PR success makes media, students go wild for Paul Smith’s College
Research shows that people with bachelor’s degrees earn significantly more than their former high school classmates, are less prone to depression and divorce and live longer. More college graduates, The Hechinger Report adds, also make for a healthier and more innovative society.
Yet, as NBC News noted, there were four million fewer college students in 2022 than there were 10 years earlier, “a falloff many observers blame on Covid-19, a dip in the number of Americans under 18 and a strong labor market that is sucking young people straight into the workforce.”
PBS reported in 2023 that U.S. college attendance was “on the upswing” until the pandemic reversed decades of progress. Rates fell even as the number of high school graduates grew, “and despite economic upheaval, which typically drives more people into higher education.” The report cited National Student Clearinghouse data indicating U.S. undergraduate college enrollment decreased by 8% between 2019 and 2022, and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data showing that the slide in college attendance since 2018 has been the largest ever recorded. The PBS report added that the slide in college enrollment is likely to worsen labor shortages and decrease people’s lifetime earnings, and it warned: “Economists say the impact could be dire.”
Adding to the challenge was “the recent tumultuous rollout of the new federal financial aid form” used by colleges, which has led to fewer students paying their enrollment deposits.
Meanwhile, the changing climate is altering rainfall, influencing crop yields, affecting human health, impacting forests and other ecosystems and even impacting our energy supply.