There were 11 Black students enrolled in Upton County schools in the 2024-25 school year, the same number as in the previous year, according to the Texas Education Agency.
Data showed that Upton County welcomed 785 students during the 2024-25 school year. Among them, Black students comprised 1.4% of the student body to be the third least represented ethnicity in the county.
Among the four schools in Upton County, McCamey High School, McCamey Middle School, and Rankin School recorded the highest enrollment of Black students, with a total of three.
A recent study by WalletHub classified Texas as one of the least-educated states in the U.S., ranking it 41st out of 50 in educational quality and student outcomes.
Underfunding is a frequently cited challenge facing Texas’ school districts. According to a 2024 report from the Texas Education Agency, per-pupil funding has not increased since 2019, despite inflation rates rising by more than 20% since then.
“As a result, many districts in our very own Central Texas region are being forced to cut back on essential programs, services, consider school closures, and adopt deficit budgets just to provide students with the education that they deserve,” Hutto ISD Trustee James Matlock stated in an interview.
| School name | % Black students | Total enrollment |
|---|---|---|
| Rankin School | 1% | 301 |
| McCamey Primary School | 1% | 197 |
| McCamey High School | 2.1% | 144 |
| McCamey Middle School | 2.1% | 143 |
Information in this article was obtained from the Texas Education Agency. The source data can be found here.



