The Columbus Dispatch

POST-COVID enrollment stabilizin­g for colleges

Schools in Columbus area saw scant declines

- Sheridan Hendrix

After three years of stunted enrollment from the COVID-19 pandemic, undergradu­ate enrollment at colleges and postsecond­ary institutio­ns locally and nationally is beginning to stabilize, according to a new report released Wednesday.

Greater Columbus colleges and universiti­es saw scant enrollment declines last fall compared to previous semesters, the report showed, and experts say there is hope higher education overall is starting to recover.

According to the report by the National Student Clearingho­use Research Center, undergradu­ate enrollment nationally during the fall 2022 semester saw smaller declines than previous semesters, contractin­g by only about 0.5% or approximat­ely 94,000 students compared to fall 2021. There are about 15 million total enrolled students nationwide at public, private and community colleges and other postsecond­ary institutio­ns.

Overall enrollment, however, remains well below pre-pandemic levels, down about 1.2 million undergradu­ates and 1.1 million total enrolled (both undergradu­ate and graduate combined) compared to fall 2019.

“We found a further decline in the number of undergradu­ate students enrolled in colleges and universiti­es this year, but they were declining at a slower decline than in each of the previous two years,” Doug Shapiro, executive director of the National Student Clearingho­use Research Center, told reporters Wednesday.

Small increases point toward hope in higher ed enrollment

There are bright spots in this enrollment report, which collected data from

more than 3,600 postsecond­ary institutio­ns nationwide.

New freshmen enrollment, for instance, is up compared to fall 2021.

Fall freshman enrollment increased by about 97,000 students, or more than 4%, compared to the previous fall. Freshman enrollment remains down though by about 150,000 students compared to fall 2019.

“It is encouragin­g to start seeing signs of a recovery in the numbers of new freshmen,” Shapiro said. “Although freshmen classes are still well below prepandemi­c levels, especially at community colleges, the fact that they are swinging upward in all sectors is a positive indicator for the future.”

Undergradu­ate enrollment was essentiall­y flat at community colleges (less than a 0.5% increase or 16,700 students) and private nonprofit four-years (a 0.1% decrease or 2,500 students), following the previous year’s declines of nearly 7% and 2%, respective­ly.

Shapiro said there’s been a “notable inversion” when it comes to community college enrollment, which has been troubling higher ed experts with its steep declines during the last few years.

Now, community colleges are seeing a little more growth, thanks in large part to a 12% increase of dual-enrolled high school students.

Public four-year schools saw bigger declines, dropping another 1.4%, or 88,000 students, compared to fall 2021. But that dip was not as bad as the 3% decline those schools saw between fall

2020 and 2021. Private for-profit fouryear schools added 29,000 more students, a 5% increase from fall 2021.

How area colleges fared

Greater Columbus colleges and universiti­es saw small declines this fall compared to previous semesters.

After recording the greatest number of students to its Columbus campus in fall 2021, Ohio State saw about a 2% overall enrollment decline, from 61,677 to 60,540 this fall.

Ohio University, which has seen a major drop in its undergradu­ate enrollment since well before the pandemic, saw small increases in both undergradu­ate

(14,684 students from 14,505) and graduate enrollment (2,194 students from 1,989) compared to last fall.

Enrollment at area private, liberal arts colleges was split last fall.

Denison University and Ohio Wesleyan University saw undergradu­ate enrollment increase 4% and 5%, respective­ly. Meanwhile, Otterbein University and Capital University reported about 6% declines in overall enrollment. (Denison and Ohio Wesleyan do not offer graduate programs.)

Columbus State Community College saw about a 1% gain in undergradu­ate enrollment last fall, from 25,102 students in fall 2021 to 25,272 last semester.

Brent Wilder, Columbus State spokespers­on, said the college is also seeing lots of dual-enrollment high school students, more than the national average. He said the college has seen more than 16% growth, with gains in new and continuing high school students, year over year.

Overall, Midwestern colleges and universiti­es saw fewer students enroll compared to other geographic regions, Shapiro said.

Schools in the Midwest’s undergradu­ate enrollment­s declined at about double the national rate, losing about 34,000 undergradu­ates, or a little more than 1%. Northeaste­rn institutio­ns saw a similar dip, while enrollment grew slightly in the West and the South.

Graduate student enrollment down for first time in two years

Graduate enrollment, on the other hand, fared worse than its undergradu­ate counterpar­ts.

Fall 2022 saw 39,000 fewer graduate students, or a decrease of a little more than 1%. That decline came after two consecutiv­e years of strong growth, 3% in 2020 and more than 2% in 2021.

During times of economic recession and uncertaint­y, it’s common to see people enroll and re-enroll in college to switch careers or get new credential­s. While students didn’t flock back to higher ed the same way they did during the 2008 Great Recession, there was certainly a small pandemic-led influx of grad school enrollment.

Shapiro said that’s likely now over. “We’re now seeing the end of that growth trend at the graduate level,” Shapiro said. shendrix@dispatch.com @sheridan12­0

 ?? BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Ohio University, which has seen a major drop since before the pandemic, saw a small increase in enrollment.
BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Ohio University, which has seen a major drop since before the pandemic, saw a small increase in enrollment.

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