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District enrollment declines and class-size scenarios framed as context for reorganization

November 21, 2025 | Town of Acton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts


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District enrollment declines and class-size scenarios framed as context for reorganization
At the Nov. 18 meeting the district presented its annual enrollment report, which administrators said is central to reorganization and budget planning.

Andrew, presenting the report, said the district has “a little bit under 5,000 students” systemwide (K–12) and described a roughly 9.5% decline in K–12 enrollment over the past 12 years. NESDEC projections cited in the presentation project enrollment near 4,600 students by 2032, with elementary enrollment readings showing the district at about 2,477 this year and modest projected variation in the coming years. The administration also noted that the Boxborough share of the district’s enrollment is projected to be between 18% and 19% next year, which affects cost-sharing calculations between the towns.

Presentation slides emphasized that while overall enrollment declines, student needs (economically disadvantaged status, English-language learners, and students with IEPs) are rising. Andrew said the district requested a more detailed enrollment study using census and building-permit data (a deeper analysis NESDEC said could take about three months) to test whether local construction and demographic shifts materially change projections.

Administration showed scenarios illustrating the instructional effect of reducing sections: cutting eight elementary sections would push average class sizes slightly above guideline levels, and cutting 11 sections would push them higher still. Trustees asked for comparisons with neighboring districts and for more granular age-of-entry data; Andrew said some of that is available in the packet and he would follow up on additional analyses.

What’s next: the district will pursue a more detailed enrollment study and incorporate those findings into AB Forward planning and the FY27 budget process.

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