CaliforniaSchoolsImperial County Special Education

Imperial County Special Education

PublicSpecial education
El Centro, California · Imperial County Office of Education
Teachers41.0FTE
Ratio12.0:1students per teacher
Students491enrolled
SCHOOL SNAPSHOT
Students491
Grade Span0–12
Student:Teacher12.0:1
Free/Reduced Lunch70%
Title INo
SectorPublic
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Student : Teacher
12.0:1
0.0%vs prior yrUS avg 15.4:1
Teacher FTE
9
78.0%vs prior yr
Enrollment
491
0.0%vs prior yr
Years of Data
5
2020–2024
Counselors
ASCA max 1:250
Nurses
1:205
50.6%vs prior yrNASN max 1:750
Psychologists
1:154
9.2%vs prior yrNASP max 1:500
Social Workers
SSWAA max 1:250
Trends & 5-year history below

Pupil : Teacher Ratio — 5-Year Trend

11.7:112.5:113.3:114.1:114.9:115.7:12020202120222023202412.2:112.1:112.7:112.0:1This schoolUS public-school avg

Enrollment & Teacher FTE

4374494604724834956142129364420202021202220232024441447481491363738419EnrollmentTeacher FTE

Year-by-year workforce

Metric20202021202220232024Nat Avg
Enrollment441447481491
Teacher FTE363738419
Pupil : Teacher ratio12.2:112.1:112.7:112.0:115.4:1

What These Numbers Mean

Teacher FTE

Full-Time Equivalent counts part-time teachers proportionally. One full-time teacher = 1.0 FTE; two half-time teachers also = 1.0 FTE. This is the standard federal reporting unit.

Pupil : Teacher ratio

NCES-reported ratio divides total enrollment by teacher FTE. It is NOT the same as average class size — schools with specialists, coaches, and resource teachers will show lower ratios than typical class sizes.

How to read the trend

A falling pupil:teacher ratio (line going down) means more staffing per student — generally a positive signal. A rising line can indicate budget pressure or fast enrollment growth outpacing hiring. Always compare to the US average (dashed grey).

Historical data spans 20202024 from NCES CCD.

Student Support & Wellbeing

Non-teaching staff who support student mental health, physical health, and behavioural needs. Lower pupil-to-staff ratios mean more one-on-one access.

Nurses & Psychologists — staff to pupils

1:01:1621:3241:4861:6481:8102015201720201:4151:4151:2051:1461:1411:154Nurse : PupilsNASN 1:750Psychologist : PupilsNASP 1:500

Support staffing & ratios — year by year

Metric201520172020Nat Avg
Counselors (FTE)000
Nurses (FTE)112.2
Psychologists (FTE)2.932.9
Social Workers (FTE)000
Counselor : Pupils1:250
Nurse : Pupils1:4151:4151:2051:750
Psychologist : Pupils1:1461:1411:1541:500
Social Worker : Pupils1:250

Why these ratios matter

Counselors (ASCA 250:1)

School counselors support academic planning, college & career readiness, and social-emotional wellbeing. The American School Counselor Association recommends no more than 250 students per counselor.

Nurses (NASN 750:1)

School nurses manage chronic conditions, medications, immunisations, and emergencies. The National Association of School Nurses recommends at least 1 full-time nurse per 750 students (more for high-need populations).

Psychologists (NASP 500:1)

School psychologists assess learning & behavioural needs, run mental-health interventions, and coordinate special-education services. NASP recommends 500:1 or lower.

Social workers (SSWAA 250:1)

School social workers bridge home-school relationships, address attendance & trauma, and connect families to community resources. SSWAA recommends 250:1.

Source: US Dept of Education CRDC (20152020) — Civil Rights Data Collection.