Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Navigating a new education landscape

Most Pittsburgh-area small colleges are watching their student population­s fall

- Maddie Aiken

Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia’s small colleges are hurting. An analysis by the Post-Gazette found that over four-fifths of small, private institutio­ns in the region experience­d overall enrollment declines between fall 2013 and fall 2022.

Of the private schools that have experience­d enrollment drops, some lost just small fractions of their student bodies.

Others have watched upward of 37% of their student bodies diminish over the past decade.

Enrollment challenges have also hit Penn State’s regional commonweal­th campuses and the University of Pittsburgh’s Greensburg campus, where enrollment­s fell anywhere between 21% and 50% in a decade.

Institutio­ns with enrollment­s of under 5,000 total students were included in the analysis. Colleges’ fall 2022 numbers were analyzed, as the Department of Education has yet to release fall 2023 enrollment data, and most of the schools have not individual­ly released these data.

While small colleges that are selective and have reasonable endowments can likely weather challenges, other schools are at risk — particular­ly those with a larger share of first-generation students and Pell Grant recipients, said Joni Finney, an education consultant and the former director of the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Institute for Research on Higher Education.

Ms. Finney believes that, to attract more students, institutio­ns need to “show the public” that their educationa­l opportunit­ies are worth it. In part, this can be completed through student and community cooperatio­n, she said.

“Small institutio­ns can revitalize the local communitie­s around them,” Ms. Finney said. “[They should put] students in positions at different companies and have them [complete] internship­s, or [offer]

structured internship­s on campus through student work.”

As small colleges navigate an everchangi­ng higher education landscape, it could be key for many of these institutio­ns to rethink and reform the ways that they recruit students.

Which schools have seen enrollment decreases?

Of 13 small, private colleges and universiti­es in the region, only two saw their overall enrollment­s increase between fall 2013 and fall 2022.

Those universiti­es were Chatham University, which had a 10% enrollment increase during that time frame (from 2,170 students to 2,387), and La Roche University, which saw a 40% spike (from 1,481 students to 2,068).

Both of those schools underwent transforma­tional changes in the 2010s. Chatham, a former women’s college, began enrolling men in 2015, while La Roche achieved university status in 2019. That helped the Catholic school support a growing student population and new academic programs, university officials said at the time.

The remaining 11 colleges and universiti­es saw their student population­s fall during that decade.

While some enrollment­s dwindled moderately, others plummeted.

Waynesburg University, Robert Morris University and Allegheny College experience­d the most dramatic declines: Each saw their student population­s fall about 37%.

Robert Morris had over 5,400 students in fall 2013. In fall 2022, it enrolled 3,431 students, according to Department of Education data.

Meanwhile, Waynesburg saw its student population fall from nearly 2,200 students to 1,366, and Allegheny College’s enrollment dropped from over 2,100 students to 1,353.

Other enrollment declines occurred at Geneva College (33% enrollment decrease between 2013 and 2022), Carlow University (30% decrease), Seton Hill University (16% decrease), Saint Vincent College (15% decrease), Point Park University (14% decrease), Washington & Jefferson College (13% decrease), Westminste­r College (11% decrease) and Grove City College (7% decrease).

It’s worth noting that enrollment at

Carlow and Grove City remained stable over the last five years. Carlow’s enrollment increased slightly, by 1%, from 2,076 students to 2,104 in fall 2022. The Catholic university reported an enrollment uptick in the fall with over 2,300 total students.

Grove City’s enrollment decreased slightly, by 0.9%, in five years. The Christian college enrolled 2,338 students in fall 2018 and 2,316 in fall 2022.

Enrollment declines are also occurring at local Penn State commonweal­th campuses and the University of Pittsburgh’s Greensburg campus.

Penn State Shenango and Penn State Fayette watched their enrollment­s drop by about half during the 2013-22 time frame. Shenango enrolled 281 students in fall 2022, while Fayette enrolled 424. (Shenango did see an 18% increase in students in fall 2023, for a total of 332 students.)

Other commonweal­th campus enrollment declines were 42% at Penn State Greater Allegheny (363 students enrolled in fall 2022), 32% at Penn State New Kensington (460 students enrolled) and 26% at Penn State Beaver (522 students enrolled).

At Pitt-Greensburg, enrollment fell 21% between 2013 and 2022, from 1,677 students to 1,328.

How can these colleges attract more students?

Experts have attributed these enrollment drops to a variety of factors, including rising tuition costs, dwindling trust in higher education and a drop in the college-aged population in northeaste­rn states.

Alooming demographi­c cliff exacerbate­s concerns for both private and public institutio­ns. The number of traditiona­l-age college students is expected to peak by 2026, and then steeply decline. In Pennsylvan­ia, the share of younger residents has already diminished­faster than 46 other states.

Because of this, attracting older students could be key for these institutio­ns. A January report by National Student Clearingho­use in part attributed nationwide increases in fall 2023 freshman enrollment to a 6% boost in freshmen aged 21 or older.

Jennifer Causey, a senior research associate with National Student Clearingho­use, said that, based on these data,

““Could [colleges] be working more closely with local community colleges to improve transfer pipelines? How can [colleges] make transfer pipelines more efficient in order to help ease that process?” Jennifer Causey senior research associate with National Student Clearingho­use

schools might want to consider targeting older students through methods like revamping pipelines from community colleges to four-year institutio­ns.

“Could [colleges] be working more closely with local community colleges to improve transfer pipelines? How can [colleges] make transfer pipelines more efficient in order to help ease that process?” Ms. Causey said. “It’s not necessaril­y trying to go and grab older students per se. Technicall­y you are, but it’s not as if you’re just trying to grab them from the freshman standpoint.”

That National Student Clearingho­use report also found that, nationally, enrollment at private, nonprofit colleges and universiti­es increased slightly, by 0.6%, between 2022 and 2023. Those data accounted for bothlarge and small institutio­ns.

But in the Keystone State, enrollment at all private, nonprofit institutio­ns slightly decreased, with a 0.1% decline in students.

“This growth is more of a national trend,” Ms. Causey said. “Pennsylvan­ia is seeing a littlebit of a slightly different story.”

To maintain the health of private colleges and universiti­es, Barbara Mistick, president of the National Associatio­n of Independen­t Colleges and Universiti­es, said it’s important to ensure these schools are affordable.

NAICU, which has over 1,000 institutio­n members, works to ensure aid is directed toward students, rather than institutio­ns, so students can choose the “best institutio­n” for them, Ms. Mistick said.

And, from a recruitmen­t perspectiv­e, Ms. Mistick believes it’s important for small schools to differenti­ate themselves from other institutio­ns. That could mitigate environmen­tal challenges like the demographi­c cliff, she said.

“The institutio­ns that I see that are successful have a very well-defined mission and they have a very well-defined market,” Ms. Mistick said. “They know what they’re good at, they recruit students that are interested inthose subjects and they recruit broadly.”

 ?? Lucy Schaly/Post-Gazette ?? Robert Morris University students walk through campus on Monday, Aug. 28, 2023. This fall, officials said enrollment was up 20% from last year. Over the past decade, the school’s enrollment fell 37%.
Lucy Schaly/Post-Gazette Robert Morris University students walk through campus on Monday, Aug. 28, 2023. This fall, officials said enrollment was up 20% from last year. Over the past decade, the school’s enrollment fell 37%.
 ?? Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ?? The number of traditiona­l-age college students is expected to peak by 2026.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette The number of traditiona­l-age college students is expected to peak by 2026.
 ?? Benjamin B. Braun/Post-Gazette ?? La Roche University saw a 40% spike in overall enrollment­s increase between fall 2013 and fall 2022.
Benjamin B. Braun/Post-Gazette La Roche University saw a 40% spike in overall enrollment­s increase between fall 2013 and fall 2022.

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