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ENROLLMENT TRENDS · ALABAMA

Alabama schools on the rise

Alabama public schools with the largest enrollment growth from 2017-18 to 2024-25.

Schools in this report
50
top growth in state
Top growth
+202%
McCalla Elementary School
Range
+39% to +202%
2017-18 → 2024-25
TOP 50 AL PUBLIC SCHOOLS BY ENROLLMENT GROWTH · 2017-18 → 2024-25
SchoolCityDistrict2017-182024-25% change
McCalla Elementary SchoolBESSEMERJefferson County249752202%
The PathwayMOBILEMobile County156396154%
MidTown Elementary SchoolMADISONMadison City4421,097148%
Duran Junior High SchoolPELL CITYPell City274601119%
Sophia P Kingston Elementary SchoolSELMASelma City142305115%
Florence B Mathis ElementaryFOLEYBaldwin County4831,023112%
Acceleration Day and Evening AcademyMOBILEMAEF Public Charter Schools245513109%
Warrior Elementary SchoolWARRIORJefferson County305612101%
Williams Middle SchoolHUNTSVILLEHuntsville City33965994.4%
Brilliant SchoolBRILLIANTMarion County13325894.0%
Cobb Preparatory AcademyANNISTONAnniston City14027092.9%
Hueytown Primary SchoolHUEYTOWNJefferson County31860189.0%
Elberta High SchoolELBERTABaldwin County39173588.0%
Snow Rogers Elementary SchoolGARDENDALEJefferson County20838987.0%
Athens Middle SchoolATHENSAthens City51193583.0%
Holly Pond Elementary SchoolHOLLY PONDCullman County35063481.1%
Meridianville Middle SchoolHAZEL GREENMadison County6251,10076.0%
Harmony SchoolLOGANCullman County19633771.9%
New Brockton Elementary SchoolNEW BROCKTONCoffee County42672770.7%
Red Level SchoolRED LEVELCovington County32153566.7%
Cullman City Primary SchoolCULLMANCullman City48278262.2%
UW Clemon Elementary SchoolADAMSVILLEJefferson County36759060.8%
Trace Crossings Elementary SchoolHOOVERHoover City48076960.2%
University Place Elementary SchoolTUSCALOOSATuscaloosa City35757059.7%
Elkmont Elementary SchoolELKMONTLimestone County38159957.2%
Collins Intermediate SchoolSCOTTSBOROScottsboro City34453856.4%
Sycamore SchoolALPINETalladega County21834056.0%
Sipsey Valley Middle SchoolBUHLTuscaloosa County37157555.0%
New Hope High SchoolNEW HOPEMadison County38759854.5%
Big Sandy ElementaryMOUNDVILLETuscaloosa County34152253.1%
Thompson Middle SchoolALABASTERAlabaster City9541,44451.4%
Johnson Elementary SchoolATHENSLimestone County31747549.8%
Whitesboro Elementary SchoolBOAZEtowah County28442348.9%
Northridge Middle SchoolTUSCALOOSATuscaloosa City53077546.2%
Westlawn Middle SchoolTUSCALOOSATuscaloosa City38956846.0%
Crestline Elementary SchoolHARTSELLEHartselle City48771045.8%
Magnolia SchoolFOLEYBaldwin County65394444.6%
Maplesville High SchoolMAPLESVILLEChilton County41059244.4%
Robert F Bumpus Middle SchoolHOOVERHoover City8371,19242.4%
Caldwell Elementary SchoolSCOTTSBOROScottsboro City40857941.9%
Meek Elementary SchoolARLEYWinston County14921141.6%
Carver Senior High SchoolMONTGOMERYMontgomery County1,0981,55341.4%
Lanett Junior High SchoolLANETTLanett City10414741.3%
Concord Elementary SchoolBESSEMERJefferson County28340041.3%
Fultondale High SchoolBIRMINGHAMJefferson County60184841.1%
Leeds Elementary SchoolLEEDSLeeds City48167841.0%
Shelby Elementary SchoolSHELBYShelby County17224240.7%
Fairfax Elementary SchoolVALLEYChambers County49068940.6%
Hackleburg High SchoolHACKLEBURGMarion County18926540.2%
Thorsby High SchoolTHORSBYChilton County64289539.4%
50 of 50 rows · Brick-and-mortar only. Virtual, online, and cyber schools excluded. Schools must have had ≥100 students in 2017-18 and be open in both school years.↓ Download schools-on-the-rise-by-state-al.csv

How this list was built

Every Alabama public school that reported total enrollment in both the NCES SY 2017-18 and SY 2024-25 vintages was scored on percent change in enrollment. Schools needed at least 100 students in 2017-18 to qualify, which filters out small specialty programs whose percentage swings are dominated by noise. Brick-and-mortar only: virtual academies, cyber charters, and online schools are excluded by name pattern and by NCES is_virtual flag. Those schools dominate raw growth numbers but rarely represent a school families are choosing for their neighborhood.

Enrollment growth is a leading indicator, not a quality measure. Schools grow because catchment areas shift, because districts consolidate, because a magnet program opens, or because reputation pulls in transfers. A school on this list is one that more Alabamafamilies are sending their kids to in 2024-25 than in 2017-18, for whatever reason. Pair this with the school's page on allk12 for test scores, demographics, and discussion.

Source data

NCES Common Core of Data, EDGE_ADMINDATA_PUBLICSCH MapServer, vintages 2017-18 and 2024-25. Refreshed yearly when NCES publishes a new admin-data release. School names, slugs, and current district affiliation come from the 2024-25 snapshot.

HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT

Anyone is welcome to cite or republish these findings. Please credit allk12.com and link back to this page so readers can verify the underlying data.

allk12 (2026). "Alabama schools on the rise: enrollment growth 2017–2024." Retrieved from https://allk12.com/reports/on-the-rise/alabama
For interview requests or custom data pulls: [email protected]
DOWNLOAD THE DATA
schools-on-the-rise-by-state-al.csv
RELATED
Alabama schools in decline · All Alabama schools · Best Alabama schools · All states
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.