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College and the demographics cliff

dixiehack

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2002
Messages
39,177
We talked about this a bit in another thread, but there is about to be a sharp drop off in high school graduates thanks to the lower birth rates from the time of the recession at the close of the 2000s.

A lot more stories like this in the years to come.

https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/l...ester/95-ded59e15-51e5-4638-84ec-529621b4c29b

The bill to close three of Mississippi's public universities isn't going anywhere, but eventually some of these schools will get the ax.

https://mississippitoday.org/2024/0...universities-says-it-has-slim-chance-to-pash/
 
If only there was a way we could get replacement students. Like if we call ourselves the Shining City on a Hill, and welcome people from other countries. Their kids could go to college.
 
We talked about this a bit in another thread, but there is about to be a sharp drop off in high school graduates thanks to the lower birth rates from the time of the recession at the close of the 2000s.

A lot more stories like this in the years to come.

https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/l...ester/95-ded59e15-51e5-4638-84ec-529621b4c29b

The bill to close three of Mississippi's public universities isn't going anywhere, but eventually some of these schools will get the ax.

https://mississippitoday.org/2024/0...universities-says-it-has-slim-chance-to-pash/
New England has as a lot of small colleges. A lot have or will close in the next few years.

This download has a collection of articles about the subject.

https://www.neacac.org/ashets/docs/Committees/Tough times for New England higher ed.pdf

It started before the pandemic as enrollment was already falling. This from August 2020.

Fighting for Survival | The Plight of Small New England Colleges

small colleges like it, tightly woven into the history and culture of New England as in no other part of the United States, have been uniquely vulnerable to demographics, economics, and technology, among the other changes that have left many fighting for survival—now including a pandemic that is vastly worsening their already grave financial and enrollment troubles.
 
New England has as a lot of small colleges. A lot have or will close in the next few years.

New England, which has seen zero population growth due to NIMBYism. You want young people, you have to give them a place to live. Connecticut is down tens of thousands of new housing units. Vermont is the same way. I'm
Sure Mashachusetts is similar.
 
It's a reason I think unemployment will remain relatively low even in downturns in this new era.
 
We lost a 93-year-old college in 2019. Several colleges in Vermont have shuttered the last 5 years.
 
I left my university gig two years ago and the anxiety over this was already considerable. Many state schools increasingly count on out-of-state students paying full freight and when there's fewer of them, yikes.
 
I teach at a private R1, and it received more applications for next year than ever before. Administration is worried about the upcoming demographic shift, but it hasn't hit us yet.
 

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