal jobs&lt;/a&gt; under the current administration, and many of those positions were concentrated in the suburban Washington counties where enrollment losses are heaviest. Whether affected families have left the state, shifted to private schools, or begun homeschooling is not visible in enrollment data alone.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Housing costs may also be pushing families with young children to lower-cost states. This is a plausible contributing factor, particularly in Montgomery and Howard counties, though no Maryland-specific data isolates its effect on school enrollment.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;Funding follows the students out the door&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The fiscal consequences are immediate. Maryland&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;https://blueprint.marylandpublicschools.org/&quot;&gt;Blueprint for Maryland&apos;s Future&lt;/a&gt;, a $3.8 billion education reform law, allocates funding on a per-pupil basis. Each lost student reduces state revenue to the district. Baltimore County&apos;s $104 million in budget cuts and 494 eliminated positions offer a preview of what other declining districts will face.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The structural problem is that fixed costs do not shrink with enrollment. A school building that served 600 students still needs heating, a principal, and a custodial staff when enrollment drops to 500. Specialized instructional programs, which the Blueprint specifically funds based on student need, are particularly difficult to scale down. A district cannot eliminate half a speech therapist.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Whether 2025-26 was a one-time shock or the start of something worse depends on whom you ask. The kindergarten pipeline does not equivocate: with 5,187 fewer kindergartners than graduating seniors this year, the underlying demographics guarantee continued contraction. The only open question is how fast.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
</content:encoded><category>enrollment</category></item><item><title>Maryland Publishes 2025-26 Enrollment Data</title><link>https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-09-md-publishes-2025-26-enrollment-data/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://md.edtribune.com/md/2025-12-09-md-publishes-2025-26-enrollment-data/</guid><description>MSDE releases 2025-26 enrollment data showing a 9,385-student statewide drop, the largest non-COVID decline in the past decade.</description><pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2025 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;A year ago, Maryland&apos;s statewide enrollment looked like it had stabilized. The state posted three straight years clustered around 859,000 students, and districts started budgeting as if the worst of the post-COVID decline might be over. The new data ends that story.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Maryland State Department of Education released 2025-26 enrollment totals in its &lt;a href=&quot;https://marylandpublicschools.org/about/Pages/DCAA/SSP/index.aspx&quot;&gt;Staff and Student Publications&lt;/a&gt;, showing 849,698 students statewide, down 9,385 from 2024-25. That is the state&apos;s largest one-year decline outside the first COVID shock. Whatever floor people thought they saw last year was not a floor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What the numbers open up&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Over the coming weeks, The MDEdTribune will break this dataset into district, grade, and recovery storylines that matter for budgets, staffing, and school planning.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The statewide cliff, quantified.&lt;/strong&gt; Maryland just took its sharpest non-pandemic hit in years, dropping below 850,000 and breaking the 2023-25 plateau. The first deep dive measures how broad the loss was and where it accelerated most.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/2025-12-16-md-enrollment-cliff&quot;&gt;RELATED: Maryland Lost 9,385 Students in a Single Year&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Recovery that never arrived.&lt;/strong&gt; Most systems are still below pre-COVID enrollment, and the gap widened again in 2025-26. We will map which districts recovered, which stalled, and which fell further behind.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://edtribune.com/md/2026-01-06-md-covid-recovery-stalls&quot;&gt;RELATED: Only 4 of 24 Maryland Districts Have Recovered from COVID&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;By the numbers:&lt;/strong&gt; 849,698 students statewide in 2025-26 — down 9,385 from the prior year, a 1.1% decline and the largest non-COVID one-year loss in the current series.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;The threads we are following&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;District concentration risk.&lt;/strong&gt; Maryland&apos;s largest systems, including Montgomery and Baltimore County, absorbed some of the biggest losses in absolute terms. We are tracking whether that concentration persists or spreads further into mid-sized systems.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Grade-pipeline stress.&lt;/strong&gt; Kindergarten erosion and high-school rollover trends now appear in the same year, signaling pressure on both ends of the pipeline. We will test whether this is a one-year break or a structural shift.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Direction reversals statewide.&lt;/strong&gt; A dozen districts that grew the prior year flipped back into decline, while just one district posted growth. That breadth changes the policy conversation from isolated local declines to statewide contraction.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2&gt;What comes next&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This series will publish one article each Tuesday, starting with the statewide cliff and then moving through district spotlights and grade-shift analysis. Each story includes reproducible charts and code-linked evidence from the Maryland enrollment pull.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
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