schoolsbycounty

Haskell County Schools & Education

School Score

53/100

Percentile-style score

Score Band

Midrange Signal

Graduation Rate

82.1%

National avg 87.5%

Education Statistics

Graduation Rate

82.1%

National avg 87.5%

State avg 88.7%

Per-Pupil Spending

$10,784

National avg $13,239

State avg $9,009

School Score

53/100

Percentile-style score

State avg 61/100

State Score Position

#76

of 105 counties by score

Education Data Brief: Haskell County

Measured School Summary

Haskell County has midrange measured school signals (score: 53/100) with a graduation rate of 82.1%, which warrants review in official state and district records.

Funding Context

Haskell County spends $10,784 per student, which is on the lower end of adequate and may require careful resource allocation to maintain quality.

Neighbor Context

Its school score is 13% below the Kansas average, and its graduation rate trails the state average by 6.6 percentage points, while per-pupil spending is 20% higher than the state norm.

School Data Brief

How to read Haskell County before comparing districts

County-level education data is best used as a screening layer. It summarizes the local school environment, then points you toward the district and school records that matter for local review.

Local context that changes the interpretation

5 public schools and 2 districts are represented below. Use those school and district records to confirm whether the county-level context fits the neighborhoods you are actually considering.

Overall screen

53/100

Mixed county signal. Ranks #76 of 105 Kansas counties with school score data.

Completion

82.1%

6.6 pts below the state average

Funding context

$10,784

$1,775 above the state average

School coverage

5

2 districts represented in the county school list.

Start with measured county context

This county needs a closer look at district mix, school level, and local context. Compare the score, graduation rate, and spending together rather than treating any single metric as final.

Check the local school mix

Haskell County has 5 public schools across 2 districts, so school-level fit can vary inside the county.

Verify local rules

Use this page as county-level context, then confirm attendance zones, transportation, special programs, and current school boundaries with local districts.

Parent decision brief

What Haskell County school data means before you move

County averages are useful for screening, but parents choose addresses, grade pathways, and district rules. This brief turns the public data into the checks that matter before you sign a lease or mortgage.

Small-system county

Haskell County has a compact public-school footprint. A single school change, boundary rule, or district update can move the lived experience more than the county score suggests.

State position

#76

of 105 Kansas counties with school score data. The county score is 8 points below the state average.

Data confidence

Usable

3 of 5 county signals are present, and 100% of listed schools report enrollment. Compare schools, then verify missing fields locally.

K-12 continuity check

These are the largest visible district slices in the county data. They show whether elementary, middle, and high school records appear together or whether a family needs to investigate transition points.

Sublette

Elementary to high school visible

391 students

Elementary 1Middle 1High 1Other 0

3 listed schools in this county slice.

Satanta

Elementary and high visible

239 students

Elementary 1Middle 0High 1Other 0

2 listed schools in this county slice.

District reality check

Sublette is the largest listed district slice, with 3 schools. County pages do not prove address assignment, so verify boundaries with local district tools.

What the data cannot tell you

NCES records do not confirm current attendance zones, private-school options, transfer approvals, program capacity, transportation, or whether a listed school is available to a specific address.

Questions to ask before choosing an address

Which district actually serves the addresses we are considering in Haskell County?

Do the neighborhoods we like fall inside the same district, or are we comparing different Haskell County district systems?

What changes at the elementary-to-middle and middle-to-high transitions in the district pathway we would likely use?

If we need a program not visible in the NCES flags, which district office can confirm current offerings?

Are the largest listed schools the ones our address can actually attend, or are they only county-level context?

Education Overview

About Schools in Haskell County, Kansas

This context is screened for neutral school-data wording and should be read alongside the current metrics on this page. It is not school advice.

A Small-Scale Rural Education Infrastructure

Haskell County operates five public schools, including two elementary, one middle, and two high schools. Two local districts serve a total of 630 students across the region. This compact infrastructure ensures students stay connected within their local communities.

Sublette and Satanta Lead Local Learning

Sublette is the largest district, managing three schools and educating 391 students. The Satanta district follows with 239 students enrolled in two schools. There are currently no charter schools operating within the county.

Personalized Learning in a Fully Rural Setting

Every school in Haskell County is classified as rural, creating a close-knit learning environment with an average school size of 126 students. Sublette Elementary is the largest campus with 202 students, while Sublette Middle offers an intimate setting of just 58 students. Attending school here feels personal and community-focused.

School Overview

Total Schools

5

in Haskell County

Reported Enrollment

630

5 schools reporting

School Districts

2

districts

Charter Schools

0

0% of total

School Level Breakdown

Elementary2
Middle1
High2
Other0

2 School Districts in Haskell County

Sublette

3 schools
391 students

Satanta

2 schools
239 students

5 Public Schools in Haskell County

Sorted by reported enrollment. Every NCES public school remains listed here; no school-level profile pages are included in the current generated coverage for this county.

NCES 2022-23 public school data and FY 2022 school-finance data

Level

Showing 5 of 5 matching schools

Sublette Elem

Sublette

Sublette, 67877 / Rural: Remote

RecordPK–6Primary202 students

Sublette High

Sublette

Sublette, 67877 / Rural: Remote

Record9–12High131 students

Satanta Jr-Sr High

Satanta

Satanta, 67870 / Rural: Remote

Record6–12High123 students

Satanta Elem

Satanta

Satanta, 67870 / Rural: Remote

RecordPK–5Primary116 students

Sublette Middle

Sublette

Sublette, 67877 / Rural: Remote

Record7–8Middle58 students

Education Funding Detail

Annual Per-Pupil Expenditure

$10,784

State avg $9,009

Compare Nearby Counties

Review Haskell County against other counties using the same NCES-backed metrics.

Open Compare

Browse Public Schools

See school-level enrollment, grade ranges, school type, and district affiliation.

View Schools

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Kansas counties have the highest graduation rates?
Scott County (97.0%), Neosho County (96.6%), and Nemaha County (96.3%) currently lead Kansas among counties with available NCES four-year adjusted cohort graduation-rate data. This answer is generated from the same dataset used in the county table and can change when federal data refreshes.
What is per-pupil spending like in Kansas?
Across Kansas counties with available NCES district-finance data, average per-pupil spending is $9,009. The highest current county values are Elk County ($16,438), Mitchell County ($12,668), and Coffey County ($12,176). Compare counties in the table before treating the statewide average as representative of a local district.
How should I read the school score in Haskell County?
Haskell County has a school score of 53/100, which is a midrange measured signal in this county-level index. This score is calculated from available NCES graduation-rate and school-finance data, with school-level records shown separately below.
What is the graduation rate in Haskell County?
The high school graduation rate in Haskell County is 82.1%, which is below the national average of 87.5%. This figure is based on NCES district-level data for public high schools in the county.
How much does Haskell County spend per student?
Haskell County spends $10,784 per pupil annually on public education, based on NCES district finance data. Current operating spending per fall enrollment, including instruction, support services, administration, transportation, and operations. It excludes capital outlays and debt service in the SchoolsByCounty methodology.

Frequently Asked Questions

Schools in Haskell County, Kansas — FAQ

What does the school system look like in Haskell County, Kansas?

Haskell County operates five public schools, including two elementary, one middle, and two high schools. Two local districts serve a total of 630 students across the region. This compact infrastructure ensures students stay connected within their local communities.

What are the major school districts in Haskell County, Kansas?

Sublette is the largest district, managing three schools and educating 391 students. The Satanta district follows with 239 students enrolled in two schools. There are currently no charter schools operating within the county.

What is the school experience like in Haskell County?

Every school in Haskell County is classified as rural, creating a close-knit learning environment with an average school size of 126 students. Sublette Elementary is the largest campus with 202 students, while Sublette Middle offers an intimate setting of just 58 students. Attending school here feels personal and community-focused.

Counties with Similar School Profile

By Evan Brooks, Data EditorUpdated Reviewed by Evan Brooks, Data Editor

Data Sources

Education data sourced from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) Common Core of Data and School District Finance Survey. School scores are derived composite metrics based on available NCES graduation-rate and school-finance signals.

Data is informational only. Coverage varies by county and reporting year. Not for use as the sole basis for educational decisions.