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PEW Research: How do Dems vs GOP voter view colleges

Colleges that spoon-feed you a particular ideology don't teach you critical thinking. Whether those beliefs are right or left-leaning isn't the point.


Colleges have become an overly priced obsolete product and need to be reinvented. We need to provide kids more options including one's that provide a combination of in class study and the op to apply those skills in a work environs (paid internships). The latter can help make education more affordable.


Three years is sufficient for most undergrad studies (gets the students back in the workforce more rapidly). Also the idea that 35%+ of college expenses are administration-related is nuts.



1. Colleges and universities, K-12 public schools

Americans’ views of whether educational institutions are having a positive or negative impact on the country are essentially unchanged since late 2022. About half (53%) say colleges and universities are having a positive impact, while 45% say they’re having a negative impact.


Views of the impact of K-12 public schools are identical (53% positive, 45% negative). These also are little changed from 2022, though somewhat less positive than in 2021 (when 61% had a positive opinion).


Partisanship and ideology


Democrats are about twice as likely as Republicans to view both colleges and K-12 schools positively.


Roughly three-quarters (74%) of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents say colleges have a positive impact – nearly as many (72%) say the same of K-12 public schools.

Only about a third of Republicans and Republican leaners express positive opinions about the impact of colleges (31%) or K-12 public schools (34%).


There is a sharp ideological divide among Republicans in views of educational institutions. Just 20% of conservative Republicans say colleges have a positive impact – roughly half the share of moderate and liberal Republicans who say the same (53%). The difference is similar when it comes to opinions about how K-12 public schools affect the country.


Democrats are less ideologically divided: Liberal Democrats are more likely than conservative and moderate Democrats to view colleges and public schools positively, but sizable majorities in both groups say colleges and public schools have a positive effect.

Age, education


Younger adults and those with more formal education are more likely than older adults and those with less education to view educational institutions positively.


COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES


Roughly six-in-ten of those ages 18 to 29 (63%) say that colleges and universities are having a positive impact, compared with 56% of those 30 to 49 and 52% of those 50 to 64.


Among those ages 65 and older, more say that colleges are having a negative impact (56%) than say they are having a positive impact (40%).


59% of those with at least a bachelor’s degree view colleges and universities positively, compared with 50% of those without a bachelor’s degree.


K-12 PUBLIC SCHOOLS

58% of adults under 30 say that K-12 schools are having a positive impact, as do 54% of adults ages 30 to 64. This drops to 46% among those ages 65 and older.

Six-in-ten college graduates say that K-12 public schools are having a positive impact, compared with 49% of those without college degrees.


Read the full report

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