15 public K-12 schools in Spanish Fork from NCES Common Core of Data: enrollment, grade span, demographics, and Civil Rights Data Collection statistics for every active campus.
15 public schools ranked by quality score. NCES CCD 2024-25 data.
The highest-ranked of Spanish Fork's 15 public schools is Maple Mountain High, scoring 37/100, against a city average of 21.9/100. Computed live across every Spanish Fork campus reporting to NCES.
How the Spanish Fork Public-School Landscape Breaks Down
Spanish Fork, UT enrolls 12,387 students across 15 public schools reporting to the National Center for Education Statistics. Of those, 1 are charter schools, giving families genuine alternatives to the traditional neighbourhood assignment model. The average student-teacher ratio across the city is 23.2:1, and the composite quality score, derived from student-teacher ratio, counselor access, gifted-program availability, and CRDC attendance data, averages 21.9/100. Schools must report at least five campuses in a city to appear in this listing, which is why very small towns may redirect to the broader county or state view.
The most-resourced campus in Spanish Fork on this index is Maple Mountain High, at 37/100 on the Resource Investment Index with 1,902 enrolled students. What the index does and doesn't measure; click any school below for its full component breakdown.
Spanish Fork spans 2 districts, each filing its own NCES F-33 return, per-pupil spending can vary between neighbouring campuses. Sort the table below by enrollment, level, or district; click any school for its full profile.
Maple Mountain High accounts for 15.4% of all Spanish Fork public-school enrollment
That concentration means Spanish Fork-wide averages can mask substantial variation outside the dominant entity. Grade level: Combined. A dominant campus often anchors a city's program landscape and absorbs a disproportionate share of district capital and staffing decisions. When one entity dominates a region's footprint, its programmatic and budget decisions effectively set policy for a majority of the affected population.
Spanish Fork school enrollment varies 5.9× across entities
Spanish Fork school enrollment ranges from 323 students (lowest) to 1,902 students (highest), a spread of 1,579 students. That relatively narrow ratio reflects an unusually homogeneous school portfolio for a city this size. Per-school staffing, programme depth, and capital-renovation cycles often diverge inside the same city based on enrollment shape, a 200-student magnet runs a different operational model than a 2,000-student comprehensive high school.
Spanish Fork student-teacher ratio is 23.2:1 — high (typically associated with larger urban scale or staffing constraints that have widened the headcount gap)
student-teacher ratio is the simplest comparative metric but it does not capture the full picture: the ratio counts FTE classroom teachers against total enrollment, push-in specialists, English-language aides, special-education co-teachers, and counselors are not included in most reporting Higher values may reflect larger urban scale or recent resource constraints that have widened the gap.
Most racially and ethnically mixed schools in Spanish Fork
Ranked by the Simpson student-body diversity index (0-100) from NCES race and ethnicity data, where higher means a more evenly mixed student body. It measures mix, not quality.
The highest-ranked school in Spanish Fork is Maple Mountain High with a quality score of 37/100. There are 15 public schools in Spanish Fork with 12,387 total students.
How many schools are in Spanish Fork, UT? ▼
Spanish Fork has 15 public schools with a total enrollment of 12,387 students. 1 are charter schools. Average student-teacher ratio: 23.2:1.
Data from NCES Common Core of Data (CCD) 2024-25 and Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) 2021-22. Quality scores based on student-teacher ratio,
counselor access, gifted programs, and attendance. Schools must have 5+ in the city to be listed.
Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the NCES Common Core of Data (CCD). Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
Read our methodology, which explains how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.