pull down to refresh
21 sats \ 5 replies \ @Undisciplined OP 17 Sep \ parent \ on: Back to School—A Critique of the College Model econ
If you take the top 50 or so colleges, their enrollments have been pretty steady since just after WWII. My guess is that there will continue being plenty of enrollment for them, especially factoring in international students.
Other than that, I think we will see much of what you describe and are already seeing some of it.
Enrollment has been steady for the top 50 since 1945?
Where are the excess students going? The bottom 150?
reply
Don't hold me to that precise year or cutoff, but for many decades it has been true for big established universities.
There are thousands of small colleges. I think there were upwards of 8k at the peak and a few thousand have closed.
reply
But what about large state colleges like university of California system?
I think enrollment has increased since 1950 or whatever year
I will do some research
I don’t have access to a computer right now. This site has a lot of relevant data , I think
reply
That's probably right. I'll retreat to the 70's, as that's probably more widely applicable across the nation. On the eastern side of the country, most of these schools' enrollment plateaued after the GI bill, but the West Coast was still growing rapidly.
reply
That makes more sense
I remember thinking that ucla was a lot smaller in 1970 vs today.
Even vs 1990
reply