It is true that pandemic-driven enrollment declines have started to level off – overall undergraduate enrollment dropped just 0.2% YOY in spring 2023. However, freshman enrollment is still 6 percent below 2019 levels. Graduate-level enrollment is also down 2.2% since spring 2022 and total postsecondary enrollment remains well below pre-pandemic numbers, 1.09 million students fewer overall compared to spring 2020. We have a new set of challenges in front of us – challenges that can only be confronted by true strategic innovation in enrollment marketing.
What is the post-pandemic enrollment crisis?
Many factors continue to affect enrollment. It has been widely reported that the country is experiencing a college-age population contraction – we’re now feeling the effects of decreasing birth rates that started during the 2007-2009 recession. Nationwide, the number of 18-year-olds is set to decline by over 15% from 2025 onwards and to continue for several years after.
But most importantly, it’s not the shrinking pool that is most worrying for American higher ed institutions, it’s the dramatic shift in attitude towards ‘going away to college’ that is the sector’s greatest challenge. Covid-19 has prompted a re-evaluation of the role of higher education in modern society. What is its value? Are we doing it right? How does it align with the needs of our planet, industries and communities? Crucially, it is employers that are asking these questions as well as students and parents. Six states have recently eliminated college degree requirements for government jobs. A succession of major corporations have done the same — IBM, Accenture, Dell and Google, to name a few, have publicly dropped degree requirements in what is being dubbed a ‘skill-based sea change in the job market.’ Mix these changing attitudes with low unemployment rates and rising cost of living and it’s suddenly harder to convince people to pursue expensive, traditional higher ed pathways.
That said, college-age students in 2023 America aren’t disinterested in postsecondary learning altogether. Recent data from ECMC Group shows that Gen Z are far more enthusiastic about postsecondary education than they were at the outset of the pandemic. What has changed since 2019, is four-year college is no longer a consideration for 50% of Gen Z. Many are convinced they can achieve success through cheaper, shorter and more practical options. For high schoolers, postsecondary education is a means to a job. With the democratization and diversification of non-degree learning options and industries offering more robust training and apprenticeship schemes, higher ed is competing more fiercely than ever with credible alternative pathways to a career.