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Demographics


Child Population, by City, School District and County (10,000 Residents or More): 2007-2011 See Source and Notes

Region Number
United States 74,047,753

Region Number
California 9,303,518
Region Number
Alameda County 339,631
Amador County 6,473
Butte County 46,172
Calaveras County 9,038
Colusa County 6,356
Contra Costa County 259,160
Del Norte County 6,343
El Dorado County 41,496
Fresno County 276,004
Glenn County 7,892
Humboldt County 26,920
Imperial County 50,261
Inyo County 3,986
Kern County 252,072
Kings County 42,256
Lake County 13,843
Lassen County 6,093
Los Angeles County 2,427,831
Madera County 42,650
Marin County 51,785
Mariposa County 3,382
Mendocino County 19,511
Merced County 80,678
Mono County 2,963
Monterey County 110,356
Napa County 31,335
Nevada County 19,295
Orange County 738,138
Placer County 84,378
Plumas County 3,735
Riverside County 616,909
Sacramento County 362,686
San Benito County 16,141
San Bernardino County 598,000
San Diego County 721,299
San Francisco County 107,294
San Joaquin County 200,978
San Luis Obispo County 50,655
San Mateo County 158,182
Santa Barbara County 96,726
Santa Clara County 425,396
Santa Cruz County 55,018
Shasta County 40,201
Siskiyou County 9,276
Solano County 102,270
Sonoma County 106,283
Stanislaus County 148,069
Sutter County 26,055
Tehama County 16,180
Trinity County 2,546
Tulare County 142,404
Tuolumne County 9,922
Ventura County 212,140
Yolo County 44,929
Yuba County 20,968

Definition: Estimated population ages 0-17.

Data Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS). Accessed at http://factfinder2.census.gov (Jan. 2013).

Footnote: Data are displayed for geographies with at least 10,000 people based on 2011 population estimates. These estimates are based on a survey of the population and are subject to both sampling and nonsampling error. N/A means that data are not available. Some regions listed among the cities under the "Choose Counties, Cities and School Districts" menu are Census Designated Places (CDPs), such as East Los Angeles; CDPs are communities within the unincorporated part of a county.

Learn More About this Topic

Measures of Demographics on Kidsdata.org

On kidsdata.org, demographic information includes the following:

Birth Rate per 1,000 Women Ages 15-44 (General Fertility Rate)
Births, by Race/Ethnicity (total number and percentage of births)

Child Population (available for all counties):

by Age and Gender
by Race/Ethnicity (data are not comparable before and after 2000, due to racial classification changes)
by City, School District, and County (65,000 Residents or More), as single-year estimates
by City, School District, and County (20,000 Residents or More), as 3-year estimates
by City, School District, and County (10,000 Residents or More), as 5-year estimates
by Legislative District, as 5-year estimates
by Rural and Urban Areas (State Only)

Public School Enrollment, Overall and by Race/Ethnicity
Total Population

Why This Topic Is Important

Child population trends help project potential needs for education, child care, health care, and other services for children (1). Nationwide, the child population is projected to grow from its current 75 million to about 78 million in 2015 (1). Trends also show that by 2050, Latinos/Hispanics will have replaced White, non-Hispanics as the largest racial/ethnic group of children in the U.S. (1). This is already true in California where, as of 2010, Latino/Hispanic children accounted for 51.6% of children under 18 (2). Understanding the demographic composition of the child population provides important insight into the needs of children today and can guide investments that will best support American youth in the future.

For more information about demographics, see kidsdata.org’s Research & Links section.

Sources for this narrative:

  1. Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics. (2011). America’s children: Key national indicators of well-being, 2011. Retrieved from: http://www.childstats.gov/americaschildren/demo.asp
  2. State of California, Department of Finance. (2010). Estimates of race/ethnic population with age and gender detail, 2000-2010. As cited on www.kidsdata.org, a project of the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health. Retrieved from: http://www.kidsdata.org/data/topic/table/child-population-race.aspx

How Children Are Faring

From 1995 to 2010, the birth rate per 1,000 women ages 15-44 declined in California and most counties. While the total number of children in California increased between 1995 and 2004, the numbers have been declining since then. Children ages 0-17 comprise about a quarter of the state's population; this has decreased from 28.4% in 1995. More than one-fourth (26%) of California's 9.3 million children lived in Los Angeles County in 2011. Orange and San Diego counties had the next largest child populations.

Latino children make up the largest racial/ethnic group among the state’s child population. In 2010, 51.6% of California children were Latino/Hispanic (up from 44.3% in 2000), and 27.3% were white (down from 35.0% in 2000). About 11% of California children were Asian American, 5.7% were African American/Black, 3.8% were Multiracial, 0.4% were American Indian, and 0.4% were Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander in 2010.

Since 1994, the racial/ethnic makeup of the public school population in California has changed. Consistent with child population trends at the state level, African American/Black, American Indian/Alaska Native, and white student representation has been declining, while Hispanic/Latino student representation has been steadily increasing. Between 1994 and 2012, Filipino, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, and Asian/Asian American student representation remained relatively steady.