© 2024 Blue Ridge Public Radio
Blue Ridge Mountains banner background
Your source for information and inspiration in Western North Carolina.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

NC home-schooling numbers dropped last year but remain above pre-pandemic levels

 Kailyn McCain was home-schooled last year, but her mother has enrolled her in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools for 2021-22.
Jarrett McCain
Kailyn McCain was home-schooled last year, but her mother has enrolled her in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools for 2021-22.

The number of home-schooled students declined slightly in North Carolina and Mecklenburg County last year, a new state tally shows.

Almost 153,000 North Carolina students were homeschooled the past school year, compared with more than 163,000 the previous year. That’s a decline of about 5%. But the latest numbers are 7.5% above the last pre-pandemic count, posted in the summer of 2019. Homeschooling boomed when schools shifted to remote learning because of COVID-19.

Mecklenburg and Wake counties, the state’s largest districts, have seen similar trends. In the Charlotte region, Lincoln, Union and Iredell counties saw slight increases in home-schooling during the past year, while Cabarrus and Gaston counties logged fewer home-schooled students. All remain well above 2019 numbers.

The state’s Division of Non-Public Education estimates home-school enrollment and publishes the data in the summer after a school year ends. The division also tallies private school enrollment but as of Monday afternoon that data had not been posted for 2022-23. The website says it’s coming by the end of July.

Sign up for our Education Newsletter

Select Your Email Format

Copyright 2023 WFAE. To see more, visit WFAE.

Ann Doss Helms covers education for WFAE. She was a reporter for The Charlotte Observer for 32 years, including 16 years on the education beat. She has repeatedly won first place in education reporting from the North Carolina Press Association and won the 2015 Associated Press Senator Sam Open Government Award for reporting on charter school salaries.