A new report found that the number of homeless students in the United States hit a 12-year high during the 2017-18 school year.
The report from the National Center for Homeless Education says more than 1.5 million public school students reported being homeless at some point during that time period.
The director of the center, George Hancock, told The New York Times that the 2017-18 number was more than double the nearly 680,000 homeless students reported in 2004-05.
Using data submitted by states, the report summarizes current trends in the education of students who said they were homeless, even for brief periods of time. That could mean they shared a home with another family or spent a night in a shelter.
Comparing the 2017-18 school year to the 2015-16 school year, researchers found a 15 percent increase in the number of homeless students nationwide.
The report doesn’t offer reasons for the increase, but experts tell The Times that several factors may have contributed to the problem.
Barbara Duffield, the executive director of the nonprofit SchoolHouse Connection, says natural disasters, lack of affordable housing, the opioid epidemic, and fluctuations in economic conditions all could’ve influenced the increase.