Mon
Oct 13 2014
12:17 pm

By nearly one million from 2011 to 2013, the U. S. Census Bureau reports.

Community college enrollment is down most steeply, by about 10%.

Per the Chattanooga Times-Free Press:

An optimistic take is that students have steered away from college to grab jobs that appeared as the economy improved. A more pessimistic view is that the expense of college and specter of student loan debt -- the average college graduate now owes an estimated $33,000 -- has made enrollment shrink.

In an online poll linked to the article, 89% of readers have presently answered that "yes," college has become unaffordable.

DowntownMan's picture

Demographics?

College enrollment is traditionally driven by demographics. I wonder if the number of college age people is falling?

bizgrrl's picture

From the U.S. Bureau College

From the U.S. Bureau

College enrollment declined by close to half a million (463,000) between 2012 and 2013, marking the second year in a row that a drop of this magnitude has occurred. The cumulative two-year drop of 930,000 was larger than any college enrollment drop before the recent recession, according to U.S. Census Bureau statistics from the Current Population Survey released today.

"The drop-off in total college enrollment the last two years follows a period of expansion: between 2006 and 2011, college enrollment grew by 3.2 million,” said Kurt Bauman, chief of the Census Bureau’s Education and Social Stratification Branch. “This level of growth exceeded the total enrollment increase of the previous 10 years combined (2.0 million from 1996 to 2006).”

According to the new statistics, the drop in enrollment was equally divided between older and younger students. Enrollment of students 21 and younger fell by 261,000; the enrollment of students older than 25 fell by 247,000, not statistically different from the change in enrollment of students 21 and younger. Overall, 40 percent of those 18 to 24 were enrolled in college in fall 2013, after having reached 42 percent in 2011.

A large part of the decline took place in two-year colleges (known often as community or junior colleges). Such schools experienced a 10 percent decline in enrollment from 2012 to 2013, while enrollment at four-year colleges grew slightly (1 percent).

Hayduke's picture

Doesn't look like they

Doesn't look like they distinguished between the state universities and community colleges that tend to be worth the money and the for-profit schools that turn out legions of unemployables. A decline in enrollment at the latter would be good news.

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