More

Jump In U.S. College Enrollment Highest In 40 Years

HOPE YEN   06/16/10 02:02 PM ET   AP

College Enrollment

WASHINGTON — The nation's colleges are attracting record numbers of new students as more Hispanics finish high school and young adults opt to pursue a higher education rather than languish in a weak job market.

A study released Wednesday by the Pew Research Center highlights the growing diversity in higher education amid debate over the role of race in college admissions and controversy over Arizona's new ban on ethnic studies in public schools.

Newly released government figures show that freshman enrollment surged 6 percent in 2008 to a record 2.6 million, mostly due to rising minority enrollment. That is the highest increase since 1968 during the height of the Vietnam War, when young adults who attended college could avoid the military draft.

Almost three-quarters of the freshman increases in 2008 were minorities, of which the largest share was Hispanics.

The enrollment increases were clustered mostly at community colleges, trade schools, and large public universities, which tend to have more open admissions policies and charge less tuition. Still, the gains in minorities were seen at almost all levels of higher education, with white enrollment dipping to 53 percent at community colleges and 62 percent at four-year colleges.

Preliminary government data show freshman college enrollment continued rising in 2009 to fresh highs, but demographic breakdowns were not yet available.

"The nation is moving beyond whether minorities have access to post-secondary education," said Richard Fry, a senior researcher at Pew who wrote the report. "The question increasingly is not 'which youth go beyond high school?' but 'who goes where?'"

California, the District of Columbia, Arizona, Alabama and Nevada had the largest freshman enrollment increases in 2008, with gains ranging from 11 percent to 21 percent. States registering declines included Minnesota, Nebraska, Delaware and Oklahoma, which dropped as much as 5 percent.

Demographers say much of the college enrollment gains reflect the nation's rapidly changing demographics, in which 43 percent of all students in K-12 are now minority. But the recession, too, is adding to the increases as more high school graduates – primarily Hispanics – enroll immediately in college rather than take their chances in the labor force.

Among the findings:

_Freshman enrollment of Hispanics in higher education jumped by 15 percent in 2008, compared to 8 percent for blacks, 6 percent for Asians and 3 percent for whites.

_The share of 18- to 24-year-olds who earned a high school diploma reached an all-time high of 85 percent, up from 84 percent in 2007. Among Asians, the number was 92 percent, whites 90 percent, blacks 79 percent and Hispanics 70 percent.

_Colleges showing the largest freshmen increases included Fresno City College in California, jumping 448 percent to 2,998 students; Arizona State University, rising 21 percent to 8,458; and American Public University System in West Virginia, increasing 332 percent to 121 students.

The findings add to the burgeoning debate over the role of race in America amid a steady rise in the minority population that is expected to make them the new American majority by mid-century. In Arizona, Gov. Jan Brewer last month signed a measure banning ethnic studies courses in public schools if they serve to promote racial solidarity or are designed primarily for students of a particular race.

Several minority groups have praised Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan, who as solicitor general authorized the filing of a brief by the Justice Department defending the constitutionality of the University of Texas' affirmative action program that considers race in undergraduate admissions. The case, still pending, is expected to be appealed to the Supreme Court.

Fry noted that minority enrollment appeared to be concentrated in the "basic tiers" of higher education, such as community colleges and trade schools. It is not clear whether gains occurred in more selective four-year colleges, which often use affirmative action to promote diversity.

In addition, while Hispanics have seen recent gains in college enrollment, they still lag overall. Hispanics make up roughly 12 percent of full-time undergraduate and graduate students, compared to their 16 percent representation in the total U.S. population.

"These findings are only half reassuring," Fry said. "Many Hispanic teens still are not graduating high school, and the high school gains may not be sustained when the teen labor market revives. It also remains to be seen how many of these additional minority freshmen will actually complete degrees."

Pew, an independent research group, based its findings on 2008 data from the Census Bureau and the Education Department. The figures for "white" refer to those whites who are not of Hispanic ethnicity.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST COLLEGE

Filed by Leah Finnegan  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 81
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Democommon Sense
06:30 AM on 06/18/2010
So when all this Hispanics graduate and are more socially educated, more likely to vote, and more likely to lean liberal because of education. How will the GOP backtrack its record of racism?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Democommon Sense
06:33 AM on 06/18/2010
this=these ugg damn you 3am!
10:24 AM on 06/17/2010
More bad news for Gen Y: More students going in to college and less jobs coming out of college. Word to the wise, look into sites that help you stand out from the crowd and represent yourself in a professional manner. BeyondCredentials.com was the one that helped me.
04:31 AM on 06/17/2010
When the economy busts colleges always do well. Unfortunately that also comes at the same time when they're usually the most cash starved.

This just means it's the biggest bust in the last 40 years. Which sounds about right.
03:07 AM on 06/17/2010
"Almost three-quarters of the freshman increases in 2008 were minorities, of which the largest share was Hispanics."

I smell another debt bubble.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
lisakaz2
Da ministero dell'interno di Snark.
02:50 AM on 06/17/2010
Of course there is. If ppl can avoid this disastrous job market, they'll do it. Of course here's the corollary -- who is teaching these students? The academic job market has never been worse imo. I got one letter about a one yr job that claimed to have nearly 100 applicants (1 job, 1 yr only) then another who didn't give a number, just said there were more highly qualified applicants than they could interview. Getting a job isn't far removed from getting struck by lightning.

So academia is cutting corners here.
04:19 AM on 06/17/2010
Anyone who can, is applying for jobs with any measure of job security. What better than applying in academia with its safe ivory towers and that ultimate golden carrot at the front of the stick, tenture. Everyone else is going for a state / gov job and those are obviously not hiring unless your a census worker or volunteering to be shipped to the eastern front meat grinder in afghanistan..
04:34 AM on 06/17/2010
I don't think you understand how tenure works in higher education. Don't confuse that world with K-12. We have the finest higher education in the world because we retain the best research scientists and publishers in the world.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
lisakaz2
Da ministero dell'interno di Snark.
12:11 PM on 06/17/2010
This was a one year UNTENURED position. About 100 ppl applied for a job with NO security outside the one year.
04:35 AM on 06/17/2010
100 applicants for a tenured R1 position is pretty normal. 30 of those will be well qualified though. And even fewer will stick out enough to get past the firing squad. A&H will be more than that, sciences far less.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
lisakaz2
Da ministero dell'interno di Snark.
12:11 PM on 06/17/2010
This was untenured, visiting asst prof or lecturer.
01:35 AM on 06/17/2010
We're turning into 19th century Russia. There's nothing life having a huge population of educated serfs. In order to be a successful serf you must hold onto your job-without actually doing much work. Lying to your boss at every opportunity is essential. Reading is very important too. You must be a well of useless information in order to keep your employer confused but at the same time, they might have a tiny bit of respect for you. Maybe.
There are worse things than being a serf so it is what it is.......
01:06 AM on 06/17/2010
Keep piling on the debt. Fools.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
lisakaz2
Da ministero dell'interno di Snark.
02:52 AM on 06/17/2010
No, it's avoiding the job market. The debt isn't real and they figure, maybe they can remain students long enough so that when they're ready for it, the market will have more jobs.
04:21 AM on 06/17/2010
I've had those same thoughts myself in weighing options for a career change in this current climate, so what you are saying certainly sounds plausible.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Senseid
01:00 AM on 06/17/2010
It is one thing to start college, it is another thing to graduate and find a better job because of college.

Not finishing college with thousands in dollars of student loans and no diploma is worse than not going in the first place.
11:38 PM on 06/16/2010
No waitress without a 4-year degree by 2012!
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
11:34 PM on 06/16/2010
With the draconian cutbacks in K-12 education funding, a high percentage of an entire generation of high school graduates will be poorly prepared for college and/or the job market.

Also, high school graduation rates will drop.

The economy (and tax revenues) will suffer.

Penny wise and pound foolish federal budgeting.
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
11:32 PM on 06/16/2010
"and young adults opt to pursue a higher education rather than languish in a weak job market." and some older adults too.
blogisti
Approved Knowledge Only
08:19 PM on 06/16/2010
It's a good thing Republicans can't read. If they ever found out that minorities were attending post secondary institutions in record numbers they would close them all down.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jasel
Nurse
08:11 PM on 06/16/2010
Welcome to the Debt Express!! Taking ALL passengers!!! I say ALLL passengers!!
04:45 PM on 06/16/2010
With no jobs out there, it's a good time to go (back) to school.
04:48 PM on 06/16/2010
Yeah then when you graduate you'll have to dump down your accomplishments just to work at Taco Bell.
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
11:35 PM on 06/16/2010
And use your Taco Bell earnings to pay off $60K in college loans.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gfs5541
04:45 PM on 06/16/2010
Let's be honest: Of course more people are going to college. There's no jobs out there! Moreover, if you're dirt poor, you can get a Pell Grant plus other gents like the Federal Supplemental Education Opportunity Grants or FSEOG. This is not out of being lazy, this is from "I don't want to be on the street" mindset.

However, it's not like it's easy to be in school. Far from it. At times, school can be several times worse than having a job, because you are in effect training for a job with a set of undetermined and I'll-defined skills, hence that's why the universities and colleges hate setting up "career tracking". It's no use trying to get a certain degree if there's not any demand for any locked skill set.