Fact Book on Higher Education

Overview

SREB Fact Book on Higher Education

The SREB Fact Book on Higher Education is one of the nation’s most comprehensive collections of comparative data on higher education. For decades, state leaders, policymakers, researchers and journalists have used the Fact Book to find accurate, comparable data and learn more about long-term trends.

The 2021 Fact Book includes more than 100 tables on data such as the population and economy, enrollment, degrees, student tuition and financial aid, faculty and administrators, revenue and expenditures. In all but specialized  data based on SREB’s regional survey, figures for each of the 50 states and District of Columbia are available.

The Student Success Imperative
Highlights from the 2021 Fact Book

Preparing Tomorrow’s Workforce in an Uncertain Economy

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 brought shutdowns across the workforce and around the globe. Students returned home, colleges pivoted to online learning, and educators and state leaders adapted to let students learn despite quarantines, a sagging economy and digital disconnection.

Two years and several surges later, students are back in person, but the effects of the pandemic have shifted the landscape of higher education. As states continue to respond to a constantly changing, technologically advanced world, one thing is clear: Postsecondary education will be the engine that drives us as we recover from the pandemic.

State Economies Need Student Success

Nearly every SREB state has a goal for raising its education attainment levels, in part to meet projected job growth for people with some postsecondary education. The benefits of higher education go not only to individuals but to the communities in which they live. Higher earnings generally follow higher attainment and lead to more tax revenue for local and state governments to fund support services.

Education attainment levels in the Southern region have risen slowly, with 31 percent of adults ages 25 and older having a bachelor’s degree or higher. To raise postsecondary attainment levels further, states must address perhaps the greatest barrier to access: affordability. The average annual cost of attendance for public four-year colleges for the 2019-20 academic year was $21,000 ($11,100 for public two-year colleges). The cost for a public, four-year institution for one year is 138 percent of the average annual household income for those in the lowest fifth of incomes, and 31 percent for those in the middle fifth.

Rising student debt also discourages some students from pursuing a postsecondary degree or credential. In 2019, 54 percent of college graduates in the SREB region had outstanding college loans, with an average debt of $28,200. Student debt disproportionately affects Black and Hispanic students, and this in turn affects the diversity rates of faculty members.

Declining Enrollment

The decline in college enrollment is another threat to attainment levels in SREB states. Slowing of population growth had already already affected enrollment, which declined more during the pandemic. 

With fewer students enrolling, states and postsecondary institutions face the challenge of helping more students succeed, particularly from populations that have historically had lower graduation rates, including Black, Hispanic, rural and first-generation students.

Education Attainment, Employment and Earnings

Higher education attainment levels are associated with higher earnings. Adults with bachelor’s degrees in the U.S. earned an average of $75,800 in 2019. Those with an associate degree averaged $50,900, 20 percent more than individuals with only a high school diploma or GED. 

Jobs that require at least a postsecondary certificate are expected to show above-average growth. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicted that growth in total employment would slow to 4 percent from 2019 to 2029, while job growth for individuals with a postsecondary certificate or associate degree is expected to increase about 6 percent. Jobs requiring a bachelor’s degree are projected to rise more than 6 percent.

As states and postsecondary institutions emerge into a new sense of normalcy as the global pandemic progresses, we have only begun to see what kind of effects it will have on higher education. From increases in virtual attendance to decreases in enrollment to the fallout from the Great Resignation, future editions of the Fact Book will show how the COVID-19 pandemic shapes the future of higher education and the workforce.

Publication May 2022214 pages(22E01)Susan LounsburyChristiana Datubo-BrownHannah Bartlebaugh

2021 SREB Fact Book on Higher Education

The SREB Fact Book on Higher Education includes data on the population and economy, enrollment, degrees, student tuition and financial aid, faculty and administrators, revenue and expenditures. With more than 100 tables of detailed information, the Fact Book is one of the nation’s most respected and most comprehensive collections of comparative data on higher education.

2021 SREB Fact Book on Higher Education

News SREB News Release
Undergraduate Enrollment by Race and Ethnicity, SREB Region. 2012: White 56% Black 23% Hispanic 15% All other 6%. 2017: White 52% Black 20% Hispanic 19% All other 9%.

Postsecondary Trends Threaten Workforce Needs
Fact Book Documents Challenges to Education Attainment Goals

Postsecondary attainment continues a slow climb in the South, according to the 2019 Fact Book on Higher Education.
 
Population and college enrollment trends are beginning to slow at a time when advancing technology and artificial intelligence are shifting the workplace to demand higher-level skills. And affordability remains a stubborn challenge to students and families and to states trying raise state education attainment levels to grow their economies.
 

General information

Fact Book History

1956

A Factbook on Higher Education in the South
(John K. Folger and Redding S. Sugg Jr.)

1963 Statistics for the Sixties: Higher Education in the South
(E.F. Schietinger)