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Number of young Latinos
in college surges
By JUSTIN POPE, AP Education Writer
August 25, 2011 (AP): In just one year the number of Latinos
ages 18 to 24 on US-America college campuses grew by nearly a
quarter, while the number of white students that age declined,
highlighting a substantial and increasingly rapid demographic
transition in higher education.
The 24 percent increase—about 350,000 additional young Latinos
in college in 2010 compared to the year before—was reported
Thursday in a study of Census data by the Pew Hispanic
Center. It's the largest such increase on record, and is
noteworthy because it's substantially higher than the 7 percent
increase in the overall population of Latinos that age.
That more Latinos are completing high school, and thus becoming
eligible for college, is one factor. But the economy is another,
with fewer jobs available for students who stop at high school.
Latinos may have been disproportionately affected by those
changes, though it's not clear from this particular data.
``In the Great Recession, job markets, particularly for the
nation's young in many states, significantly deteriorated,''
said Richard Fry, senior research associate at the center. ``For
some youth, work is an alternative to school. They can't find
jobs, so why not finish high school? Why not go to college?''
The number of college-age blacks enrolled in higher education
also increased, though not as rapidly, and for the first time
there are more Latino 18-to-24 year-olds on U.S. campuses than
blacks.
Overall, college-age Latinos represented 1.8 million, or 15
percent, of the 12.2 million young adults in college. But
substantial differences persist in the types of colleges
different groups attend.
Forty-six percent of young Latinos attending college last
October enrolled in two-year schools and 54 percent in four-year
schools. By contrast, 73 percent of young white students
enrolled are in four-year colleges, along with 78 percent of
Asians and 63 percent of blacks.
The 43 percent of college-aged whites enrolled in higher
education remains higher than the figure for blacks (38 percent)
and Latinos (32 percent).
But unlike for those groups, the proportion of young whites in
higher education is falling. There were 320,000 fewer young non-
Latino whites in college in 2010 compared to the year before.
The drop is only partly explained by a declining population of
whites that age; the smaller group is also falling in
achievement. Both the percentage graduating from high school and
the percentage of high school graduates enrolling in college
fell last year.
At the Community College of Denver, in Colorado, where about a
quarter of the approximately 7,000 students are Latino,
President Cliff Richardson says the economy is one factor
driving enrollment growth but the college has gotten better at
recruiting.
``We're also doing many new outreach programs, we're catching
these students in high schools, sometimes even in middle
schools,'' he said. ``We're making them believe college is
attainable.''
Lorenzo Castillo,
a biology student and aspiring dentist at Florida International
University, where Latinos are a majority of the student body,
said the word has gotten out in the community there are no good
jobs without college.
``It's because of how people are being brought up these days,''
he said. ``You have to go to college now. You have to work
harder now. A lot more people are than before.''
Online:
http://pewhispanic.org/
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