Enrollment
1,127
New York · 2024-25 NCES data
Federal NCES profile for Spencerport High School, including enrollment, faculty, free-lunch eligibility, demographics, and resource indicators — Resource Investment Index 48/100.
The verdict
Spencerport High School earns a D Resource Investment Index (48/100), with class sizes near the New York 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
1,127
New York · 2024-25 NCES data
Teachers (FTE)
110.0
Federal CCD staff survey
Students per teacher
10.4:1
vs 11.7:1 New York avg
-11% vs state
Free-lunch eligible
34.2%
vs 56.2% New York avg
-39% vs state
How Spencerport High School compares with New York and U.S. medians
At or below state median
10.4:1 — 1.3 below the New York state median of 11.7:1, indicating smaller average class loads than typical schools in the state.
Spencerport High School reports 1,127 enrolled students to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) alongside 110.0 full-time-equivalent teachers, producing a 10.4:1 student-teacher ratio. That figure sits 11% below the New York state mean of 11.7:1, signalling more teacher attention per pupil than the state benchmark. Against the national 2024-25 average of 15.7:1, it is 34% lower, a useful calibration for families comparing districts across state lines.
Title I and federal lunch eligibility offer another window into the student body: 34.2% of pupils qualify for free meals, a proxy for household income that federal programs use to direct funding. The free-lunch share is 39% below the New York average and 34% below the national baseline. The school offers 12 Advanced Placement courses, a stronger academic pipeline indicator than enrollment alone. Counselor coverage works out to roughly 225 students per counselor, meeting the American School Counselor Association recommendation of 250:1. Chronic absenteeism — missing 10% or more of school days — stands at 24.8% according to the 2021-22 Civil Rights Data Collection.
On the finance side, the surrounding Spencerport Central School District spends $22,411 per pupil district-wide, below the New York average of $26,410 and above the national average of $16,593. Revenue comes 43.2% from local sources (property taxes), 45.4% from the state, and 11.4% from federal programs per the NCES F-33 finance survey. Taken together, these measurements produce a Resource Investment Index of 48/100 (D), calculated from 5 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 New York state and U.S. national means lets readers see whether this school is an outlier or in line with peers.
| Metric | This school | vs New York | New York avg | U.S. avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students per teacher | 10.4:1 | ▼ 11% | 11.7:1 | 15.7:1 |
| Free-lunch eligible | 34.2% | ▼ 39% | 56.2% | 51.8% |
| Enrollment | 1,127 | top 94% | — | — |
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)
10 Among the smallest classes smaller classes than 88% 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')
1,127 larger than 93% 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 73.8% of enrollment.
District-wide per-pupil expenditure for Spencerport Central School District, which includes Spencerport 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.
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.
Before you act on this record
Treat this page as the federal baseline — then verify locally.
Figures are the school's reported federal record (CCD 2024-25, CRDC 2021-22) — coverage varies by entity type, and PlainSchools does not rate or rank schools.
Spencerport High School has 1,127 students enrolled. It is a high school in Spencerport, NY.
The student-teacher ratio at Spencerport High School is 10.4:1, which is 11% lower than the New York average of 11.7:1 and 34% lower than the national average of 15.7:1. Lower ratios generally mean more individual attention per student.
34.2% of students at Spencerport High School are eligible for free lunch, compared to the New York average of 56.2%.
The largest demographic group at Spencerport High School is White at 73.8%. The school serves a diverse student body in Spencerport, NY.
Spencerport High School has a Resource Investment Index of 48/100 (D) based on 5 factors: student-teacher ratio, AP course offerings, counselor availability, attendance rates. This index measures federal resource allocation — staffing levels, program availability, and support services — not standardized test scores or academic outcomes.
Spencerport High School earns a D Resource Investment Index (48/100), with class sizes near the New York median. 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.