Parents who are desperately trying to get their children into a top school may not believe this: U.S. higher education enrollments this fall might be lower - perhaps significantly so at some institutions - than they were a year ago.
Official national data won't be published for some time. Yet state by state, enrollments appear to be down, mostly at community colleges and at some four-year schools as well.
In Ohio, preliminary numbers from the Board of Regents of the University System of Ohio show a 5.9 percent decline, and the drop-off at one community college (Hocking) was so precipitous (more than 20 percent) that it had to dismiss staff.
In other Midwest states such as Michigan and Wisconsin, numbers at some institutions have fallen as well. In Arizona, one large Tucson- area community college (Pima) shows a decline of 11 percent.
Some flagship state universities are full up - the University of Arizona, for example, reports that total enrollment is at an all-time high - though the University of Colorado, for one, has enrolled fewer students. In several cases, state funding cuts may have precipitated some of the declines, but that isn't the whole story.
The huge decreases in the number of students in the past couple of years have been at for-profit universities. They have been hit by stricter federal regulations, a major reason that some of the biggest for-profits have shifted away from a business model focused on large enrollment growth.
There are five possible reasons cited for dropping enrollments.
First, the population of 18-year-olds is in decline, and that is where most freshmen come from. Although this is a legitimate explanation, the decline in this age group isn't large enough (roughly 2 percent in the past year) to explain big enrollment decreases.