Where the boys aren't — college graduations
I attended two graduation ceremonies earlier this month, including a
As my husband saw the
Afterward, I looked at the latest enrollment data for the spring semester that just concluded. The total
The gender tilt in favor of women is even more pronounced at other public campuses in
The numbers are similar at some of
The sole campus in the University System where males outpace females is
If you want to understand the prevalence of women at public campuses, go back to the high school pipeline. The pipeline leaks too many kids along the way to college enrollment, especially boys.
In March of this year, there were 58,640 male 12th graders in the state's public schools, according to the state
These boys may have moved or dropped out. Some died. Suicides are surging among male teens and young men, according to the
Yes, girls also fall off the path to high school completion, but not at the same rate. In the March enrollment count, this year's 12th grade class included 58,857 girls, down from 69,471 four years ago in the freshman class. That is a fade out of 10,614 female students since March of 2020 or 15%.
Nationwide, concern is growing over a widening gap in male and female academic attainment. Among the disparities revealed in federal data: For every 100 women enrolled in
A typical response to these disparate academic trends is that men can succeed without a college degree. And they can if they go into a narrow slice of high paying blue-collar jobs, including plumbing, HVAC and construction.
Still, despite the increased public skepticism about whether a college diploma is worth it, the median economic value added from a bachelor's degree doubled over the value of a high school degree after 1983, according to the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.
The
Economist
College grads not only make more money on average, they live longer. My uncle was a self-employed plumber who used to tell me and my brothers that he spent a lot of his days in crawl spaces and had the bad knees to show for it.
"Go to college," he advised us. "The view is nicer, and it's easier on your back."
Downey writes for the



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