Those numbers sound accurate. I went to a university where you typically graduated in four or five years, but where I teach, it's a different story. Ten years ago, my university had a poor graduate rate of approximately 32% in six years. Now we're up to 52% in six years--both a remarkable improvement and a mediocre result.Joe Shlabotnik wrote:With three sons in this demographic it appears to me to be the job market. Lots of their friends and them looking around and not seeing the opportunities so they get another major, look at grad schools, take a few more courses, etc. I worry about this generation because of this.pioneer98 wrote:Of 100 students that enter college, this is what happens to them after 6 years:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/sp ... s-college/
21 drop out
30 get a batchelor's degree
14 get an associates degree
35 of them are still enrolled
That's insane. I recall a lot of people taking 5 years to graduate...but 1/3 of college students are taking over 6 years to graduate? I wonder if this is worse because there job market it bad. But just kind of ridiculous.
State and federal support for higher education is much lower now than it was thirty years ago, and the prices of higher education keep going up. Heck, in California in the 60's, you could get a college education for free (I'm sure you had to buy the books, though). The days of the Sputnik scare and the Cold War are long gone.
I've looked up retention and graduation rates for numerous colleges and universities as my son applies for college. In some cases, the numbers are atrocious, and I wouldn't let my son apply if he were interested in the schools. Debt loads for students emerging from some of these schools (such as NYU) are also mind-boggling.


