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Saturday, September 20, 2025

Alger County Education: 1 Hawaiian student was enrolled in schools in 2024-25 school year

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Dr. Michael F. Rice Michigan superintendent of public instruction | https://radio.wcmu.org/

Dr. Michael F. Rice Michigan superintendent of public instruction | https://radio.wcmu.org/

There was one Hawaiian student enrolled in Alger County schools in the 2024-25 school year, the same number as the previous year, according to the Michigan Department of Education.

Data showed that Alger County welcomed 932 students during the 2024-25 school year. Comprising only 0.1% of the student body, the Hawaiian community is one of the least represented ethnicities within Alger County schools.

Superior Central School was the only school in Alger County that enrolled Hawaiian students in the 2024-25 school year.

In the 2024-25 school year, 1,427,386 students enrolled in Michigan schools, a figure 4.8% below the pre-pandemic total of 1,499,552 in 2019-20, with white students seeing the largest decline of approximately 3%.

Academic performance in Michigan remains below pre-pandemic levels. According to the 2024 NAEP results, the share of students reaching the basic benchmark in core subjects is about 10 percentage points lower than in 2019—except for fourth-grade math, which saw a decline of just 2 points.

Achievement gaps between ethnic groups also persist. On average, Hispanic students scored 15 points below white students. The gap was even wider for Black students, who scored about 30 points lower than their white peers.

The 2025 education budget, approved by Gov. Whitmer last July, totals $23.4 billion—$900 million less than the previous year’s budget. K-12 schools are working with $20.6 billion, a reduction from the $21.5 billion allocated in 2024.

However, some school superintendents and educators were concerned about the new budget. "Schools cannot function properly without adequate funding for safety and mental health," stated Rep. David Martin, R-Davison, referring to a significant cut of around $301 million from school safety and mental health programs. Based on the current bill, the program will receive just $26.5 million.

Ethnicities in Alger County in 2024-25 School Year

White (82.9%)American Indian (12%)Ethnicities < 5% (5.1%)

Enrollment Demographics in Alger County Schools During 2024-25 School Year

School name% of Hawaiian students enrolmentTotal enrollment
Superior Central School0.3%329
Munising High and Middle School0%296
William G. Mather Elementary School0%253
AuTrain-Onota Public School0%20
Burt Township School0%34

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