Community Corner
COVID-19 Pandemic Undercuts Enrollment By 8.1% At Kansas Universities, Colleges
The systemwide headcount dwindled to 165,251, down nearly 15,000 students from last fall.

By Tim Carpenter, The Kansas Reflector
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Oct. 1, 2020
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TOPEKA — Enrollment at the 32 public universities and colleges under supervision of the Kansas Board of Regents collapsed by 8.1% in the fall semester as the COVID-19 pandemic interrupted educational plans of thousands of students.
The systemwide headcount dwindled to 165,251, down nearly 15,000 students from last fall. Overall enrollment in Kansas’ public higher education system had eroded in the three previous years, but the slippage amounted to about 3,800 students.
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In the new report on fall 2020 enrollment, the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and the four other state universities enrolled 3.5% fewer students than a year ago. Washburn University, a municipal institution in Topeka, was hammered by a 10% reduction.
The 19 community colleges collectively lost 14.1% of their students. Only one — Cowley Community College — added students to register a 0.5% increase. At the six technical colleges in Kansas, all suffered enrollment declines for a total 9.4% reduction.
Blake Flanders, president and chief executive officer of the Board of Regents, said COVID-19’s influence on fall enrollment was anticipated.
“COVID has introduced a unique set of hurdles for higher education,” Flanders said. “However, the pandemic has also converged with longer-term challenges facing enrollment, including a steady decline in the college going rate of Kansas high school graduates.”
He said the Board of Regents would continue to press for deliver opportunities for Kansans to build rewarding careers and to provide Kansas businesses access to a skilled workforce.
KU chancellor Doug Girod said an 804-student reduction in enrollment at the university was driven by a 7.2% decline in first-time freshmen and 18.1% drop among international students. Given hardships the pandemic presented students and families, Girod said, the overall loss of 2.7% at KU could have been worse.
But the pandemic has created a projected $120 million deficit in the current fiscal year that will necessitate “painful cost-savings measures in the months ahead,” the chancellor said.
“KU will need to adopt new business models, reorganize and restructure and implement cost reductions. All options — including furloughs, layoffs and salary reductions — must be considered for us to manage through this,” Girod said.
Heather Morgan, executive director of the Kansas Association of Community College Trustees, said the sharp decline experienced by the community college system was a direct consequence of the spread of COVID-19.
“Kansas community colleges typically serve students who face greater barriers to higher education, which were magnified by the pandemic,” she said in a statement on behalf of the community colleges.
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