Public polls show rapidly falling confidence in college even as degrees awarded, bachelor attainment rates, and median graduate earnings have continued to rise. The gap appears driven partly by misunderstanding of sticker prices, salience of high‑profile controversies, and media framing rather than a collapse in the college value proposition.
— Correcting the perception gap matters because policy responses driven by public outrage (e.g., sweeping funding cuts, credential skepticism) risk misallocating resources and undermining mobility unless anchored to enrollment, earnings, and affordability data.
Tyler Cowen
2026.03.04
70% relevant
Rising endowment drawdowns (NACUBO/Commonfund data cited) are a financial signal that can feed the public’s declining confidence in colleges — the article supplies the empirical lever (endowment withdrawals up 11% and endowments covering 15.2% of operating costs) that helps explain why perceptions and institutional viability may diverge.
msmash
2026.01.05
100% relevant
The article cites Pew and NBC polling (declines in 'very important' and 'not worth the cost') versus 2010–2023 degree and attainment statistics and earnings comparisons that show durable returns.
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