KY Commissioner of Education Jason Glass 2023 | Kentucky Department of Education
KY Commissioner of Education Jason Glass 2023 | Kentucky Department of Education
Boys made up 50.5% of the county student body, while the other 49.5% were girls.
Data also showed that white students made up 74.5% of the student body, the largest percentage in Webster County schools, followed by 18.7% of Hispanic students, 3.5% of multiracial students and 2.6% of Black students.
Webster County High School had the highest enrollment among Webster County’s six schools in the 2022-23 cycle, welcoming 707 students.
Despite escaping some of the pandemic's educational disruptions, Kentucky's achievement gaps have remained an issue since 2019. In the eighth-grade reading assessments, for example, Hispanic students scored eight points lower than their white peers, and the gap reached 15 points in math. Black students fared even worse, falling more than 20 points behind and facing a failure rate nearly double that of their white counterparts.
Kentucky is in the midst of a statewide teacher shortage as turnover rates spiked to 10.9% in 2023, up from an 8.9% nine-year average. This issue is more prominent in schools with more low-income and minority students.
Data also shows that between 2019 and 2023, there was an increase of 260% in the number of available teaching posts in Kentucky schools. This often leads to larger class sizes, combining programs, and retaining staff despite potential negative impacts on teacher working conditions.
School Name | Total Enrollment in 2022 | Total Enrollment in 2023 | % change |
---|---|---|---|
Webster County High School | 682 | 707 | 3.7% |
Sebree Elementary School | 431 | 419 | -2.9% |
Webster County Middle School | 357 | 333 | -7.2% |
Providence Elementary School | 323 | 323 | 0% |
Dixon Elementary School | 359 | 319 | -12.5% |
Clay Elementary School | 213 | 214 | 0.5% |