Jim Hogg County
The 3 public K-12 schools in Jim Hogg County cover all standard grade bands (1 elementary, 1 middle, and 1 high), with combined enrollment around 967.
7-year change in Jim Hogg County
SY 2017-18 vs SY 2024-25County vs. school enrollment demographics
Left bar is the racial makeup of Jim Hogg County residents (Census ACS 5-year). Right bar is the enrollment-weighted makeup of public schools in the county (NCES CCD). NCES systematically under-reports Hispanic, Pacific Islander, and Native American enrollment for many schools; where the resident share is meaningful but the reported school share is zero, we mark the school bar "not reported".
Test scores in Jim Hogg County
Latest 2023-24 ELA proficiency, 3 schools ranked. Texas state average: 52.7%.
- HEBBRONVILLE H S· 51.0%
- HEBBRONVILLE EL· 43.0%
- HEBBRONVILLE J H· 42.0%
| Name | City | Level | Grades | Enrollment | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HEBBRONVILLE EL | Hebbronville | Elementary | PK-05 | 448 | · |
| HEBBRONVILLE H S | Hebbronville | High | 09-12 | 298 | · |
| HEBBRONVILLE J H | Hebbronville | Middle | 06-08 | 221 | · |
Cities in Jim Hogg County
About Jim Hogg County
Jim Hogg County is a rural-scale Texas county of about 4,727 residents, home to 3 public schools and roughly 967 students.
Zooming out, census numbers show the median household earns about $42,211 a year, about 15% of adults have a bachelor's degree or above, and roughly 34% of residents live below the federal poverty line. That income level is 37% meaningfully below the Texas median.
For a sense of the school types, Jim Hogg County comprises 1 elementary school (448 students), 1 middle school (221), and 1 high school (298).
JIM HOGG COUNTY ISD is the biggest district by enrollment, covering about 967 students across Jim Hogg County.
Over the past 7-year window. Across the same 7-year window, public-school enrollment fell 16%: 1,151 students in SY 2017-18 versus 967 in SY 2024-25.
On this page, the community for Jim Hogg County discusses school events, board meetings, and seasonal calendars. Discussions cut across districts, schools, and grade levels.