The overall student body in metro Atlanta public schools—including Cobb County schools—has become more diverse over the decade.

In fact, Cobb saw a 15 percent increase of black students enrolled in county schools since 2006.

But how has the Hispanic population changed?

In 2006, 13,422 Hispanic students enrolled in Cobb schools, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Georgia Department of Education.

That's about 12 percent of the student population in 2006.

Ten years later, Hispanic students made up more than 20 percent of the Cobb County student population.

The number of Hispanic students enrolled in the county's schools rose to 22,982 students, a 67 percent increase from 2006.

Cobb's white student population saw a 15 percent decrease since 2006.

» Explore The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's interactive guide to Georgia schools here

Read more:

On a desktop or laptop, hover your cursor over the charts below to explore the shifts in racial makeup, poverty and more across Georgia's student body:

About the Author

Keep Reading

Elementary school students work on Chromebooks in 2022.  District-issued laptops are the subject of a new TikTok trend, where students insert small objects into the computers' USB ports to try to start a fire. (Bob Andres/AJC)

Credit: robert.andres@ajc.com

Featured

The Thanksgiving air travel period is on as passengers made their way through the airport Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. Traveling through Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport during the holidays can be an ordeal. Parking shortages could disrupt your plans and security waits can be long during busy periods, causing bottlenecks. Hartsfield-Jackson is advising travelers to get to the airport at least 2½ hours before their domestic flight and at least 3 hours before their international flight. (John Spink/AJC)

Credit: John Spink