Utah women lag behind nation in higher education

Published: Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009 1:16 a.m. MST
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National statistics show that more women enroll in college than men, but in Utah, women remain a minority at many of the state's colleges and universities.

To address that trend, Susan Madsen, a Utah Valley University business professor, has launched a yearlong study to determine why women in the Beehive State seem less interested in higher education than their national peers.

"We think we're encouraging young women in Utah to be educated," Madsen said. "But there are a lot of young women — and young men, for that matter — who choose not to go to college."

Madsen is leading a group of women educators and researchers in the Women in Education Project, a study commissioned by the Utah System of Higher Education, to examine why fewer women in the state tend to pursue higher education than their peers in other states. The researchers will compare data, conduct interviews among college dropouts and high-school guidance counselors and combine the findings into a series of reports over the next 12 months, with the goal of providing policymakers and community leaders with a better understanding of why Utah women aren't heading to college.

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Nationwide, 57 percent of college students are women. Across Utah's public higher-education system, that number is about 49 percent, according to the latest 2009 fall enrollment numbers.

Utah Commissioner of Higher Education William Sederburg said there is a national push to help more people earn baccalaureate degrees. Over the years, Utah has lost ground in comparison with the national average of college-educated people, falling below average in recent years, according to a recent report by the Utah Foundation.

Currently, only about 28 percent of Utahns have a college degree, compared with 29 percent of people nationwide. In order to reach a statewide goal of 55 percent to 60 percent, Sederburg said, more women — and more men — will need higher education.

"It's just one area that has real potential," he said of the female student population, which he believes might suffer when compared with national averages because of a local cultural factor of women tending to marry and start families at younger ages in Utah, contributing to fewer female students in colleges and universities.

Another hypothesis could be the tightening economic situations in the homes of students.

"As tuition increases, married couples often find they can only afford to send one person to college at a time," Sederburg said. "Typically, it is the woman who steps back."

Sederburg said more could probably be done in the form of on-campus child care or part-time student scholarships to help more women complete a degree.

Recent comments

ECB, you're right, typically 31% of BYU students are from Utah--which...

RC | Nov. 14, 2009 at 12:29 p.m.

It's hard to factor in BYU stats when 70% of BYU students aren't...

ecb | Nov. 11, 2009 at 10:12 a.m.

Uneducated women (20 and older) are 3 times more likely to have...

Stunned by the Stupidity | Nov. 11, 2009 at 9:46 a.m.

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