The evolving nature of higher education is on full display this week as students at Clark College christen a new school year.
As Vancouver’s two-year college opens its doors, welcoming 12,835 students, the numbers bear out the diverse role that a community college can play. According to Columbian reporter Susan Parrish, 73 percent of Clark students are first-generation college students; more than 30 percent are people of color; 200 are international students; and 2,000 are Running Start enrollees — high school students who are accruing college credit while also completing their secondary studies.
Each of those numbers reflect a decades-long societal push to increase higher-education opportunities and to paint college as essential for a successful adulthood. According to a federal interagency report earlier this year, college enrollment has risen from 26 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds in 1980, to 41 percent in 2012. The rise in those numbers is particularly dramatic in the case of minority students; among blacks, for example, enrollment has gone from 19 percent to 37 percent over the past 30 years.
So, more and more people are seeking a college education as such training becomes more and more essential for competing in a global marketplace. Long gone are the days when a high school graduate could go down to the local factory or the local mill and land a job that would turn into a secure long-term career. The demise of such middle-class, blue-collar jobs has altered the educational landscape as well as the economic landscape.