The bulletin board for America's public schools. Parents, teachers, students, and staff. One community per school.
allk12 · Rankings · Fastest declining · New Mexico · K-12 schools

The fastest-declining public K-12 schools by enrollment in New Mexico

7 public K-12 schools in New Mexico appear in this ranking of the fastest-declining public K-12 schools by enrollment, ranked by the steepest enrollment decline between the 2017-18 and 2024-25 school years. ASPEN COMMUNITY SCHOOL leads the list at -34.3%, against a median of -21.2% across the ranked schools.

Use the search box to find a specific school within this ranking, sort by any column, or export the full list. Built from NCES and state data for 2024-25.

Schools ranked
7
New Mexico
Best Enrollment change
-34.3%
Median Enrollment change
-21.2%
FASTEST DECLINING · NEW MEXICO
#SchoolCityDistrict2017-182024-25% Change
1ASPEN COMMUNITY SCHOOLSANTA FE, NMSANTA FE434285-34.3%
2To'hajiilee Day SchoolToHajiilee, NMTo'hajiilee Day School354246-30.5%
3MANZANO HIGHALBUQUERQUE, NMALBUQUERQUE1,5871,157-27.1%
4Alamo Navajo Community SchoolAlamo, NMAlamo Navajo Community School368290-21.2%
5ELDORADO HIGHALBUQUERQUE, NMALBUQUERQUE1,8091,579-12.7%
6Mescalero Apache SchoolMescalero, NMMescalero Apache School646614-5.0%
7Pine Hill SchoolsPine Hill, NMPine Hill Schools316315-0.3%
Page 1 of 1 · top 7 of 7 ranked. NCES + state assessment data, 2024-25.↓ Download full CSV

All New Mexico schools

Fastest declining rankings at a wider scope

Nationwide

Other rankings for New Mexico

LargestMost diverseLowest ratioHighest proficiencyFastest growingHighest povertyLowest povertyHighest ratioLowest proficiencyMost HispanicMost BlackMost WhiteMost Asian

All ranking categories →

DATA NOTICE

allk12 is independent and not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by NCES, the US Census Bureau, any state education agency or assessment program, or any other government agency. Source data is compiled from public records and provided "as is," without warranty of accuracy or completeness. You rely on it, and any analysis derived from it, at your own risk. See the full disclaimer.