Business Spring Numbers Show 'Dramatic' Drop In College Enrollment - Zoomers catch on to Scam

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Overall enrollment in undergraduate and graduate programs has been trending downward since around 2012.

Undergraduate college enrollment fell again this spring, down nearly 5% from a year ago. That means 727,000 fewer students, according to new data from the National Student Clearinghouse.

"That's really dramatic," says Doug Shapiro, who leads the clearinghouse's research center. Fall enrollment numbers had indicated things were bad, with a 3.6% undergraduate decline compared with a year earlier, but experts were waiting to see if those students who held off in the fall would enroll in the spring. That didn't appear to happen.

It's really the end of a truly frightening year for higher education. There will be no easy fixes or quick bounce backs.

"Despite all kinds of hopes and expectations that things would get better, they've only gotten worse in the spring," Shapiro says. "It's really the end of a truly frightening year for higher education. There will be no easy fixes or quick bounce backs."

Overall enrollment in undergraduate and graduate programs has been trending downward since around 2012, and that was true again this spring, which saw a 3.5% decline — seven times worse than the drop from spring 2019 to spring 2020.

The National Student Clearinghouse attributed that decline entirely to undergraduates across all sectors, including for-profit colleges. Community colleges, which often enroll more low-income students and students of color, remained hardest hit by far, making up more than 65% of the total undergraduate enrollment losses this spring. On average, U.S. community colleges saw an enrollment drop of 9.5%, which translates to 476,000 fewer students.

Undergraduate college enrollment fell again this spring, down nearly 5% from a year ago. That means 727,000 fewer students, according to new data from the National Student Clearinghouse.

"That's really dramatic," says Doug Shapiro, who leads the clearinghouse's research center. Fall enrollment numbers had indicated things were bad, with a 3.6% undergraduate decline compared with a year earlier, but experts were waiting to see if those students who held off in the fall would enroll in the spring. That didn't appear to happen.

It's really the end of a truly frightening year for higher education. There will be no easy fixes or quick bounce backs.
Doug Shapiro, National Student Clearinghouse
"Despite all kinds of hopes and expectations that things would get better, they've only gotten worse in the spring," Shapiro says. "It's really the end of a truly frightening year for higher education. There will be no easy fixes or quick bounce backs."

Overall enrollment in undergraduate and graduate programs has been trending downward since around 2012, and that was true again this spring, which saw a 3.5% decline — seven times worse than the drop from spring 2019 to spring 2020.

The National Student Clearinghouse attributed that decline entirely to undergraduates across all sectors, including for-profit colleges. Community colleges, which often enroll more low-income students and students of color, remained hardest hit by far, making up more than 65% of the total undergraduate enrollment losses this spring. On average, U.S. community colleges saw an enrollment drop of 9.5%, which translates to 476,000 fewer students.

"The enrollment landscape has completely shifted and changed, as though an earthquake has hit the ground," says Heidi Aldes, dean of enrollment management at Minneapolis College, a community college in Minnesota. She says her college's fall 2020 enrollment was down about 8% from the previous year, and spring 2021 enrollment was down about 11%.

"Less students are getting an education"

Based on her conversations with students, Aldes attributes the enrollment decline to a number of factors, including being online, the "pandemic paralysis" community members felt when COVID-19 first hit, and the financial situations families found themselves in.

"Many folks felt like they couldn't afford to not work and so couldn't afford to go to school and lose that full-time income," Aldes says. "There was so much uncertainty and unpredictability."

A disproportionately high number of students of color withdrew or decided to delay their educational goals, she says, adding to equity gaps that already exist in the Minneapolis area.

"Sure, there is a fiscal impact to the college, but that isn't where my brain goes," Aldes says. "There's a decline, which means there are less students getting an education. That is the tragedy, that less students are getting an education, because we know how important education is to a successful future."

To help increase enrollment, her team is reaching out to the high school classes of 2020 and 2021, and they're contacting students who previously applied or previously enrolled and stopped attending. She says she's hopeful the college's in-person offerings — which now make up nearly 45% of its classes — will entice students to come back, and appeal to those who aren't interested in online courses. So far, enrollment numbers for fall 2021 are up by 1%. "We are climbing back," she says.

A widening divide

Despite overall enrollment declines nationally, graduate program enrollments were up by more than 120,000 students this spring. That means there are more students who already have college degrees earning more credentials, while, at the other end of the spectrum, students at the beginning of their higher ed careers are opting out — a grim picture of a widening gap in America.

"It's kind of the educational equivalent of the rich getting richer," Shapiro says. "Those gaps in education and skills will be baked into our economy, and those families' lives, for years to come."

It's kind of the educational equivalent of the rich getting richer. Those gaps in education and skills will be baked into our economy, and those families' lives, for years to come.
Doug Shapiro, National Student Clearinghouse
The value of a college degree — and its impact on earning power and recession resilience — has only been reinforced by the pandemic. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans with a college degree were more likely to stay employed during the pandemic, and if they did lose a job, they were more likely to get hired again. Unemployment rates were higher for those without a degree or credential beyond high school.

"Almost all of the income gains and the employment gains for the last decade have gone to people with higher education degrees and credentials," Shapiro says. "Those who are getting squeezed out of college today, especially at community colleges, are just getting further and further away from being able to enjoy some of those benefits."

In the National Student Clearinghouse data, traditional college students, those 18 to 24, were the largest age group missing from undergraduate programs. That includes many students from the high school class of 2020, who graduated at the beginning of the pandemic. Additional research from the clearinghouse shows a 6.8% decline in college-going rates among the class of 2020 compared with the class of 2019 — that's more than four times the decline between the classes of 2018 and 2019. College-going rates were worse for students at high-poverty high schools, which saw declines of more than 11%.

For communities and organizations tasked with helping high school graduates transition and succeed in college, the job this year is exponentially harder. Students have always struggled to attend college: "It's not new to us," says Nazy Zargarpour, who leads the Pomona Regional Learning Collaborative, which helps Southern California high school students enroll and graduate from college. "But this year, it's on steroids because of COVID."​


Her organization is offering one-on-one outreach to students to help them enroll or re-enroll in college. As part of that effort, Zargarpour and her colleagues conducted research to help them understand why students didn't go on to college during the pandemic.

"Students told us that it's a variety of things, including a lot of just life challenges," she says. "Families being disrupted because of lack of work, families being disrupted because of the challenges of the illness itself, students having to take care of their young siblings, challenges with technology."

The biggest question now: Will those students return to college? Experts say the further students get from their high school graduations, the less likely they are to enroll, because life gets in the way. But Zargarpour says she is hopeful.

"It will take a little bit of time for us to catch up to normal and better, but my heart can't bear to say all hope is lost for any student ever."
e Enrollment Plummets For 1st-Year Students
"The enrollment landscape has completely shifted and changed, as though an earthquake has hit the ground," says Heidi Aldes, dean of enrollment management at Minneapolis College, a community college in Minnesota. She says her college's fall 2020 enrollment was down about 8% from the previous year, and spring 2021 enrollment was down about 11%.

Based on her conversations with students, Aldes attributes the enrollment decline to a number of factors, including being online, the "pandemic paralysis" community members felt when COVID-19 first hit, and the financial situations families found themselves in.

"Many folks felt like they couldn't afford to not work and so couldn't afford to go to school and lose that full-time income," Aldes says. "There was so much uncertainty and unpredictability."

A disproportionately high number of students of color withdrew or decided to delay their educational goals, she says, adding to equity gaps that already exist in the Minneapolis area.

"Sure, there is a fiscal impact to the college, but that isn't where my brain goes," Aldes says. "There's a decline, which means there are less students getting an education. That is the tragedy, that less students are getting an education, because we know how important education is to a successful future."

To help increase enrollment, her team is reaching out to the high school classes of 2020 and 2021, and they're contacting students who previously applied or previously enrolled and stopped attending. She says she's hopeful the college's in-person offerings — which now make up nearly 45% of its classes — will entice students to come back, and appeal to those who aren't interested in online courses. So far, enrollment numbers for fall 2021 are up by 1%. "We are climbing back," she says.

Despite overall enrollment declines nationally, graduate program enrollments were up by more than 120,000 students this spring. That means there are more students who already have college degrees earning more credentials, while, at the other end of the spectrum, students at the beginning of their higher ed careers are opting out — a grim picture of a widening gap in America.

"It's kind of the educational equivalent of the rich getting richer," Shapiro says. "Those gaps in education and skills will be baked into our economy, and those families' lives, for years to come."

It's kind of the educational equivalent of the rich getting richer. Those gaps in education and skills will be baked into our economy, and those families' lives, for years to come.

The value of a college degree — and its impact on earning power and recession resilience — has only been reinforced by the pandemic. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans with a college degree were more likely to stay employed during the pandemic, and if they did lose a job, they were more likely to get hired again. Unemployment rates were higher for those without a degree or credential beyond high school.

"Almost all of the income gains and the employment gains for the last decade have gone to people with higher education degrees and credentials," Shapiro says. "Those who are getting squeezed out of college today, especially at community colleges, are just getting further and further away from being able to enjoy some of those benefits."

In the National Student Clearinghouse data, traditional college students, those 18 to 24, were the largest age group missing from undergraduate programs. That includes many students from the high school class of 2020, who graduated at the beginning of the pandemic. Additional research from the clearinghouse shows a 6.8% decline in college-going rates among the class of 2020 compared with the class of 2019 — that's more than four times the decline between the classes of 2018 and 2019. College-going rates were worse for students at high-poverty high schools, which saw declines of more than 11%.

Her organization is offering one-on-one outreach to students to help them enroll or re-enroll in college. As part of that effort, Zargarpour and her colleagues conducted research to help them understand why students didn't go on to college during the pandemic.

"Students told us that it's a variety of things, including a lot of just life challenges," she says. "Families being disrupted because of lack of work, families being disrupted because of the challenges of the illness itself, students having to take care of their young siblings, challenges with technology."

The biggest question now: Will those students return to college? Experts say the further students get from their high school graduations, the less likely they are to enroll, because life gets in the way. But Zargarpour says she is hopeful.

"It will take a little bit of time for us to catch up to normal and better, but my heart can't bear to say all hope is lost for any student ever."

Less students are getting an education

*Fewer
 
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I think this is really the end of a truly frightening year for higher education. There will be no easy fixes or quick bounce backs, fellow Kiwis.
 
Gee I can't imagine why, it's almost like anyone with a brain would go to tech school where you can spend 1/10th of the price to learn something like elevator repair and earn 70k a year while having no debt instead of getting a worthless degree in yakub studies.
You want to fix the education system? Replace high school with a 4 year tech school. Name something you learned in high school that is useful in your daily life, you can't. High School as well as college is a scam.
 
And after everything, the article is STILL pushing the bs about how you absolutely have to get a degree or you and your family will be poor forever. Unbelievable.
 
And after everything, the article is STILL pushing the bs about how you absolutely have to get a degree or you and your family will be poor forever. Unbelievable.
They seriously say "college is too expensive to be worth the investment" and "you need to go to college to get a job" in the same article.
 
The repetition in OP had me thinking I was about to suffer a stroke.

I like that the institutions apparently don't question what they could do to improve the situation they care so much about. It's not about the money, it's about the education, right? Then slash the stuff no one enrolls in and the bureaucracy along with it. A lot of those courses are completely useless.
Nope! Reach out more and no doubt fearmonger to get those kids in debt and enrolled! Family having a rough time, gotta take care of kids? Well you're going to live in destitution if you don't get a degree right now!!!!

If you ask most people why they don't go to school, it's because of money. No one seems to be working to fix that problem at these universities and colleges, though.
 
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It's really the end of a truly frightening year for higher education. There will be no easy fixes or quick bounce backs.
Music to my ears.
Those gaps in education and skills will be baked into our economy, and those families' lives, for years to come.
Oh no, whatever will we do without more people being indoctrinated into progressivism! Fuck off.
 
The repetition in OP had me thinking I was about to suffer a stroke.
I did fuck it up, but there are a lot of very repetitious paragraphs, too, to the point that I kept getting confused about what I had duplicated. So I gave up.
 
[BoOmEr AlErT!!!] Higher education baffles me in some ways. Uneducated parents tell their kids they need to go to college, meanwhile these parents know nothing about the system of higher education. These kids then go to college and think "ok I'm here!" and end up floating in the system, wasting money or accumulating debt because they never thought to make/map their goals BEFORE wasting money. Some of those kids drop out, others get a worthless degree that only feeds back into the college system if they're savvy enough to get teaching qualifications. Then, in the US, those teachers with worthless degrees get paid shit to teach their worthless subjects. Amazing how college is trying to become it's own self-sustaining ecosystem.

Wouldn't be surprised if the cunts who write these kinds of articles are paid by some college boards.
 
Doesn't say much right now IMO, a lot of the stats in the past 24 months are due to post-secondary shifting online and potential students not wanting to pay for what are glorified Youtube education videos and no chance at the party life. If the current trend continues after unis and colleges fully reopen then it's time to bust out the popcorn and marshmallows because a lot of post-secondary staff will get to experience the life of the average private sector employee.

With that said, however:
They will hang onto those programs for dear life and will shortchange engineering programs first.

This is already happening. In my neck of the woods government has started slashing post-secondary subsidies so the affected schools have spiked tuition for engineering and medical programs by over 50%. Admittedly due to the heavy foreign student enrollment in these programs mind you (Pajeets at least know which side the bread is buttered on), but it's still incredibly pathetic.
 
When you force students into stare at a computer screen to get the same education that they would get if they were in a classroom, it starts to make you think about the actual worth of this freaking education.

Ironically, Covid is starting to being a pain to the elite's side very soon. I can imagine them backtracking and saying it magically disappeared and for students to get back in classes to get brainwashed like before.
Yeah, the schools were always showing off their fancy student unions (including ones for every race and creed except for white), their fancy dorms, and all the other pretty expensive shit they build to explain why fees and tuition goes up every year.

And then you have the students who don't get to use any of those things, yet still has to pay the fees as though they're there. I'd wonder how absolutely braindead the ones still signing up for zoom meetings are.
 
This is already happening. In my neck of the woods government has started slashing post-secondary subsidies so the affected schools have spiked tuition for engineering and medical programs by over 50%. Admittedly due to the heavy foreign student enrollment in these programs mind you (Pajeets at least know which side the bread is buttered on), but it's still incredibly pathetic.
When I was in undergrad about 15 years ago, they slapped a $500 engineering fee because they said engineering programs were more expensive to maintain, which is true.

I usually ignore alumni shit but a couple years ago I read a newsletter where they bragged about opening a second coffee bar in a building and a stunning and brave lecture about queers in STEM. For laughs, I checked out what this engineering fee was at and it was $1,500. Then there was some other incomprehensible engineering fee of $250. Then last year I got calls about this exciting new fund dedicated to black engineering students. Mo money fo dem programz n sheit.

STEM has been pozzed for a while now.
 
There is a correlation between level of patriotism or American pride and college graduates compared to high school graduates.
 
To help increase enrollment, her team is reaching out to the high school classes of 2020 and 2021, and they're contacting students who previously applied or previously enrolled and stopped attending.
This sounds familiar... How's Mizzou doing nowadays?

I did fuck it up, but there are a lot of very repetitious paragraphs, too, to the point that I kept getting confused about what I had duplicated. So I gave up.
It's like giving up on finishing your final paper and just taking what you can get rather than risk the late penalty.
 
Higher education bail out when? It's a ridiculous concept, but we live in ridiculous times.

That's basically student loan cancellation, which would come on the onus of the taxpayer and not the universities. In theory they could forgive student loans and not fuck over taxpayers directly by collecting from the universities themselves, but there's too many lobbyists to prevent that.
 
This sounds familiar... How's Mizzou doing nowadays?
They lost a 6 (or 7) figure amount of money a year in terms of alumni donations and a couple of rich boomers wrote them out of their will. Enrollment was fucked the year or two after.

Not as funny as Evergreen where enrollment keeps getting lower and lower year after year and they've laid off quite a bit of staff even back in 2019. I can't wait to see how bad enrollment is at Evergreen this year.
 
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