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Fewer Students Are Going To College. Here's Why That Matters


Muda69

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https://www.npr.org/2019/12/16/787909495/fewer-students-are-going-to-college-heres-why-that-matters

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This fall, there were nearly 250,000 fewer students enrolled in college than a year ago, according to new numbers out Monday from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, which tracks college enrollment by student.

"That's a lot of students that we're losing," says Doug Shapiro, who leads the research center at the Clearinghouse.

And this year isn't the first time this has happened. Over the past eight years, college enrollment nationwide has fallen about 11%. Every sector — public state schools, community colleges, for-profits and private liberal arts schools — has felt the decline, though it has been especially painful for small private colleges, where, in some cases, institutions have been forced to close.

"We're in a crisis right now, and it's a complicated one," says Angel Pérez, who oversees enrollment at Trinity College, a small liberal arts school in Hartford, Conn.

Why is this happening?

The biggest factor for the years of decline is the strong economy. The last time U.S. college enrollment went up was 2011, at the tail end of the recession. As the economy gets better, unemployment goes down — it's currently at 3.5 % — and more people leave college, or postpone it, and head to work.

When the recession hit a decade ago, the reverse happened: Many people, especially older adults, returned to college. That bump in college enrollment set records, and in some ways the current downturn is simply "colleges returning to more historic levels of enrollment," Shapiro says.

U.S. demographics are also shifting. The number of high school graduates is flat — and in some cases declining — because of lower birth rates about 20 years ago. Those numbers are also projected to decline, so the trend of fewer students coming from high school isn't going away anytime soon.

And finally, there's the cost of college. States are putting less money into higher education, and that's led to an increased reliance on tuition. As tuition goes up, and grants and scholarships don't keep pace, that's pushed the cost of college down to students and their families. Without state investment, institutions are strapped, and so are American families.

These factors — and the data that support them — find their way into Pérez's meetings with the budget team at Trinity College. "Decreasing demographics, a decreasing ability to pay and an increasing lack of desire to pay from the people who can afford it" are the things that keep him up at night, worrying he may not fill his freshman class.

Even families who are able to afford higher education are starting to ask themselves whether the cost is worth it. "All of it becomes the perfect storm," he says.

....

Boo-hoo.  Colleges have been sucking up that sweet, sweet free government money, in the form of student loans,  for decades now in order to hire more administrative workers than teaching staff and to turn campuses into veritable Taj Maha'ls with ambitious building projects that cost hundreds of millions.   And now it's time to pay the piper.

 

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18 hours ago, Muda69 said:

https://www.npr.org/2019/12/16/787909495/fewer-students-are-going-to-college-heres-why-that-matters

Boo-hoo.  Colleges have been sucking up that sweet, sweet free government money, in the form of student loans,  for decades now in order to hire more administrative workers than teaching staff and to turn campuses into veritable Taj Maha'ls with ambitious building projects that cost hundreds of millions.   And now it's time to pay the piper.

 

Law schools were the canary in the coal mine.

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