The one thing that’s more difficult than getting into college, is getting out.

This is by far the thing that college access researchers have the most difficult time communicating to families and by far the thing that is most important for families to know:

The majority of colleges in the US do not graduate students on-time or at all.

I think the reason most people don’t believe us when we say this is because it’s like saying most restaurants in the country don’t serve meals. You’re thinking that it’s part of the thing that they should do: graduate students. I agree. It should be. But it isn’t. And it’s systemic meaning there isn’t anything individual students can do to change this statistic except to be aware and then not go to that college. If I told you that most restaurants do not serve meals but they will charge you way too much for the meal you aren’t going to get, would you still go?

If I told you that most restaurants do not serve meals but they will charge you way too much for the meal you aren’t going to get, would you still go? Get in line to get in? Pay a bunch of money just so they can tell you they don’t have a meal for you?

When I phrase it that way, you probably said absolutely not. But most of you do anyway. Students still apply in record numbers to schools that will not graduate them on-time or at all.

Why don’t colleges graduate students on-time?

The above also demonstrates why it is so important for you to consider graduation rates in your search. It should be a statistics problem. This is for all my budding data scientists.

School X admits 90% of students with similar grades and test scores as you. It graduates 5% of them on-time.

This means it does not have the infrastructure to support you.

This school is probably severely impacted and might even be getting ready to close. Hard pass.

School Y admits 40% of students with similar grades and test scores as you. It graduates 70% of them on-time.

This means it does have the infrastructure to support you.

This school is great! But you’ve probably never heard of it. They’re spending money to make sure students graduate on-time, not on marketing. That’s a Bridge to College school.

School X admits 5% of students with similar grades and test scores as you. It graduates 95% of them on-time.

This means it does not have the infrastructure to support you.

This is the highly selective, high-brand ID school that you got so bent out-of-shape and had to apply to. But it doesn’t have the resources to ensure you graduate on-time which is also why they probably didn’t offer you any money either. Hard pass.