Bloom's Sixth


Recent Posts

KU’s big jump in freshman enrollment this academic year ran counter to broader trends in higher education. Around the country, college enrollment has been trending downward (although there was a slight increase in 2023), many campuses have been closing or consolidating, and a lower birthrate after the 2008-09 recession looms in what has become known as the “enrollment cliff.” That is, with fewer births, there will soon be fewer students graduating from high school and thus fewer potential college applicants…
Read Moreabout Enrollment trends suggest a changing educational landscape
Posted on by Doug Ward

The latest enrollment report for universities in the Kansas regents system (down 1.5%) seems worth little more than a shrug. Longer term, though, the higher education trends in Kansas will require considerable attention – and action. Enrollment at the six regents universities has fallen 13.5%, or 10,100 students, since peaking in 2011. That average masks even bigger declines at individual universities: Pittsburg State, down 28.4% since 2011; K-…
Read Moreabout How enrollment trends are shaping the university of the future
Posted on by Doug Ward

The headlines about KU’s fall enrollment sounded much like a Minnesotan’s assessment of winter: It could be worse. Indeed it could have been, given the uncertainties brought on by the coronavirus and rumblings among students that they might sit out the year if their courses were online. Depending on how you measure, enrollment on the Lawrence and Edwards campuses …
Read Moreabout A look behind KU’s fall enrollment numbers
Posted on by Doug Ward

Enrollment at Kansas regents universities declined again this year. I say again because enrollment has declined each year since 2011. The decline – 5.7% since 2011 — is relatively small, but it illustrates the challenges of a state university system that has become increasingly dependent on student tuition dollars to finance operations. It also illustrates the challenges that regents…
Read Moreabout Enrollment numbers reflect a difficult decade for higher education (and provide a few surprises)
Posted on by Doug Ward

Enrollment reports released last week hint at the challenges that colleges and universities will face in the coming decade. Across the Kansas regents universities, enrollment fell by the equivalent of 540 full-time students, or 0.72 percent. Emporia State, Fort Hays State, Wichita State and the KU Medical Center all showed slight increases, but full-time equivalent enrollment fell at Pittsburg State (3.98 percent), Kansas State (3.09 percent), and the KU…
Read Moreabout Enrollment figures foreshadow challenges for universities
Posted on by Doug Ward

This fall’s enrollment figures contained much for the University of Kansas to be proud of, and the university rightly bragged about that. Freshman enrollment has grown for five years in a row, and the incoming class is made up of nearly 23 percent minority students. That was great news, especially because more restrictive admissions standards went into place this fall. Those higher admissions standards show up in the 3.58 average GPA of the incoming class. Two other…
Read Moreabout Two enrollment trends worth watching
Posted on by Doug Ward

By Doug Ward Course redesign has become a crucial piece of helping college students succeed. The statistics below about enrollment and graduation rates make it clear that success is too often elusive. Course redesign is hardly the only solution to that problem, but it is a proven, tangible step that colleges and universities can take. Course redesign involves moving away from faculty-centered lectures and adopting student-centered techniques that improve learning. It usually includes online work that students do outside of class and in-…
Read Moreabout The core elements of course redesign
Posted on by Doug Ward

Despite declining enrollments (see below) and changes in student demographics, most colleges and universities have continued to divert resources into traditional areas related to rankings rather than to innovations that would help them reach and serve new audiences. That’s the argument Michael R. Weise, a senior research fellow at the Clayton Christensen Institute, argues in an article in Educause. Colleges and universities have…
Read Moreabout Education Matters: Competency and enrollment
Posted on by Doug Ward