Every state, one map at a time. This project extends the Visualized Missouri Public Schools model to all fifty states — interactive district-level maps of enrollment, funding, teachers, and achievement, built entirely from public data. Each state wears a color drawn from its flag. Click yours.
Hover for the name; click to open that state’s page. Missouri — the flagship site, fully built — wears its own slate blue.
Policy debates about public schools are usually argued with statewide averages. Averages hide the map. When you shade every school district by the numbers — who is enrolling, what a community can raise in taxes, what teachers are paid, how students are doing — the geography of American education becomes visible, and so do the places averages leave behind. The Missouri flagship site proved the model; this project carries it to every state, one map at a time, always from public data, always with the methods shown.
Every state page currently shows its school district boundaries — the canvas the data will be painted on. States are being built out Missouri-style in phases: enrollment first, then funding, teachers, and achievement.
National sources cover every state the same way: NCES Common Core of Data (enrollment, staffing), Census F-33 (school finance), SEDA (achievement and pandemic recovery), and Census SAIPE (child poverty). State-specific depth — tax levies, salary schedules — is added state by state.