There were 10 American Indian or Alaska Native students enrolled in Mercer County schools in the 2022-23 school year, a 25% increase from the eight American Indian or Alaska Native students in the previous school year, according to the Kentucky Department of Education.
Data showed that Mercer County welcomed a total of 3,497 students during the 2022-23 school year. Among them, American Indian or Alaska Native students comprised 0.3% of the student body to be the least represented ethnicity in the county.
Among the seven schools in Mercer County, three schools recorded the highest enrollment of American Indian or Alaska Native students in the 2022-23 school year, with a total of two students.
Despite escaping some of the pandemic’s educational disruptions, Kentucky’s achievement gaps have remained an issue since 2019. In the eighth-grade reading assessments, for example, Hispanic students scored eight points lower than their white peers, and the gap reached 15 points in math. Black students fared even worse, falling more than 20 points behind and facing a failure rate nearly double that of their white counterparts.
| School name | % of American Indian or Alaska Native Students Enrolment | Total Enrollment |
|---|---|---|
| Burgin Independent School | 0.2% | 542 |
| Mercer County Senior High School | 0.1% | 762 |
| Mercer County Day Treatment | 3.1% | 32 |
| Kenneth D. King Middle School | 0.3% | 657 |
| Mercer Central | 2.9% | 70 |
| Mercer County Intermediate School | 0.3% | 625 |
| Mercer County Elementary School | 0.1% | 809 |

