Schools

Student-Staff Ratios at Racine Unified and How They Compare

See how the number of students per staff member at Racine Unified stack up against nearby districts and the state.

One thing that always comes up when districts talk about laying off staff, is the student-staff ratio. In general, according to the non-profit group Class Size Matters, a lower ratio is considered good, providing for smaller class sizes and giving students more opportunity for attention from teachers. 

There were 870,470 students enrolled in Wisconsin public and charter schools in the 2011-12 school year, employing 3,497 administrators, 31,532 aides and support staff, and 65,446 licensed staff members. (All employment numbers are full-time equivalents, meaning two half-time staff members would count as one.)

Statewide, staff-student ratios are as follows: 249 students per administrator, 28 students per aide/support staff, and 13 students per licensed staff member

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Racine Unified has more students per administrator FTE, 285.05, and more students per aide/support staff FTE, 29.22. The district's student-licensed staff member FTE ratio is slightly lower than the state average, with 12.52 students per FTE.

The lowest student-licensed staff ratio in the state is in the tiny Norris School District, which has a ratio of 3.61 for its 52 students and 14.4 licensed staff FTEs. The highest student-licensed staff ratio at a public school district is 18, for the Paris J1 district in Kenosha County, which has 252 students and 13.85 licensed staff FTEs. There were two Milwaukee charter schools with ratios of 19 students to licensed staff FTE.

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