Enrollment
69
Florida · 2024-25 NCES data
Other / mixed grade configuration · Orlando, FL
Federal NCES profile for Juvenile Detention, including enrollment, faculty, free-lunch eligibility, demographics, and resource indicators - Resource Investment Index 70/100.
The verdict
Juvenile Detention earns 70/100 on the Resource Investment Index, with class sizes smaller than 95% of Florida schools.
Juvenile Detention has class sizes smaller than 95% of Florida schools. Computed live against every Florida school reporting to NCES.
By Resource Investment Index, Juvenile Detention ranks #4 of 128 schools in Orlando, FL.
Enrollment
69
Florida · 2024-25 NCES data
Teachers (FTE)
8.0
Federal CCD staff survey
Students per teacher
8.6:1
vs 17.8:1 Florida avg
-52% vs state
How Juvenile Detention compares with Florida and U.S. medians
Smaller classes than state median
8.6:1 - 9.2 below the Florida state median of 17.8:1, indicating smaller average class loads than typical schools in the state.
Juvenile Detention is a small combined-grade school in Orlando, Florida, enrolling 69 students.
Classes run notably small here: at 8.6:1, Juvenile Detention is leaner than roughly 95% of Florida schools and 52% under the state's 17.8:1 norm, more adult attention per pupil than most peers.
This is a small campus: fewer students than 91% of Florida schools, with 69 enrolled.
Its Resource Investment Index outscores 97% of the 3,996 Florida schools with a score on record, a top-tier result on this measure.
Its student body is led by African American (65%) and Hispanic or Latino (23%) (diversity index 51/100).
Counselor coverage is strong, about 69 students per counselor, inside the American School Counselor Association's recommended 250:1.
Attendance holds up well here: only 1.4% of students were chronically absent, below the typical post-pandemic national figure.
Its district draws 18.0% of revenue from federal sources, an above-typical federal share that tends to track a higher-need student population.
Orange also operates Apopka High (3,446 students) and Timber Creek High (3,383 students) alongside Juvenile Detention.
Sourced from NCES CCD, CRDC, and F-33 (federal records, not a quality verdict). How we source and compute this.
Source: National Center for Education Statistics Common Core of Data + CRDC + F-33 · 2024-25
Juvenile Detention on the metrics families compare, against Florida and U.S. means.
| Metric | This school | vs Florida | Florida avg | U.S. avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students per teacher | 8.6:1 | ▼ 52% | 17.8:1 | 15.7:1 |
| Enrollment | 69 | top 91% | - | - |
Source: NCES Common Core of Data School-level CCD + state/national means from Public School Universe · 2024-25
Three separate federal collections, each on its own reporting cadence - which is why this school's numbers line up on a consistent basis against every other school and state on this site, rather than mixing figures pulled from different survey years.
Largest group: African American at 65.2% of enrollment.
Simpson diversity index - at 51.1, Juvenile Detention is about as mixed as the Florida school average of 52.3.
District-wide per-pupil expenditure for Orange, which includes Juvenile Detention.
Source: NCES F-33 School District Finance Survey District-level finance · FY 2021-22 Per-pupil expenditure reflects the district-wide average. Individual school budgets are not reported at the federal level.
| School | Enrollment | Economic Profile | Student-Teacher Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apopka High | Larger | No free-lunch data | Higher S:T ratio |
| Timber Creek High | Larger | No free-lunch data | Higher S:T ratio |
| Winter Park High | Larger | No free-lunch data | Higher S:T ratio |
| Colonial High | Larger | No free-lunch data | Higher S:T ratio |
| Windermere High | Larger | No free-lunch data | Higher S:T ratio |
Comparisons are relative to Juvenile Detention's own figures; each column derives from NCES Common Core of Data.
Matched by enrollment size and by staffing ratio across all of Florida, not just this city - a different peer set than the local comparisons above.
Next steps
Verify locally before acting on Juvenile Detention's federal record.
Federal record (CCD 2024-25, CRDC 2021-22) - PlainSchools assigns no subjective rating; the composite quality score is a transparent, reproducible index computed from this cited federal data.
Juvenile Detention has 69 students enrolled. It is an alternative school in Orlando, FL.
The student-teacher ratio at Juvenile Detention is 8.6:1, which is 52% lower than the Florida average of 17.8:1 and 45% lower than the national average of 15.7:1. Lower ratios generally mean more individual attention per student.
The largest demographic group at Juvenile Detention is African American at 65.2% of enrollment, in Orlando, FL. Its student body is more racially and ethnically mixed than most US schools, with a diversity index of 51.1/100.
Juvenile Detention has a Resource Investment Index of 70/100 (higher reported resources relative to schools nationally) based on 4 factors: student-teacher ratio, counselor availability, attendance rates. Not a test-score or academic measure (national median ~41/100, see methodology).
By Resource Investment Index, Juvenile Detention ranks #4 of 128 schools in Orlando, FL. This compares federal resource and staffing data among local peers; it is not a test-score or academic ranking. See all schools in Orlando on the city page.
Juvenile Detention earns 70/100 on the Resource Investment Index, with class sizes smaller than 95% of Florida schools. This is a resource snapshot, not an academic rating; see the Resource Investment Index question above for what the number does and doesn't measure.
Besides Juvenile Detention, Orange also operates Apopka High (3,446 students), Timber Creek High (3,383 students), and Winter Park High (3,277 students). See the Orange district page for the complete list.
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. Each school's figures reflect its most recent NCES/CRDC submission on file. See our editorial standards & corrections policy, the methodology behind these numbers, or report a data error. Data current as of June 2026.
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Last updated:
PlainSchools, “Juvenile Detention, Orlando FL.” Compiled from NCES Common Core of Data, Civil Rights Data Collection, and the NCES F-33 finance survey; data as of June 2026. https://plainschools.com/schools/juvenile-detention-fl
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