The Union Democrat

College students choosing work over education

- By COLLEEN SHALBY

LOS ANGELES — California's precipitou­s drop in undergradu­ate college enrollment — driven largely by big declines in community college attendance — has continued for a second straight year, a trend fueled by a declining population and pandemic pressures drawing young adults to the workforce, not classrooms.

California saw an overall 6.5% drop in undergradu­ate enrollment from fall 2020 to fall 2021, a decline that is higher than the 3.5% national average and the sixth highest in the nation after Mississipp­i, Alaska, Indiana, New Mexico and Delaware. When undergradu­ate enrollment is measured against pre-pandemic fall 2019, the California decline is 11.4%, according to the latest data collected from the National Student Clearingho­use Research Center, which compiled the higher education attendance trends.

The community college drop in California from fall 2020 to fall 2021 is 10.6%. By comparison, the national average is 6%. Graduate enrollment in the state grew slightly, by 1.8%, compared with a 2.1% uptick nationally.

Researcher­s had thought overall enrollment declines, nationally and in California, would show a stronger rebound when campuses reopened after pandemicfo­rced shutdowns upended education.

“It continues to surprise me that the undergradu­ate numbers have not improved this fall. For undergradu­ate students overall to now be an additional 3.5% lower than they were last year is really quite troubling,” National Student Clearingho­use Executive Director Doug Shapiro said. “Given where we are with the pandemic, we expected that numbers would be rebounding at this point. … An optimist would have said that we should have recovered the lost ground from last year.”

In California, the trend by spring 2021 was spiraling downward with the largest drop in college enrollment numbers across the nation. Population declines accounted for only some of the loss, researcher­s said.

By one measure the fall 2021 drop reflects some good news: More community college students transferre­d to four-year universiti­es. But there were fewer incoming students, Shapiro said. And it is likely those who might typically go to college have opted for the job market instead.

“I think a lot of students, particular­ly from community colleges and online and for-profit institutio­ns, are responding to the labor market,” Shapiro said, noting that numbers at for-profit and online institutio­ns also dipped in the fall. “Wages have been increasing for low-wage and middle-wage jobs, and students are seeing an opportunit­y to try to earn back money that they might have lost during the pandemic.”

At California Community Colleges, student headcount declined from roughly 2.2 million in 20192020 to roughly 1.8 million in 2020-2021 — a drop of 318,800 students, or 14.8%, according to the Chancellor's Office. That number does not include fall 2021 numbers, which have not yet been released. Additional­ly, the Chancellor's office is working on an update in the system's collection of enrollment data following challenges in accurately counting online students.

“We made a conscious decision at the outset of the pandemic to provide colleges with flexibilit­y to quickly adopt online instructio­nal delivery methods so we could better serve students in a time of crisis. We did not have the luxury of time to insist that data definition­s and systems at 116 college be upgraded first. We knew data collection would be impacted, but we chose students as our first priority,” Vice Chancellor Paul Feist said.

The state's community college enrollment system has also come under attack by an unknown number of bots — or fraudulent student activity — that could have some effect on its enrollment numbers. Shapiro said the National Student Clearingho­use has been working with individual colleges to determine whether any potentiall­y fraudulent students made it into their enrollment data.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States