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Are faith-based colleges in trouble? It depends.

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Ricardo Azziz has held numerous executive positions in higher education and led the merger that resulted in Georgia Regents University, now Augusta University. He is principal at Strategic Partnerships in Higher Education Consulting Group.

He writes the regular Merger Watch opinion series on corporate restructuring in higher education.

Cabrini University is a Roman Catholic institution in Radnor, Pennsylvania, that will close next year after its spring term, with Villanova University acquiring its campus. An example of too little, too late, Cabrini leaders had sought to partner or merge with another institution when it was already heavily indebted. It had also lost around half of its student body in fall 2021 compared to a decade prior.

Much hand-wringing has ensued about the plight of faith-based higher education, although the reality is much less grim. In fact, faith-based higher education seems to be doing better than the sector in general.

The number of institutional closures in higher education has increased over the past decade. Between fall 2010 and fall 2020, enrollment in degree-granting, Title IV-eligible colleges fell by over 2 million students, representing a 9.7% decrease. Enrollment declined 8.4% at public institutions and 49.4% at for-profit institutions. Meanwhile, it increased by 270,000 students, or 13.6%, among private nonprofit institutions. 

Religiously affiliated institutions have seen relatively small enrollment losses

Enrollment by institution type from 2010-2020

In comparison, religiously affiliated colleges experienced a modest decrease in total enrollment, of 1.4%. During this decade the number of religiously affiliated institutions declined only slightly, falling 3.3% compared to 14.4% for the entire higher education sector.  

Number of religiously affiliated institutions have declined at a lower rate

Change in number of institutions from 2010-2020

But before the faith-based sector celebrates their resilience in these trying times, we should recognize that the stress and pain are unevenly distributed among these schools and denominations. 

Let’s consider denominations with at least 20,000 students enrolled in affiliated schools in 2010. Of those, institutions affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Southern Baptist, Churches of Christ, Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod and Church of the Nazarene denominations, as well as religiously affiliated institutions that defined themselves as “undenominational” or “interdenominational,” gained students during the decade. 

The gains were highest for institutions affiliated with the Latter-day Saints, as well as undenominational and interdenominational colleges. 

We should note that the growth in enrollment is not only observed in institutions affiliated with the Christian faith. Colleges and universities affiliated with the Jewish faith also gained enrollment during this decade, increasing 25% from a total of 12,755 students in 2010 to 15,976 in 2020. 

Alternatively, other denominations experienced enrollment losses. By total number of students enrolled in their affiliated institutions, the Roman Catholic, United Methodist, and Baptist denominations saw the largest declines. Understanding the reasons for the differences in enrollment trends will be helpful in developing strategies to address the ongoing recruitment challenges, for this sector and beyond. 

Enrollment changes vary widely among denominations

Enrollment by religiously affiliated college type

Why have enrollment trends played out so differently for religiously affiliated institutions over the past decade?

A 2023 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute suggests Americans are becoming increasingly more likely to be religiously unaffiliated. While we may want to ascribe the enrollment challenges of these colleges to this decline in religious participation, that would be an oversimplification. Their enrollment losses have been relatively small. 

However, the survey findings may explain the significant growth in enrollment experienced by undenominational or interdenominational religious colleges. But while we may want to ascribe the trend to disaffiliate with organized religion as the result of its increasing polarization along racial and political lines, political polarization may actually be driving enrollment to conservative Christian colleges.

Enrollment also grew from 2010 to 2020 by an impressive 60% at institutions affiliated with the Latter-day Saints. The significant increase can be ascribed, at least in part, to the religion expressly valuing higher education. However, other religions also value education. 

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Ricardo Azziz

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