Fast Facts
Select your city or town to find facts and data on the children and families in your community. Please contact us if you have any questions or would like help finding additional data.

Holyoke

Key educational benchmarks
Holyoke Massachusetts
% of third graders who meet or exceed expectations in reading (Next-generation MCAS, 2019) 24% 56%
% of students graduating high school within four years 72.1% 89.0%
Early education and care
   
% of children under age 6 with all parents in the labor force 57.5%
73.5%
# of preschool-aged (3-5 yrs) children 1,707
224,901
% of 3- and 4-year-old children enrolled in an early education program (estimate only) 47.5%
59.5%
# of public schools with preschool classrooms 7
518
# of licensed center-based programs, pre-COVID* 19
2,892
# of licensed family child care providers, pre-COVID* 43
5,330
K-12 education1
   
# of students enrolled in public school 5,153
911,465
% of public school students identified as economically disadvantaged 81.4%
36.6%
% of public school students whose first language is not English 38.9%
23.4%
% of public school students receiving special education services 27.9%
18.7%
% of public school kindergarten students attending full-day kindergarten 100.0%
93.8%
 
Child population
Birth-5 6-18
  Holyoke Massachusetts Holyoke Massachusetts
# of children 3,597 442,592 7,505 1,074,498
% of children living below the poverty line2 53.0%
14.2%
42.8%
12.7%
% who are Black or African American 1.8% 7.4% 2.3% 7.3%
% who are Asian 0.9% 6.3% 0.8% 5.2%
% who are Hispanic or Latino 71.1% 16.9% 69.5% 13.9%
% who are White 23.7% 63.1% 25.5% 69.1%
% of students who are another race, or two or more races3 2.6% 6.2% 1.9% 4.4%
   
* Community data calculated by SFC, 2016. Visit EEC for most recent local data. Massachusetts totals pre-COVID from early 2020. available in EEC Board Meeting, March 9, 2021.
1 Community data excludes charter and vocational schools. Economically disadvantaged is calculated based on a student's participation in one or more of the following state-administered programs: the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP); the Transitional Assistance for Families with Dependent Children (TAFDC); the Department of Children and Families' (DCF) foster care program; and MassHealth (Medicaid).
2 Includes children birth to 17. The 2017 federal poverty guideline for a family of four is $24,600 per year.
3 Includes American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander.
Sources: Massachusetts Department of Early Education and Care, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, US Census 2010, ACS 15-19.
 
400 Atlantic Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02110                                                                                    info@strategiesforchildren.org