National Undergraduate Enrollment Falls Again in 2021
Undergraduate enrollment dropped again in 2021, adding to a marked drop in student participation in Higher Education in the last few years.
Student enrollment at colleges fell once again in the fall, a new report has found, prompting some to worry whether the declines experienced during the pandemic could become an enduring trend.
The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center on Thursday said undergraduate enrollment in fall 2021 dropped 3.1 percent, or by 465,300 students, compared with a year earlier. The drop is similar to that of the previous fall, and contributes to a 6.6 percent decline in undergraduate enrollment since 2019.
That means more than 1 million students have gone missing from higher education in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Clearinghouse.
Even as campuses have largely reopened and returned to some semblance of normalcy, people are not pursuing credentials at the same rate as before. Experts worry that the unabating declines signal a shift in attitudes about higher education and could threaten the economic trajectory of a generation.
“The longer this continues, the more it starts to build its own momentum as a cultural shift and not just a short-term effect of the of the pandemic disruptions,” Doug Shapiro, executive director of the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, said in an interview. “Students are questioning the value of college. They may be looking at friends who graduated last year or the year before who didn’t go and they seem to be doing fine. They’re working; their wages are up.”
Job openings are at near record highs, and the lure of what many economists say is a job seekers’ market may be siphoning off would-be students, especially adult learners. Indeed, one of the sharpest enrollment declines this fall was among people 24 and older, particularly at four-year colleges, according to Clearinghouse data.
The number of associate-degree-seeking students enrolled at four-year institutions plummeted in the fall, down 11 percent from a year ago. The drop was less severe at community colleges, where the decline in head counts was 3.4 percent.
Community colleges at a crossroads: Enrollment is plummeting, but political clout is growing
Still, public two-year colleges remain the hardest-hit sector since the start of the pandemic, with enrollment down 13.2 percent since 2019. Leaders of community colleges have said some of their students struggled to pivot online at the start of the health crisis because of spotty Internet access, while others took a step back from school because of family obligations.
Because community colleges educate a large share of students from low-to-moderate-income families, higher education experts worry a continuation of enrollment declines could erode their earnings potential. Shapiro is broadly concerned that tepid enrollment throughout higher education will impact the nation for years to come.
“There’s a great deal at stake,” he said. “We have to get students back on track, re-engage them.”
There are some promising signs in the data. Freshman enrollment stabilized in fall 2021 following a precipitous decline the previous year, even though it remains 9.2 percent lower compared with pre-pandemic levels. Private nonprofit four-year colleges are driving the increase in enrollment, with an increase of 11,600 students, according to Clearinghouse data.
Only four states — Arizona, Colorado, New Hampshire and South Carolina — witnessed an increase in total fall enrollment. Head counts at colleges and universities in Maryland fell 5 percent, largely driven by depressed enrollment at community colleges. The same trend prevailed in Virginia, where total fall enrollment dipped 1.2 percent because of public two-year schools.
Quickly! Add more HR requirements for the good jobs!Report
IIRC, there was supposed to be a demographic cliff for colleges in the 2020s because “Gen Z” is a bit of a population bust. Here is an article from 2019 on it: https://www.cupahr.org/issue/feature/higher-ed-enrollment-cliff/
COVID could be an accelerator or it could be something that goes away in a few years. It is also a bit of a broad statement to state that colleges faced a decline as opposed to certain ones did. I think any college or university which can be describe as semi-elite or above is still doing fine and dandy in terms of applications and enrollment.Report
“The semi-elites and elites are doing just fine” strikes me as having an unstable equilibrium.Report
Seems like that is super stable mode of society that has functioned quite well in many places for hundreds of years. Whether that is good is different thing and i generally don’t think it is. But elites and semi’s having power is like the most stable thing ever.Report
The thing you have to remember about Jaybird is that he hates bougie Democrats above all others.Report
Was it yesterday you were complaining that people were going to personally attack you? The day before? And did anyone actually attack you?Report
you pointed to about 75 institutions nationwide, less than 2% of all four year institutions (and 1.4% of all institutions, including 2 year programs). of course schools with billion dollar endowments are going to be ok! no one is worried about those yutzes, they’re too busy rolling around in money to care.
everyone else (meaning literally everyone else) is gonna have more issues with this, though demographics (as i noted below) is only one part of the puzzle. but it is not a minor piece, and in the long term it is the most important driver.Report
Well, then. I guess this is nothing more than a regression to the mean.
(To be honest, I see this as a correction (if not a solution) to a problem rather than a problem in and of itself.)Report
Beats me but people sure the system is just about to crash have about 99,9999% record of being wrong. Sure that .0001 was sweet but our system is both f’d up in many ways some of which we would even agree on and very very stable.Report
I’m not saying it’s about to crash.
I *WILL* say that I think that we will move from “everybody in the semi-elite to the elite is still doing okay” to “most of the people in the mostly-elite are doing okay (except for the slackers) and all of the elite are still just as well off as they’ve ever been”.
And if that’s not a problem, then that’s not a problem.Report
According to Census estimates, there were 4.26 million 18-year-olds in 2019, and every single-year cohort below that until 10 had a population of at least 4.14 million. So demographics could explain a small part of the decline, but only about 150,000 cumulative for 2020-2021. It seems that the actual decline has been on the order of one million.Report
“Student enrollment at colleges fell once again in the fall, a new report has found, prompting some to worry whether the declines experienced during the pandemic could become an enduring trend.”
Why are they worried?
“That means more than 1 million students have gone missing from higher education in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Clearinghouse.”
Oh no… where did they go?! Is this like that show where people just suddenly disappeared one day? Will they pop up out of no where in 7 years or whatever?Report
This is one of those articles that would benefit greatly by exploring cause. ‘Apparent statistic’ plus ‘heavily invested person’s (panicked) reaction’ isn’t particularly informative.
Edit: if it’s really ‘the economy is just so good’ then it seems like something to celebrate.Report
I would have assumed a drop this big from just overseas students alone.Report
I went to my undergraduate school’s (a fly-over state R1 resident research school) reporting pages. Overall they were down by 2%. International students were down more than 13%.Report
Yeah, I agree. Also need long term data because I think enrollment declines were occurring since the Great Recession enrollment bump.
On the other hand, surveys last fall had more than one-third of college students cancelling college, and a similar number of high school seniors saying they would defer or cancel college if it was on-line. I would think there would be some time-shifting which would have led to some increased enrollment this Fall.Report
it’s always neat when something comes up on this site i actually know a lot about!
we have longterm data, my duderinos (i dunno how many links they’ll let me include here). a whole buttload (technical term)
this is a good starting point, if keeping in mind that institutions vary heavily in terms of the impact they face.
knocking.wiche.edu/public-hsgs-covid-19/
anyway, nathan de grawe’s book “demographics and the demand for higher education” is a really good resource if you’re very interested into getting to the weeds on what the next ten years look like (spoiler: kinda rough!)
and yes, birthrates aren’t everything right now, but in the longterm they are. trump hastened the eventual dearth of international recruitment (inevitable, but he sped up the process by 5-10 years) which removed the last avenue to external recruitment growth.Report
That is truly fascinating, thank you for sharing.Report
Agreed. Higher ed is searingly overdue for a massive fiscal crisis. If enrollment plunges because the economy is so good people can get jobs without jumping through higher eds hoops and higher ed then crashes into a wall that’s win win.Report
well, it’ll work itself out, a lot of college faculty will quit over pandemic frustrations before enrollment drops low enough for them to be fired. I will say a lot of our students seem awfully burned out and disconnected.
this is probably my horrible week talking – I have more students sick or quarantining now (first week of the semester AFTER vaccines became widely available) than any other time in the pandemic. Fully 1/3 of my students are either sick, quarantining, or on “can attend but required to mask” status, meaning exposed-but-five-days-post-exposure-without-symptoms
I don’t know what the answer is. Shuttering every university except the elite ones isn’t good. Going to a “mostly online education for the proles” isn’t a good solution. Maybe there are no good solutions. (And maybe I should keep taking career aptitude tests to see if I hit on something that seems like a reasonable career switch for someone over fifty and without a lot of desire to do a whole new education)Report
There is a good solution, but about 30% of people prefer this situation you describe.Report
apropos of funding and “elite” schools via jon b:
https://twitter.com/JonBoeckenstedt/status/1482026899387797505?t=tyPk5S5WO1ARJ-VrF2rwKQ&s=09
tl;dr it’s pretty much what you’d expect
(pitzer doesn’t gap so they eat more of their ntr than their selectivity peers)
the entire thread is worth a read. jon does neat visualizations along these lines from time to time.Report