Four-Year Colleges with the Highest Enrollment Growth During COVID-19
Key Insights:
- While national college enrollment dropped in 2020, online schools saw boosts during COVID-19
- New data shows which colleges had the highest enrollment growth in fall 2020
- Tuition-free online school University of the People had a 671% enrollment increase, the highest of any school
The COVID-19 pandemic hit higher education hard last year, with enrollment declines making headlines across the country. Both four-year and community colleges had significant enrollment drops nationally, with a 4.5% decline for undergraduate students in 2020, according to data from the
Four-Year Colleges with the Biggest Enrollment Boosts in Fall 2020
| School | Fall 2019 Enrollment | Fall 2020 Enrollment | Absolute Change | Percent Change |
|---|
Top 10 Four-Year Colleges with the Highest Enrollment Growth During COVID-19
Takeaways
Many of the colleges on this list serve a high rate of online students and have characteristics common in online offerings — lower tuition rates than many other universities, career-focused programs in high-demand fields, and accelerated degree options, to name a few.
These findings speak to the impact that the pandemic had on students' decisions about college and suggest a growing trend in the public perception of online degrees as a viable education option rather than an alternative. It also may highlight changing education needs for the workforce as thousands of people reskill for new careers in light of the changing economic landscape.
Correction note: Arizona State University - Campus Immersion changed its reporting structure in 2021, encompassing additional campuses in the fall 2020 enrollment numbers that were not included in 2019. As a result, enrollment growth rate calculations were incorrect. It has been removed from this list to correct that error.
Methodology
We limited our study to postsecondary institutions with at least 1,000 undergraduate students enrolled in Fall 2019 that graduated primarily baccalaureate students or higher in the 2018-19 and 2019-20 school years. Once these limitations were applied, the data resulted in a total of 1,294 schools. Enrollment numbers are for total undergraduate student enrollment in fall 2019 and fall 2020. All data comes from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) from the U.S. Department of Education.
Written by: Taylor Nichols