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The Typical American College Student Is Not Who You Think

U.S.|The Typical College Student Is Not Who You Think

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/25/us/us-typical-college-student.html

As a fight over the future of elite higher education consumes university leaders and politicians, most college students live in a very different world with very different challenges.

A woman with long blonde hair and navy pants sits at a round kitchen table with pink chairs. Two little boys with blonde hair are across the table from her.
Jasmin Cross studies at her kitchen table while her sons play. Ms. Cross attends Portland Community College in Portland, Ore.Credit...Amanda Lucier for The New York Times

Alan BlinderSteven Rich

Aug. 25, 2025Updated 8:53 a.m. ET

There are more than 19 million college students in the United States. Most are well removed from academia’s corridors of wealth and power, cavernous football stadiums and carefree nights hanging out in dorms. The war between President Trump and Harvard University barely registers to them.

Instead, many live close to home, often juggling work or taking care of children with their course load. Many are enrolled part time or in community colleges.

The American higher education system is a showcase of individual ambitions and academic variety. But many parts of that system are under strain, buffeted by budget cuts, demographic changes and even a pressure campaign from Mr. Trump. And for many college students, this strain is making the ability to earn a degree even harder.

Community colleges, along with regional public universities, are the workhorses of higher education in the United States, which has roughly 4,000 degree-granting schools. Some nine million students are enrolled at community colleges, accounting for 43 percent of America’s undergraduates.

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Students at LaGuardia Community College in Queens, N.Y.Credit...Jake Naughton for The New York Times

Many of these students — nearly three in four — are enrolled on a part-time basis, squeezing in a handful of classes for slow, sometimes unsteady progress toward a degree. They are often drawn to community colleges because of lower tuition costs, schedule flexibility, smaller classes and proximity to home.

One in five undergraduate students is a parent, balancing term papers with temper tantrums. Many children of students are in school themselves.

Roughly 1.4 million undergraduate students are single mothers, making up 9 percent of America’s undergraduate population.

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Students work at laptops at Portland Community College. Credit...Jenny Kane/Associated Press

The pandemic ushered in a new era of online education that built on administrators’ realization that the internet could be a cash cow for their schools and an academic pathway for busy students. Now, a majority of students take at least some of their classes online.

And beyond the enormous range of boot camps, certifications and other credentials — many of which researchers believe are of limited quality and little long-term value — many colleges and universities offer entirely online degree programs.

That is a rise from 11 percent a decade ago. Many online students will never visit the schools, or even the states, from which they earn degrees. Their loyalty to the college can be nearly nonexistent.

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Student housing at Jackson College in Jackson, Michigan.Credit...Emily Elconin for The New York Times

Dorm life is not the norm for most students, with only about 16 percent living on campuses.

The cost of college has generally smoothed out in recent years. High sticker prices have flattened after a long run of growth, but the amount of outstanding student loans continues to rise.

The median former college student currently owes about $19,000, up from $13,000 two decades ago, with adjustments for inflation. Students with graduate degrees are often on the hook for far more, owing an average of $69,000.

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Students at a gift shop on the campus of Jackson College.Credit...Emily Elconin for The New York Times

Student debt has race and gender gaps. Black women have the highest debt load, with an average of $33,000. That is more than three times the amount that white men are carrying, and $15,000 more than what white women owe.

Most students who attend college are the recipients of some form of financial aid. Students received more than $100 billion in federal, state and local awards last year.

More than $31 billion in Pell Grants were disbursed to undergraduate students attending U.S. colleges and universities.

At least 12 percent of the U.S. population have earned some college credits, but do not have a degree to show for it.

Alan Blinder is a national correspondent for The Times, covering education.

Steven Rich is a data reporter at The Times, using data analysis to investigate major issues and contextualize current events.

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