Enrollment
46
Colorado · 2024-25 NCES data
Federal NCES profile for Ouray Senior High School, including enrollment, faculty, free-lunch eligibility, demographics, and resource indicators — Resource Investment Index 60/100.
The verdict
Ouray Senior High School earns a C+ Resource Investment Index (60/100), with class sizes smaller than 98% of Colorado schools.
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
46
Colorado · 2024-25 NCES data
Teachers (FTE)
6.0
Federal CCD staff survey
Students per teacher
6.7:1
vs 16.9:1 Colorado avg
-60% vs state
Free-lunch eligible
20.0%
vs 38.5% Colorado avg
-48% vs state
How Ouray Senior High School compares with Colorado and U.S. medians
Smaller classes than state median
6.7:1 — 10.2 below the Colorado state median of 16.9:1, indicating smaller average class loads than typical schools in the state.
Ouray Senior High School reports 46 enrolled students to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) alongside 6.0 full-time-equivalent teachers, producing a 6.7:1 student-teacher ratio. That figure sits 60% below the Colorado state mean of 16.9:1, signalling more teacher attention per pupil than the state benchmark. Against the national 2024-25 average of 15.7:1, it is 57% lower, a useful calibration for families comparing districts across state lines.
Title I and federal lunch eligibility offer another window into the student body: 20.0% of pupils qualify for free meals, a proxy for household income that federal programs use to direct funding. The free-lunch share is 48% below the Colorado average and 61% below the national baseline. The school offers 4 Advanced Placement courses, a stronger academic pipeline indicator than enrollment alone. Counselor coverage works out to roughly 110 students per counselor, meeting the American School Counselor Association recommendation of 250:1.
On the finance side, the surrounding Ouray School District No. R-1 of the County of Ouray and spends $18,735 per pupil district-wide, above the Colorado average of $16,273 and above the national average of $16,593. Revenue comes 58.3% from local sources (property taxes), 35.5% from the state, and 6.2% from federal programs per the NCES F-33 finance survey. Taken together, these measurements produce a Resource Investment Index of 60/100 (C+), 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 Colorado state and U.S. national means lets readers see whether this school is an outlier or in line with peers.
| Metric | This school | vs Colorado | Colorado avg | U.S. avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students per teacher | 6.7:1 | ▼ 60% | 16.9:1 | 15.7:1 |
| Free-lunch eligible | 20.0% | ▼ 48% | 38.5% | 51.8% |
| Enrollment | 46 | top 4% | — | — |
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)
7 Among the smallest classes smaller classes than 97% 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')
46 larger than 5% 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 73.9% of enrollment.
District-wide per-pupil expenditure for Ouray School District No. R-1 of the County of Ouray and, which includes Ouray Senior High 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.
In-depth guides on understanding NCES data, school choice, and education funding.
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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.
Ouray Senior High School has 46 students enrolled. It is a high school in OURAY, CO.
The student-teacher ratio at Ouray Senior High School is 6.7:1, which is 60% lower than the Colorado average of 16.9:1 and 57% lower than the national average of 15.7:1. Lower ratios generally mean more individual attention per student.
20.0% of students at Ouray Senior High School are eligible for free lunch, compared to the Colorado average of 38.5%.
The largest demographic group at Ouray Senior High School is White at 73.9%. The school serves a diverse student body in OURAY, CO.
Ouray Senior High School has a Resource Investment Index of 60/100 (C+) based on 4 factors: student-teacher ratio, AP course offerings, counselor availability. This index measures federal resource allocation — staffing levels, program availability, and support services — not standardized test scores or academic outcomes.
Ouray Senior High School earns a C+ Resource Investment Index (60/100), with class sizes smaller than 98% of Colorado schools. The Resource Investment Index reflects staffing, counselor access, gifted programs, and attendance reported to NCES, not test scores or academic outcomes, so treat it as a resource snapshot rather than an overall rating.