There were 61 multiracial students enrolled in Wyandot County schools in the 2024-25 school year, 9% less than the previous year, according to reports from the Ohio Department of Education & Workforce.
Data showed that Wyandot County welcomed 3,108 students during the year. Among them, multiracial students comprised 2% of the student body to be the least represented ethnicity in the county.
Among the nine schools in Wyandot County, Carey High School recorded the highest enrollment of multiracial students in the 2024-25 school year, with a total of 17 students.
Public school enrollment in Ohio fell to 1.47 million students in fiscal year 2025, down 1%, marking the largest drop since fiscal year 2022.
According to a report from the Ohio Legislative Service Commission, enrollment fell most sharply in rural and small-town districts. In contrast, joint vocational districts recorded growth, with chartered nonpublic schools recording the largest enrollment increases.
According to an analysis by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, Ohio students have not fully recovered from pandemic-related learning losses. In the 2024-25 school year, about 55.3% of students were proficient in math and 60% in reading, both several points below 2018-19 levels.
Ohio ranks 23rd nationally in K-12 school expenditures, with public schools spending $16,687 per pupil for a total of $28.05 billion annually. Overall, costs exceed available funding by nearly $460 million.
| School name | % of multiracial students enrolment | Total enrollment |
|---|---|---|
| Carey High School | 3.6% | 468 |
| Upper Sandusky Middle School | 2.6% | 504 |
| Mohawk Elementary School | 2.1% | 517 |
| Union Elementary School | 3.7% | 268 |
| Carey Elementary School | 2.7% | 368 |
| Upper Sandusky High School | 0% | 425 |
| East Elementary School | 0% | 116 |
| Mohawk High School | 0% | 313 |
| South Elementary School | 0% | 129 |

