February 15, 2023
Flagships Prosper, While Regionals Suffer
Some key numbers are moving in the right direction at the University of Oregon. The flagship institution enrolled 5,338 freshmen in the fall of 2022, its largest entering class ever. First-year enrollment increased 16 percent over 2021, which was also a record year. Meanwhile, Western Oregon University, a regional public institution an hour’s drive north, just outside Salem, lost nearly 7 percent of its enrollment over the same period.
The good times/bad times dynamic is playing out elsewhere in the state, with total enrollment since 2010 at Oregon’s regional public colleges down more than 18 percent, while it’s up more than 17 percent at the state’s flagships. In 28 states, flagships have seen enrollment rise between 2010 to 2021, while regionals have trended down, according to a Chronicle analysis of U.S. Education Department data. Across all states, enrollment at 78 public flagships rose 12.3 percent from 2010 to 2021, the most recent year for which data is available.
The good times/bad times dynamic is playing out elsewhere in the state, with total enrollment since 2010 at Oregon’s regional public colleges down more than 18 percent, while it’s up more than 17 percent at the state’s flagships. In 28 states, flagships have seen enrollment rise between 2010 to 2021, while regionals have trended down, according to a Chronicle analysis of U.S. Education Department data. Across all states, enrollment at 78 public flagships rose 12.3 percent from 2010 to 2021, the most recent year for which data is available.