Enrollment of minorities in US colleges has increased substantially in recent years, but not fast enough to keep up with demographic changes.
Among Hispanics, a lower proportion who are in their late 20s has completed at least a two-year degree when compared with those age 30 and older.
Unless the trend is reversed, the increases in Hispanic participation in higher education won’t be enough to ensure that a growing proportion earn a college degree.
The findings are highlighted in a biennial report to be released yesterday by the American Council on Education, supported by the GE Foundation.
“One of the core tenets of the American dream is the hope that younger generations, who’ve had greater opportunities for educational advancement than their parents and grandparents, will be better off than the generations before them,” said council President Molly Corbett Broad. “Yet this report shows that aspiration is at serious risk.”
In fact, the report shows notable progress for minorities in higher education in several areas.
Between 1995 and 2005, total minority enrollment on US campuses rose 50 percent, to 5 million students.
The numbers of Hispanics receiving bachelor’s degrees has nearly doubled over that period, as has the number earning doctorates.
However, significant gaps among racial groups remain, and by some measures are widening. In 2006, among 18 to 24-year-olds, 61 percent of Asian-Americans were in college. That compares with 44 percent of whites, 32 percent of blacks and 25 percent of Hispanics.
Department of Education figures show that in 2006, 18 percent of older Hispanics had at least an associate’s degree, compared with just 16 percent of 25 to 29-year-olds.
Council researcher Mikyung Ryu said the numbers do not suggest that’s simply because students are delaying getting an associate’s degree until after 30.
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