|
|
|
|
|
by pacbard
438 days ago
|
|
The most likely explanation for this phenomenon is that there isn't a change in the population average for variable X, but that the decrease in college students' average X is due to an increase in population college going rates. Looking at the statistics[1], the US went from a 23.2% college completion rate in 1990 to 39.2% completion rate in 2022, or a 67% increase in college degree completions. If you assume that X in the population is constant over time, mechanically you will need to enroll and graduate students from lower percentiles of X in order to increase the overall college completion rate in the whole population. This process might be particularly acute at "lower tier" institutions that cannot compete with "top tier" institutions for top students. [1]: https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d20/tables/dt20_104.20.a... |
|
You can also see it in the whole pipeline. Everything he described is true (age adjusted) for K-12 as well.