Is Higher Ed’s ‘Monopoly on Opportunity’ Coming to an End?
Jeff Selingo
Bestselling author | Special Advisor to President, Arizona State U. | College admissions and early career expert | Contributor, The Atlantic | Angel investor | Editor, Next newsletter | Co-host, FutureU podcast
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In the fall of 2020,?soon after?Who Gets In and Why?was released,?I was on Zoom with parents in Southern California. They were from a group of high schools in the type of communities where you know from the moment your kids were born that they were going to college. You didn’t question college nor the cost of the degree.
But what I heard that evening surprised me after 20+ years of covering higher ed. This wasn’t a group of college naysayers, but they were wondering about the value of the degree and asking about alternatives to the traditional post-high school pathway for their kids.
It would be the first of many Zoom discussions like that during the pandemic. I thought perhaps it was just a function of college being mostly online during Covid. But even as campuses started to open, the discussion about when and where college?is?worth it didn’t stop.
Journalists like to trade in anecdotes, so I filed away these tidbits.
And then a few weeks ago, I read a study from?Populace that put some numbers behind the?anecdotes.?
Populace?is a?Massachusetts-based think tank co-founded by Todd Rose . I first met Rose in 2015 when his book,?The End of Average, came out. At the time he was at the Graduate School of Education at Harvard.
The headline?from?study on what Americans want out of K-12 education confirmed what I had been hearing from parents and counselors for the last three years:?Getting kids ready for college plummeted from the 10th highest priority to 47th.
“It’s not that they don’t want kids prepped for what’s next,” Rose told me, “but colleges no longer have the monopoly on that opportunity.?It’s?not clear that the value proposition of college is what it used to be.”
Maybe the bachelor’s degree doesn’t pay off like it did in the 1980s and 1990s I told Rose, but it’s still better than a high school diploma by itself. Rose told me not to read into the results that students simply need a high school diploma to succeed.
Rather, he said, the findings demonstrate that the college degree as the?only?path to a good life doesn’t hold the sway it once did among?parents, who want their kids to learn practical skills, be problem solvers, and develop good character traits while in K-12.
While college prep finding in the Populace survey grabbed all the headlines,?Rose found something else interesting in the data.?For the first time in his research, he said, Americans favored individual learning over standardized learning. For example, they value students “learning at their own pace” over students “advancing if they meet minimum grade requirements.?
This finding seemed to confirm what I’ve also been hearing from college leaders and professors over the last two years: students want options in how they learn. They want a mix of face-to-face, online, and hybrid classes as well as courses that provide opportunities for hands-on learning.
For Rose, the survey also signals that once far-out ideas like “mastery-based learning”—where students move on from a concept once they demonstrate mastery rather than the time they spend in a seat—and which Michael Horn advocates for in K-12 schools his book,?From Reopen to Reinvent, is not a fad.
Now, I know among educators there are lots of ?? for putting so much stock in one survey.?Rose said he asked the data scientists on his team three times to confirm the specific finding about college prep.
Populace uses unique polling methodology called “conjoint analysis” that asks people to make tradeoffs to better determine what they think is important versus what they assume everyone else wants. This is especially critical to surface in education where people might be unhappy with the status quo, but they think they can’t change the system.
“The incumbent system doesn’t care what they think, so it leads to a sense of resignation,” Rose told me.?“What Covid did was unlock a nascent set of alternatives. It’s still a new market, but it’s a new market that will get better.”
The frustration with education is real. You’ll see it if you spend any time talking to parents or counselors in schools, or watching advisors work with underserved students in community-based organizations, or reading Facebook groups and Reddit discussions about college admissions.
The result is that students are leaving the education system.?An?analysis of enrollment data?released last week by Stanford University in collaboration with the Associated Press found that there were no records last school year for more than 240,000 school-age children living in 21 states and the District of Columbia, which provided recent enrollment details.?These students didn’t move out of state, and they didn’t sign up for private school or home-school, according to publicly available data.?
Some of those kids are part of the 16.7?million 18-24 years olds who are not enrolled in schooling of any kind, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s 44% of all Americans in that age group.
The pandemic disrupted?education, perhaps K-12 more than higher ed. But both sectors need to rethink how to reach, engage, and prepare students “because they can’t go back to 2019,” Rose said.?
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For too long, we have thought about college as the next logical step after high school without always thinking why.?And for millions of Americans it became the only next step when the manufacturing industry collapsed in the early 1980s, closing off a pathway for those who wanted good jobs without going right on to college.
Because the U.S. hasn’t designed legitimate and scalable alternatives to college, we often end up warehousing students at the age of 18 for a few years on college campuses who have no idea why they’re there or what they want to do next. As Ryan Craig?pointed out in in?Forbes?a few weeks ago, “you know a better place to gain those life skills? A job.”
Earlier this month, I returned from a?brief trip to Switzerland, where?compulsory education, which ends after ninth grade,?is designed to give students the core academic skills that parents seem to also want in the U.S. from K-12. At that point in Switzerland, students can choose an academic path or a vocational path.?
But the Swiss academic path is much narrower than the one in the U.S. and is focused on the few professions, such as medicine, where a university education is required. Only about a quarter of Swiss students choose the academic track.
The vocational path is much more popular, with nearly 70 percent of students choosing it, and includes some two-dozen areas of specialization from banking and retail to health care.?Swiss students who pursue careers in accounting or graphic design or project management don’t go to college like they do in the U.S.—they get an apprenticeship and learn on the job.
Apprenticeships are on the rise in U.S., and perhaps given the high cost of college, more teenagers might consider this pathway. Still, there is a cultural belief in the U.S. that apprenticeships are for the trades and not for other careers. Perhaps the pandemic is changing that belief.
What do you think??I’d love to hear from readers in the comments below about whether they agree with the Populace survey that K-12 puts too much emphasis on college prep at the expense of other skill-building and what we need to do to fully develop better pathways to good lives after high school?
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?? Thanks to all of those who reached out for an article I’m working on about?deferrals from early action programs. I’ll be in touch soon with some of you, but I’m still looking for more examples from students who got lots of deferrals from early action. Please reach out by sending a message to [email protected]
?? MARK YOUR CALENDAR:?The?"Next Office Hour"?in March will be on?Tuesday, March 21?at 2 p.m. ET/11 a.m. PT.
On this webcast we’ll explore how to make the bachelor’s degree into a much more valuable credential for students and will release the findings from a new paper on what enables?the bachelor's degree to have currency in the job market.?
Join us for an interactive conversation to learn from:
?Register for free?here. (Support from Workday)
???And I look forward to seeing many of you in the chat this coming Tuesday?for February’s Next Office Hour focused on improving the pathway from education to career, including the role micro-internships play. See the details and register for free here.
SUPPLEMENTS
???Which?College Programs Are Worth It??The 30-day comment period for how to put together an annual list of “low-value” postsecondary programs ended last week. The Biden administration wants to release the first iteration of the list this year to help consumers, but higher ed lobbyists are generally opposed to the plan. (Inside Higher Ed)?
?? End of SAT for D1 and D2 Athletes.?The NCAA has permanently removed a requirement that first-year Divisions I and II athletes earn a qualifying SAT or ACT score to participate in sports. (Higher Ed Dive)
?? Trades vs. College.?"The Washington State Auditor found in 2017 that good jobs in the skilled trades were going begging?because students are being almost universally steered to bachelor’s degrees. Recent labor statistics suggest that’s still the case – in Washington State and around the country." (Hechinger Report)
Until next time, Cheers — Jeff?
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Ocean Lover | Independent Educational Consultant | Specialist in Australian & USA Tertiary Admissions
2 年Our 16 yr old son is doing an in-school apprenticeship in Sydney, Australia. He will remain in yr 11 and 12, get his HSC which is basically equivalent to a US hs diploma, but will not get a ranking that is needed for application to university. He attends high school 3 days per week, TAFE one day per week for practical training (similar to US community college) and one day on the job with his employer. In four years he will be 20 and will be licensed to plumb, and if he continues for six full years he can start his own business and hire his own apprentices. It is a brilliant system and we feel blessed he has this opportunity. On another note my husband imports a US-built product and the factory cannot satisfy their need for skilled labour, slowing down production/sales/logistics and recently have reached out to us to learn more about the apprenticeship programs in Australia.
I help startups, tech, and software companies grow with marketing strategies | Founder of Brainstorm | Strategic Problem Solver
2 年Jeff thanks so much for all you do.
Co-Founder of Summit Prep
2 年Jeff Selingo, do you see the rise in pre-employment testing (especially from large employers) as symptomatic of the trend toward valuing verified skills instead of taking the value of a college degree at face value?
LinkedIn Top Higher Education Voice, publisher of International Employability Insight (IEI) & founder of Asia Careers Group SDN BHD
2 年A further contribution to the debate. Is a new Dark Age beckoning for higher education? A thought provoking piece in University World News, coauthored with Alan Preece. Over the last year or so one may have questioned all the noise around #employability & #graduateoutcomes. ? I am confident #universities will weather the storm, in this regard the UK is at an advantage with record numbers of 18 year olds for the next 10 years, but what then? The focus on employability is not to penalise universities or undermine the immensely valuable work they have done throughout the pandemic, but aims to future proof them for what is an uncertain future. As the article highlights faith in #highereducation is waning & it is time to stem the tide. Afocus on #studentoutcomes is the way to do this, & investment to ensure all #students no matter their ethnicity, orientation, nationality, religion etc. successfully transition to the workforce following university. We have time, if #education institutions act now they can ensure through the #successfuloutcomes of their students that a university education is more desirable and relevant in the next thirty years than it is now. Asia Careers Group SDN BHD - Investing in International Futures
As always, a very thoughtful article by Jeff Selingo .. Catering to these new needs of students will be made easier for intuitions that embrace the new opportunities presented by the "man-machine" combination that is quickly becoming a reality with the commoditization of AI augmented solutions.