Enrollment declines are no longer a distant threat — they’re a current reality reshaping higher education. Even small drops in student numbers can destabilize funding, weaken campus vitality, and hinder long-term progress. As economic pressures grow, colleges and universities must act decisively to stay competitive and relevant.
Unfortunately, higher education has had to grapple with several macroeconomic trends in recent years. These trends include decreasing enrollment, requiring institutions to fight that much harder for the remaining pool of college-bound students.
Your campus needs to have a plan to counter this trend. If you’re a college administrator, read on to learn what your organization can do to counter reductions in enrollment.
Context
Many factors are converging to make higher education less attractive for potential students. The first is rising tuition costs. The higher education affordability crisis has dominated the news for years. However, the problem is significantly reducing the number of students considering college in the near future. Recent cuts to federal funding, grants, and shrinking financial aid are likely to exacerbate this affordability crisis, so we don’t expect the issue to resolve on its own anytime soon.
However, this isn’t the only factor impacting enrollment. Perceived diminishing returns on investment, in terms of wages and career stability, are also causing many students to think twice before enrolling. As artificial intelligence dominates the economic and business news, many students are opting for trade schools or apprenticeships over traditional higher education. The prognosis is dire for many institutions; some 20 or so colleges shut their doors in 2024, and the trend shows no signs of abating in the near future.
In 2024, at least 20 colleges and universities announced closures or mergers, according to higher education analysts—a trend that experts warn may accelerate in the years to come.
How to Respond to Declining Enrollment
Strengthen Student Retention Rate
Even modest improvements in student retention—just 3–5%—can dramatically stabilize enrollment and revenue. Unlike recruitment, which often requires significant investment and lengthy lead times, retention strategies yield faster and more cost-effective returns, directly reflecting an institution’s commitment to student success.
Leading institutions are analyzing step-out and dropout patterns, deploying early alert systems, and prioritizing belonging across all student populations to drive persistence and close equity gaps. Whether supporting first-time undergraduates, returning adults completing degrees, graduate cohorts, or online learners, the most effective strategies combine data-informed interventions with inclusive, proactive engagement. This comprehensive approach ensures that retention efforts reflect the full diversity of today’s student experience—and deliver measurable impact across modalities and life stages.
Retention isn’t just a metric—it’s a reflection of how well your institution supports its students.
Add Additional Offerings
As the transition from high school to college continues to evolve, so do the expectations of prospective students. Institutions that adapt to these shifting demands—particularly in terms of flexibility, relevance, and support—are better positioned to attract students. Online education, once viewed as secondary, now plays a crucial role in attracting non-traditional learners, including working adults, returning students, and graduate students. These learners increasingly seek programs that align with their life circumstances and career aspirations—and they’re willing to invest in institutions offering hybrid and asynchronous online programs, bridge programs for career changers, veterans, and non-traditional students, microcredentials, and workplace certifications.
According to Ruffalo Noel Levitz’s 2025 report on student success and retention, institutions that expand online offerings while embedding proactive support systems are outperforming peers in both enrollment and completion outcomes. The report emphasizes that today’s students expect personalized, tech-enabled experiences that reflect their diverse backgrounds and learning preferences—making online education not just a convenience, but a strategic imperative.
A recent 2025 EDUCAUSE CHLOE Report highlights that institutions investing in robust infrastructure and faculty readiness—not just course expansion—are seeing the strongest outcomes in student engagement and retention. The takeaway: scaling online education isn’t just a tech challenge—it’s a strategic, campus-wide transformation.
Improve Faculty Support
Implementing and scaling online education is not a simple plug-and-play solution. It demands deep institutional expertise, cross-functional coordination, and sustained investment. While expanding online offerings is a strategic imperative for enrollment growth and access, the process presents notable challenges—especially for faculty. Faculty, in particular, often face steep learning curves, shifting workloads, and managing increased responsibilities that demand thoughtful support and professional development.
Faculty burnout is a distinct and persistent challenge in higher education, shaped by declining enrollment, reduced budgets, and expanding responsibilities. Burned-out faculty often struggle to manage classrooms, provide meaningful support, and drive student outcomes—making burnout not just a personnel issue, but a strategic risk.
Online education, while essential for access and flexibility, can exacerbate these pressures. Faculty teaching online often face a breakdown in work-life boundaries, with constant digital connectivity, asynchronous demands, and a flood of student communications. Today’s learners—especially those in online environments—are conditioned by the norms of instant gratification and expect rapid feedback, 24/7 availability, and seamless technology experiences. In the absence of established parameters, policies, as well as institutional and instructional support, this dynamic can quickly lead to time poverty and emotional fatigue.
Mitigating faculty burnout is oftentimes easier said than done. Burnout has numerous causes, and there are many different ways for institutions of higher education to begin to mend burnout amongst faculty. We’ve seen institutions utilize everything from access to mental health support to expanded leave options.
Addressing faculty burnout requires more than expanding online offerings. Institutions must invest in instructional support systems, technology and course management tools, workload adjustments, and digital norms that safeguard faculty time and well-being. We’ve seen institutions utilize everything from access to mental health support to expanded leave options. Recognizing burnout as a systemic problem is crucial for maintaining both instructional quality and long-term enrollment stability. These can be effective, but the normal wear and tear of teaching in rapidly changing and perplexing environments often continues. Faculty burnout is likely to persist as a central challenge for numerous higher education institutions in the foreseeable future.
Analyze Student Outcomes
Increasing student proficiency and outcomes is a key counterattack to declines in enrollment and a great way to mitigate the chance of dropout. The better you can support your faculty and the students through their education, the greater the odds that they will remain affiliated with your institution. However, this is oftentimes easier said than done. Complementary resources, such as access to tutoring or mental health resources, are dependent on the student’s choice. While they have their place, they cannot be your fallback for better student outcomes. What then should you do?
Call Instructional Connections! Our Academic Coaches are a vital resource that some of North America’s top universities utilize to enhance faculty work-life balance, support manageable workloads, and add an extra layer of support for students embedded in their online courses. Instructional Connections’ Academic Coaches are proven, well-vetted professionals who assist your instructors of record in managing their online courses. With the support of our Academic Coach, your instructors can delegate some time-consuming, routine tasks in the online environment, enabling them to engage more directly with students and focus on achieving better outcomes.
Academic Coaches are not replacements for faculty—they are a strategic enhancement. When deployed effectively, they maintain academic standards, foster student success, and support institutional scalability.
Get in touch with us today to learn more!