Enrollment
396
Ohio · 2024-25 NCES data
Federal NCES profile for Kinder Elementary School, including enrollment, faculty, free-lunch eligibility, demographics, and resource indicators — Resource Investment Index 32/100.
The verdict
Kinder Elementary School earns an F Resource Investment Index (32/100), with class sizes near the Ohio median.
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
396
Ohio · 2024-25 NCES data
Teachers (FTE)
17.0
Federal CCD staff survey
Students per teacher
18.4:1
vs 18.3:1 Ohio avg
+1% vs state
Free-lunch eligible
54.5%
vs 31.6% Ohio avg
+72% vs state
How Kinder Elementary School compares with Ohio and U.S. medians
Slightly above state median
18.4:1 — 0.1 above the Ohio state median of 18.3:1, indicating larger average class loads than typical schools in the state.
Kinder Elementary School reports 396 enrolled students to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) alongside 17.0 full-time-equivalent teachers, producing a 18.4:1 student-teacher ratio. That figure sits 1% above the Ohio state mean of 18.3:1, signalling larger average class loads than peers in the same state. Against the national 2024-25 average of 15.9:1, it is 16% higher, a useful calibration for families comparing districts across state lines.
Title I and federal lunch eligibility offer another window into the student body: 54.5% of pupils qualify for free meals, a proxy for household income that federal programs use to direct funding. The free-lunch share is 72% above the Ohio average and 5% above the national baseline. Counselor coverage works out to roughly 566 students per counselor, above the ASCA-recommended ceiling of 250:1. Chronic absenteeism — missing 10% or more of school days — stands at 27.3% according to the 2021-22 Civil Rights Data Collection.
On the finance side, the surrounding Miamisburg City spends $14,570 per pupil district-wide, below the Ohio average of $16,867 and below the national average of $19,490. Revenue comes 55.8% from local sources (property taxes), 27.4% from the state, and 16.8% from federal programs per the NCES F-33 finance survey. Taken together, these measurements produce a Resource Investment Index of 32/100 (F), calculated from 4 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 Ohio state and U.S. national means lets readers see whether this school is an outlier or in line with peers.
| Metric | This school | vs Ohio | Ohio avg | U.S. avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students per teacher | 18.4:1 | ▲ 1% | 18.3:1 | 15.9:1 |
| Free-lunch eligible | 54.5% | ▲ 72% | 31.6% | 51.8% |
| Enrollment | 396 | top 52% | — | — |
Source: NCES Common Core of Data School-level CCD + state/national means from Public School Universe · 2024-25
Class size vs. every US school
Students per teacher (lower means more individual attention)
18 smaller classes than 22% of 92,598 US schools
Each bar is a band; taller bars hold more US schools. The dashed line + filled bar mark this entry. Hover or tap any bar for its full count, share, and where it sits relative to this entry.
Source U.S. Department of Education — NCES Common Core of Data · 2024-25
School size vs. every US school
Total enrollment — where this school sits by size (neither large nor small is 'better')
396 larger than 47% of 95,891 US schools
Each bar is a band; taller bars hold more US schools. The dashed line + filled bar mark this entry. Hover or tap any bar for its full count, share, and where it sits relative to this entry.
Source U.S. Department of Education — NCES Common Core of Data · 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 79.0% of enrollment.
District-wide per-pupil expenditure for Miamisburg City, which includes Kinder Elementary School.
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.
5 comparable elementary schools (grades K-5) 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.
Kinder Elementary School has 396 students enrolled. It is a elementary school in Miamisburg, OH.
The student-teacher ratio at Kinder Elementary School is 18.4:1, which is 1% higher than the Ohio average of 18.3:1 and 16% higher than the national average of 15.9:1.
54.5% of students at Kinder Elementary School are eligible for free lunch, compared to the Ohio average of 31.6%.
The largest demographic group at Kinder Elementary School is White at 79.0%. The school serves a diverse student body in Miamisburg, OH.
Kinder Elementary School has a Resource Investment Index of 32/100 (F) based on 4 factors: student-teacher ratio, counselor availability, attendance rates. This index measures federal resource allocation — staffing levels, program availability, and support services — not standardized test scores or academic outcomes.