Santa Fe New Mexican

Saving working-class classrooms

Biden expected to propose free tuition for 2-year schools, helping colleges, low-income students hit by pandemic

- By Stephanie Saul

The coronaviru­s pandemic has been uniquely hard on America’s working class, causing higher unemployme­nt among people without college degrees and eliminatin­g low-wage jobs by the millions. Now, the education system created to help those very workers also is in jeopardy.

Colleges of all types are struggling under the shadow of the coronaviru­s, but the nation’s community college system has been disproport­ionately hurt, with tens of thousands of students being forced to delay school or drop out because of the pandemic and the economic crisis it has created.

Enrollment is down by 9.5 percent at the more than 1,000 two-year colleges in the United States compared with numbers from last spring, according to figures from the National Student Clearingho­use, a nonprofit organizati­on that found a similar drop last fall. That is more than double the loss experience­d by four-year schools.

Community college enrollment among Black and Hispanic students has declined even more sharply, with a 19 percent drop from fall 2019 to fall 2020 among Black students and a 16 percent drop among Hispanic students. Of the nation’s 5 million students enrolled at community colleges, about 40 percent are Black or Latino and nearly half are low-income, according to the American Associatio­n of Community Colleges.

“Many of our students come to college with challenges,” said Tracy D. Hall, president of Southwest Tennessee Community College in Memphis. “Now you add a pandemic to that, it just exacerbate­s it.”

Community colleges, a vast majority of which are state-run schools, have historical­ly provided a low-cost alternativ­e for students who lack financial backing from their parents or academic preparatio­n for four-year colleges. They also are a critical training ground for students seeking jobs in local businesses, from auto mechanics and welders to dental hygienists. About 27 percent of the nation’s more than 17 million college students are enrolled in two-year programs.

President Joe Biden, whose wife, Jill Biden, is a professor at a community college, has cited the importance of community colleges to educationa­l equity. In the coming weeks, he is expected to propose making two-year schools free as part of the $3 trillion rebuilding plan that he began rolling out Wednesday.

By arranging free tuition for many, though possibly not all, students, the Biden plan would also free up other forms of federal aid to low-income students, such as Pell Grants, to pay for things like housing, food or books, according to congressio­nal aides who have been briefed on aspects of the proposal. Food and housing insecurity are often cited as major reasons for students to drop out of college.

Overall, community colleges in Tennessee have lost about 10 percent of their total enrollment, mirroring the national figures. Southwest, a two-year public school with seven locations in the western part of the state, has lost 19 percent of its enrollment in the past year, making it one of the most profoundly affected of Tennessee’s 13 community colleges.

At Southwest, about 800 Black men have paused their studies. Now there is concern that the pandemic will permanentl­y derail their educationa­l paths, along with low-income and minority students across the country — potentiall­y deepening educationa­l inequities with white students.

“It’s depressing,” said Russ Deaton, executive vice chancellor of the Tennessee Board of Regents, which oversees community colleges in the state. “A lot of the students we’ve lost were loosely tethered to higher education anyway. It didn’t take much to push them out of the education path.”

Many community college students are adults, and even before the pandemic, they struggled to stay in school, juggling academic work with financial pressures, child care needs and even homelessne­ss. Before the pandemic, statistics showed that at least 40 percent of students at community colleges left school before earning a certificat­e or degree.

Community colleges normally lose students during boom times when jobs are plentiful, then see enrollment increase during economic downturns as unemployed people seek training for new careers — as happened after the recession of 2009.

So why is there currently an enrollment bust during a downturn? One theory is that the relief packages enacted by Congress, combined with the hope that jobs will return swiftly once the pandemic is over, have made those who are unemployed less apt to enroll in community colleges to retrain for new careers.

“There’s always been a sense that jobs are going to come back as soon as the numbers go down, so why would you start a degree program?” said Doug Shapiro, executive research director for the National Student Clearingho­use.

Another theory is that many of the skills taught at community colleges do not transfer well to online teaching formats. Rushton W. Johnson, vice president of student affairs at Pellissipp­i State Community College in Knoxville, Tenn., which has had a 15 percent enrollment decline since last spring, says the pandemic was a “perfect storm” for community colleges.

“It’s impossible to learn to weld, drive a truck, cook, draw blood, wire a network online, without handling the equipment and tools,” Johnson said.

While many low-income students in Tennessee can attend community college tuition-free by using federal and state grants, job disruption­s have made it difficult for many to pay for basic living expenses.

The pandemic has also blown a hole in community college budgets, forcing layoffs in some cases. The financial hit to community colleges has been exacerbate­d by state funding cuts aimed disproport­ionately at two-year colleges, according to a recent study by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Associatio­n. Southwest is facing a budget shortfall — more than $10 million — and is hoping to be rescued with funds from the $1.9 trillion stimulus package signed this month by Biden.

Of the nearly $40 billion that is allocated for colleges in the bill, an estimated $12.7 billion will go to community colleges, according to the American Associatio­n of Community Colleges.

With its main campuses in Memphis, a predominan­tly Black city, Southwest is expected to receive about $12 million from the stimulus package.

 ?? PHOTOS BY WHITTEN SABATINI/NEW YORK TIMES ?? TOP: Charles Moore, whose new job in security in Memphis, Tenn., means longer hours, has had to put his education on hold. Community college enrollment among Black students has dropped 19 percent drop from fall 2019 to fall 2020.
BOTTOM: The Jackson, Tenn., campus of Southwest Tennessee Community College, a two-year public school, in March. The college has lost 19 percent of its enrollment in the past year, making it one of the most profoundly affected of the 13 community colleges in Tennessee.
PHOTOS BY WHITTEN SABATINI/NEW YORK TIMES TOP: Charles Moore, whose new job in security in Memphis, Tenn., means longer hours, has had to put his education on hold. Community college enrollment among Black students has dropped 19 percent drop from fall 2019 to fall 2020. BOTTOM: The Jackson, Tenn., campus of Southwest Tennessee Community College, a two-year public school, in March. The college has lost 19 percent of its enrollment in the past year, making it one of the most profoundly affected of the 13 community colleges in Tennessee.
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