The U.S. has reached an educational milestone that could be seen as positive or dissappointing, depending on your viewpoint. Earlier this month, the Census Bureau announced that more than 30 per cent of American adults hold bachelor’s degrees for the first time. Ten years ago, just 26.2% of Americans over 25 had a bachelor’s degree, so this does represent and improvement.
While this hardly seems impressive, The Washington Post reports that today, the U.S. actually has the second highest proportion of adults aged 25 to 64 holding a bachelor’s degree in the world, behind only Norway.
But the picture is less positive when all college degrees are considered. According to The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the U.S. has fallen from 12th to 16th in the world in share of adults aged 25 to 34 who hold any type of college degree, training Canada, Japan and South Korea. That’s because so many people enter American schools but never complete a degree. The American “attainment rate” for degrees is now 41 per cent, a number that trails France, Sweden, Ireland and even Russia.
Other key points in the Census Bureau’s “good new/bad news” report included:
- All ethnic groups are seeing rises in the number of bachelor degrees held, but the gap between whites on one side and blacks and Latinos on the other is actually widening.
- Asian-Americans are the most highly-educated racial group in the U.S.
- The male advantage in education is very closed to being erased, as women have come to outnumber men in American colleges and universities.