U.S. undergraduate enrollment continues to drop

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 мар 2023
  • College enrollment numbers in the U.S. are still on the decline, according to the National Student Clearinghouse. The group found that there are little more than 1 million fewer undergraduate students in 2022 compared with 2019 and a nearly 8% decline in transfers from community colleges to four-year colleges in the last year. Stephanie Marken from Gallup's education division joined Jeff Glor to discuss.
    #news #education #college
    CBS News Streaming Network is the premier 24/7 anchored streaming news service from CBS News and Stations, available free to everyone with access to the Internet. The CBS News Streaming Network is your destination for breaking news, live events and original reporting locally, nationally and around the globe. Launched in November 2014 as CBSN, the CBS News Streaming Network is available live in 91 countries and on 30 digital platforms and apps, as well as on CBSNews.com and Paramount+.
    Subscribe to the CBS News RUclips channel: / cbsnews
    Watch CBS News: cbsn.ws/1PlLpZ7c
    Download the CBS News app: cbsn.ws/1Xb1WC8
    Follow CBS News on Instagram: / cbsnews
    Like CBS News on Facebook: / cbsnews
    Follow CBS News on Twitter: / cbsnews
    Subscribe to our newsletters: cbsn.ws/1RqHw7T
    Try Paramount+ free: bit.ly/2OiW1kZ
    For video licensing inquiries, contact: licensing@veritone.com

Комментарии • 248

  • @ryanwalters6184
    @ryanwalters6184 Год назад +181

    Pay 50k to 200k for college then only get paid $44k a year to be a teacher /police officer. Good luck filling these jobs in the coming years.

    • @Christina_320
      @Christina_320 Год назад +16

      Right, lucky if you can even make that.

    • @bossladybritt
      @bossladybritt 10 месяцев назад +2

      Say that again!

    • @bossladybritt
      @bossladybritt 10 месяцев назад

      @@JulianKazmier-vo3fn I highly doubt it.

    • @davefischer2344
      @davefischer2344 4 месяца назад

      Makes no sense.

    • @nopenope1186
      @nopenope1186 Месяц назад +1

      Cops make like 6 figures here before OT

  • @vincentstevens1210
    @vincentstevens1210 Год назад +150

    As a HS Chemistry teacher, I see most of my students would prefer learning a trade rather than something they will never use. Dangling financially ruinous promises in front of students without offering true alternatives is cruel. Trade unions should step up with apprenticeship programs, and community colleges must do a better job at providing real trade skills programs. Too many young people enter sham/scam private trade ‘colleges’ only to end up in serious debt.

    • @lauracanedo1446
      @lauracanedo1446 Год назад +10

      Exactly what I was thinking. Thank you for saying this!

    • @yihannajohnson3711
      @yihannajohnson3711 Год назад +6

      Exactly

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +4

      Well said Vincent! As a teacher myself I’d like to add that we live in a skills based economy. The liberal arts degree isn’t skills based. Young people (middle and older aged career changers) are realizing companies hire based on skills ability. Can the English degree holder weld those pipes together? Can the poli sci degree holder service a HVAC unit and replace a compressor?
      I’m not disparaging any degree but when push comes to shove the ones with ‘real skills’ always make more money and have better career opportunities. Kudos to you.

    • @welcomeparadise4433
      @welcomeparadise4433 11 месяцев назад

      For doctor and lawyers now what?

    • @user-rf1nn8sg3f
      @user-rf1nn8sg3f 9 месяцев назад +3

      I also think people and universities are not what they were in the 1950's. The rich people function has left the university when government loans/subsidy became the primary funding source. Rich people start businesses, provide scholarships, fund endowments, hire recent graduates, create a networking environment. This is gone from most universities. Now its about how can the university get money from the government to pay for students rather than wealthy alumni. College is for talented people (actors, musicians, artists, athletes, ect), academically gifted, people looking to become professionals (doctors, lawyers, ect), and wealthy. Everyone else needs to be kept out. I'd say college is good for about 20 percent of the population. The rest are wasting time. Community college and trade school/vocational school is for people trying to gain entry into middle class, university is for people trying to gain access into elite class (and only about 10 percent will succeed - doctor, lawyer, business owner, architect).

  • @ebby588
    @ebby588 Год назад +42

    It’s too expensive, even for middle class families-$32k per semester to start off making $40k a year is a money pit!!

  • @tomr6866
    @tomr6866 Год назад +118

    If you aren't in medicine or tech College is like a huge pile of burning money

    • @Christina_320
      @Christina_320 Год назад +3

      Yup

    • @willmartin1637
      @willmartin1637 Год назад +7

      Even that is a waste of moolah. Not enough educators for those majors leaving it to competitive

    • @jacobnapkins1155
      @jacobnapkins1155 Год назад +2

      ​@@willmartin1637good scare them away so us college grads don't have to compete with others and can make a ton of money

    • @Corkfish1
      @Corkfish1 Год назад +9

      ​@@jacobnapkins1155 not if your degree is in dance theory, sociology, political science etc.

    • @texassecession6422
      @texassecession6422 Год назад +7

      I graduated from a state dental school in 2000. My total debt was around $100K. There were only 45 dental schools in the US when I graduated. Now, it's close to 70 schools in the US so there are a lot more competition among new dentists. And the total debt can be more than $500K for private schools. I heard other professional schools are like that too. So, it's definitely tougher for young graduates.

  • @cheehee808_
    @cheehee808_ 9 месяцев назад +22

    Personally, as a college graduate if i had to redo it id rather have gone into trade school.

  • @annettegustafson1435
    @annettegustafson1435 Год назад +31

    Of course! Who wants to be carrying crippling college loan debt for years? It's expensive just to eat and keep a roof over your head

  • @masondenuccio1886
    @masondenuccio1886 Год назад +70

    I attended a top university to study Nursing when I was 18. I never finished and amounted a large some of debt. At the time, obtaining the degree was too difficult despite knowing if I was to complete the degree I’d be set financially and job security-wise. Now, I’m re-enrolling into community college with a focus on a degree that isn’t so demanding, while holding the likelihood of obtaining just as an in-demand job. They make these programs extremely difficult to complete and wonder why student opt out of completion.

    • @willmartin1637
      @willmartin1637 Год назад

      They lie to get people to take classes for nursing. It ends up being very ridiculous and expensive and you might be waitlisted.

    • @masondenuccio1886
      @masondenuccio1886 Год назад

      @@alia2842 secondary education

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад

      Shouldn’t nursing be demanding? You are putting your life in somebody else’s hands.

    • @mrs.potatohead8471
      @mrs.potatohead8471 Год назад +1

      What would you do differently if you could go back?

    • @yosemite735
      @yosemite735 9 месяцев назад +4

      Take the best people and leave the rest. Dumbing down a degree leaves us with dummies.

  • @Corkfish1
    @Corkfish1 Год назад +44

    Most degrees are garbage and people are finally getting it.

    • @davefischer2344
      @davefischer2344 4 месяца назад +8

      Very true. You need connections.

    • @joarGyjuRanar
      @joarGyjuRanar 3 месяца назад

      And soon, the media will report on why trade schools are struggling to get new enrollees. Why? It's the same as college. It's all about connections. It's almost as if it were a neo-caste system.

    • @nabeehyoutube5599
      @nabeehyoutube5599 2 месяца назад

      And lots of experiences, and and and....​@@davefischer2344

    • @fearless6947
      @fearless6947 День назад +1

      finally

  • @lauracanedo1446
    @lauracanedo1446 Год назад +51

    Ok I’ll explain my story: I graduated college almost five years ago. I majored in Psychology. At the time that was what I wanted to do. Then my interests started to change. When I started looking for a job, all of these jobs required 2-5 years of experience. It was very difficult to find an entry level job. Now that I’ve been out of college for a while, my interests have changed and so have my views about colleges. If I can give anyone advice, I would say go to a trade school or community college. Go for something that is high in demand. Don’t get me wrong, I know people have 4 year degrees with jobs now which is great. However, this isn’t the case for everyone. I have more opinions about bachelors degrees and colleges in general but I’m going to keep these to myself.

    • @jragon9215
      @jragon9215 Год назад

      Yea I have a fetish for black pantyhose so when I’m hiring and a women walks in with that it immediately catches more of my attention.

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +3

      I tell young people all the time if I could do it again it would be ‘skills based and in demand’.
      They started pushing all those things after the Great Recession in 2008.

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 10 месяцев назад +1

      Lies again? Lazy Students

    • @shadowslayer9988
      @shadowslayer9988 8 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@NazriBAlright boomer

    • @ramanpreciado2241
      @ramanpreciado2241 4 месяца назад

      I try telling people to not pursue what you want but to pursue what is in demand. Some People get angry saying anyone should pursue whatever they want. I respond " Yes and they will likely have debt they will never pay back".

  • @freda2758
    @freda2758 Год назад +56

    Enrollments should continue to drop. "College" has turned into yet another obstacle to keep working class and poor from achieving wealth. It's not to obtain higher education, which leads to wealth. It's just another stop block for those who are not dripping in wealth.

    • @jon8537
      @jon8537 Год назад +5

      Exactly so

    • @KyleEvra
      @KyleEvra Месяц назад +1

      Preach it they want to keep the wage slaves poor.

  • @lostprophet912
    @lostprophet912 Год назад +22

    Kids that are graduating now were raised by a generation buried in debt that experienced poor returns on their college "investment". Parental influence is probably a huge factor in enrollment dropping.

    • @MrKevinwg
      @MrKevinwg 5 месяцев назад +4

      That is what I am thinking. I would discourage most people from going. It is not worth the cost. I hope my child does not get suckered into it like I did.

    • @FlyingKoreanMinja
      @FlyingKoreanMinja Месяц назад

      Every generation has its perspective as my parents' generation saw college as a guaranteed success to life vs our generation seeing trade school as a pathway to more lucrative careers.
      The problem is people jump into these trends without properly assessing other factors. Trade schools maybe popular and lucrative now, but theres no guarantee it will remain the same 10 years down the line when many go to trade school instead of college. Keep in mind that colleges were once perceived the same way as trade schools are now.

  • @Christina_320
    @Christina_320 Год назад +23

    Gee…Umm let’s see here, maybe it’s bc people don’t have money! 🙄🙄 This world is so far gone, just all the way around. Graduate with a bachelors it’s like a high school diploma. Get paid hardy anything. The whole system is messed up. Ridiculous.

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +2

      Depends on what that bachelor’s degree is in. It’s not the degree, but what you study.

    • @Christina_320
      @Christina_320 Год назад

      @@Jedi12789 Yeah, true. But just generally speaking the majority of them are a waste unless you’re like a doctor or a lawyer or something along those lines.

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +2

      @@Christina_320 nursing, engineering, engineering tech., IT, business, construction, comp. sci., even education. There are some good ones that lead to jobs. Like I said, all depends on what you study. Lawyers are more than a dime a dozen.

    • @Christina_320
      @Christina_320 Год назад

      @@Jedi12789 Yeah..

  • @angusdog22
    @angusdog22 7 месяцев назад +8

    I’m a Union Tradesman and most of our project management staff are college educated. They tell me that they learned absolutely nothing helpful in college as it applies to construction other then knowing how to put a spreadsheet together. 🤦‍♂️

  • @dusk1947
    @dusk1947 Год назад +22

    Well lets see: College student's pay more tuition towards campus amenities, sports complexes, and administrative fee than for the actual education. Which matches a desire for college campus's to play "keeping up with the Jones's". At the same time there has been deeply inadequate regulation of the lending sector who gets away with letting mere 18 year old's take out $50-100K in debts. At the same time, student loans are somehow immune to bankruptcy which only incentivizes lenders to loan more as they don't need to weight the risk of a teenager's likelihood to repay that debt (they know it will follow them), which also incentivizes colleges to inflate tuition.
    At the same time, the mid-20th century wisdom that you need a degree to really succeed, no longer holds true. What you need is a specialization in a skill others will pay for. That's not always a degree and more often, it's a trade. And unless you're in a STEM field, how many graduates actually use their education? Make that return on investment even more meaningless...
    Because the costs have skyrocketed over the past two generations, it's no longer a good economic decision for a wide swath of young adults.
    Want that to change? Reign in costs, regulate lenders, allow for bankruptcy, and cut non-education bloat on campus. You know, actually make it economically viable again

  • @mojobiel
    @mojobiel Год назад +28

    I know many HVAC repairmen, welders, plumbers, electricians, etc making well in excess of 100K. College probably isn't the best fit for the majority of students coming out of high school.

    • @yoleeisbored
      @yoleeisbored Год назад +3

      Yeah maybe there should be trade programs in high schools.

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +5

      It’s got to be stem or business and even then most young men and women would do better off by working 2-5 years before heading back. It’s never too late to go back to school. It’s far better to pound the pavement every morning doing what other people won’t do (going to work).

    • @gmwilliamsful
      @gmwilliamsful 5 месяцев назад +1

      It ISN'T. The average IQ is 100-119. Such people AREN'T college material. Mass college education began w/open enrollment in the late 1960s-early 1970s. Open enrollment stated that anyone who wanted should attend college. See the dire results of this. Let's return to the days when college was only for a SELECT FEW- those who are brilliant with IQs ranging from 130-upward. Only people with an IQ of 130 & more should attend college.

  • @radiokid10970
    @radiokid10970 Год назад +12

    An 18-year-old graduates high school and enters a trades program. In one year he is an aprentice and making 40k to 50k. By the end of four years he's earned - with raises - nearly 300k by the time he's 22 years old. An 18-year-old going to college for a liberal arts, degree, or any BA degree that is not a valuable trade...then finds that he/she needs a masters to get a job. Two years later and another 100k in debt, that person is 24 years old and 200k in debt. College is not worth it, if you are not going for a professional trade, such as lawyer or doctor. There are even inexpensive trade, certificate and two-year programs for nursing and business. Forget college and build a career -not debt.

    • @PJP-DJP
      @PJP-DJP 5 месяцев назад

      Agreed 100%. If youre going to college, make sure youre studying something with a practical value. This excluses MOST liberal arts which are worthless. Math and science degrees can be parlayed into almost many job. Things like gender studies hold almost no value for an employer unless youre planning on becoming a college professor to which all youre doing is re-entering the vicious cycle.

  • @branflakee4257
    @branflakee4257 Год назад +19

    I waited and worked for 6 years after high school before finally deciding going to college. I couldn't stand to do manual work so now I have a good paying office job!

    • @Westcoast10
      @Westcoast10 Год назад +1

      That’s cuz you soft

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +1

      You did what I wish I would’ve done. Go to work for 2-5+ years and go back or just go online. It was different 15-20 years ago tho. These kids are in a much better spot now.

    • @rara1800
      @rara1800 10 месяцев назад +1

      That’s good! Manual isn’t for everyone just like working in an office isn’t for everyone either every had their own niche!

    • @danielsawaked685
      @danielsawaked685 3 месяца назад +1

      lol this is exactly how I feel, I’ve been working fast food for almost 2 years since I was a hs senior, working in that field is one of my motivators for finishing my degree

  • @chadtomriddle4786
    @chadtomriddle4786 Год назад +11

    Wait "fortunately" more women are graduating then men? Imagine if it was the reverse when she said that

  • @sakenu16
    @sakenu16 9 месяцев назад +5

    Colleges have gotten too expensive. Many also started to see them being useless when some colleges started offering students a way to create their own degree.

  • @melregissings
    @melregissings Год назад +35

    America's in decline.

  • @laurasmith856
    @laurasmith856 Год назад +36

    It took me 9 years to get a 4 year degree.

    • @blakrumba
      @blakrumba Год назад +13

      Me too. Still working on it. I regret ever having done this.

    • @mrs.potatohead8471
      @mrs.potatohead8471 Год назад

      @@blakrumba Why? (Genuine question)

    • @welcomeparadise4433
      @welcomeparadise4433 11 месяцев назад

      Really why?

    • @jeanp.5929
      @jeanp.5929 7 месяцев назад +3

      I'll share as well. I will graduate with a 4-year degree in 2026 when I first started college in 2006. That's 20 years off and on. The net time I will have spent taking classes will be 11-12 years. The reason why it's taking me so long is because I developed schizoaffective disorder along the way. I know I shouldn't be in college because of my mental health disability but the jobs I've had haven't been that great. Fortunately I'm not in debt because I got the GI Bill from my time being in the military.

  • @jon8537
    @jon8537 Год назад +9

    Studies proving an higher income for having a degree no longer holds true.

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +3

      Only certain degrees. The jobs that have many openings are the ones most people don’t want to do.

  • @pabloalmeida7996
    @pabloalmeida7996 Год назад +13

    Only degrees that I’ve seen with good salary and demand in the economy are Accounting,Finance, IT/Tech related degrees Engineering and healthcare/medicine anything else you’re wasting time and money.

  • @meejinhuang
    @meejinhuang Год назад +23

    College is too expensive in the US. The federal student loan program will lend hundreds of thousands of dollars to poor students that will never pay back the loans.

    • @ChristianThomas-rk8zg
      @ChristianThomas-rk8zg Месяц назад

      Hundred of thousands is nothing compared to the trillion + dollar of college debt.

  • @user-vg7rh5up2k
    @user-vg7rh5up2k 10 месяцев назад +8

    European schools have really low tuition rates in comparison to many US universities. And many have a focus in academics, nothing else.

  • @tuncborabergsan811
    @tuncborabergsan811 Год назад +41

    As a first year mechanical engineer major, I understand why people decide to drop out and/or just not decide to go to university. The overall competitiveness added in with pressure and stress may backfire. I still believe that if you do study engineering or medicine it is worth it since the benefits out weigh the cost. Having said all of that I would never go and sit through 4 years of Business School just to better understand how incentives work in our daily lives plus be in debt of at least 50k dollars.

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +3

      Business school can lead to good jobs, however, stem including engineering and it is better if one really wants to be an engineer.

    • @asahisagoiboi3517
      @asahisagoiboi3517 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Jedi12789There are better and cheaper engineers from abroad that you have to compete with. Just because you have a stem degree it doesn't mean that an Eastern European or SE Asian is not better than you.

    • @LisaSoulLevelHealing
      @LisaSoulLevelHealing 3 месяца назад

      I got an electrical engineering degree. It was valuable far outside of an engineering jib, and I went into consulting. It trained me to be a very critical thinker.

  • @Gilbert-gv5bp
    @Gilbert-gv5bp Год назад +25

    I literally dropped out of school, I’m 24 and already making 100k a year with good bonuses. School didn’t help me at all!

    • @alia2842
      @alia2842 Год назад +4

      What’s your job

    • @Gilbert-gv5bp
      @Gilbert-gv5bp Год назад +5

      @@alia2842 store manager

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад +5

      ⁠@@Gilbert-gv5bp yeah that’s what they don’t tell these kids. A grocery store assistant manager can make $55-65k and the store manager can make $70-100k+. I’m not even going to mention the district or regional managers salaries. And most of the time, not all but most, these managers don’t have college degrees and are making killer money with a good work environment. Kudos to you.

  • @J.Shabazz
    @J.Shabazz Год назад +20

    Men are generally not playing the game anymore and are more logical (cost vs. reward)!

    • @Ricky-_-H
      @Ricky-_-H 9 месяцев назад

      You’re absolutely correct ✅. My logic is trade career and person with a bachelor degree makes same amount of money 40k-75k. Trade school takes 1-2 years and bachelor degree 4 or 5 years

  • @LDRINCAL
    @LDRINCAL Год назад +12

    Kids can’t afford to attend!!

  • @9251finley1
    @9251finley1 4 месяца назад +5

    They are failing to mention that the first two years of college are a waste of time and money for most degrees. Students are forced to take liberal arts classes that don’t translate into a paying career before getting to take the classes that actually interest them or translate into money. Colleges have become indoctrination centers not education centers. If many of those employed by colleges had to do real work or justify their existence they would fail. Get rid of the classes that are a joke or at least don’t force students to have to take them and lower the costs and you’ll see the decline slow down. People are seeing higher education as a waste of time and money.

    • @alperdue2704
      @alperdue2704 Месяц назад

      Many high schools offer duel enrollment programs that allow you to earn those credits while in high school at a fraction of the cost. My son graduated just two credit hours short of his associates degree, because he chose to remain in chorale.

  • @victoriac847
    @victoriac847 Год назад +22

    Honestly good. We need more people in trades

  • @noona514
    @noona514 10 месяцев назад +12

    This generation isn't going to college or the military. It's a new age.

    • @Peter-mj6lz
      @Peter-mj6lz 8 месяцев назад +1

      College was only a big thing for most people from the 80’s to recently in the uk. So hasn’t always been a big thing.

    • @JonathanFarelas
      @JonathanFarelas Месяц назад

      I went to the military(5 years) bc for the education benefit. Im not going to debt like my sister.

  • @rdgr
    @rdgr Год назад +12

    Like all these reports on how great college is, they failed to mention the trades where you can make a lot of money and live comfortably. A lot of trade unions offer apprenticeships where you get paid to work. Again, livable income.

  • @burdenastheygo3763
    @burdenastheygo3763 Год назад +21

    I still remember when college & universities were free . Now they cost 10 yrs of work to pay the debt..

    • @g_factking
      @g_factking 3 месяца назад

      More like 40 yrs

  • @jerryvargas3591
    @jerryvargas3591 Год назад +5

    Go to community college. If you can’t do it, then the penalty won’t be as severe as a four year. If you can’t do it, then go down the street to the tech college and go into a trade. Just don’t get stuck at that retail or restaurant gig tho.

  • @lacey1714
    @lacey1714 4 месяца назад +4

    It's a fairly simple answer: it's unaffordable.

  • @user-yp9nz6bs9q
    @user-yp9nz6bs9q Год назад +4

    The cost of tuition in community colleges is the reason for low enrollment?

  • @katherinejones8022
    @katherinejones8022 Год назад +8

    Too costly & too dangerous! Bang bang!!

  • @kennethpao1355
    @kennethpao1355 5 месяцев назад +3

    It's unfortunate that this CBS News segment, including the invited guest interview, never mentioned the concept of 'supply and demand' and the concept of 'cost benefit analysis'.
    The news program did discuss the university/college education 'cost' issue but never touched on what the US job market is looking for what kind of University/College education
    specialties nor what the entry jobs paid salaries compared with the average 4 years student loans. Sad.

    • @pixiet7321
      @pixiet7321 Месяц назад

      Agreed. This was an intellectually lazy think piece.

  • @hamfistsman6267
    @hamfistsman6267 Год назад +7

    Can't afford it.

  • @christophergraves6725
    @christophergraves6725 2 месяца назад +1

    The primary reason for the rising tuition is the explosion of administrators and their support staff. Most colleges now employ far more non-faculty employees than faculty. The faculty who are hired to teach undergraduates are overwhelmingly (75%) adjunct who are paid below the poverty line with few or no benefits and no job security. The tenure track faculty tend to specialize in research, much of which no one reads. The readership on social science/humanities articles is on average just over four readers per article and in the natural sciences that figure is below one reader per article. While some research is useful and beneficial, the vast majority is simply busy work for tenure-track faculty.
    Then we have the move away from a traditional curriculum in the social sciences and humanities with an emphasis on preserving the intellectual traditions of the West and training students in critical thinking so that they can reason for themselves to the truth to radical Neo-Marxist indoctrination that denies the value of Western Civilization, evidence and reason and even the truth with a capital T.

  • @MrWaterbugdesign
    @MrWaterbugdesign Год назад +4

    If female enrollment was declining it would be the main story. Male enrollment declining...well that's no big deal. That answers why male, including Black male, enrollment is down...they're dropping out. The main reason males get a degree is to be a better provider but the marriage option, now even a relationship option, in the US is clearly not a good path for men. So, no need for a degree. Males are taking jobs that don't require a degree, investing, saving money so they can retire early, move to Brazil or SE Asia and then find a good wife and have his kids there in retirement. Offshoring marriage is increasing and a popular option for many men.
    Females on the other hand are getting advanced degrees, working their tails off, paying off massive college loans and enjoying their independent life.
    Everybody wins!

  • @Chidoro41
    @Chidoro41 2 месяца назад

    Applications at the highest rated 200 universities in the US have been increasing and were very high this year. It’s the lower Uni’s that must be having the problem.

  • @dblbogey
    @dblbogey Год назад +3

    Enrolments are down?? We hear about “Big” Business, Big Gov’t, Big Tech, etc. but we never hear about “Big”Education…who’s student costs have gone up at more than double the rate of inflation over the past 30 years…go figure.

  • @Wallyisking
    @Wallyisking 10 месяцев назад +4

    Witnessing the displacement of traditional higher education (degree-issuing institutional bodies) with alternative education options in our lifetime is an excitement to behold! Consider improvements in low-cost/free online education such as the quality/variety of materials, instructors, sources and teaching methodologies. Now throw in improvements in technology (AI, 3D printing, robotics) and a more globalized network of independent learners.
    Fewer and fewer people will need to rely on universities to provide content, material and collaborators if they already have these at their fingertips from anywhere and at a small fraction of the cost. Unless the quality of a university education is somehow improving at a rate beyond its alternatives, outside of highly specialized skillsets the monetary value of university degrees will continue to decline as alternative options continue to expand and improve. Even research will be more publicly available at the cutting edge level - something once exclusive in large part to academia and organizations with deep pockets.
    Good for the public, not necessarily good for the gatekeepers 😁

  • @t-point7569
    @t-point7569 11 месяцев назад +4

    Trade school is far better than a college degree. Right now in 2023 degree is just a piece of paper in America no one cares anymore

  • @williambeatty7781
    @williambeatty7781 8 месяцев назад +3

    I think the decrease in college enrollment is a good thing. Too many people go to college and get a useless liberal arts degree and end up in debt with NO job skills.

  • @spzaruba5089
    @spzaruba5089 Год назад +6

    Hating America is not profitable or marketable. Why pay for that kind of failed learning??

  • @elizabethr4107
    @elizabethr4107 Год назад +3

    This is so sad 😞

  • @jon8537
    @jon8537 Год назад +3

    The decline needs to continue until people can justify their earnings with the debt they will incur.

  • @jordanespinoza7738
    @jordanespinoza7738 Год назад +6

    Advice for somebody don’t go to college without a guarenteed internship or apprenticeship otherwise your chances of finding a job fall to sub 20% sub 15% of employment statistics

    • @pianotnt
      @pianotnt 8 месяцев назад

      Amen to that that's why I. Currently enrolled online pharmacy technician class with externship 😊

    • @Melbester9
      @Melbester9 5 месяцев назад

      I didn't know about internships when I was in college to get work experience. But then I got my first job after my Associates Degree.

  • @jkenneth4986
    @jkenneth4986 Год назад +3

    Umm about 20% of men young to old are attending colleges and universities!

  • @striker44
    @striker44 8 месяцев назад +10

    With nepotism, discrimination being high, diversity quota everywhere, woke education, high education, dilution of scholarship with sports quota student taking seats away from academically oriented students, dumbed down education and such are driving students away from colleges.

    • @hopefulmelancholy7514
      @hopefulmelancholy7514 4 месяца назад

      Correct, and the woke indoctrination has essentially devalued our education to almost nothing

    • @pixiet7321
      @pixiet7321 Месяц назад

      This was a lazy thought process

  • @SolidSnake-cn7mo
    @SolidSnake-cn7mo Год назад +4

    Nobody wants to pay all that debt with no chance of getting a job in the field they have studied for. College isn’t job training I had to drop out of grad school due to financial difficulties.

    • @yihannajohnson3711
      @yihannajohnson3711 Год назад

      Facts

    • @Jedi12789
      @Jedi12789 Год назад

      Depends on the field. Business/stem/healthcare. Everything else is training you to teach or just be a master with a liberal arts degree.

  • @MrDude826
    @MrDude826 Год назад

    Do we know which races have the largest drop?

  • @pepercat17
    @pepercat17 3 месяца назад

    Was a non traditional student. I hit the ground running at 24, when I could file FASFA under my own income and was able to get financial grants. 4 year colleges seriously don’t get non traditional students at all. Until they do, they’ll continue to bite the toast.

  • @khaotic81
    @khaotic81 4 месяца назад

    Hot take: trade jobs or skill work is quite limited due to the rise in technological advances in the last few decades. With the increase in enrollment to trade schools and a decrease in college admissions, it won't change most things in many americans everyday lives. Beside jobs such as in the justice system, political scientists, medical system and engineering which all required a high education. However, with few applications applying for med school every there could be an increase in death rates if there isnt a change in education regarding health.

  • @rl1271
    @rl1271 2 месяца назад +2

    Why is this lady so fixated on race?

  • @investmentking1653
    @investmentking1653 3 месяца назад

    If college students are happy with no gym, fancy dorm, no recording, no advisors, etc., higher education can be affordable. In addition, positions and offices required because of government regulation pile on the tuition.

  • @horsepowermultimedia
    @horsepowermultimedia Месяц назад

    If college prices are as high as they are now, THEN LET THE SYSTEM BURN!

  • @edwardcasas2137
    @edwardcasas2137 5 месяцев назад

    It took me 7 years to go part-time to get my degree. The cost is really room and board, I was able to work and go to school. I went to a state university and majored in IT. I was bio-med and worked on medical devices for a blood bank. I would suggest if you want to get a degree that you couple it with a technology. For example, if you are into art, you might want to get a degree in graphics design and do your artwork on the side. Back in the beginning of the 20th century, colleges were created to produce well-rounded people, and schools after high school were only for the rich or ultra smart people. With the increase in tuition, you need an ROI when thinking about college. You will be drowning in debt if you do not think about this.

  • @gurkagurkadurka6688
    @gurkagurkadurka6688 Год назад +12

    Higher education is great. But you still have to choose smartly. I graduated from a CC in 2011 with 28k worth of debt. I now make good money doing something I love, I have great benefits, and (due to my prior military service) will be earning a pension in 2 years.
    You don't have to be afraid of "book lernin" kids. You have to be afraid of yourself. Your level of motivation, ambition, and drive. As well as your decision making.
    Higher education is a good thing if you let it be.

    • @yosemite735
      @yosemite735 9 месяцев назад

      CC is free. What a dope

    • @gurkagurkadurka6688
      @gurkagurkadurka6688 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@yosemite735 Awwwww.... look at this kid. He thinks state tuition rates apply across the country.
      Bless your heart. 🤗

    • @Ricky-_-H
      @Ricky-_-H 9 месяцев назад

      @@gurkagurkadurka6688sometimes higher education can lead to huge debt regardless both trade and bachelor to master degrees makes same amount of money base on experience

  • @hybridPeople358
    @hybridPeople358 6 месяцев назад

    Berkeley was asking for $42,000 a year. My father laughed and walked away.

  • @darthregulus
    @darthregulus 5 месяцев назад +1

    Have a plan to pay off your debt and choose the right major. The debt will not stop you from reaching your goal. Also, not everyone is cut out to be a college graduate, it’s a commitment even after graduation

  • @sportingdirector1
    @sportingdirector1 5 месяцев назад +1

    When tuition is increasing, enrollment probably drops...

  • @user-ly6pl3bk7j
    @user-ly6pl3bk7j Месяц назад

    Shouldn't most college degrees be online at this point?
    I see no reason why an education should cost more than $8K a year.
    And smarter people are more likely to go college, so of course they are generally going to earn more. Correlation does not equal causation.

  • @blac-mode
    @blac-mode Год назад +1

    Hbcu enrollment are rising
    While pwi are declining
    Speak volumes

  • @synchronicity458
    @synchronicity458 Год назад +7

    A lot of Colleges are just leaning into being adult day cares and safe spaces versus a place where young adults gather to be challenged.
    We extended adolescence by 5 years and anticipate that if you’re not in college at 19 years old that you will probably just bum around for 4-5 years

    • @DataHotep
      @DataHotep 8 месяцев назад +2

      You haven't been to a college in recent years. Those safe spaces are very small on campus, its still all about education.

  • @RedJoker9000
    @RedJoker9000 Месяц назад

    Plus cost is a issue for less salary

  • @CarlosMartinez-fv7dk
    @CarlosMartinez-fv7dk 3 месяца назад

    Before committing to a major in college you need to ask yourself this question. "What skills will I have to offer a potential employer once I graduate?" If you can't think any, you need to rethink your major. I was fortunate that I went to community college studied Mechanical Engineering Technology and after graduating was offered a job as an Apprentice Machinist at GE. This was 1978 , I have never been unemployed and worked my way up to a very rewarding career. College is a great choice if you choose a right major.

  • @ronaldharding3927
    @ronaldharding3927 Год назад +5

    Started by the policies of RWR in the 80's. His cutting of monies sent to states in revenue sharing tripled mine and my wife's tuitions at a state school. Cutting funds to states in order to fill rich/wealthy men's pockets increased costs to every state tax and agencies due to the legal demand to maintain federally mandated programs like MEDICAID, etal. Then he allowed those corporations he enriched to move their operations to China in leveraged buyouts. Men like Mike Milkin made $500+millions/yr sending jobs overseas leaving only service industry jobs that pay minimum wages. People like me, who took two degrees were left holding the bag. I don't know why 15mil are students when there won't be but 4mil jobs for college degrees when they graduate.

  • @belugabath
    @belugabath 10 месяцев назад +1

    Admissions offices have become recruiting offices

  • @codebloke2200
    @codebloke2200 5 месяцев назад +1

    0:39 She actually sprouted devil's horns. Don't trust her!

  • @EverettJohnson-gu3tu
    @EverettJohnson-gu3tu Месяц назад

    How about they stop expecting 6 figures for a piece of paper that's maybe worth 4, if it's worth anything to job seekers?
    At this point, colleges should start proving their financial worth, instead of us students having to prove our academic worth.

  • @alperdue2704
    @alperdue2704 Месяц назад

    The one size fits all approach doesn’t work. Not every student should attend college; nor should every student attend a trade school. There are careers where college is necessary and if every student attends trade schools then you will have a glut of tradesmen driving down earnings.

  • @simplycinderfella3418
    @simplycinderfella3418 4 месяца назад

    Comments are more informative than any other article or video I’ve watched. 🤔

  • @WYWHfirst
    @WYWHfirst 3 месяца назад

    College is more expensive but that isn't the main problem. The main issue is you can learn nearly anything you could learn at a college online for free. Why go $50-100k or more in debt for something you can get online for free? At that point your paying for the piece of paper (degree) at the end and nothing else. Literally paying for an exclusive "you get to have a nicer job" ticket.

  • @trendingnews1033
    @trendingnews1033 3 месяца назад

    We’re going backwards in terms of education a slump

  • @VintageModernRemixes
    @VintageModernRemixes Год назад +2

    Best part at 0:40

  • @jaytrumpwins5739
    @jaytrumpwins5739 Год назад +1

    WHY YOU THINK CHINA SAYS WE CANT JUST DEPEND ON THE INTERNET

  • @josephwhisnant9511
    @josephwhisnant9511 Месяц назад

    It needs to. You don't need a degree to be a plumber, electrician, barber, HVAC, brick mason, pour concrete, build houses (carpenter), auto mechanic and etc. (yet) They all make 6 figures plus. Yea its work, so what.

  • @mathewrivers8064
    @mathewrivers8064 3 месяца назад

    Let’s stop making students take general education courses that have nothing to do with their field of study. This will save them time and money.

  • @VulcanGunner
    @VulcanGunner Год назад +1

    because they priced themselves out of the market.

  • @cosandraodame7623
    @cosandraodame7623 10 месяцев назад +4

    You will always focus on black people why don't you focus on your own group

  • @Thisguyrocks518
    @Thisguyrocks518 Год назад +3

    If women graduate at a higher rate than men why is that a good thing shouldn’t they be both graduating at the same rate I think that’s what the host was getting it it’s interesting to see the social narrative being pushed by the reporter

    • @willnill7946
      @willnill7946 Год назад

      I think you know the answer to that

  • @MidnightRambler
    @MidnightRambler 9 месяцев назад +2

    The hard-left indoctrination factories are struggling🎉

  • @christian7561
    @christian7561 11 месяцев назад +1

    As a grad, College is a business' that doesn't guarantee a good job!!! only has value for some areas.

    • @Melbester9
      @Melbester9 5 месяцев назад

      What did you get your degree in? How are you doing now?

  • @ashleyc506
    @ashleyc506 4 месяца назад

    Good, a 4 year degree is grossly overvalued.

  • @AndrewDavie-er3ug
    @AndrewDavie-er3ug 5 месяцев назад

    In the words of Turanga Leela, 21s century college has become expensive daycare.

  • @sleepinglady2778
    @sleepinglady2778 9 месяцев назад

    College cost too much. We need a well educated society to succeed.

  • @hokeywolf3416
    @hokeywolf3416 2 месяца назад

    Because you can get $20/hour to sling fast food. Why go through the effort and spend the money.

  • @johnnyjayzeboomboomroom9163
    @johnnyjayzeboomboomroom9163 Год назад

    You can’t afford the cost of living on financial aid for community college. You have time to only work not study.

  • @user-fc3vz2qg1v
    @user-fc3vz2qg1v 4 месяца назад

    Enrollment is mainly dropping because of demographics; there are fewer and fewer high school graduates in the USA.

  • @nashtrucker
    @nashtrucker 5 месяцев назад

    This women is the perfect embodiement of why enrollment is down. Men are outnumbered almost 70-30 currently in higher education but she doesn't notice a problem and in fact sees it as a positive. Then she has the audacity to focus on a study about why women struggle in school. The absolute irony.

  • @sydneyrosenblatt8433
    @sydneyrosenblatt8433 Год назад +8

    Less people to compete with when I graduate.

    • @disgracetodiscuss9410
      @disgracetodiscuss9410 Год назад +2

      Just don’t make others pay for your debt..

    • @jragon9215
      @jragon9215 Год назад +1

      Just know wearing black pantyhose is another advantage for you in interviews

    • @gmwilliamsful
      @gmwilliamsful 5 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly, there are people attending college who AREN'T COLLEGE MATERIAL.

  • @spacetimemalleable7718
    @spacetimemalleable7718 5 месяцев назад

    People realize the costs of University/College is not worth it. Student debt has reached $1Trillion and students are taught by poorly paid adjunct professors. Most of the tuition/fees go to adminstrators and not to the teachers/professors. The U.S. has a lousy public education system which has been politicized and worsened with a lack of student discipline (due to poor and negligent parenting). Now their Universities are deteriorating. If this trend continues, the future for the U.S. is BLEAK and it will not be competitive with rapidly developed countries such as China. Unlike N. European countries where tuition is low and taxes are high, Americans do NOT see or value higher education as other countries and consider it "socialism". Very myopic. Whatever happened to low cost universities such as those in the 1950s/60s and the GI bill??

  • @dorothy6200
    @dorothy6200 Год назад

    Yup

  • @fuzzprobe
    @fuzzprobe 4 месяца назад

    Fewer kids, highr costs. Maybe start getting those Boomers back into the schools to prevent retirement and SS payments? SAVE M ON ENY!

  • @anythinggoes9131
    @anythinggoes9131 9 месяцев назад

    It’s obvious cost of going to college is ridiculous. Why take out stup!t loan you could never pay off. If you’rea student thinking of going to college think twice it’s stup!d to take on loan you won’t be able to pay off. You see a lot of people that when to college that can’t payoff with their loans so the idea that you will make more money if you go to college maybe yes but paying off that loan with money you make won’t be enough and you will always be in debt

  • @Damian-ci1yj
    @Damian-ci1yj 2 месяца назад

    Where will we be as a nation in 10 years?
    I fear for USA 🇺🇸 ❤️