Headline News

Colleges Have Been a Small-Town Lifeline. What Happens as They Shrink?

For decades, institutions of higher education provided steady, well-paid jobs in small towns where the industrial base was waning. But the tide of young people finishing high school is now also starting to recede, creating a stark new reality for colleges and universities — and the communities that grew up around them. As Americans have fewer children and a diminishing share of young adults pursue a degree, the once-burgeoning market for college slots has kicked into reverse. Although undergraduate enrollment stabilized somewhat in 2022, it’s still down about 7.6 percent since 2019.
 
Read Full Article

More news from NAICU

  • What’s Next for Colleges After Judge Vacates Biden’s Title IX Rule
  • College Tuition Has Fallen Significantly at Many Schools
  • Soaring Tuition is Making College Unaffordable. We Can Fix This. - Commentary
  • December Brings Late Round of Job, Program Cuts
  • Ed Department Changes Reporting Requirements for Online Colleges
  • Are Colleges Ready for the New Anti-Hazing Law?
  • Back to Article Overview