At a recent kids’ concert I saw this flyer from Francis W. Parker School that highlighted its demographic diversity:

That got me curious about the ethnic and racial composition of Chicago’s three elite private schools – Parker in Lincoln Park, UChicago’s Laboratory Schools in Hyde Park, and Latin School of Chicago in the Gold Coast.
These certainly aren’t the only desirable schools in Chicago – some public neighborhood schools (my own kids attend a CPS neighborhood school) and especially selective enrollment programs and parochial schools are also hotly sought-after – but they do seem to be in a class of their own in terms of prestige. The backgrounds of the families sending their kids to these schools can tell us important things about the city’s socio-economic elite (though it’s also the case that plenty of these students attend with financial aid, so not a perfect mapping).
Below is a chart I made comparing Chicago’s ~2020 demographic makeup with the numbers reported by Parker, Lab, and Latin; these are city-wide schools so a city-wide comparison seems like the right starting point. It’s important to note a caveat that how the Census counts these categories may be different than how schools report them [also, no, I don’t know why the Parker flyer offers slightly different data than its website, but I used the latter because it says it’s the 2024-25 student body].
| Chicago | Latin | Lab | Parker | |
| White | 31 | 54 | 39 | 50 |
| Hispanic | 30 | 9 | 5 | 8 |
| Black | 29 | 6 | 9 | 9 |
| Asian | 7 | 15 | 19 | 10 |
| Multi-Racial | 3 | 14 | 19 | 17 |
| Unspecified or other | 2 | 7 | 6 |
For each school, I bolded the categories that are over-represented compared to the all-Chicago averages, and italicized those that are under-represented (they are the same across the schools). Again, there are caveats about possible differences between school and Census measures of identification (plus a couple have a decent % of Unspecified/Declined to Specify/various other categories), but the basic finding feels pretty plausible given what we know about wealth and race/ethnicity in Chicago.
Are the Chicago numbers for the population as a whole, or the school-age population?
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For the population as a whole. A quick Google didn’t give data for this year, but this report (page 16) provides 2018 data (43% Black 43% Hispanic 17% white): https://kidsfirstchicago.org/assets/miscellaneous/2021-K1C-EnrollmentReport-PART1-vFINAL.pdf
As a reference point, CPS enrollment in 2024 is 47% Hispanic, 35% Black, 11% white, 5% Asian.
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