Education

College Enrollment Likely to Drop as Schools Consider Staying Closed Until 2021

Colleges haven’t said for certain what the upcoming year will look like, in part because they fear that online learning will drive students away

A pedestrian wearing a protective mask exits Harvard Yard on the closed Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., on Monday, April 20, 2020. College financial aid offices are bracing for a spike in appeals from students finding that the aid packages they were offered for next year are no longer enough after the coronavirus pandemic cost their parents jobs or income.
Adam Glanzman/Bloomberg via Getty Images

As colleges consider when it will be safe to reopen, there’s more than just the fall semester at stake.

While the global coronavirus pandemic and extreme economic uncertainty have pushed many schools to extend the decision deadline until June 1, they are are also postponing a final determination of what students can expect come August.

Increasingly, families don’t want to wait and see.

Current and prospective college students and their parents don’t feel remote learning has the same value as in-person instruction. Rather than commit to online classes at a pricey four-year institution, many college-bound seniors have said they will take a gap year or enroll for a semester or two at a community college instead.

Currently enrolled college students could take a leave of absence, as well, rather than pay top dollar for online courses. (The rules regarding deferrals and leaves vary from college to college.)

For colleges, the impact on enrollment could be financially devastating. 

“Many schools are tuition-dependent,” said Robert Franek, editor in chief of The Princeton Review and author of “The Best 385 Colleges.”

“That really does change their financial make up for next year and beyond.”

In fact, 4 in 10 parents now say the Covid-19 crisis may prompt their children to delay going to college, according to one study commissioned by Brian Communications.

“Parents of graduating [high school] seniors have deep concerns connected to this outbreak that could threaten the long-term viability of institutions if they don’t respond in the near term,” said Brian Tierney, CEO of Brian Communications. 

Adding to the burden is the likelihood that fewer international students will enroll in U.S. schools for the upcoming academic year.

Restrictive student visa policies and changing attitudes about studying in the U.S. will inevitably hamper the flow of foreign students, who often pay full tuition and contributed nearly $41 billion to the national economy in the 2018-2019 academic year, according to NAFSA: Association of International Educators.

On top of that, colleges must forgo much of the revenue from summer programs, many of which are already canceled or moved online.

And then there is the blow to endowments, as many families take a financial hit from a stagnant economy, resulting in a decline in giving.

“People’s ability to give has decreased, and people’s need has increased,” said Allen Koh, CEO of Cardinal Education, a California-based tutoring, test-prep and college admissions firm.

“Colleges are getting hit in every single way,” he said. “The financial devastation is going to be huge.”

Budget shortfalls will cause colleges to cut staff and scale back their financial aid offerings, Koh said. (Already, universities have furloughed thousands of employees and announced revenue losses in the hundreds of millions, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education.)

Or they will be out of business entirely.

A number of smaller colleges and universities were struggling financially before Covid-19, said Julio Martinez, executive director of the ScholarShare Investment Board, which administers ScholarShare 529, California’s official college savings plan.

“The reality is that the crisis may trigger a significant number of school closings,” he said.

This story first appeared on CNBC.com. More from CNBC:

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