Figure 1: Toole County, MT At least High School Education![]() |
Figure 2: Toole County, MT Bachelors Degree or Better Education![]() |
---|---|
Figure 3: Advertisement![]() |
Figure 4: Toole County, MT School Dropout Rate![]() |
---|---|
Figure 5: Toole County, MT Education Attainment Breakdown![]() |
Figure 6: Higher Education Attainment (100%=All People with Bachelor or better)![]() |
---|---|
Figure 7: Toole County, MT Bachelors Degrees Field of Study![]() |
---|
Figure 8: Toole County, MT Bachelors Degree Obtained![]() |
---|
Figure 9: Toole County, MT Education Attainment by Level Comparison (Age 25+)![]() |
---|
Figure 10: Toole County, MT Education Attainment Detailed Comparison (Age 25+)![]() |
---|
Figure 11: Toole County, MT Detailed Education Attainment Breakout by Age Group (Age 18+)![]() |
---|
Figure 12: Toole County, MT Detailed Education Attainment Breakout by Race (Age 25+)![]() |
---|
Figure 13: Toole County, MT Detailed Male and Female breakdown of Educational Attainment![]() |
---|
Figure 14: Toole County, MT School Enrollment by Aggregate Categories![]() |
---|
Figure 15: Toole County, MT Overall Public vs. Private School Enrollment![]() |
Figure 16: Toole County, MT Public vs. Private K-8 School Enrollment![]() |
---|---|
Figure 17: Toole County, MT Public vs. Private High School Enrollment![]() |
Figure 18: Toole County, MT Public vs. Private College Enrollment![]() |
---|---|
Figure 19: Toole County, MT Public vs. Private Graduate or Professional School Enrollment![]() |
Figure 20: Toole County, MT Total Enrolled in Schools![]() |
---|---|
Figure 21: Advertisement![]() |
Figure 22: Toole County, MT Public vs. Private Preschool![]() |
---|---|
Figure 23: List of Schools in the Toole County, MT Area (2013)![]() |
---|
Figure 24: Toole County, MT School Enrollment (2013)![]() |
---|
Figure 25: Student to Teacher Ratios (2013) - Low Scores Are Better![]() |
---|
Figure 26: Toole County, MT School Racial Mix (2013)![]() |
---|
Cities marked with an asterisk ("*") should resemble a city or town but do not have their own government (i.e. Mayor, City Council, etc.) These places should be recognizable by the local community but their boundaries have no legal status. Technically these include both Census Designated Places (CDP) and Census County Divisions (CCD) which are defined by the Census Bureau along with local authorities. (For more information, see:
Census Designated Place or "CDP")
and Census County Division "CCD".)
For comparison purposes, the US national average and the state average value are provided. Additionally, the "Combined Statistical Area" or CSA is shown that is closest to the city, county, or zip code shown. A CSA is a large grouping of adjacent metropolitan areas that identified by the Census Bureau based on social and economic ties. (See: Combined Statistical Area) |
Data sources - Mouse over ![]() |