Many of those who didn’t enroll or complete degrees say college was too expensive — but they also cite stress and career uncertainty, new research finds.
Why aren’t more people enrolling in college? Why are many of those who do enroll leaving before they complete their degrees? And what can be done to get them back?
Those questions grew even more pressing in the last few years as enrollment fell across the country — flying in the face of a long nationwide push to increase students’ access to college.
And there are no easy answers, according to a study of 18- to 30-year-olds without college degrees that was released Wednesday. The research, supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, describes a complex group of students who’ve walked away from colleges’ doors.
Researchers offered four main insights for higher education:
The findings could influence higher ed and high schools. They could also have significant ramifications for the Gates Foundation’s work, which has long focused on increasing the number of people with some level of education past high school, said Patrick Methvin, director of postsecondary success at the Gates Foundation.
“These are important, and frankly, sobering for us,” Methvin said during a Wednesday video call to discuss the findings with reporters. “We’ve been focusing on trying to widen the path to and through education after high school for over a decade now.”
Two firms, Edge Research and HCM Strategists, studied the issue for the Gates Foundation. They looked at high school graduates between the ages of 18 and 30 who opted against going to college or stopped out of a program. They held 11 focus groups and conducted a survey of 1,675 people in March and April.
Below are some of their other top findings.
Researchers asked participants why they chose not to go to college or finish a degree. Two of their top four responses related to money.
More than one-third of respondents, 38%, said they didn’t want to take on debt or that college was too expensive. And 26% said it was more important for them to get a job and make money.
Meanwhile, 27% said college was too stressful or too much pressure, and 25% said they were unsure about their majors or future careers.
Asked why they might get a degree, respondents overwhelmingly focused on career outcomes.
Three-quarters said earning more money was either a very important or extremely important reason to get a degree. Similar shares cited getting a better job or receiving training for a specific career. On the other hand, only 52% cited a traditional reason for attending higher ed: becoming more cultured.
Researchers asked whether respondents were interested in a variety of educational options and whether they had experience with them. The video platform YouTube proved to be a prime source of information.
Almost half of respondents said they’d taken classes on YouTube. One-fifth said they had experience with online learning there, and 27% said they were learning on the platform at the time of the survey.
Those numbers outpaced other educational options. The next closest response was taking a course to receive a license — 16% of respondents said they’d taken such a course, and 9% said they were doing so.
Another 21% of respondents planned to learn on YouTube. But more referenced plans for other pathways.
About 39% of respondents said they planned to take a course to receive a license, and 40% said they planned to take a course for a verified certificate. Those percentages match the share of respondents who said they planned to enroll in a two-year or four-year college.
“Options that are tied to specific skills or jobs, people felt very positively and strongly about,” said Terrell Halaska Dunn, partner at HCM Strategists.
Respondents prioritized their own emotional, mental and financial health more frequently than a college education.
Researchers asked them about their personal goals over the next few years. Almost nine in 10 respondents, 87%, said good mental and emotional health was either important or their top priority, making it the most popular answer. A close second was financial stability, cited by 85%, and in third place was earning more money, at 80%.
Continuing to learn and grow personally was a goal for 80% of respondents as well. But that didn’t necessarily translate to earning a college degree. Just 48% of respondents said getting a college degree was important or a top priority in the next few years.
Another question showed 46% of respondents definitely planned to go to college, while about 42% weren’t willing to commit.
Of those who signaled they might attend, just 15% said they planned to do so in the next six months. About a third, 31%, said they planned to go in six months to a year. Outpacing both of those answers were 37% who said they planned to go to college in one to three years. Another 8% said they would go in more than three years, and 9% weren’t sure.
Some 74% of respondents called on-the-job training a good value or an excellent value. Slightly fewer, 70%, said the same about taking a course to receive a license.
Those options outpaced a four-year college degree, cited by 60% as a good or excellent value, and a two-year degree, cited by 61%. But when pressed to select only one option, 21% of respondents said a four-year degree was the best value — about the same as 20% who pointed to on-the job-training.
Demographic breakdowns of those who said they definitely plan on going to college caught researchers’ attention.
About equal shares of men and women said they definitely planned to attend. But disparities emerged when looking at respondents’ education levels. Just 44% of those with only a high school education said they definitely planned on attending college, compared to 55% of those with some college education.
About half of Black and Hispanic students said they definitely planned on going. That was significantly more than 42% of White students who signaled college plans.
This finding comes after higher ed has worked for years to diversify its ranks as many institutions struggled to serve students who aren’t White.
“In many cases we’ve seen higher education institutions not really doing great outreach to our Black students, our Latinx students, indigenous students and first-generation students,” Methvin said.
But higher education has struggled to connect with rural students for some time, he said. This may explain some of the difference if many of the White students who aren’t interested in college are from rural areas.
Many respondents said high school taught them how to get into college but not how to succeed there. And few said it prepared them for their lives after school.
Just 11% of respondents told researchers high school prepared them extremely well for the next step in their lives, and only 19% said it prepared them very well. At the other end of the spectrum, 22% said high school did not prepare them well, and 16% said it didn’t prepare them at all.
Survey respondents listed several skills they wished high school taught them: how to do taxes, how to maintain good credit, how to get a job and keep it.
Respondents wanted schools to recognize multiple pathways, said Adam Burns, chief operations officer at Edge Research.
“There are several different options for folks as they graduate, and it would have been wonderful if high school could have supported them better in that,” Burns said. “That’s a very, very clear message.”
Survey respondents supported a wide variety of ideas that could help them enroll in college and earn degrees.
Three-quarters of students said it would help if they were able to get more education without taking on additional debt. A similar share said job counselors would be helpful.
Many also signaled support for having financial advisers, flexible programs and cost-of-living assistance.
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University of Pennsylvania was waiving its $400 deposit for about a fifth of its students. Abandoning it aims to reduce barriers for low-income students.
DeSantis requests information about Florida’s transgender students. Yale changes mental health policies amid lawsuit.
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