Classroom Ratios, Rosters, and Rooms: Capacity Planning for Your Program

The Bead Team

4/21/2026

#program-management#planning#volunteers
Classroom Ratios, Rosters, and Rooms: Capacity Planning for Your Program

Every fall the same puzzle: enrollment numbers land, the volunteer list lands, the building has the rooms it has, and somehow it all has to fit. Here's how experienced coordinators approach capacity planning — and how to see the problem coming in July instead of discovering it in September.

Start with ratios, not rooms

Adult-to-child ratios are the constraint everything else serves. Common working figures (check your own tradition's and insurer's requirements — they govern):

Age groupTypical ratioPractical class max
Preschool1:510 with two adults
K–2nd grade1:814–16 with two adults
3rd–5th grade1:1016–20 with two adults
Middle school1:1220–24 with two adults
High school1:15larger groups workable

Remember the two-adult rule from our child safety guide: every class needs two screened adults regardless of size, which means your minimum staffing is two per class, not one.

The planning sequence

  1. Get enrollment by grade early. This is the strongest argument for online registration with a live count (see our registration guide) — capacity planning in August requires knowing in July that 2nd grade doubled.
  2. Derive classes from ratios. Twenty-seven 2nd graders at a 16-child practical max means two classes, which means four adults.
  3. Recruit to the gap, specifically. "We need one more 2nd-grade teacher and two aides" out-recruits "we need volunteers." Our recruitment ideas work best with a specific ask.
  4. Assign rooms last. Rooms are the most flexible constraint — furniture moves, hallways get creative. Ratios and screening don't flex.

When the numbers don't work

Every coordinator faces the year the volunteers don't materialize. In rough order of preference:

  • Combine adjacent grades (3rd–4th together) rather than exceeding ratios
  • Shift a grade to a different time slot where you have adult coverage
  • Cap enrollment with a waitlist — painful, but more honest than an unsafe classroom
  • Never solve it by quietly running one adult per room

Rosters are the deliverable

Planning ends when every teacher holds an accurate roster: names, allergies, emergency contacts, authorized pickups. If your rosters are re-typed from registration forms, that's two chances for errors in your highest-stakes data.

In Bead, registration flows straight into class rosters — live enrollment counts by grade while you plan, and every teacher gets a current roster with the safety details on their phone. Bead is free for congregation education programs. Not a trial. Create your free workspace.