New York Post

‘Corona’ college gap year

Fewer college-bound

- By MARY KAY LINGE

New federal applicatio­ns for college aid this year have dropped 17 percent from 2019 — sparking fears that coronaviru­s concerns could drive high-school seniors to postpone college or skip it altogether.

The decline, according to an analysis of Department of Education data, builds on a 13 percent drop in freshman college enrollment­s this fall, as colleges switched to pandemic-prompted remote learning — and threatens economic harm to the American secondary-education system that could linger for years.

Only 24 percent of students eligible to apply for the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, have done so, The Wall Street Journal reported Saturday. Last year at this time, 29 percent of high-school seniors had submitted the paperwork, which opens federal, state and other grants and loans to college students.

The decline is even more severe at schools that serve rural, low-income and minority students, the National College Attainment Network found.

College searches and applicatio­ns “are luxuries for a lot of families right now,” said Bill DeBaun, the nonprofit’s director of data and evaluation.

A national survey of potential college students this week found that 36 percent of high-schoolers say they are less likely to pursue higher education than they were before the pandemic hit, Insider Higher Ed reported Thursday.

High-school guidance counselors find themselves scrambling to motivate students through a computer screen.

“If a student doesn’t want to answer a call or show up for a Zoom class, they just don’t have to,” Jeremy Raff, of the Lancaster, Pa., school district, told The Wall Street Journal. “It is so easy to disengage.”

And kids themselves are hearing from peers that remote learning at the college level is no more satisfying than it is in high school.

“My friends who went away to college didn’t like it,” said Kaylin Francoeur, a freshman at a Massachuse­tts community college, who enrolled there because of the pandemic’s uncertaint­y.

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