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Number of Hoosier high school graduates moving on to college is dropping

Per a national report on disengaged learners, about 43% of respondents who put a hold on their college studies said they were either extremely or very likely to continue their education at a later point. (Adobe Stock)

The Indiana Commission for Higher Education has a problem: the number of Hoosier high school graduates who actually move on to college continues to drop.

“There has been a decline in the transition, or the college going rate, for the past few years,” says Commissioner Chris Lowery, “over a five year period, the college going rate has declined from 65 to 53-percent.”

Commissioner Lowery believes this decline is the result of a combination of factors: the COVID-19 pandemic, financial challenges, a lack of communication and scholarship information available to parents, so on and so forth. For many students, the idea of college just isn’t what it used to be.

Lowery explains, “I would sum it up as a challenge with the perception, sometimes reality, but the perception of the value of higher education.” Lowery says that most students tend to face three roadblocks when considering college: affordability, quality of education, and career relevance. One scholarship program that helps students move on to college is 21st Century Scholars. But less than half of eligible students take advantage of that program, says Commissioner Lowery.

Lowery says the Higher Education Commission has restructured internally and redesigned their communication strategies. To put it simply, the commission wants to get aggressive.

“We need to reverse the trend, I would say we need to be aggressive and bold about it,” Lowery continues, “we’ve got to reverse the trend with high school students and we have to get more adults engaged. There are two million working age Hoosiers without post-secondary attainment beyond the high school diploma. And the reality is that the skills required for today and tomorrow’s workforce require more.”

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3 comments

H June 13, 2022 at 5:28 am

Not everyone needs college i make 65k a year no degree or college debt and Im very happy. Not every person needs to go to college. Im in the construction trades and we make very good money

Reply
Charles U Farley June 13, 2022 at 6:18 pm

Colleges went woke, the new degrees are are liberal arts garbage (at best), the cost is astronomical, and due to “equity” the courses have been dumbed down to the point of being useless. I’m shocked the “college going rate” is as high as it is.

Why bother when you have to work twice as hard as everyone else to overcome your “white privilege” when everyone else gets free rides and boosted test scores?

Reply
STEM, not underwater basket weaving. June 14, 2022 at 2:44 pm

Quite likely after 12 years in the public schools a majority aren’t smart enough for college with spending their time learning CRT, DEI, LGBTQ+, BLM, Antifa, drag shows and how to put condoms on bananas. For those that still managed to learn in spite of teacher’s attempts to dumb them down they don’t feel like going to the college indoctrination centers for more of the same. Can you blame them? And H above is correct as well, apprenticeship programs will teach you a well paying trade and they can’t get enough people to replace those retiring.

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