Every figure on PlainSchools is rendered directly from the source NCES, CRDC and F-33 federal
records, no number is typed in by an editor. District totals are aggregated directly from the schools reporting under this district in the source records. See our
editorial standards & corrections policy, the
methodology behind these numbers, or
report a data error. Data current as of June 2026.
Midland, Pennsylvania - 1 schools
110
Total Enrollment
1
Schools
-
Per-Pupil Spending
High
School Types
District-Level NCES Analysis
Midland Innovation & Technology Cs operates 1 public schools serving 110 students, placing it among the smallest districts in Pennsylvania. The school portfolio breaks down into 1 high schools, a small enough portfolio that most families will interact with nearly every campus in the district at some point. These enrollment and school figures come from the NCES Common Core of Data (CCD) 2024-25 release, and the district is based in Beaver County.
. Demographically, the student body averages 64.3% White, 27.8% African American, 4.8% Hispanic or Latino across the district's schools.
Midland Innovation & Technology Cs accounts for 100.0% of all Midland Innovation & Technology Cs student enrollment
That is an overwhelming concentration, leaving the rest of Midland Innovation & Technology Cs a distant remainder — means Midland Innovation & Technology Cs-wide averages can mask substantial variation outside the dominant entity. Grade band: high. A single dominant campus often anchors a district's program offerings and staffing patterns; the share helps explain why district-wide averages may not reflect the typical neighbourhood-school experience. When one entity dominates a region's footprint, its programmatic and budget decisions effectively set policy for a majority of the affected population.
Midland Innovation & Technology Cs has higher-than-average Title I eligibility — 99.1% of the population qualifies for free or reduced-price lunch
free or reduced-price lunch eligibility is the federal threshold for Title I funding allocations, established under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA, 2015). Eligibility here is a supermajority of the population — well past the 75% concentration-grant threshold that unlocks extra funding on top of the basic Title I formula. Regions with eligibility this high typically draw a substantially larger federal funding share relative to their local tax base, which can either offset or reinforce existing gaps depending on allocation policy.
Comparisons are relative to Midland Innovation & Technology Cs's own figures; each column derives from NCES Common Core of Data and the F-33 Finance Survey.
Nearby Districts in Pennsylvania
Top districts in the same state, compare side-by-side for enrollment, spending, and demographics.