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Ordinance 3370-14
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Ordinance 3370-14
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3/19/2014 1:51:29 PM
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Ordinances
Ordinance Number
3370-14
Date
3/5/2014
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IV. STUDENT ENROLLMENT PROJECTIONS <br /> Projected Student Enrollment 2012-2017 <br /> Enrollment projections are generally most accurate for the initial years of the forecast period. <br /> Beyond the 5-6 year range,projected assumptions about economic or demographic trends may <br /> prove false,resulting in an enrollment trend that is quite different from the projection. For this <br /> reason is important to monitor birth rates, new housing construction, and population growth on an <br /> annual basis as part of facilities management. In the event that enrollment growth slows,plans for <br /> new facilities can be delayed. It is much more difficult,however, to initiate new projects or speed <br /> up projects when enrollment growth exceeds projections. For this reason,it is sometimes useful to <br /> project slightly more growth than might be expected so as to be better prepared for future events. <br /> The Growth Management Act(GMA)requires that planning for public facilities be consistent with <br /> the 20-year population projections developed by the Office of Finance and Management(OFM) for <br /> the State of Washington. <br /> The District has contracted with a consultant to develop a methodology for projections. The <br /> consultant has a twenty-two year history of working with local school districts in doing projections, <br /> including seven years as the demographer for the Seattle Public Schools and fifteen years as an <br /> independent consultant providing long-range projections for the Highline,Edmonds, Puyallup, <br /> Federal Way,Marysville, Seattle,Northshore, Bethel, South Kitsap,Bremerton, Bellevue, and <br /> Mukilteo school districts.The methodology employed by the consultant is a variation of the cohort <br /> survival method. Cohort survival compares enrollment at a particular grade in a specific year,to the <br /> enrollment at the previous grade from the prior year. For example, enrollment at the first grade is <br /> compared to the previous year's kindergarten enrollment. The ratio of these two numbers (first <br /> grade enrollment divided by kindergarten enrollment)creates a"progression ratio"providing a <br /> summary measure of the in-and-out migration that has occurred over the course of a year. This <br /> ratio can be calculated for each grade level. Once these ratios have been established over a period <br /> of years they can be averaged and/or weighted to predict the enrollment at each grade. <br /> Cohort survival works well for every grade but kindergarten where there is no previous grade to <br /> use for comparison. At the kindergarten level enrollment is compared to the county birth cohort <br /> from five years prior to estimate a birth-to-k ratio. This ratio,averaged over several years,provides <br /> a method for predicting what proportion of the birth cohort will enroll at the kindergarten level. <br /> The District's percentage of this cohort has varied considerably over the past 7 years from a high of <br /> 12.4%to a low of 11.7%. Future forecasts assume that the District will enroll about 12%of the <br /> birth cohort. <br /> Cohort survival is a purely mathematical method, which assumes that future enrollment patterns <br /> will be similar to past enrollment patterns. It makes no assumptions about what is causing <br /> enrollment gains or losses and can be easily applied to any enrollment history. For this reason, <br /> cohort survival is a useful tool that anyone can use for projecting school enrollments. <br /> 1d <br />
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