Law professor Jonathan Turley just posted an article that contains a fascinating stat: “From 2010 to 2021, [university] enrollments fell from roughly 18.1 million students to about 15.4 million.”
The decline is apparently continuing, and Turley blames diminishing trust in the quality of the education now offered by American schools.
Here’s an excerpt from Turley’s post:
What Happens If We Hold College and Nobody Comes?
In the 1930s, Bertolt Brecht asked “What if they gave a war and nobody came?” As someone who has been a teacher for over 30 years, I find myself increasingly asking the same question as trust and enrollments fall in higher education.
Trust in higher education is plummeting to record lows. According to recent polling, there has been a record drop in trust in higher education since just 2015. Not surprisingly, given the growing viewpoint intolerance on our campuses, the largest drops are among Republicans and Independents.
There has been a precipitous decline in enrollments across the country as universities worry about covering their costs without raising already high tuition rates. From 2010 to 2021, enrollments fell from roughly 18.1 million students to about 15.4 million.
There are various contributors to the drop from falling birthrates to poor economic times. However, there is also an increasing view of higher education as an academic echo chamber for far left agendas. For many, there is little appeal in going to campuses where you are expected to self-censor and professors reject your values as part of their lesson plans.
That fear is magnified by surveys showing that many departments have purged their ranks of Republicans, conservatives, and libertarians.
In my new book “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage,” I discuss the intolerance in higher education and surveys showing that many departments no longer have a single Republican as faculties replicate their own views and values.
One survey (based on self-reporting) found that only nine percent of law professors identified as conservative.
Some anti-free speech advocates are actually citing higher education as a model for social media in showing how “unlikeable voices” have been eliminated.
Many of those “unlikeable” people are now going elsewhere as schools focus on degrees in activism and denouncing math, statistics, the classics, and even meritocracy as examples of white privilege.
Schools offering classic education are experiencing rising enrollments, but the growing crisis has not changed the bias in hiring and teaching. Despite repeated losses in courts, universities and colleges continue to deny free speech and diversity of thought.
The fact is that this academic echo chamber may be killing educational institutions, but the intolerance still works to the advantage of faculty who can control publications, speaking opportunities, and advancement with like-minded ideologues.
We have seen the same perverse incentive in the media where media outlets are seeing plummeting readers and revenue. Journalism schools and editors now maintain that reporters should reject objectivity and neutrality as touchstones of journalism.
It does not matter that this advocacy journalism is killing the profession. Reporters and editors continue to saw at the limb upon which they sit due to the same advantage for academics. For reporters, converting newsrooms into echo chambers gives them more security, advancement, and opportunities.
Recently, the new Washington Post publisher and CEO William Lewis was brought into the paper to right the ship. He told the staff “let’s not sugarcoat it…We are losing large amounts of money. Your audience has halved in recent years. People are not reading your stuff. Right. I can’t sugarcoat it anymore.”
The response from reporters was to call for owner Jeff Bezos to fire Lewis and others seeking to change the culture. The Post has been eliminating positions and just implemented another round of layoffs to address the budget shortfalls.
In the meantime, trust in the media is at record lows — paralleling the polling on higher eduction. The result is the rise of new media as people turn to blogs and other sources for their news.
The same phenomenon is occurring in academia. People are now evading campuses with online programs. For those of us who believe in brick and mortar educational institutions, we may be watching a death spiral for some universities and colleges as administrators and faculty treat their students as a captive audience for their ideological agendas.
In the meantime, alternative educational opportunities are seeing a rapid rise. Take the Catherine Project, a project started four years ago, to offer free discussions of classic works that is also free from ideological indoctrination. The project has reportedly doubled in size since 2022.
With online educational technology, universities and colleges no longer have a monopoly on education. People have choices and they are increasingly choosing alternatives. To paraphrase Lewis, “let’s not sugarcoat it…People are not [buying our] stuff.”
Interesting article. No surprise enrollment is declining. Besides the anti America garbage they teach, the campuses aren’t safe. Our daughter attends a UNC school. In her first semester she was locked down twice for gunman on campus and dealt with all of the campus protests. It’s a joke. They’re no longer institutions of higher learning. Hardly worth the price tag. Our son attends the local junior college. He works as an auto mechanic for a major U.S. automaker, is paid in that role and the his tuition is paid. He’s already moved up to diesel tech. He’ll finish with no debt while getting paid. He’s got several friends doing the same, a couple in automotive and one as an electrician. No political nonsense.
I earned an undergraduate degree in 1984. I got a masters degree from the same institution in 2005. In my work that involved social services and Adult Education, from the early 1990s until 2022, I was very involved in recruiting and educating college interns that served in our programs. As a graduate assistant in the 1980s, I was shocked at the poor reading and writing skills of freshman students. It only got worse over time. In all this time, there were many shining stars, but there were also a lot of disappointments. I witnessed the decline of which you speak first hand. There is a lot of money in higher education. It is too bad that there is not as much education in higher education. For a long time now, every time I get the opportunity, I encourage people to avoid college unless there is some training or education they can’t possibly get anywhere else. I tell kids to learn one or two useful skills that will provide for them and their families. And the whole student loan situation is quite a racket. Makes a lot of money for the banks, but it has terrible consequences upon the unwitting victims.