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E-grāmata: Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education

3.88/5 (302 ratings by Goodreads)
(Carleton College)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jan-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421424149
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jan-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421424149

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The author examines the role of demographics in the demand for higher education in the US, using the Higher Education Demand Index, which he developed from data from the 2002 Education Longitudinal Study to estimate the probability of college-going based on demographics, showing how the future demand for college attendance depends on institution type. He discusses major demographic changes in the US affecting higher education, such as immigration, interstate migration, birth rates, and the number of high school graduates; college-going probabilities and connections to demographics; the Higher Education Demand Index, its assumptions, and its use as a model; anticipated shifts in demand within higher education as a whole; demand for two-year programs and four-year schools; full-pay students; how future demand might change if recruitment efforts and policy innovations impacted gaps in college-going across dimensions of race/ethnicity and income; how changes to public policy might impact the rate of attendance; and what might happen in the 2030s. Annotation ©2018 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Higher education faces a looming demographic storm. Decades-long patterns in fertility, migration, and immigration persistently nudge the country toward the Hispanic Southwest. As a result, the Northeast and Midwest—traditional higher education strongholds—expect to lose 5 percent of their college-aged populations between now and the mid-2020s. Furthermore, and in response to the Great Recession, child-bearing has plummeted. In 2026, when the front edge of this birth dearth reaches college campuses, the number of college-aged students will drop almost 15 percent in just 5 years.

In Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education, Nathan D. Grawe has developed the Higher Education Demand Index (HEDI), which relies on data from the 2002 Education Longitudinal Study (ELS) to estimate the probability of college-going using basic demographic variables. Analyzing demand forecasts by institution type and rank while disaggregating by demographic groups, Grawe provides separate forecasts for two-year colleges, elite institutions, and everything in between. The future demand for college attendance, he argues, depends critically on institution type. While many schools face painful contractions, for example, demand for elite schools is expected to grow by more than 15 percent in future years.

Essential for administrators and trustees who are responsible for recruitment, admissions, student support, tenure practices, facilities construction, and strategic planning, this book is a practical guide for navigating coming enrollment challenges.

Recenzijas

Over the past two weeks I've read a book about the future of American higher ed, and want to recommend it very highly. It might be the most important book on the subject published this year. Bryan Alexander blog This birth dearth has prompted Nathan Grawe, Professor of Economics at Carleton College, to analyze the dynamics of demographic shifts and consider how schools might prepare for a significant decrease in demand. Grawe meticulously presents his findings in his insightful and practical new book, Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education. Degree or Not Degree Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education, by Nathan Grawe, is both terrifying and worth reading if you work in, or care about, higher education. I actually gasped several times, which isn't my usual response to monographs about demographics. Inside Higher Ed Grawe's book is timely, well-researched, and thought-provoking. Especially college or university presidents would be well-served to give it a thorough reading, and this reviewer certainly be sharing the book with his. Michael T. Catalano, Dakota Wesleyan University, Numeracy The leading spokesperson of this emergent discourse of demographic crisis is the economist Nathan D. Grawe, whose book Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education sent a shockwave through higher education's administrative class.  Los Angeles Review of Books The most influential academic book of the past few years. Joshua Kim, Inside Higher Education

Papildus informācija

Fascinating and ambitious. There will be a wide and eager audience for this book. -- Martin J. Finkelstein, Seton Hall University, coauthor of The Faculty Factor: Reassessing the American Academy in a Turbulent Era An ambitious, original book that provides a new and much-needed general framework for detailed, fact-based forecasting of the demand for higher education over the next 15-20 years. Grawe's scholarship is well beyond sound. -- Bradley G. Lewis, Union College
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(4)
1 Demographic Headwinds for Higher Education
5(16)
2 Demographics as Destiny?
21(6)
3 The Higher Education Demand Index
27(17)
4 Changing Contours of Population and Aggregate Higher Education Demand
44(14)
5 Demand for Two-Year Programs
58(10)
6 Demand for Four-Year Institutions
68(19)
7 Is Anyone Paying for All of This?
87(11)
8 Coping with Change: Strategies for Institutional Response
98(15)
9 Anticipated Higher Education Attendance: The Policymaker's Perspective
113(13)
10 The Potential for Policy to Affect Attendance Rates
126(9)
11 Looking beyond 2030
135(4)
Methodological Appendix 139(16)
Notes 155(8)
References 163(6)
Index 169
Nathan D. Grawe is the Ada M. Harrison Distinguished Teaching Professor of the Social Sciences at Carleton College, where he served as associate dean from 2009 to 2012.