Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? By Sandy Baum, Ph.D., and Patricia Steele, Ph.D.

Similar documents
E D U C A T I O N A N D T R A I N I NG. Student Debt. Who Borrows Most? What Lies Ahead?

Text table 4-1 Enrollment, degree attainment, and employment status of academic year 1996/97 and 1997/98 S&E bachelor s degree recipients: April 1999

bachelor s degree-granting institutions were located.

Who Borrows Most? Bachelor s Degree Recipients with High Levels of Student Debt

Suggested Citation: Institute for Research on Higher Education. (2016). College Affordability Diagnosis: Georgia. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for

trends in the profiles of graduate and first-professional students from to These tables group students by their graduate degree

Undergraduate Debt Causes Pipeline Leakage from Undergraduate School to Graduate and Professional School

SalarieS of chemists fall

Educational Attainment in the United States: 2015

Suggested Citation: Institute for Research on Higher Education. (2016). College Affordability Diagnosis: Tennessee. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for

Which Path? A Roadmap to a Student s Best College. National College Access Network National Conference Mary Nguyen Barry September 16, 2014

WEB TABLES. Characteristics of Associate s Degree Attainers and Time to Associate s Degree U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION MARCH 2012 NCES

LICENSED SOCIAL WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES, Chapter 2 of 4. Demographics

GRADUATE AND FIRST-PROFESSIONAL STUDENTS

Undergraduate Degree Completion by Age 25 to 29 for Those Who Enter College 1947 to 2002

Patient Responsibility in Health Care: An AARP Bulletin Survey

Educational Attainment of Veterans: 2000 to 2009

Women, Wages and Work A report prepared by the UNC Charlotte Urban Institute for the Women s Summit April 11, 2011

The Student Debt Review

ETS s Addressing Achievement Gaps Symposium. Advancing Success for Black Men in College. A Statistical Profile

A Study of Career Patterns of the Presidents of Independent Colleges and Universities

The question of whether student debt levels are excessive

Trends in Higher Education Series. Education Pays. The Benefits of Higher Education for Individuals and Society. Sandy Baum and Jennifer Ma

College Students with Children are Common and Face Many Challenges in Completing Higher Education

Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2013

Demographic Profile of Wichita Unemployment Insurance Beneficiaries Q3 2015

How To Predict How The Health Insurance Reform Plan Will Affect The Uninsured

Financing Public Higher Education

Parental Educational Attainment and Higher Educational Opportunity

The Price of a Science PhD: Variations in Student Debt Levels Across Disciplines and Race/Ethnicity

Educational Attainment

Analysis Brief March 2013

Trends in Doctorate Recipients

Wealth and Demographics: Demographics by Wealth and Wealth by Demographics using the Survey of Consumer Finances. *** DRAFT March 11, 2013 ***

AMERICA'S YOUNG ADULTS AT 27: LABOR MARKET ACTIVITY, EDUCATION, AND HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION: RESULTS FROM A LONGITUDINAL SURVEY

THE EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS OF BLACK STUDENTS

Portraits A PORTRAIT OF LOW-INCOME YOUNG ADULTS IN EDUCATION JUNE 2010

AMERICA S YOUNG ADULTS AT 23: SCHOOL ENROLLMENT, TRAINING, AND EMPLOYMENT TRANSITIONS BETWEEN AGES 22 AND 23

LICENSED SOCIAL WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES, 2004 SUPPLEMENT. Chapter 2 of 5. Who Are Licensed Social Workers?

College Enrollment by Age 1950 to 2000

VCCS Report on High Performance Metrics Data for Achieve 2015 Goals within VCCS

The Gender Wage Gap by Occupation 2015

Analysis Brief. Trends in Public Higher Education: Enrollment, Prices, Student Aid, Revenues, and Expenditures

Could a Cash Balance Plan Benefit Illinois Teachers?

Health Reform Monitoring Survey -- Texas

Demographic Profile of Wichita Unemployment Insurance Beneficiaries Q2 2014

The Gender Wage Gap by Occupation 2014

Minorities in Higher Education Supplement. Young M. Kim

Women See Value and Benefits of College; Men Lag on Both Fronts, Survey Finds

College Enrollment Hits All-Time High, Fueled by Community College Surge

Suggested Citation: Institute for Research on Higher Education. (2016). College Affordability Diagnosis: Texas. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for

STUDENT DEBT MYTHS AND FACTS Second Edition

A New Measure of Educational Success in Texas. Tracking the Success of 8th Graders into and through College

WHO BORROWS PRIVATE LOANS?

Future Leadership Shaped by the Numbers: The American College President 2012 Edition

Are California Teacher Pensions Distributed Fairly?

Recruiting Teachers Using Student Financial Aid: Do Scholarship Repayment Programs Work?

Economic inequality and educational attainment across a generation

THE PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL WORKFORCE

The Power of 15 Credits

Left Behind. Unequal Opportunity in Higher Education

Is a Cash Balance Plan the Right Choice for Louisiana State Employees?

Campus Child Care Declining Even As Growing Numbers of Parents Attend College

Over academic years (AY) 2001 to

Shifting from. College Access to College Success 10/4/2011 THE EDUCATION TRUST. What is CRO and how does it work? How can CRO help school counselors?

Transfer Intelligence: How Community College Transfer Students Work toward a Bachelor s in Criminal Justice

SPECIAL SECTION: Indebtedness

INEQUALITY MATTERS BACHELOR S DEGREE LOSSES AMONG LOW-INCOME BLACK AND HISPANIC HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES A POLICY BULLETIN FOR HEA REAUTHORIZATION

UWEP Utah Women and Education Project

From Higher Education to Work in West Virginia, 2012

The Benefits of Community Service Employment (PY2006)

Gallup-USA Funds Minority College Graduates Report

Workforce Training Results Report December 2008

May Minnesota Undergraduate Demographics: Characteristics of Post- Secondary Students

Borrowers Who Drop Out

NATIONAL CENTER FOR EDUCATION STATISTICS U.S. Department of Education Office of Educational Research and Improvement NCES

2003 National Survey of College Graduates Nonresponse Bias Analysis 1

First-Generation Students:

Florida s Families and Children Below the Federal Poverty Level

Student Loan Market Trends Is College Worth It. Presenter: Kelly Savoie, Director Business Development April 2016

The Rise of College Student Borrowing

COLLEGE ENROLLMENT AND WORK ACTIVITY OF 2014 HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES

The Path Forward The Future of Graduate Education in the United States Executive Summary

UNINSURED ADULTS IN MAINE, 2013 AND 2014: RATE STAYS STEADY AND BARRIERS TO HEALTH CARE CONTINUE

Maine High School Graduates: Trends in College-Going, Persistence, and Completion August 2015

An Agenda for College Affordability and Degree Completion

Figure 5-1 Master's degrees awarded in S&E and non-s&e fields, by sex:

MCPS Graduates Earning College Degrees in STEM-Related Fields

Student Financing of Graduate and First-Professional Education:

HOUSINGSPOTLIGHT FEDERALLY ASSISTED HOUSING? Characteristics of Households Assisted by HUD programs. Our findings affirm that

Response to the Department of Education Request for Information: Promising and Practical Strategies to Increase Postsecondary Success

Profile of Pell Grant Recipients Quick Reference Guide

Strategies for Promoting Gatekeeper Course Success Among Students Needing Remediation: Research Report for the Virginia Community College System

The MetLife Survey of

Student debt: what s the problem?

Marriage and divorce: patterns by gender, race, and educational attainment

The Non-English Speaking Population in Hawaii

A Synopsis of Chicago Freshman Enrollment at DePaul University Fall

STEM at American Institutes for Research. The Role of Historically Black Colleges and Universities as Pathway Providers:

Trends in Higher Education Series. Trends in College Pricing

Transcription:

Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? By Sandy Baum, Ph.D., and Patricia Steele, Ph.D. January 2017

About the Authors Sandy Baum, Ph.D., is a senior fellow in the Income and Benefits Policy Center at the Urban Institute. Patricia Steele, Ph.D., is founder and principal consultant of the research and evaluation firm Higher Ed Insight. Acknowledgments This brief was funded by Access Group, a nonprofit membership organization comprising nearly 200 nonprofit and state-affiliated ABA-approved law schools. We are grateful to them and to all our funders who make it possible for the Urban Institute to advance its mission. The views expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to Urban, its trustees, or its funders. Funders do not determine research findings or the insights and recommendations of Urban Institute experts. Further information on the Urban Institute s principles is available at www.urban.org/support. We are grateful to Matthew Chingos, Elizabeth Forney, Victoria Lee, and Kim Rueben of the Urban Institute, and Tiffane Cochran and Paul Drehoff of Access Group for their comments and suggestions.

In 2015, 12 percent of adults in the United States ages 25 and older held advanced degrees master s, doctoral, or professional degrees. 1 These 25.4 million people constituted 37 percent of the individuals who had completed bachelor s degrees. 2 During the Great Recession, those with college degrees fared much better than those without degrees, but a number of college graduates struggled to find satisfactory employment, leading many to graduate study. The option of seeking an advanced degree has gained momentum in recent decades, and now some observers call the master s degree the new bachelor s degree. 3 This brief is the first in a series addressing questions about enrollment and success in graduate school, funding of graduate students, the conceptual differences between undergraduate and graduate students, and the data available to address these questions. As participation in graduate programs rises, it is critical to ask who is enrolling, which programs they are choosing, whether they complete their degrees, and how their investment in education beyond the bachelor s degree pays off. This brief reviews changes over time in educational attainment levels and the earnings premiums for advanced degrees, and then explores differences in enrollment and completion patterns across demographic groups. In 2011 12, nine percent of graduate students in the United States and 24 percent of those in doctoral programs were international students. Although U.S. Census data on educational attainment do include noncitizens, the analysis that follows focuses on the graduate school enrollment of U.S. citizens and permanent residents who earned bachelor s degrees. 4 Graduate Education over Time The share of adults ages 25 and older who have completed graduate degrees rose from eight percent in 1995 to 10 percent in 2005, and to 12 percent in 2015, growing from 34 percent to 37 percent of individuals with bachelor s degrees (figure 1). Master s degrees, which include Master of Business Administration, Master of Social Work, and master s in other specific fields, in Figure 1: Educational Attainment of Adults Ages 25 and Older over Time 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 1.0% 1.5% 5.3% 1.2% 1.5% 5.9% 1.2% 1.5% 6.8% 1.4% 1.5% 7.6% 1.7% 1.6% 8.7% 10% 5% 15.2% 17.0% 18.1% 19.4% 20.5% 0% 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Bachelor s Master s Professional Doctoral Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, 2015 Annual Social and Economic Supplement and earlier years, http://www.census.gov/ hhes/socdemo/education/data/cps/2015/tables.html. Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? 1

addition to Master of Arts and Master of Science degrees, constituted 73 percent of advanced degrees in 2015 a five percent increase from 20 years earlier. (Professional degrees include advanced degrees in chiropractic, dentistry, law, medicine, optometry, osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, podiatry, and veterinary medicine. Doctoral degrees include Ph.D.s, education doctorates, and doctorates in a number of other fields.) The Earnings Premium Average earnings are significantly higher for individuals with advanced degrees than for those whose highest degree is a bachelor s. In 2015, average earnings for 35- to 44-year-olds with master s degrees were 23 percent higher than the average for those with bachelor s degrees ($87,320 versus $71,100). In the same year, the average earnings premium for doctoral degree recipients was 63 percent, and average earnings were more than twice as high for those with professional degrees as for those with bachelor s degrees. There are measurable differences in earnings associated with graduate degrees among adults in their late twenties and early thirties (figure 2). The steeper earnings paths of graduate degree holders particularly those with doctoral and professional degrees cause the earnings gap to grow as individuals move into their late thirties and forties. College Graduates Who Pursue Graduate Studies Thirty-nine percent of all 2007 08 bachelor s degree recipients enrolled in a graduate degree program within four years of graduating from college (figure 3). 5 In contrast, among 1992 93 bachelor s degree recipients, 34 percent enrolled in a graduate program within four years of finishing college. Within 10 years of receiving their bachelor s degrees, 40 percent of the earlier cohort had enrolled in graduate school. Though it is not yet possible to follow the 2007 08 cohort for 10 years, it appears that participation rates have grown over time. The percentage of students enrolling in graduate school increases with family income. Among dependent 2007 08 four-year college graduates, 39 percent of those from families in the lowest income quartile, 42 percent from middle-income families, and 45 percent from the highest income quartile had enrolled in graduate school within four years of college graduation. Among 1992 93 bachelor s degree recipients, graduate school enrollment rates ranged from 33 percent for the lowest-income group to 42 percent for the highest-income group after four years, and from 41 percent to 49 percent after 10 years (table 1). Figure 2: 2015 Mean Earnings by Age and Educational Attainment $180,000 $160,000 $140,000 $120,000 $159,210 $163,370 $116,090 $143,640 $144,770 $129,350 $100,000 $80,000 $60,000 $40,000 $93,530 $74,860 $63,050 $54,840 $87,320 $71,100 $92,760 $86,580 $77,600 $75,220 $20,000 $0 25 to 34 years 35 to 44 years 45 to 54 years 55 to 64 years Bachelor s Master s Doctoral Professional Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, 2016 Annual Social and Economic Supplement, Table PINC-04. 2 Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds?

Figure 3: Graduate School Enrollment Rates of 1992 93 and 2007 08 Bachelor s Degree Recipients 45% 40% 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 34% 1992 93 bachelor s degree: Enrolled within 4 years 40% 39% 1992 93 bachelor s degree: Enrolled within 10 years 2007 08 bachelor s degree: Enrolled within 4 years Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 1993 2003 and 2008 2012. The percentage of female 1992 93 bachelor s degree recipients who enrolled in graduate school was only slightly higher than the percentage among males, but the gender gap was larger in the later cohort, in which 40 percent of females and only 36 percent of males started a graduate program within four years of finishing college. Students who earn their bachelor s degrees at younger ages are consistently more likely than older students to go on to graduate school. Forty-five percent of 2007 08 black bachelor s degree recipients enrolled in graduate school by 2012 more than any other racial/ethnic group (table 1). To put this information into context, it is important to consider the educational pipeline. In 2003, when many of the 2007 08 bachelor s degree recipients were graduating from high school and preparing for college, 11 percent of black 16- to 24-year-olds were high school dropouts compared with just six percent of white students in that age group. 6 Moreover, only 58 percent of 2003 black high school Table 1: Graduate School Enrollment among Bachelor s Degree Recipients by Student Characteristics 1992 93 bachelor's degree: Enrolled within four years 1992 93 bachelor s degree: Enrolled within 10 years 2007 08 bachelor s degree: Enrolled within four years All 34% 40% 39% Race/ethnicity White 33% 40% 38% Asian 39% 41% 42% Black 34% 45% 45% Hispanic 38% 43% 36% Gender Male 33% 39% 36% Female 35% 42% 40% Dependent students family income Lowest quartile 33% 41% 39% Second quartile 35% 43% 42% Third quartile 37% 49% 42% Highest quartile 42% 49% 45% Age completed bachelor s degree 22 or younger 40% 49% 39% 23 to 26 28% 33% 37% 27 to 30 25% 29% 38% 31 or older 33% 36% 38% Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 1993 2003 and 2008 2012. Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? 3

graduates enrolled immediately in college compared with 84 percent of Asian, 66 percent of white, and 59 percent of Hispanic students in that graduating class. 7 Only 19 percent of black students who were high school sophomores in 2002 had earned a bachelor s degree 10 years later compared with 33 percent of all high school sophomores. In other words, black students earning bachelor s degrees who are in a position to consider graduate school are a much smaller share of their age group than white and Asian college graduates. The higher rate of graduate school enrollment among black college graduates does not imply a high rate of enrollment among black young adults relative to other racial and ethnic groups. Looking at the educational attainment levels of the adult population sheds additional light on the relatively high graduate school enrollment rate of black college graduates. As table 2 shows, although similar percentages of black and white bachelor s degree recipients hold advanced degrees, both the share of all adults with advanced degrees and the share with a bachelor s degree Table 2: 2015 Educational Attainment Rates of Adults Ages 25 and Older by Race and Ethnicity Bachelor s degree Advanced degree Bachelor s or advanced degree Percent of bachelor s degree holders completing an advanced degree White 23% 14% 36% 37% Asian 33% 21% 54% 40% Black 14% 8% 22% 36% Hispanic 11% 5% 15% 30% Source: U.S. Census Bureau (2015), Educational Attainment in the United States: 2015, Table 1, https://www.census.gov/hhes/socdemo/education/ data/cps/2015/tables.html. Note: Components may not sum to totals because of rounding. Figure 4: Percentage of 2007 08 Bachelor s Degree Recipients Enrolled in a Graduate Program as of 2012 by Undergraduate Major 80% 70% 60% 50% 67% 60% 57% 54% 47% 46% 40% 30% 41% 39% 35% 28% 20% 10% 0% Bio/physical Social science, science sciences technology, math, agriculture Humanities Education Health care fields General studies and other Engineering, and engineering technology Other applied Business Computer and information sciences Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 2008 and 2012, PowerStats. 4 Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds?

or higher are far lower among black and Hispanic groups than among white and Asian populations. Figure 4 reports graduate school enrollment rates by undergraduate major for 2007 08 college graduates. Those in fields with better immediate employment prospects are least likely to continue their education within four years of finishing college. For example, only 28 percent of those who earned bachelor s degrees in computer and information sciences in 2007 08 and 35 percent of those in business had enrolled in graduate school by 2009. Types of Graduate Programs Graduate program enrollment patterns vary among students from different demographic groups. Women who continued their education after completing bachelor s degrees in 2007 08 were more likely than their male classmates to enroll in master s degree programs, and male graduates were more likely to enroll in professional and doctoral degree programs (figure 5). Asian college graduates who went on to graduate school within four years were much more likely than others to Figure 5: Percentage of 2007 08 Bachelor s Degree Recipients Who Enrolled in Graduate School as of 2012 by Type of Graduate Program All 10% 71% 13% 6% Gender Male Female 9% 66% 17% 8% 10% 74% 11% 5% Race and ethnicity White Asian Black Hispanic 10% 70% 13% 6% 9% 53% 31% 8% 6% 79% 8% 7% 11% 75% 10% 4% Dependent students parental income quartile Lowest quartile Second quartile Third quartile Highest quartile 8% 72% 14% 6% 11% 70% 12% 7% 8% 64% 19% 10% 10% 62% 23% 5% Received Pell grant No Pell Pell 9% 68% 16% 7% 10% 76% 9% 5% Age completed bachelor s degree 22 or younger 23 or 24 25 to 29 30 or older 8% 66% 19% 7% 13% 73% 8% 6% 11% 79% 4% 6% 10% 84% 2% 4% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Certificate Master s Professional Doctoral Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 2008 and 2012, PowerStats. Note: Components may not sum to 100 percent because of rounding. Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? 5

enroll in doctoral and, particularly, professional degree programs. Thirty-one percent of Asian graduate students entered professional degree programs and 53 percent pursued master s degrees. By comparison, these figures were eight percent and 80 percent, respectively, among black college graduates who enrolled in graduate school. Race, ethnicity, and gender are not the only characteristics differentiating students who enroll in master s degree programs as opposed to doctoral and professional degree programs. Graduate students from the highest family income quartile, those who did not receive Pell grants as undergraduates and those who completed their bachelor s degrees at age 22 or younger are much more likely to enroll in professional degree programs than are those from less affluent families and those who were older when they graduated from college. There are also notable differences in the institutional sectors in which different groups of students pursue their graduate studies. Among those enrolling in master s programs, black students, those from lowincome families, and those who earned their bachelor s degrees at older ages are most likely to attend for-profit institutions. Twenty-four percent of the black 2007 08 college graduates who enrolled in master s degree programs attended for-profit institutions, compared with just nine percent of all students (table 3). Table 3: Distribution of 2007 08 Bachelor's Degree Recipients Enrolled in Master's Degree Programs by Sector Public Private nonprofit For-profit All 51% 40% 9% Gender Male 52% 41% 7% Female 51% 40% 9% Race and ethnicity White 55% 39% 6% Asian 57% 38% 5% Black 37% 39% 24% Hispanic 44% 50% 7% Other 44% 37% 19% Dependent students parental income quartile Lowest quartile 50% 39% 12% Second quartile 55% 37% 8% Third quartile 54% 40% 6% Highest quartile 49% 48% 4% Pell grant status No Pell 47% 39% 14% Pell 54% 41% 6% Age completed bachelor s degree 22 or younger 54% 42% 4% 23 or 24 54% 37% 9% 25 to 29 44% 36% 20% 30 or older 38% 40% 22% Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 2008 2012, PowerStats. 6 Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds?

Degree Completion An accurate perspective on graduate degree completion requires a time frame that extends more than four years beyond bachelor s degree completion. To accomplish this, we look at completion rates 10 years out for 1992 93 four-year college graduates. Table 4 reports graduate school attainment rates of 1992 93 bachelor s degree recipients as of 2003. The table reports outcomes both for all students who enrolled in graduate school and for those whose highest degree program was a master s program 73 percent of all graduate students. Overall, completion rates were lower in master s degree programs than in other programs 61 percent compared with 74 percent for post-master s Table 4: Degree Completion of 1992 93 Bachelor's Degree Recipients Who Enrolled in Graduate School by 2003 Completed degree All Enrolled in 2003 Left without degree Completed degree Master's Only Enrolled in 2003 Left without degree All 65% 13% 23% 61% 13% 26% Gender Male 67% 13% 21% 62% 14% 25% Female 63% 13% 24% 60% 13% 27% Undergraduate dependency status, 1992 93 Dependent 69% 11% 20% 65% 12% 23% Independent 56% 15% 28% 54% 15% 31% Dependent students family income quartile, 1992 93 Lowest quartile 64% 13% 23% 59% 14% 27% Second quartile 67% 13% 20% 63% 14% 23% Third quartile 68% 12% 20% 65% 12% 23% Highest quartile 76% 7% 17% 72% 9% 20% Received Pell grants, 1992 93 No Pell 66% 12% 22% 62% 13% 25% Pell 58% 15% 28% 54% 13% 33% Age when received bachelor s degree 22 or younger 70% 10% 20% 65% 11% 24% 23 24 58% 17% 25% 56% 16% 27% 25 29 53% 17% 30% 53% 16% 31% 30 or older 59% 14% 27% 56% 14% 30% Parental status No kids 68% 13% 20% 63% 14% 23% Kids 62% 12% 26% 58% 13% 29% Graduate degree program Master s degree 61% 13% 26% Post-master s certificate 74% 12% 14% Professional degree 77% 10% 14% Doctoral degree 76% 13% 12% Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 1993 2003. Note: Components may not sum to 100 percent because of rounding. Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? 7

certificate programs, 76 percent for doctoral programs, and 77 percent for professional degree programs. Twentysix percent of those who began master s degree programs left school without completing a degree compared with 12 to 14 percent of those in other types of programs. Students who were dependent for financial aid purposes when they graduated from college (66 percent of all who enrolled in graduate programs and 62 percent of those who enrolled in master s programs) were more likely than independent students to complete the graduate programs in which they enrolled. That is, younger college graduates were more likely than older students to complete their programs. Among dependent students, those whose families were in the highest income quartile were more likely than others to complete their graduate degrees. These outcomes are consistent with the finding that students who did not receive Pell grants as undergraduates and who were age 22 or younger when they earned their bachelor s degrees were more likely than others to complete their graduate programs. Conclusion As the difference between the four-year and 10-year enrollment rates of 1992 93 bachelor s degree recipients reveals, many bachelor s degree recipients wait quite a while after finishing college to enroll in graduate school. It is, therefore, difficult to predict how many current students will pursue advanced degrees. However, available data suggest both that graduate study is becoming more common and that the enrollment patterns differ across demographic groups. In particular, as is the case for undergraduate education, students from higherincome backgrounds are more likely than others to enroll, more likely to complete their programs and more likely to earn degrees that promise high value in the labor market. Four-year college graduates from lower-income backgrounds are not just less likely than others to go to graduate school. When they do continue their education beyond college, they are more likely than those from higher-income backgrounds to seek master s degrees, which yield a considerably lower earnings premium than doctoral and professional degrees. Black college graduates who make up a much smaller share of their age group than white and Asian college graduates are actually more likely than those from other racial and ethnic groups to go to graduate school. But they disproportionately enroll in master s degree programs, which generate the lowest earnings premiums; a very small percentage pursue professional degrees that lead to the highest average earnings. Moreover, about one-quarter of black master s degree students attend forprofit institutions. Among graduate students, males, Asians, those from higher-income backgrounds and those who were younger when they completed college are most likely to pursue professional degrees to prepare to enter medicine, law and other high-paying careers. Master s degree programs, which have lower completion rates overall than doctoral and professional programs, enroll higher proportions of women, black students, students from lower-income backgrounds and those who earned their bachelor s degrees at older ages. The increased earnings and career opportunities associated with most types of advanced degrees make ensuring the broad availability of these programs critical. This brief does not address the reasons behind these different enrollment patterns. Future briefs will explore financial barriers by examining the prices paid, the debt accrued and the earnings outcomes of students with different characteristics enrolling in the range of available graduate programs. 8 Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds?

APPENDIX Table A.1: 1995 2015 Educational Attainment of Adults Ages 25 and Older Bachelor s Master s Professional Doctoral Bachelor s or higher Advanced Advanced as percentage of bachelor s or higher 1995 15% 5% 1% 1% 23% 8% 34% 2000 17% 6% 1% 1% 26% 9% 33% 2005 18% 7% 2% 1% 28% 10% 35% 2010 19% 8% 2% 1% 30% 11% 35% 2015 21% 9% 2% 2% 33% 12% 37% Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, 2015 Annual Social and Economic Supplement and earlier years. Table A.2: Percentage of 2007 08 Bachelor s Degree Recipients Who Enrolled in a Graduate Degree Program as of 2012, by Field of Study Undergraduate field of study (Percentage of 2007 08 bachelor's degree recipients enrolled) Enrolled by 2012 Biological and physical science, science technology, math, agriculture (7%) 67% Social sciences (15%) 60% Humanities (12%) 57% Education (8%) 54% Health care fields (8%) 47% General studies, other (3%) 46% Engineering, engineering technology (6%) 41% Other applied (15%) 39% Business (23%) 35% Computer and information sciences (3%) 28% Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 2008 2012, PowerStats. Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? 9

Table A.3: Types of Graduate Programs Attended by 2007 08 Bachelor s Degree Recipients Who Enrolled in Graduate School by 2012 Certificate Master s Professional Doctoral All 10% 71% 13% 6% Gender Male 9% 66% 17% 8% Female 10% 74% 11% 5% Race and ethnicity White 10% 70% 13% 6% Asian 9% 53% 31% 8% Black 6% 79% 8% 7% Hispanic 11% 75% 10% 4% Dependent students parental income quartile Lowest quartile 9% 66% 17% 7% Second quartile 8% 72% 14% 6% Third quartile 11% 70% 12% 7% Highest quartile 8% 64% 19% 10% Pell grant status No Pell 9% 68% 16% 7% Pell 10% 76% 9% 5% Age completed bachelor s degree 22 or younger 8% 66% 19% 7% 23 or 24 13% 73% 8% 6% 25 to 29 11% 79% 4% 6% 30 or older 10% 84% 2% 4% Source: NCES, Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study, 2008 012, PowerStats. Note: Components may not sum to 100 percent because of rounding. 10 Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds?

Notes 1. The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has revised its terminology, replacing the categories of first professional and doctoral degrees with professional practice doctoral degrees and research/scholarship doctoral degrees, respectively. For consistency with historical data, this brief uses the U.S. Census categories of professional and doctoral. 2. U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, Educational Attainment of the Population 18 Years and Over, by Age, Sex, Race, and Hispanic Origin: 2015, Table 1, http://www.census.gov/hhes/socdemo/education/data/cps/2015/tables. html. 3. Laura Pappano, The Master s as the New Bachelor s, New York Times, July 22, 2011, http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/24/education/edlife/edl-24masters-t.html. 4. NCES, National Postsecondary Student Aid Study 2012, PowerStats. 5. Some bachelor s degree recipients about five percent of those who graduated in 2007 08 pursue a second bachelor s degree, an associate degree, or an undergraduate certificate. Since these are not graduate degree programs, they are not included in the enrollment percentages cited here. 6. NCES, Digest of Education Statistics 2006, Table 104. 7. NCES, Digest of Education Statistics 2015, Table 302.20. Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds? 11

About the Urban Institute About Access Group The nonprofit Urban Institute is dedicated to elevating debate on social and economic policy. For nearly five decades, Urban scholars have conducted research and offered evidence-based solutions that improve lives and strengthen communities across a rapidly urbanizing world. Their objective research helps expand opportunities for all, reduce hardship among the most vulnerable, and strengthen the effectiveness of the public sector. Founded in 1983, Access Group, Inc. is a nonprofit membership organization comprised of nearly 200 nonprofit and state-affiliated ABA-approved law schools. From providing financial education resources and services for students and schools, to supporting research and grant programs, data collection and analysis, to driving policy advocacy, Access Group works to promote broad access, increased affordability and the value of legal education specifically, and graduate and professional education more broadly. Access Group is headquartered in West Chester, PA; its Center for Research & Policy Analysis is located in Washington, DC. 12 Who Goes to Graduate School and Who Succeeds?

Corporate Office: 10 N. High Street, Suite 400 West Chester, PA 19380 Washington, DC, Office: 440 First Street NW, Suite 550 Washington, DC 20001 AccessGroup.Org AccessResearch.Org 2100 M Street NW Washington, DC 20037 www.urban.org 2017 Access Group, Inc. and Urban Institute. All rights reserved.