Mahadev Maitri Foundation
US Initiatives
High· 20 schools in district

East High School

500 Tomcat Ln, Aurora, IL 60505Aurora East USD 131
Federal DataRegular SchoolGrades 0912Non-Charter
4,197
Students
Total enrolled
$19,110
Per-Pupil Spend
Nat'l avg $14,347
33% vs nat'l
19.4 : 1
Student:Teacher
Nat'l avg 15.4:1
26% vs nat'l
37/100
Opportunity Score
Neighborhood outcomes
26% vs nat'l
Large public school
Serves 4,197 students in grades 09–12 in Aurora, Illinois.
33% above average funding
District spends $19,110 per pupil, 33% more than the national average of $14,347.
Below-median opportunity
Children from this neighborhood historically reach the 37th income percentile as adults, per Harvard/Census Opportunity Atlas data.
About This School

East High School is a very large high in Aurora, Illinois, serving grades 09–12 with 4,197 students. The district invests $19,110 per student — 33% above the national average of $14,347, with a 19.4:1 student-teacher ratio near the national norm. About 65% of students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch, indicating a mixed-income student body. A neighborhood opportunity score of 37/100 — below the national median of 50 — is worth factoring into a fuller picture of long-term student outcomes.

Student Body & Demographics at East High School

4,197
Total Students
19.4 : 1
Student:Teacher
65%
Free Lunch
217
Teacher FTE
Grade Range
PK
K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Highlighted grades (0912) are served by this school
Gender Distribution2,151 male · 2,046 female
51%
49%
Male 51%Female 49%
Free / Reduced Lunch Eligibility65%
National avg 52% · 2,742 students
Student Composition
89%
Asian1%
White2%
Hispanic / Latino89%
Black7%
Multiracial1%
NCES Common Core of Data · Race/ethnicity self-reported · NCES ID: 170468000143

Academic Outcomes at East High School

Neighborhood Opportunity Score
37
/ 100
Below-median opportunity

Children from modest-income families in this neighborhood reach the 37th income percentile as adults. This school is in the 17th percentile nationally.

0 — Low50 — MedianHigh — 100
Opportunity Atlas (Chetty, Friedman et al., Harvard/Census) · Census tract · ZIP 60505

School Resources & Funding

Per-Pupil Expenditure$19,110Above avg
National avg $14,347
Per-Pupil Spending Comparison
This school
$19,110
State avg
$20,102
National avg
$14,347
How School Funding Is Typically Spent
44%
19%
12%
15%
Instruction$8,408
Student Support$3,631
Administration$2,293
Operations$2,866
Other$1,911
Estimated using national average spending distribution (NCES) · School-level breakdowns not publicly reported
Of the $19,110 spent per student, an estimated $8,466 (~44%) goes directly to classroom instruction.
Where Funding Comes From
60%
20%
State government
60.2%
Local (property tax)
20.0%
Federal programs
19.8%
NCES F-33 Finance Survey · District-level data applied to this school
Strengths & Considerations
Strengths
  • Above-average funding — $19,110/student vs $14,347 nationally
  • Traditional public school — open enrollment, no application process required
Worth Considering
  • Below-median neighborhood opportunity score (37/100) — national median is 50
Strengths and considerations are derived from federal data thresholds — not editorial judgements. See data sources below.
Data Sources & Transparency
Enrollment & Profile
NCES Common Core of Data. Grades, enrollment, demographics, school characteristics. Updated annually.
Funding & Spending
NCES F-33 Finance Survey. District-level spending data. School-level breakdowns are not publicly reported.
Graduation Rate
EDFacts Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rate (ACGR). High schools only. Small cohorts may be range-coded for privacy.
Opportunity Score
Opportunity Atlas (Chetty, Friedman et al., Harvard/Census Bureau). Census tract outcomes for children born in the 1980s.
Fact-Based Rankings
Best-school rankings are computed from federal metrics only — enrollment, per-pupil spending, student-teacher ratio, opportunity score, and graduation rate. No editorial opinion or paid placements.
Equity Data (Coming Soon)
AP access, counselor ratios, and chronic absenteeism from the CRDC will be added in a future update.

Questions to Ask on Your School Visit

Research shows the most important factors are invisible in the data. Here is what to ask when you visit.

High
1
What percentage of students take AP or dual enrollment courses?
Indicates academic rigor and college prep
2
What college counseling and application support is provided?
Ratio of students per counselor matters
3
What career and vocational pathways are offered?
CTE programs, internships, industry partnerships
4
How does the school support students at risk of not graduating?
Credit recovery, attendance intervention
5
What's the school's culture around attendance and behavior?
Discipline approach, restorative practices
6
What happens after graduation — where do students go?
Ask about college, career, military outcomes
7
What does the school do with student performance data?
How data is used to personalize instruction
8
How would you describe teacher retention here?
High turnover can disrupt continuity of learning
9
What's the culture around student diversity and inclusion?
How differences are celebrated and managed

Frequently Asked Questions

About this school and the data on this page

About This Data

All figures on this page come directly from US federal open datasets — NCES Common Core of Data, EDFacts, and the Opportunity Atlas — and we work hard to keep them accurate and up to date. That said, federal data is published on an annual cycle, so some figures may not yet reflect the very latest school-year changes or local updates. We recommend using this page as a helpful starting point and cross-checking with the school or district directly, or visiting the NCES Common Core of Data and ed.gov for the most authoritative figures before making any important decisions.