WisKids Count

WisKids Count tracks, analyzes, synthesizes, and communicates data about the health and well-being of children and families in Wisconsin. WisKids Count is a part of the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Kids Count project which seeks to enrich local, state and national discussions concerning ways to secure better futures for all children.

The Kids Count Data Center provides access to a wide range on data on indicators of child well-being in Wisconsin. Using the tools in the Data Center, you can easily create a profile of your county or school district. For more information on how to use the Kids Count Data Center, see our instructional presentation.

Decline in Use of Juvenile Detention Levels Off

After steady and significant declines in the use of juvenile detention across Wisconsin, over the past four years we have seen a leveling off in the number of youth held on an average day around the state in our detention centers.  The overall number of admissions declined some in 2012, but the average number on a given day has remained...

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Wisconsin High School Graduation Rate Increases for Third Year in a Row

Nearly nine of out of ten Wisconsin high school students graduated on time last year, a rate that has increased for at least three years in a row. But Wisconsin’s high graduation rate masks a deep disparity between the graduation rates of white and black students. In 2012, 89.5% of Wisconsin’s high school students graduated with a...

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Physicians Take on Eliminating Childhood Poverty

The American Pediatrics Association (APA) and the Academy of American Pediatricians (AAP) has recently issued a Task Force Report on Childhood Poverty: A Strategic Roadmap Committed to Bringing the Voice of Pediatricians to the Most Important Problem Facing Children in the US Today.  This report is a powerful statement about the harmful...

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17-Year-Olds Belong Back in Juvenile Court

As other states around the country in which the age of adult court jurisdiction is lower than 18 are changing, it is time for Wisconsin to use what we have learned over the past seventeen years about adolescent brain development, what works with youthful offenders, and what the research confirms - that we can keep the community safer...

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