Enrollment
190
Michigan · 2024-25 NCES data
Federal NCES profile for Keith Bovenschen School, including enrollment, faculty, free-lunch eligibility, demographics, and resource indicators — Resource Investment Index 34/100.
Public location data per NCES (National Center for Education Statistics) Common Core of Data. Verify the school's current address on the NCES CCD record.
Enrollment
190
Michigan · 2024-25 NCES data
Teachers (FTE)
29.0
Federal CCD staff survey
Students per teacher
6.7:1
vs 18.2:1 Michigan avg
-63% vs state
Free-lunch eligible
96.9%
vs 54.3% Michigan avg
+78% vs state
How Keith Bovenschen School compares with Michigan and U.S. medians
Smaller classes than state median
6.7:1 — 11.5 below the Michigan state median of 18.2:1, indicating smaller average class loads than typical schools in the state.
Keith Bovenschen School reports 190 enrolled students to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) alongside 29.0 full-time-equivalent teachers, producing a 6.7:1 student-teacher ratio. That figure sits 63% below the Michigan state mean of 18.2:1, signalling more teacher attention per pupil than the state benchmark. Against the national 2024-25 average of 15.9:1, it is 58% lower, a useful calibration for families comparing districts across state lines.
Title I and federal lunch eligibility offer another window into the student body: 96.9% of pupils qualify for free meals, a proxy for household income that federal programs use to direct funding. The free-lunch share is 78% above the Michigan average and 87% above the national baseline. Chronic absenteeism — missing 10% or more of school days — stands at 71.6% according to the 2021-22 Civil Rights Data Collection.
Taken together, these measurements produce a Resource Investment Index of 34/100 (F), calculated from 3 distinct NCES and CRDC indicators measuring resource allocation rather than academic outcomes.
Source: National Center for Education Statistics Common Core of Data + CRDC + F-33 · 2024-25
Cross-validating school-level NCES values against Michigan state and U.S. national means lets readers see whether this school is an outlier or in line with peers.
| Metric | This school | vs Michigan | Michigan avg | U.S. avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students per teacher | 6.7:1 | ▼ 63% | 18.2:1 | 15.9:1 |
| Free-lunch eligible | 96.9% | ▲ 78% | 54.3% | 51.8% |
| Enrollment | 190 | top 23% | — | — |
Source: NCES Common Core of Data School-level CCD + state/national means from Public School Universe · 2024-25
Federal measurements — not ratings — surface the resource and opportunity picture. Below are the indicators that researchers, civil-rights monitors, and funding formulas use to assess equity.
Largest group: White at 43.7% of enrollment.
6 comparable other schools (grades Mixed) serving the same city.
In-depth guides on understanding NCES data, school choice, and education funding.
How CCD, CRDC and EDFacts feed every public-school number you see.
Eight signals that matter more than the overall ranking number.
Title I, F-33, state aid formulas and what per-pupil spending really means.
Why missing 10% of school matters and how it varies by district.
Three school types, three funding models, three sets of trade-offs.
What CRDC suspension and expulsion records do and don't reveal.
Keith Bovenschen School has 190 students enrolled. It is a other school in WARREN, MI.
The student-teacher ratio at Keith Bovenschen School is 6.7:1, which is 63% lower than the Michigan average of 18.2:1 and 58% lower than the national average of 15.9:1. Lower ratios generally mean more individual attention per student.
96.9% of students at Keith Bovenschen School are eligible for free lunch, compared to the Michigan average of 54.3%.
The largest demographic group at Keith Bovenschen School is White at 43.7%. The school serves a diverse student body in WARREN, MI.
Keith Bovenschen School has a Resource Investment Index of 34/100 (F) based on 3 factors: student-teacher ratio, attendance rates. This index measures federal resource allocation — staffing levels, program availability, and support services — not standardized test scores or academic outcomes.