Texas State Board Of Education Secretary Pat Hardy (2024) | twitter.com/pathardy
Texas State Board Of Education Secretary Pat Hardy (2024) | twitter.com/pathardy
Data showed that Lavaca County welcomed 2,570 students during the 2022-23 school year. Among them, American Indian students comprised 0.3% of the student body to be the second least represented ethnicity in the county.
Among the 10 schools in Lavaca County, Hallettsville Elementary School, Shiner Elementary School, and Shiner High School recorded the highest enrollment of American Indian students in the 2022-23 school year, with a total of two students.
Texas is found to be one of the least-educated states in the U.S. A study from WalletHub ranked Texas 41st out of 50 states in terms of the quality of the educational system and how successful students were.
Underfunding is a frequently cited challenge facing the state's school districts. Per-pupil funding has not increased since 2019, despite inflation rates rising by more than 20% since then.
“As a result, many districts in our very own Central Texas region are being forced to cut back on essential programs, services, consider school closures, and adopt deficit budgets just to provide students with the education that they deserve,” Hutto ISD Trustee James Matlock said.
School name | % of American Indian students enrolment | Total enrollment |
---|---|---|
Hallettsville Elementary School | 0.5 | 440 |
Hallettsville High School | 0 | 426 |
Shiner Elementary School | 0.5 | 410 |
Shiner High School | 0.6 | 314 |
Hallettsville Junior High School | 0 | 306 |
Moulton Elementary School | 0 | 166 |
Sweet Home Elementary School | 0 | 145 |
Moulton High School | 0.7 | 138 |
Vysehrad Elementary School | 0 | 113 |
Ezzell Elementary School | 0 | 112 |