Hamilton Journal News

Why lack of men on college campuses is a big problem

- Clarence Page is a journalist, syndicated columnist, and senior member of the Chicago Tribune editorial board.

You can learn a lot about social changes by looking at one yardstick in particular: the shifting male-female ratio in college enrollment.

For example, in 1970 men outnumbere­d women on campus, accounting for 57% in four-year institutio­ns and 59% of undergradu­ate enrollment in two-year institutio­ns, according to the nonprofit National Student Clearingho­use Research Center.

A lot of us took that gender imbalance for granted — until 1973 when the Vietnam War drew down, eliminatin­g the reason a lot of my classmates had come to college in the first place.

Still, that gender trend for a few years outlasted the war. By 1980, gender was perfectly balanced in four-year colleges, and women outnumbere­d men in two-year schools, 55% to 45%.

Fast forward to today, and the script is flipped. Men are turning away from higher education at an enormous rate. At the close of the 2020-21 academic year, women made up 59.5% of college students and men 40.5%, an all-time high imbalance.

In that academic year, U.S. colleges and universiti­es had 1.5 million fewer students compared with five years ago, and men accounted for 71% of the decline.

What’s going on? A lot of very smart academicia­ns have been asking

Some experts worry about the broader societal consequenc­es.

what’s causing the trend — and, indeed, whether it’s really a problem at all.

We’ve heard some of these questions before. Are girls receiving preferenti­al treatment in high school while boys are allowed to slip through the cracks? Did recent changes in SAT scoring give an unexpected edge to female test-takers? Are college admissions to blame?

With male enrollment “falling behind remarkably fast,” as one scholar put it, some schools are considerin­g ways to enroll more men. But as much as campuses already face an abundance of touchy issues — including sexual assault, political protests, and racial and gender equity — I don’t expect a lot of attention to be devoted to recruiting more men.

Some experts worry about the broader societal consequenc­es. Scott Galloway, a bestsellin­g author and marketing professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, asserts this gender imbalance is creating what he calls a “mating gap.”

“We have mating inequality in this country,” he said, pointing to the popularity of dating apps such as Tinder that offer users a choice of potential dates by swiping left or right on their smartphone screens.

“Today’s relationsh­ips come from swiping,” Galloway said. “A fourth of men say economic viability is what counts in a mate compared to threefourt­hs of women who say the same.”

Half of dating relationsh­ips begin online, he said, compared to 1 in 4 just a few years ago — and the competitio­n in online self-promotion is stiff. Large numbers just get left out in the cold.

At worst, Galloway said, we’re producing many of “what may be the most dangerous person in the world — the young, broke and alone man.”

At worst, that’s the profile of a mass killer, as we have seen in too many tragic cases.

But troubling cases don’t have to be that extreme to justify more research and other actions, including partnershi­ps with universiti­es and online companies. Universiti­es can develop outreach programs to help students adjust to campus life beyond their screens — and they can inform adult leaders at how much the world of personal communicat­ions has changed.

As one of the Harvard co-authors of a new book called “Behind their Screens: What Teens Are Facing (and Adults Are Missing)” put it, interviewi­ng 3,500 teens “made us rethink our assumption­s.” We could use more of that. Even the smartest academics can’t assume to know what it’s like to be a young person today.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Clarence Page
Clarence Page

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States