Education
Related: About this forumCommunity colleges continue major enrollment decline
Community colleges continue major enrollment decline
Large numbers of students left school during the pandemic and never came back
By Nick Anderson
Today at 7:00 a.m. EST
At Northern Virginia Community College, a preliminary fall count of students showed enrollment slid 5 percent since just before the coronavirus pandemic began. At Prince Georges Community College, it fell 10 percent. At Montgomery College, it plunged 19 percent.
These schools, major gateways to higher education in the Washington suburbs, reflect a challenge that has emerged in sharp relief since fall 2019: The public health crisis and economic and social upheaval of the past two years have led to significant enrollment declines at community colleges around the country.
The trend, pronounced last year, deepened in many places in 2021. The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center found nearly 15 percent fewer students at the nations public two-year colleges in the fall compared with two years earlier. That has profound ramifications for the education and career prospects of people from low-to-moderate-income families because these are the nations least expensive colleges, dedicated to open access and social mobility.
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By Nick Anderson
Nick Anderson covers higher education and other education topics for The Washington Post. He has been a writer and editor at The Post since 2005. Twitter https://twitter.com/wpnick
thatdemguy
(522 posts)If this maybe due to people not wanting to pay as much for online schooling. I read about a few colleges during the worse parts of the covid pandemic still charging fees that where associated with in class time. Things like lab fees, when the labs where closed.
madville
(7,456 posts)I encourage young people to look at the trades now, technical college, apprenticeships, etc.
My 24 year old son attended a two-year technical college a few years ago and is an electrician now, makes $36 an hour and with some OT is at around $85k a year with good benefits in a semi-rural area. Their payscale tops out at $45 an hour after just 5 years as well, so with a little overtime its a $100k+ career pretty quickly
jimfields33
(18,837 posts)The plumbers have nicer homes then some college degrees workers. In fact, not some but many. Im thankful my nephew went to trade school and now is an electrician. I dont think college would have worked for him. Now hes doing great. His brothers have school loans that will be with them for decades.
MenloParque
(534 posts)She entered a utility lineman program a few years ago and is now working for a private utility firm that serves rural parts of the western US. She is already making $140k per year with all the overtime she can take or not. Once she hits the managemen track $200s are easily possible. I would say she did very well leaving the Cal State University System. Its hard work but she decided that being s cubicle jockey or office slave was not the right fit for her as an active young women.