GROWTH IN HIGHER EDUCATION ENROLLMENT: 1978-1985

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CIA-RDP90-00530R000300620012-3
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RIFPUB
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K
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14
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 2, 2013
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12
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MISC
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 O it 7-- Center r Education tat~stres -~ Growth in Higher Education Enrollment: 1978 fo 1985 Issue Paper Office of Educational Research and Improvement U. S. Department of Education Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 This report, with revisions, is reprinted from The Condition of Education, 1986 edition, published by U.S. Department of Education's Center for Education Statistics (CES). Copies of; Condition are available from the Superintendent of Documents,. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. 'I'o order, send a check or money order for $13 and refer to stock number 065-000-00276-1. Center for Education Statistics "The purpose of the Center shall be to collect and disseminate statistics. and other data related to educa- tion in the .United States and in .other nations. The Center shall ... collect, collate, and from time'. to time, report full and complete statistics on the condi- tions of education. ;in the United States; conduct and publish reports on specialized analyses of the mean- ing and significance of such .statistics; ... and re- view and report on education activities in foreign countries, "-Section 406 (b) of the General Educa- tion Provisions Act, as -amended (20 U.S.C. ..1221 a-1). . Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 growth in Higher L+'~Catlon ~nroliment: ly~i 1ya~ by Phillip Kaufman Overview College education in the United States _has grown considerably in the past forty years. Since 1950, en- rollment has increased by over 300 percent, while the number of institutions has increased almost 80 percent (U.S. Department of Education, 1986b). Dur- ing this period the nation's student body has grown increasingly more diverse, with greater numbers of women, minorities, part-time students, and older adults enrolling in colleges and universities. At the end of the 1970's, however,, some analysts saw in the projected decline of the 18- to 24-year-old population evidence for college enrollment declines in the 1980's. As of 1985, these overall enrollment de- clines have not occurred, and, in fact, college enroll- ment increased in the eazly 1980's. -This paper exam- ines the factors which have contributed to the increase in college enrollment since 1978, and dis- cusses the possible impact of these factors on future levels of college enrollment. The major findings in- clude: 1~ends in enrollment, 1978-1985 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 ? Enrollment has increased despite declines in the 18- to 24-year-old population. ? The major factor in the enrollment increases since 1978 has been higher enrollment rates for 18- to 24-year-olds. ? The other factor contributing to increases in higher education enrollment in recent years has been increased enrollment by women, par- ticularly those 25 and older. Implications ? The two factors which kept enrollment high in the late 1970's and early 1980's may be tran- sitory. ? Enrollment rates for women 25 and older may decline as more women attend college prior to the age of 25. ? The enrollment rate for 18- to 24-year-olds may decline as higher proportions- of college- age persons come from .groups with tradi- tionally lower college-going rates. ? Therefore, while enrollments have remained high in the eazly 1980's, a decline in the late 1980's and eazly 1990's may occur. The data for this analysis come from iwo sources: the Department of Education's Higher Education Gen- eral Information Survey (HEGIS) and the Bureau of the Census' Current Population Survey (CPS). In this paper; the data source(s) used are indicated in paren- theses at the beginning of each section. The analysis scheme for this paper is based, in part, on a report prepared for the Center for Statistics by Cazol Fran- ces (1986) of Washington Resources Inc. Although both CPS and HEGIS publish October. en- rollment data, HEGIS obtains its data from reports submitted by the colleges and universities, while CPS obtains enrollment data as part of a periodic sample survey of households. Therefore; HEGIS is a census of its population while CPS is a sample survey. ~ CPS collects data on individual .students -which makes detailed analyses about student chazacteristics possible. For example, CPS is the only source of na- tional data on college enrollment by age.2 Vends in Enrollment, 1978-1985 Throughout the last decade, many analysts and col- lege administrators expressed concern about enroll- ment declines in the 1980's. Pointing to the declining population of 18- to 24-year-olds, some analysts pre- dicted decreases of 15 to 20 percent in total enroll- ment between 1981 and 1995 (Crossland, 1981; Car- negie Council on Policy Studies in Higher Education, 1980).3 Contrazy to the predictions of these analysts, however, while the 18- to 24-year-old population did shrink 1.9 percent between 1978 and 1985, and the 18- to 21-year-old population declined 8:4 percent, total enrollment in higher education increased over 12 percent in that period. Patterns in college enrollment can be analysed from several perspectives. For example, the total number of 18-year-old women students can be shown as the Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/01/02 :CIA-RDP90-005308000300620012-3 proportion of all college) students or as the proportion of all 18-year-old women. Each comparison tells a slightly different story, and has its own 'importance. One yields information about the current mix of stu- dents on college campuses, while the other indicates mained constant-about 9 percent for 25- to 29-year-olds, 6 percent for 30- to 34-year- olds, and about 1.5 percent of those 35 and over. the college-going rate foi? 18-year-old women. For those 18 to 21, enrollment rates increased be- tween 1978 and 1983. Over that time period the The following sections u'se both types of comparisons number of 20- to 21-year-old students increased and to discuss several factors which have contributed to the number of 18- to 19-year-old students was rela- trends in college enrollment since 1978. Furthermore, Lively stable. The population age 18 to 21 shrank by in discussing these factors, this paper divides recent almost 9 percent between 1978 and 1985. t d i m ren s n college enroll ent into two periods, 1978 to 1983 and 1983 to 1985. During the first period, enrollment rose each year and in the second period, total enrollment declined in 1984 and then increased in 1985.4 Gender (CPS). Women as a proportion of all col- lege students5 steadily grew through the late 1970's and early 1980's. ? Women~as=a-prop ro ion-of-all-college-students rose=from~9-9=percent-in--1-978-to 52:9~pei cent in_-1985 ? Women- cc~d~-for, ~7 percent_-of`the_iii creaseyin_college-attendance-between_1-978_and~ d~983:~ ? Between 1983- and 1985 the number of men enrolled in college decreased 1.7 percent, while .the number 6f women continued to in- crease. The increase in women students was the result of a rising proportion of all women 14 and older attend- ing college, from 6.3 to 6.6 percent.b At the same time, men's college-going rate was declining, from 7.0 to 6.7. The gap between men's and women's college-going rates had disappeared by 1985. Age (CPS).~B~etween 1'978 ana-1-Q85,=the_number of college students 25 and old re increased considerably (Figure 1). This increase was due to growth in the age group, as the large baby-boom cohort grew older, rather than a change in participation rates for persons over 25. ? The-number=of students-25-and=o?1 erd -grew-~by~ 22.0_.pe.r_ce~nt_b.etwe~n-1-978~and-1-985; whi__ lei c ~the_number-of-students~35~and~oider-grew-by-_~ X27 5_pereen__t~ ? Over the 1978-85 period, the college-going rates for each of the age groups over 24 re- ? The number of l8- to 21-year-olds enrolled in college increased by 6.3 percent between 1978 and 1985 (Table 1) (U.S. Department of Com- merce, 1986). What-som a aly_~ts_could-not-foresee-in making their predictions--of-decline-in-thy lateil"9.7.0"s~was~- that the~proportion-of-i-8-tb '2-1-year=olds-attending ollege-would-increase-substantially; from_31~9 pe_r-,~ tice-nt-in-1-97-8-to--37-1--percem-in-1-985 If college- going rates had remained in 1985 what they were in 1978, the decrease in the 18- to 21-year-old popula- tion would have resulted in a decrease of more than 700,000 students: ? `T-he-increase-in-the-partic'-ipafion-r-ate-for-18- cto,2-l~year-o cis-eontribu[ed-i co ol=lege=enroll~ Ement~being~alinost-330;000=t~ighec in=1=985