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Most Americans would probably rather forget the Great Recession that began in 2007. But as long ago as it may seem, it triggered something that is about to become a big problem: Americans started having fewer babies, and the birth rate hasn’t recovered since. That means a looming decline in the number of 18-year-olds. Since those are the traditional customers for universities and colleges, enrollment is projected to fall dramatically and campuses to close. In this episode, we tell you the surprising benefits of this for students and their parents — and the scary prospects for the economy, which will suffer shortages of workers just as baby boomers retire. Come with us to a college fair where recruiters line up to compete for applicants, and hear from enrollment consultants, economists, and the president of a school that has already closed. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
The anxiety-inducing college admissions game is changing – what if colleges started applying to you instead of the other way around? With declining birth rates and growing skepticism about the value of a degree, higher education is facing an enrollment cliff, set to hit hard in 2026. That’s 18 years after the Great Recession when many American families stopped having babies. As competition for students intensifies, more states desperate for workforce talent and schools dependent on tuition dollars are turning to direct admissions – a system where students receive college acceptance offers and scholarships before they even apply. In this episode, hosts Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus break down how we got to this point where the college admission process requires students to spend a ton of time and money with no guarantee of success. And they ask whether direct admissions is the solution colleges and students need – or just a Band-Aid on a bigger enrollment crisis. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Something has been happening on college campuses that’s as surprising as it is dramatic: The number of women enrolled has overtaken the number of men. Women now outnumber men by about 60 percent to 40 percent, and that gap keeps getting wider. And men who do enroll are also more likely to drop out. There are a lot of reasons for this. Boys get lower grades than girls, on average, in elementary and middle schools. They’re more likely to be held back or face disciplinary actions. They’re less likely to graduate from high school. And more men than women go into the skilled trades, instead of getting college degrees. Among the results: Universities and colleges now tip the scales for men in admission to try to keep the genders even. But as things keep falling out of balance, there are impacts on the financial success for men and on economic growth for everybody. We’ll hear from men and women students about what that’s like right now, and from colleges about what they’re trying to do about it. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
American higher education is approaching a sharp drop in college-aged students — a trend known as the demographic cliff. At the same time, following decades of declining enrollment, humanities programs are being forced to adapt or risk disappearing altogether. In this episode of College Uncovered, hosts Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus explore how some colleges are rebranding liberal arts as “applied humanities” or “leadership studies” to better connect with career paths and market demand. With humanities majors down significantly over the past two decades, schools are searching for new ways to make these degrees more relevant — and more appealing. We travel to Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, where enrollment in the College of Liberal Arts has jumped 80 percent over the past five years, thanks to a fresh focus on technology, leadership and career readiness. We hear from Richard Utz, interim dean at Georgia Tech, and Joy Connolly, president of the American Council of Learned Societies, who argue that humanities graduates bring some of the most in-demand skills to the workforce: communication, critical thinking, collaboration and the ability to navigate ambiguity. Listen to learn how the liberal arts are evolving — and why their survival may be essential to the future of higher education and the workforce. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
U.S. colleges have long relied on international students – and the big tuition checks they bring – to hit enrollment goals and keep the lights on. But now, just as the number of American college-aged students starts to fall – a trend known as the “demographic cliff”– global tensions are making international students think twice about coming to the U.S. for college. In this episode, hosts Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus take you inside the world of international admissions. With student visa revocations on the rise – often without explanation – and a growing number of detentions tied to student activism, some international families say they are rethinking their U.S. college plans. And that has college leaders sounding the alarm. As the Trump administration ramps up immigration crackdowns on campuses across the country, many worry the U.S. could lose its status as the top destination for global talent. So what happens if international enrollment drops just as domestic numbers dry up? The stakes are high – not just for students and colleges but for the entire U.S. economy. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
The single fastest-growing group of students in college? This may come as a surprise — they’re still in high school. So-called “dual enrollment” — also known as “early college” and “concurrent enrollment” — seems a win-win. Institutions get students, at a time when demographic shifts are making that more difficult; that’s especially true at community colleges, whose enrollment has declined the most. Meanwhile, high school students rack up credits, potentially saving time and money. Some finish their associate degrees at the same time that they get their diplomas. And studies show that they’re more likely to go on to and graduate from college than their classmates who don’t. The Department of Education didn’t even track how many students were taking dual-enrollment courses until last year. It turned out that two and a half million of them are. Studies show they’re more likely to go to and graduate from college than their classmates who don’t. High school students now make up a fifth of community college enrollment. At 37 community colleges nationwide, more than half of students are still in high school. But like much in higher education, there are traps and pitfalls. Not all of those credits transfer, for example. In this episode, we provide a road map to navigating dual enrollment. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Here’s a milestone you might not have heard about: It’s projected that this year, for the first time, more college students will take all of their courses online than will take all of their courses in person. Online higher education has come a long way since its predecessor, the correspondence school. The universal shift to remote learning during the pandemic only accelerated that momentum. It has also allowed more comprehensive research into whether online teaching works as well as the in-person kind. But even as more students go online to learn, there are many caveats about this fast-growing innovation. We talk to the experts about who should take online courses, where they should take them and in what subjects. We also lay out questions to ask of online providers, such as what kinds of real-world supports — faculty office hours, tutors — are available. Finally we solve a mystery that frustrates countless consumers: how in the world it’s possible that most online courses cost as much as, or more than, the brick-and-mortar kind. After all, technology has lowered prices in almost every industry. Come with us as we expose the reason higher education can find a way to charge more for yet another product that by all rights should cost less. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Is the four-year college degree losing its grip on the American Dream? Just as American colleges reach the demographic cliff in 2026, higher education in the U.S. is facing mounting pressure from all sides. President Donald Trump has targeted several highly-selective, wealthy universities, slashing federal research funding and questioning their tax-exempt status – painting them as overpriced and out-of-touch bastions of liberalism. But skepticism about college isn’t just coming from the right. On the campaign trail, Democratic nominee Kamala Harris called out the country’s narrow focus on four-year degrees, urging more support for apprenticeships and technical programs. And the public seems to agree. A growing number of Americans – nearly a third – now say they have little or no confidence in college. That’s up 10 percent from a decade ago. Employers and states desperate for talent are dropping degree requirements for certain entry-level positions. So where does that leave students and families? And how are colleges, especially those struggling to fill seats, adapting? In this episode of College Uncovered, co-hosts Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus dig into the rise of alternative pathways. They explain why there aren’t more apprenticeship and internship opportunities and explore what happens when the college degree is no longer the default. Whether you’re a student, parent, or just interested in the future of higher education, this episode helps explain what comes next. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Harvard just did something it hasn’t done in decades — it fired a tenured professor. Francesca Gino built her reputation studying honesty. Then she was accused of faking data. In May, Harvard’s top governing board revoked her tenure and ousted her from the Business School. But why is stripping tenure so rare — not just at Harvard, but anywhere? How common is research fraud? And why are colleges so secretive when it happens? College Uncovered’s Kirk Carapezza and reporter Mark Herz unpack the Gino case. Then Kirk sits down with science journalist and attorney Eugenie Reich, author of Plastic Fantastic: How the Biggest Fraud in Physics Shook the Scientific World. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
The government rescinded billions in federal research grants during Trump’s first few months in office — cutting fellowships, scholarships, and postdoc programs that support the next generation of scientists. A federal judge recently ordered the restoration of some National Institutes of Health grants. A battle over National Science Foundation funding is still playing out in court. So what do these cuts actually mean for higher education and scientific discovery? And if the United States gives up its global lead in innovation and research, what does that mean for the rest of us? In this episode of College Uncovered, host Kirk Carapezza and reporter Craig LeMoult visit one public university hit especially hard — and explore what’s really at stake for American science. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
Across the country, public universities are being flooded with requests for syllabi, reading lists, course materials, and data on international students. One company is behind many of those requests - Metric Media. Part of a growing network of conservative-led groups, Metric Media says it’s enforcing civil rights laws and holding taxpayer-funded institutions accountable. But critics see something very different: a coordinated pressure campaign emboldened by the second Trump administration that threatens academic freedom and seeks to intimidate scholars. Now some universities are pushing back. In this bonus episode of College Uncovered, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza talks with Brian Timpone, CEO and founder of Metric Media. In a rare interview, Timpone says there’s great public interest in what public universities are teaching students and he thinks America’s public colleges have lost sight of their mission. “Some of the names of these courses, they’re almost like The Onion,” Timpone says. Dan Kennedy, a Northeastern University journalism professor, argues that groups like Metric Media are weaponizing public records laws to pressure and silence professors. We also hear from two faculty members who’ve been targeted: Christopher Petsko, a business professor at the University of North Carolina, and Jennifer Ho, a professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado–Boulder. And as the Trump administration threatens to withhold federal research funding unless universities sign its proposed “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education,” some schools have already declined. Ted Mitchell, president of the American Council on Education, tells us why he believes the compact would be disastrous for colleges and the country and why you should care. “This is nothing short of a government attempt to make institutions creatures of the state,” Mitchell said. “That’s so antithetical to what higher education is and does. Higher education is about inquiry-based research, discovery-based teaching, and to deprive institutions of the ability to do that is really tantamount to just making them propaganda engines.” The New College Compact explores the escalating battle over academic freedom, political pressure, and the future of higher education in America. Additional links: Local colleges targeted amid growing campus culture wars Zombies, Garbage And Vampires? It's Not A Nightmare, It's Your College Course Catalog Un-Welcome to College DEI Backlash “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editors: Azita Ghahramani and Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
Artificial intelligence is still new on college campuses, but it’s already transforming how professors teach and how students learn. Surveys show most students now rely on generative AI for everything from applying to college to getting through it. Some educators are leaning in, treating AI as a teaching partner. Others are leaning out, doubling down on in-person, discussion-based learning. Either way, one thing is clear: AI isn’t going anywhere. This new technology is also reshaping the job market. Young workers are seeing fewer openings in fields most exposed to automation — software development, social media, coding. That’s why colleges are racing to future-proof their programs. In this bonus episode of College Uncovered, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza visits campuses to hear directly from professors and students who are adapting in real time. Harvard physicist Greg Kestin has built a custom chatbot — an “always-on” tutor that mimics himself. Boston College English professor Carlo Rotella, author of What Can I Get Out of This?, sees his unplugged, device-free classes as cutting-edge, urging students to slow down and do the work of building something together themselves. At Wentworth Institute of Technology, faculty are designing a new applied AI degree to give graduates a kind of surfboard to ride the coming digital and labor tsunamis. And Kerry McKittrick, co-director of Harvard’s Project on Workforce, explains what students and families need to know right now about AI and college and how colleges are using AI to boost completion rates and align what they teach with what employers actually need. Additional links: With AI common on campus, some educators are leaning in (GBH) Rather than AI, this professor chooses a chalkboard and old-fashioned books (GBH) Colleges hope to ‘AI-proof’ their offerings as new tech changes job expectations (GBH) Crossing the Great AI Divide (Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce) “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editors: Azita Ghahramani and Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Isabel Hibbard Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
College football bowl season is underway, with wall-to-wall games on TV, packed stadiums and multi-million-dollar broadcasts dominated by a few dozen powerhouse programs.In Amherst, Massachusetts, it’s quiet. That’s because the University of Massachusetts Amherst Minutemen just finished the 2025 season without a single win, the only team in the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision to do so. Over the past 13 seasons, since joining the FBS, UMass has stumbled to a stunning 26-130 record.Their collapse has turned McGuirk Alumni Stadium into a concrete, empty symbol of a bigger problem: public universities pouring tens of millions into athletics just as American higher education is facing both a financial reckoning and a demographic enrollment cliff. “It’s a disastrous enterprise,” said Boston Globe sports columnist Dan Shaughnessy, who has repeatedly used his weekly column to criticize UMass’s investment in football. When teams like the Minutemen can’t compete, he argues, pouring institutional dollars into football looks especially bad for a public university. “We’re sending these kids out there to take these beatings and to possibly get hurt and it’s just not right,” Shaughnessy said. “Don’t blame the athletes when you see those scores because they shouldn’t be put up against these teams.” In this episode of College Uncovered, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza talks with Amy Perko, CEO of the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics, which finds nationwide severance pay for fired football coaches has hit a record high. Public universities now owe more than $228 million in buyouts for just 15 fired head coaches. Then economist James Koch, former president of Old Dominion University and the University of Montana, explains his new statistical analysis that argues big-time college sports don’t benefit students and graduates at all and may actually leave them worse off. Links: After an abysmal season, UMass Amherst’s football program faces scrutiny “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editors: Azita Ghahramani and Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Isabel Hibbard Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
Recent graduates are facing a tough job market. Young people – and even colleges – are asking fundamental, existential questions: What does it mean to be educated? And will an expensive college education help set in motion a future career? As enrollment declines, costs rise, and political pressure intensifies, some colleges and universities are rethinking the liberal arts. They’re restructuring and rebranding programs to emphasize applied humanities, weaving career preparation directly into the curriculum. In this episode of College Uncovered, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza visits Brandeis University and Clark University to learn how two liberal arts schools are responding to some of the biggest challenges the higher education industry has faced in decades. Can this model survive? Kirk also speaks with Scott Carlson, a senior writer at The Chronicle of Higher Education and author of the new book Hacking College: Why the Major Doesn’t Matter and What Really Does. Carlson argues that colleges need to “systemize serendipity.” “I think colleges and universities need to take a more deliberate role in helping students figure out this is how the college game is played and these are the various directions you can take these degrees,” Carlson says. Links: Brandeis bets big on rebuilding the liberal arts around real-world skills Clark University braces for a harsh new reality as higher ed recession looms From Robin Hood to resumes: The humanities get a job market makeover The Revenge of the Humanities “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editors: Azita Ghahramani and Lisa Wardle Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Isabel Hibbard Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
College Uncovered Season 4 is here! We’re standing on the precipice of a “demographic cliff” threatening higher education. A drop in the number of 18-year-olds that are alive right now – triggered by a decline in birth rates after the 2008 Great Recession – is forcing colleges to rethink everything. Schools across the country are changing admissions, restructuring financial aid, rebranding the humanities, and finding new ways to recruit and educate young men, whose numbers are dropping even more precipitously on many campuses. We’ll uncover how these changes affect students, families, higher education, the economy, and our society at large. College Uncovered is hosted by Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus, two skilled multimedia journalists with decades of experience in covering higher education in the United States. They offer students, their families, and anyone curious about the business of college, an unvarnished look at a uniquely American system – and help you make better informed choices. New episodes of College Uncovered drop each week through May and are available wherever you listen to podcasts. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts and Producers: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Editor: Jonathan A. Davis Fact -checker: Ryan Alderman Executive Editor: Jenifer McKim Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Artwork: Matt Welch Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Divisive protests, police crackdowns, and a chilling backlash against free speech are among the reasons that a growing number of students say they don’t feel welcome on some college campuses. Conflicts over abortion, LGBTQ+ rights, and DEI, as well as what can and can’t be taught in classrooms are stirring up campus life against the backdrop of a contentious presidential election. A majority of students say abortion laws and restrictions around the discussion of race and gender would have at least some effect on where they go to college, according to Gallup polling. The same polls also find that some students at four-year universities feel as if they don’t belong or disrespected. Students on the left and right alike say they’re increasingly reluctant to express controversial opinions, but that it’s okay to report on classmates or faculty who do. That’s why we’re exploring the politics of higher education this season. College has become a new battleground in the culture wars, and it's affecting where students enroll and what they’re learning. Learn more from the Hechinger Report's College Welcome Guide! “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Following intense, sometimes violent protests on college campuses last spring, colleges are taking new steps to encourage more civil dialogue and debate among students who disagree. Some schools are offering new guidance and coursework around how students should speak to one another in an effort to bridge deep differences. At the same time, colleges are tightening restrictions on campus protests related to the war in Gaza, and cracking down on protest tactics with heightened enforcement. We’ll explore the new approaches and talk with experts about the efforts to help students speak across their differences. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
More than 40 million Americans have student loan debt, but should the government forgive all or part of it? It’s a debate that’s a source of extreme political division. Opponents call it a transfer of wealth from the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder to the top and people with college degrees; supporters say forgiveness gives some breathing room to graduates who are being crushed by the costs of repayment, in some cases without ever even having graduated. The cost of college is also forcing people to put off marriage, starting families, or buying a house and fuel the American economy. We’ll hear from student loan holders and get advice on how to avoid going into debt in the first place. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Delta State University in rural Mississippi eliminated it’s highly regarded music department. It’ also cut English, math, chemistry, and about a third of the courses that it used to teach. And Delta State’s far from alone. Arkansas State, the University of North Carolina – Greensboro, Youngstown State in Ohio, West Virginia University have all made significant course cutbacks.That’s a problem. People in rural America already have far less access to colleges and universities than people in cities and suburbs. Nearly 13 million people in the US already live in higher education desserts, places well beyond commuting distance to a college. But now many of the schools that exist to serve rural students are cutting programs and majors.We talk about this trend, and how it exacerbates the already wide economic, social and political divisions between many rural and urban Americans. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Colleges that embraced diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives (DEI) in the wake of the 2020 murder of George Floyd by police are now fearing litigation and quietly eliminating their DEI programs. North Carolina is one of the latest to do so. At least 20 states have Republican proposals aimed at limiting DEI programs at public universities. State schools in Wisconsin and Alabama are preemptively banning DEI after threats by lawmakers to withhold money and raises. Even colleges in left-leaning states are no longer asking applicants to provide diversity statements for new faculty positions. So how is DEI defined and what’s lost when it goes away? How has a “DEI bureaucracy” gone out of control? Will colleges increasingly eliminate scholarships designed for historically marginalized students? Special guest host and GBH Investigative Reporter Phillip Martin joins this week’s podcast to talk about what’s behind the changes. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
College presidents serve for less than six years on average. For women and people of color, that tenure is even shorter – a full year shorter. So what’s going on? College presidents are under fire for what they say about issues like systemic racism, abortion access and war in the Middle East, as well as what they do — or don't do — about campus protests. So why would anyone want to be a college president? And, as a student, does it even matter who your president is? What questions should students and their families be asking of a colleges’ top brass? We talk to former Colorado College president Song Richardson, who left her dream job because she wanted to speak freely about hot-button issues, and the current and former presidents of Macalester College, Suzanne Rivera and Brian Rosenberg, to learn more about what's driving people away from jobs at the top of the academic ladder. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Greater Boston – a region famous for its sheer number of colleges – is also home to an underground network that helps women receive abortion pills. Every week, a group including many Boston-area college and medical students meets to put together abortion pill care packages to send to women who need them. While the founders call them “pill packing parties” the work is not without risk. Women in Texas, Mississippi and other states where abortion is illegal or restricted can be prosecuted for aborting a fetus. College students have long been active in the abortion movement, but the activism looks very different today than it did in the 1960’s. College Uncovered takes you to a “pill packing party” at an undisclosed location in Greater Boston and talks with college students mobilizing to help women get abortion medication wherever they live. We also look at the re-energized anti-abortion movement in the wake of the Dobbs ruling two years ago and hear from a leader of the “Post-Roe Generation.” GBH’s Andrea Asuaje, senior producer for “Under the Radar with Callie Crossley” hosts this week’s episode, taking a deep dive into the sweeping ways medication abortion and the Internet have changed college activism. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. Correction: A prior version of this episode misinterpreted Kristan Hawkins’ comments at Harvard Law School and erroneously said she had an abortion. In fact, Hawkins’ comments were referring to what other women have told her about having an abortion. We have updated the episode and GBH News regrets the error. ---------- Credits: Guest Host: Andrea Asuaje Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins
Throughout the 2024 presidential campaign, President-elect Donald Trump railed against colleges and universities for being too expensive, too partisan and too “woke.” Trump’s anti-elite, anti-immigration tone channeled the frustrations of many working-class Americans — and led him to a decisive win at the polls. So, with Trump returning to the White House for a second term, how much of his higher education message is rhetoric and how much is potential policy? And what comes next for students and colleges? As they wrap up this election year season, Kirk and Jon explore how college may change under a new Trump administration and ask a simple question: what comes next on campus? We hear from Michael Brickman, who worked as a senior advisor in the U.S. Education Department during Trump’s first term, and Ted Mitchell, president of the American Council on Education, the nation’s biggest association of colleges and universities. Then, Jennifer Thornton with the Business Higher Education Forum and Maria Flynn with Jobs For the Future explain why on-the-job training through apprenticeships is one policy likely to move forward quickly in a second Trump administration. We also hear from students who backed Trump and those who fear his return to the Oval Office, including Jenson Wu with The Trevor Project, who tells us a second Trump term could have a significant impact on LGBTQ college students. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation.
College Uncovered Season 3 is here! In our first two seasons, GBH and The Hechinger Report explored the business of college admissions and paying for your education. Now we’re back with a special election year season, helping you navigate the politics of American colleges and universities. College Uncovered is hosted by Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus, journalists with decades of experience who specialize in covering higher education in the U.S. They offer students and their families an unvarnished look at a uniquely American system, so YOU can make fully informed choices. One episode will drop weekly and will be available wherever you listen to podcasts. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Congratulations, you got accepted to college! The next notification you’ll get: a financial aid offer, telling you what it will cost. And those financial aid offer letters are notoriously indecipherable and misleading, making it difficult to make college cost comparisons or even know how much you’ll owe. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Colleges work hard to make their prices seem much lower than they actually are. The problem has become so frustrating for families that now there’s an effort to fix it. But don’t hold your breath. Colleges are fighting attempts to make financial aid forms easier to compare and more understandable. We’ll give you tips on how to negotiate for more financial aid and ask for a better offer. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Universities dole out more than half of the revenue they collect from tuition in the form of discounts and financial aid in their efforts to attract students. The US average is 56 percent. If a private company discounted its products by more than half, it would probably go out of business. So why do colleges use this self-destructive business model that leaves many prospective students thinking college costs more than it does? We explore. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Okay, so you’re going to college. But will the college you pick still have its lights on before you graduate? It’s a question more and more families face as colleges experience financial and enrollment challenges that force them to close or merge. We’ll look at what colleges are doing to stay alive, whether should states disclose institutions’ financial health to consumers, and what happens to students - and their credits - when their school suddenly shuts down. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
To boost enrollment and meet workforce needs, more states are offering free community college programs. But do these programs effectively help students graduate from college? And by offering college for free, does that diminish its value? We look at the research, as well as a new free college program in Massachusetts and an old one in Tennessee, where community college has been free for years. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. --------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Student loans aren’t the only kind of university debt. Colleges and universities have borrowed billions, mostly to build new dorms, dining halls and facilities, spaces they may – or may not – need as student enrollment declines nationally. Today, nearly 10 cents of every dollar in university budgets helps pay interest on institutional debt. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Students at one New York university have a surprise awaiting them: an $8,000-a-year “academic excellence fee.” We have to ask: Isn’t academic excellence included in tuition? In fact, tuition is only part of the cost of college. Like car dealerships, schools are nickel-and-diming consumers with huge fees — fees for student activities, fees for athletics, fees for building maintenance, fees for libraries, even fees for graduation, the bills for which arrive just as students and their families thought they were finally done paying for college. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
While there are a lot of tests to get into college, there are no exit exams to get out. Despite the soaring price of tuition and the benefits a degree offers, researchers have found that undergrads often spend little time studying compared to other activities like working, socializing or partying. As a result, many show limited gains in critical thinking — the hallmark of American higher education. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
College Uncovered Season 2 is here! ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins College Uncovered is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report and made possible by Lumina Foundation.
College application essays demonstrate literacy and creativity of high school students striving for higher education. As the producers of the "Dear College" podcast have found, what this rising generation says about themselves says a lot about all of us. In this bonus episode of "College Uncovered," Jenessa Otabor shares how a recent educational opportunity turned from stressful to rewarding; once she learned how to speak up for herself. Learn more about the Dear College podcast here: www.dearcollegepodcast.org
The essay is a vital piece in the college application puzzle; portraying the strengths and challenges of aspiring high school students. In this bonus episode of "College Uncovered," Tayana Antoine describes for the producers of the "Dear College" podcast, the similarities between a teen mom and an older sister. How her dual role as caretaker for her siblings and maturing adult sometimes can clash but also brings her much delight. Learn more about the Dear College podcast here: www.dearcollegepodcast.org
Colleges are increasingly hard up for students so they make a lot of promises they don’t keep. In this episode, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus of the Hechinger Report talk with students, economists and industry experts about what you need to know before handing over that giant tuition deposit. And it all starts with how much college will cost. Although it’s one of the biggest lifetime investments a person can make, most consumers don’t know what they’ll ultimately spend on a degree. Colleges overwhelmingly do not disclose – or simply understate – how much families will pay. They tie themselves in knots to avoid using the word “loan” even when students need one. Most freshmen think they’ll graduate with bachelor’s degrees within four years, but that’s not usually true. More than half will take more than four years, further increasing the cost. Good luck finding this out, though; thanks to lobbying by colleges, the graduation rate reported by the government represents the proportion of students who finish in six or eight years, not four. Colleges aren’t entirely honest about what a diploma gets you either. While they boast that most graduates are gainfully employed, colleges know the whereabouts of less than half of alumni. Forty-four percent to be precise. Getting a degree still pays off, especially considering that people who have one earn $18,000 a year more by the middle of their careers than someone with a high school diploma. But this misinformation contributes to the fact that many Americans with college educations are underemployed and working in restaurants and as coffee baristas. It’s no wonder that only about a third of Americans say they have a lot of confidence in higher education. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
The 2019 Varsity Blues scandal exposed just how far rich, famous and entitled parents would go to get their kids into big name colleges. But the truth is there are many ways colleges already give preferences to wealthy students. And they are completely legal. GBH’s Kirk Carapezza and Jon Marcus of the Hechinger Report dig into how college admissions favor students who can pay giant tuition bills out of pocket. And this happens even as the U.S. Supreme Court withdraws affirmative action advantages benefiting low-income students of color. In this episode, we explain how early decision benefits wealthy students who can afford to commit to a college before seeing a financial aid offer. And explore the world of private college advising. You’ll hear from elite coaches and experts to find out why college coaching is needed in the first place. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Getting turned down by your dream college doesn’t always mean you’ve been categorically rejected. Some applicants who fail to get in as freshmen, for example, are invited back … as sophomores. They don’t even need to reapply. It’s one of many secrets admissions officers prefer to keep quiet. Colleges don’t do this kind of thing out of the goodness of their hearts. They know a shamefully high number of freshmen – about one in four on average, will drop out. That’s a lot of seats they need to fill. Colleges also know that the students they accept as sophomores won’t count in all-important college ranking calculations, which are based mainly on the characteristics of entering freshmen. This makes it a way to admit the children of alumni and donors who might not have made the first cut. The Hechinger Report’s Jon Marcus and GBH’s Kirk Carapezza dive into how secret sophomore admissions works — and whether it might work for you. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
While colleges make it seem like they choose applicants solely on their merit as students, that’s not always the case. Former admissions officer Kyra Tyler shares her experience working in an admissions office, where she was asked to prioritize less academically qualified students with family connections and wealth. GBH’s Kirk Carapezza and GBH guest host Kana Ruhalter also dive into new research that exposes a shift in how colleges distribute financial aid. Researcher Steven Burd studied admissions packages at hundreds of selective public and private colleges and found that colleges are spending billions on students, spreading it around among students who don’t necessarily need the aid. This happens at the expense of needier students. And reporter Fazil Khan from The Hechinger Report discusses new data showing the net price of college is actually rising faster for lower-income students, exacerbating the disparities in higher education. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Many students go to a two year or community college thinking it’s a bargain: attend for two years, then transfer to a four year school, saving tens of thousands of dollars in tuition. But it doesn't always work out that way. Nearly half of all college credits don't end up transferring when a student changes schools. Kirk Carapezza and Esteban Bustillos talk about why the transfer system short-changes students, and how colleges and universities have wide discretion when it comes to deciding which credits to accept or deny. Many students are left with so-called “stranded credits” in the transfer process, a big problem for many students, but especially low-income and first-generation students whose families might not know the intricacies of the system. How can students avoid falling in the transfer trap? Experts say they should be on the lookout for colleges that guarantee transfer credits, or ask if a college has a transfer agreement with a four-year college or university. A growing number do. Listen and learn more about how to avoid common transfer pitfalls. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
A bachelor’s degree in four years is one of the most basic promises colleges make, and one of the biggest frustrations their customers face. Fewer than half of students will actually graduate in four years. And the numbers are even worse for Black and Hispanic students. Consider this surprising number: at more than 100 US colleges and universities, not a single student graduated within four years. In this episode, Kirk and Jon talk about what colleges don’t want you to know around graduation rates, and dig up the behind-the-scenes maneuver by a famous senator that has helped colleges keep the problem hidden. They also look at the ways colleges slow students down, by piling on extra requirements for graduation, failing to offer enough sections of required courses, or offering lackluster student advising. But there is hope for savvy college consumers. A few colleges have created three year bachelors’ degree programs to help students save time and money. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Some colleges and universities now spend more on marketing than on financial aid. They’re hiring marketing professionals who have worked at Fortune 500 companies and using digital marketing tools to follow you around the internet. They know how much time you spend on a website, when you save something for later, and what other sites you visit. A growing number also sneakily collect your personal information so they can target you for recruitment by touting their graduates’ high paying jobs or connections within competitive industries. Some less scrupulous schools have been warned by the Federal Trade Commission to stop exaggerating their claims about the kinds of jobs their graduates get, and how much they earn. Kirk and Jon reveal the increasingly sophisticated ways that colleges and universities try to get your attention — and offer up tips for consumers trying to navigate a sea of slogans. They’ll tell you what consumer advocates say about how to resist the slickly crafted tugs on your emotions that can get you to open your wallet. “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Colleges are quietly buying – or as they like to spin it, licensing – lists of potential student names and personal information from companies administering tests like the SAT and ACT. The goal? Recruit, but also recruit to reject. The more applicants a college recruits, the more selective and prestigious they seem in the college rankings. In this final episode of Season One, Kirk and Jon explore how both selective and less selective colleges and universities use enrollment and financial aid management strategies to increase their applicant pool, lower admission rates and meet their bottom line. And here’s the key: college is the only industry – outside banking – that can legally access all of your income information and make decisions on your ability to pay before charging you a price. Kirk and Jon trace the origins of these practices back to Boston College in the 1970s and follow the evolution of enrollment management systems into a multi-billion dollar higher ed shadow industry. Colleges now rely on their enrollment management systems to survive and compete for students. And their opaque analysis of a family’s budget can determine whether a student receives steep tuition discounts or “merit scholarships” that can dramatically lower the cost of tuition. These backroom practices have some former administrators concerned about the effects on access to and equity in higher education – and they’re calling for renewed transparency in college . “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report.
Higher education looms large in the American psyche: as the route to prosperity, a good job and a stable career. But the college dream can also be the source of crushing debt, an unfinished degree, and, sometimes, both. ---------- Credits: Hosts: Kirk Carapezza & Jon Marcus Supervising Editor: Megan Woolhouse Editor: Jeff Keating Executive Producer: Ellen London Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Meiqian He Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins College Uncovered is a production of GBH News and The Hechinger Report and made possible by Lumina Foundation.
Millions of Americans have left college before earning their degrees. Some schools are trying to re-engage those so-called “stop-out” learners to bolster their classes amid growing uncertainty about enrollment. In this episode of College Uncovered, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza explores how local institutions are partnering with national organizations like ReUp Education to reconnect with former students. Advocates are hopeful about these partnerships because most schools don’t have sufficient resources to reconnect with adult learners, who may need dozens of calls and individualized support before re-enrolling. Kirk also speaks with Elliot Felix, author of The Connected College, who believes re-engaging adult students is critical to fulfilling higher education’s promise. “College is still our best instrument for economic opportunity and mobility and helping students find their people, their place, their purpose, and their path forward,” Felix says. And if you’re an adult student who stepped away from college before finishing, we’ll outline the key questions to ask before deciding to return. Links: Colleges are reconnecting with students who left before earning their degrees Graduation Frustration The Real Cost of “Free” “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editors: Azita Ghahramani and Lisa Wardle Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Isabel Hibbard Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News
GBH recently took College Uncovered on the road to the University of Massachusetts Boston, in the city’s Dorchester neighborhood, about eight miles from some of the nation’s well-known Ivy League institutions. We chose UMass Boston not just because it’s in our backyard, but because campuses like it represent where most students in the U.S. actually go to college. Roughly 80 percent of students attend public universities and colleges, and most of them don’t graduate on time. When it comes to navigating shifting demographics, serving students, and meeting workforce demands, UMass Boston Chancellor Marcelo Suárez-Orozco says institutions need to start by connecting with their own backyards. “What we have is a rapidly aging population below replacement fertility rates,” Suárez Orozco says. “And we have a new dynamic in that the sectors of the population that are growing are the sectors of the population that we, UMass Boston, serve. These are of immigrant origin mostly, and second generation." In this special episode, GBH’s Kirk Carapezza moderates a panel discussion between Suárez Orozco, Fanta Aw, CEO of NAFSA: The Association of International Educators, and Marjorie Hass, president of the Council of Independent Colleges. The higher ed leaders discuss challenges and opportunities created by the so-called demographic cliff, and how colleges are responding to sustained political pressure on American higher education. In the episode’s second half, education reporter Jon Marcus of The Hechinger Reporter explains how colleges are trying to recruit and retain adult learners and why a growing number of schools are trimming the traditional bachelor’s degree to three years. "The new kind of three-year degree only requires 90 credits, and that's increasingly being approved by accreditors who are under political pressure and by states who recognize the consumer demand for work-oriented bachelor's degrees," Marcus says. Related links: The Demographic Cliff The Student Trade Wars Colleges are reconnecting with students who left before earning their degrees Faster, thinner: Colleges are swiftly trimming a B.A. degree to three years “College Uncovered” is made possible by Lumina Foundation. ---------- Credits: Host and Producer: Kirk Carapezza Editors: Azita Ghahramani and Lisa Wardle Executive Producer: Lee Hill Mixing and Sound Design: David Goodman & Gary Mott Theme Song and original music: Left-Roman Artwork: Matt Welch Project Manager: Isabel Hibbard Consulting Producer and Head of GBH Podcasts: Devin Maverick Robins "College Uncovered" is a production of GBH News