San Vicente ISD is a rural school district in West Texas in Brewster County.
Explore more below to learn about its enrollment and demographic trends over time, the classroom experience, student outcomes and its school funding and political environment.
Official classifications
TEA Type
Rural
NCES Type
Rural-Remote
ESC Region
Midland
Classifications are used to compare and support schools. Learn more
Below are two metrics for
your school: Average daily attendance is the core metric used by
Texas to determine how much money the state gives schools. If a
student misses school, their district's attendance average drops,
and so does the amount of money received. Chronically absent
students — those who missed at least 10% of school days — are more
likely to drop out, education advocates say.
Why this matters
Most U.S. states
use enrollment to determine state funding for school districts.
Texas, with 5.5 million public school students, is one of only six
states to fund schools based on average daily attendance. In a
post-COVID world where parents feel more inclined to keep sick
children home, some districts' finances have grown more
unpredictable. Declining birth rates and increasing schooling
options (charter schools and private school vouchers) may also
contribute to those challenges.
Attendance data was not available in
2024
Trend data not available.
How San Vicente ISD compares on attendance
We offer three
comparison points: statewide ranking, regional ranking, and peer
ranking (schools operating in similar environments). Schools in
a peer group may not be close to each other geographically.
Regions and peer groups are defined by the state.
Rank data not available.
How it breaks down
28.6%
of students
were chronically absent in
2024,
up
14.3
points
since
2020
How it breaks down
A deeper dive
Statewide data shows
chronic absenteeism disproportionately affects economically
disadvantaged students and children in special education
programs.
In a post-COVID world where parents feel more inclined to keep
sick children home, some districts' finances have grown more
unpredictable. Declining birth rates and increasing schooling
options (charter schools and private school vouchers) may also
contribute to those challenges. Texas has about 5.5 million public
school students, but 19% were chronically absent (missed at least
10% of days in the school year) in 2023-24, meaning schools missed
out on funding.