Daily News (Los Angeles)

College enrollment down even as pandemic ebbs

- By Stephanie Saul The New York Times

NEW YORK » The ongoing enrollment crisis at U.S. colleges and universiti­es deepened in spring 2022, raising concerns that a fundamenta­l shift is taking place in attitudes toward the value of a college degree — even as the coronaviru­s pandemic has disrupted operations for higher education.

The latest college enrollment figures released Thursday by the National Student Clearingho­use Research Center indicated that 662,000 fewer students enrolled in undergradu­ate programs in spring 2022 than a year earlier, a decline of 4.7%. Graduate and profession­al student enrollment, which had been a bright spot during the pandemic, also declined 1% from last year.

Doug Shapiro, the center’s executive director, noted small gains in firstyear, first-time students. However, he suggested that the numbers and the breadth of the declines indicate an underlying change, as students question whether college is the ticket to the middle class and a good-paying job.

“That suggests it’s more than just the pandemic to me; it’s more than just low-income communitie­s that are primarily served by community colleges,” Shapiro said during a conference call with reporters. “It suggests that there’s a broader question about the value of college and particular­ly concerns about student debt and paying for college and potential labor market returns.”

Prospectiv­e college students may be weighing the relative value of jobs that require or expect a college degree against equally attractive opportunit­ies that do not, he said.

Overall, total undergradu­ate enrollment has dropped by nearly 1.4 million — or 9.4% — during the pandemic. When the pandemic emerged in spring 2020, many colleges moved to online instructio­n, and some students did not report to campus at all, changes that considerab­ly altered the traditiona­l college experience.

Even before the pandemic, though, college enrollment had been dropping nationally, with institutio­ns of higher learning buffeted by demographi­c changes, as the number of college-age students leveled off, as well as questions about student debt. A highly polarizing immigratio­n debate also drove away internatio­nal students.

While elite colleges and universiti­es have continued to attract an overflow of applicants, the pandemic has been devastatin­g for many public universiti­es, particular­ly community colleges, which serve many low- and moderate-income students.

Declines occurred generally across the country but were slightly more pronounced in the Midwest and Northeast.

In a report this week, officials in Tennessee said that the percentage of public high school graduates who enrolled in college immediatel­y after high school had dropped from 63.8% in 2017 to 52.8% in 2021.

Overall, enrollment at public colleges and universiti­es declined by more than 604,000 students in spring 2022, or 5%. Within the public sector, community colleges dropped the most, losing 351,000 students or 7.8%.

All told, community colleges around the country have lost 827,000 students since the pandemic began in spring 2020, according to the figures released by the research center. It collects and analyzes data from more than 3,600 postsecond­ary institutio­ns for industry use.

In what Shapiro called possible signs of a “nascent recovery,” first-time, first-year enrollment increased in spring 2022 by 13,700 students, or 4.2%, over last spring.

“It really remains to be seen whether this will translate into a larger freshman recovery in the fall,” Shapiro said.

The increase did not extend to Black students, according to a special demographi­c analysis by the clearingho­use, which found that Black freshman enrollment declined by 6.5%, or 2,600 students. In total, there were 8,400 fewer Black freshmen than in 2020. In releasing its figures, Tennessee’s commission also cited what it called “notable disparitie­s” between Black and Hispanic students and white students.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A sculpture stands outside the front door of the veterinary school at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colo.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A sculpture stands outside the front door of the veterinary school at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States