Colleges across America face a daunting challenge: Their student head count has shrunk more than 5 percent since 2019, according to a national estimate, as debate over the value of higher education intensified during the public health crisis and economic tumult.
That’s an enrollment loss of nearly 1 million students. Some drifted out of college, while others never started. Many colleges are on an urgent quest to keep current students and recover their lost freshmen.
At stake are not only the education and career prospects of huge numbers of young adults, but also the financial health of regional colleges and universities. Once students leave, they often don’t return. Gap years can become permanent.
“How do we get these people to come back — especially in a strong job market?” asked Courtney Brown, a vice president with the Lumina Foundation, based in Indianapolis, which promotes learning beyond high school. Privileged universities are weathering the upheaval, Brown said. “It’s everybody else that is hurting.”
The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, which produced the national estimate of enrollment decline, found acute troubles in several states since fall 2019. In Pennsylvania, public university enrollment fell 12 percent, and community college enrollment plunged 23 percent.
Pandemic enrollment drops
In 24 states, the number of public university students declined at least 4 percent from fall 2019 to fall 2021.
Vermont | 17,293 | −15 |
---|---|---|
Alaska | 18,693 | −14 |
Michigan | 243,471 | −13 |
New Mexico | 51,679 | −12 |
Pennsylvania | 219,113 | −12 |
New Hampshire | 23,002 | −8 |
New York | 347,600 | −7 |
Iowa | 67,834 | −7 |
Kansas | 86,720 | −7 |
Arkansas | 83,766 | −6 |
New Jersey | 169,166 | −6 |
Idaho | 42,380 | −6 |
Nevada | 90,812 | −6 |
Texas | 668,881 | −5 |
Connecticut | 58,161 | −5 |
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