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College Degree Residents in Large US Cities

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Percentage of residents with college degrees in big cities
By The Associated Press
10 April 2006


The 70 U.S. cities with populations of 250,000 or more, with the percentage of residents age 25 and older with at least a bachelor's degree, and the percentage with least a high school diploma, or equivalent, in 2004.

Code:
City                         Bachelor's Degree High School Graduate
Albuquerque, N.M.            30                86
Anaheim, Calif.              23                76
Anchorage, Alaska            33                92
Arlington, Texas             29                88
Atlanta                      43                82
Aurora, Colo.                24                82
Austin, Texas                45                84
Bakersfield, Calif.          16                78
Baltimore                    24                74
Boston                       41                85
Buffalo, N.Y.                18                81
Charlotte, N.C.              37                84
Chicago                      30                77
Cincinnati                   34                83
Cleveland                    14                77
Colorado Springs, Colo.      34                91
Columbus, Ohio               32                87
Corpus Christi, Texas        20                79
Dallas                       29                71
Denver                       36                82
Detroit                      11                73
El Paso, Texas               22                70
Fort Worth, Texas            25                77
Fresno, Calif.               21                77
Honolulu                     34                86
Houston                      27                72
Indianapolis                 26                84
Jacksonville, Fla.           23                89
Kansas City, Mo.             26                87
Las Vegas                    18                81
Lexington-Fayette, Ky.       39                87
Long Beach, Calif.           28                75
Los Angeles                  29                70
Louisville-Jefferson, Ky.    22                81
Memphis, Tenn.               23                81
Mesa, Ariz.                  24                86
Miami                        20                63
Milwaukee                    20                79
Minneapolis                  41                89
Nashville-Davidson, Tenn.    33                85
New Orleans                  31                82
New York                     32                78
Newark, N.J.                 10                66
Oakland, Calif.              38                80
Oklahoma City                28                82
Omaha, Neb.                  29                87
Philadelphia                 20                77
Phoenix                      25                81
Pittsburgh                   34                87
Portland, Ore.               38                88
Raleigh, N.C.                50                91
Riverside, Calif.            20                76
Sacramento, Calif.           27                77
San Antonio                  24                78
San Diego                    39                85
San Francisco                51                84
San Jose, Calif.             37                83
Santa Ana, Calif.             8                51
Seattle                      51                90
St. Louis                    27                79
St. Paul, Minn.              34                87
St. Petersburg, Fla.         27                86
Stockton, Calif.             16                72
Tampa, Fla.                  30                81
Toledo, Ohio                 18                83
Tucson, Ariz.                24                82
Tulsa, Okla.                 30                85
Virginia Beach, Va.          34                93
Washington                   48                84
Wichita, Kan.                24                85
U.S.                         27                84
___
Source: Census Bureau
1 - 20 of 41 Posts
AP analysis: College graduates chase jobs, culture to big cities
By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER
10 April 2006

WASHINGTON (AP) - More college graduates than ever are flocking to America's big cities, chasing jobs and culture and driving up home prices.

The Associated Press analyzed more than three decades of education data for the largest cities and found that while many have lost population, nearly all have added college graduates.

The findings offer hope for urban areas, many of which have spent decades struggling with financial problems, job losses and high poverty rates.

They also spell trouble for some cities, especially those in the Northeast and Midwest, that have fallen behind places in the South and West in attracting highly educated workers.

"The largest predictor of economic well-being in cities is the percent of college graduates," said Ned Hill, professor of economic development at Cleveland State University. "Cities, in order to remain fiscally viable, have to have a package of goods and services that are attractive to educated people."

In Philadelphia, 20 percent of people age 25 and older had at least a bachelor's degree in 2004, up from just 7 percent in 1970.

Despite the gain, Philadelphia continues to lag other big cities in its share of residents with college degrees. Among the top 21 largest cities, only Detroit, Cleveland and Las Vegas had a smaller share.

In Pittsburgh, just over a third of those 25 and older had at least a bachelor's degree.

Nationally, the figure stood at a little more than a fourth. Some 84 percent had a high school diploma or the equivalent.

By comparison, in 1970 only a bit more than one in 10 adults had bachelor's degrees and about half had high school diplomas.

Seattle was the best-educated city in 2004 with just over half the adults with bachelor's degrees. Following closely were San Francisco, Raleigh, N.C., Washington, D.C., and Austin, Texas.

Molly Wankel, who has a doctorate in educational administration, said she moved to the Washington area for a job, and the culture of the city pulled her from the suburbs. Wankel, 51, grew up in eastern Tennessee and works at a company that develops software and training materials. She recently bought a home in the city.

"I just enjoy walking around looking at the architecture and the way people have renovated these 100-year-old homes," Wankel said. "I love the landscaping and the lovely mix of many races, straight people, gays, singles, older people, younger people."

The AP analyzed census data from 21 of the largest cities from 1970 to 2004. The AP used 10-year census data from 1970 to 2000, and the Census Bureau's American Community Survey for 2004.

The 21 cities were chosen because of their size and location to provide regional balance. The analysis was expanded for 2004, the latest year for data, to include all 70 cities with a population of 250,000 or more.

The analysis showed that while most states in the Northeast have high percentages of college graduates, their big cities do not. Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey were among the top five states in the percentage of adults with college degrees in 2004.

But Northeast placed no city among the top five; only one from the region -- Boston -- was in the top 20.

Cities with few college graduates have a hard time generating good-paying jobs. That, in turn, makes it hard to attract college graduates, said Richard Vedder, an economics professor at Ohio University.

Cities such as Newark, N.J., Detroit and Cleveland have relatively few college graduates, which helps explain why they are struggling to recover from the decline of U.S. manufacturing, Vedder said.

Among the three, Cleveland had the largest share of college graduates in 2004, 14 percent of those 25 and older.

"Society is paying people more for their brains than for their brawn," Vedder said. "The nerds and the wimps and the geeks are ruling the world."

College graduates made about two-thirds more money than high school graduates in 2004, according to the Census Bureau. The median income -- the point at which half make more and half make less -- for adults with bachelor's degrees was $42,404. It was $25,360 for high school graduates.

Adults who did not graduate high school had a median income of $18,144.

Many cities with a lot of college graduates also have expensive homes, even with the softening real estate market.

San Francisco was the costliest in 2004, with a median home value of $662,000, according to census data. That was more than four times the national median of $151,000.

Cities that want to increase their pool of skilled labor need to foster an environment that welcomes outsiders, including immigrants and people from elsewhere in the U.S., said Richard Florida, professor of public policy at George Mason University.

"You know what they say, they say we want our kids back. We want them to stop leaving," Florida said, paraphrasing leaders of many depressed cities. "What they don't say is that they want other people's kids to move there."

Most big cities are strapped with struggling public schools and need to attract outsiders to improve education levels among adults. It works for some cities, in part because unmarried college graduates are the most mobile demographic group, according to census data.

"Cities have realized that they can attract educated people and they don't need good schools to do it," said Florida, who wrote the book, "The Rise of the Creative Class."

But cities need good schools to keep people from fleeing to the suburbs once they become parents, said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington.

Frey pointed to Washington, a city with lagging public schools and impressive education levels among adults.

"D.C. is like a revolving door," Frey said. "These young people move in and then they move out when they want to have kids."

But Wankel, the Tennessee native, said she has no plans to leave Washington. She said she would miss the restaurants, museums and convenient public transportation, what she calls "civilization."

"I had always been a small town girl, and I didn't know if I could adjust to living in a big city," Wankel said. "Now, I don't want to go back to the suburbs."
nice stats...good work
Santa Ana is the only city that is going back in time. It had a higher educational atteinment in 1970 than it does now.
My God, Santa Ana puts OC and Southern California in general to shame..
Two cities where the numbers just do no add up for me.

Washington DC at 48% college graduates
Atlanta at 43%

In all due respect, the numbers go completely against the norm. Both cities have 60%+ black population, terrible poverty levels, and among the most dangerous cities in the usa. Every other city that is african american majority can't get out of the 20% range.

Any explanations here?
Atlanta is a mecca for middle-class blacks, and one of the reason many other majority-black cities have a miniscule amount of college graduates. Washington has a lot of middle-class residents as well. The jobs in both metros are very much white-collar. In Detroit and Cleveland you could get a high paying job without having to go to college. In fact, despite having 4x the percentage of college graduates as Detroit, Atlanta's median income was only slightly higher than Detroit's.
i think Santa Ana is something like 98% immigrant.
Besides, DC is around 60% as of now, and, and who really cares. I don't know how it really goes against the norm, regardless of crime and percentage black, what do all those housing figures, economic strength, standard of living, GMPs per capita and income per capita figures show. I mean, there's a lot of shit that needs to be fixed, but there's a lot of good things too, and it's not just happening for the white people int the city.

And besides, look at the other cities that are majority black, none of them have as much going for them right now as these two cities, that activity, combined with the colleges and white collar jobs just adds to it.
Lexington Wildcat said:
Two cities where the numbers just do no add up for me.

Washington DC at 48% college graduates
Atlanta at 43%

In all due respect, the numbers go completely against the norm. Both cities have 60%+ black population, terrible poverty levels, and among the most dangerous cities in the usa. Every other city that is african american majority can't get out of the 20% range.

Any explanations here?
The Census Bureau data probably covers the entire metro area of those cities. In that case, Washington would be at least 50% non-Hispanic white and less than 25% African-American. Moreover, African-Americans in the suburbs don't share the severe social problems of their poorer counterparts in downtown projects.
Lexington Wildcat said:
Two cities where the numbers just do no add up for me.

Washington DC at 48% college graduates
DC is the seat of the government so besides the politicians, you have dipolamts, lawyers, lobbyists, variious beauracrats, federal agents, military officials and so on..
these are for only the city proper?
Detroit is THE working class city.

They make enough to get by and survive, but very few are thoroughly skilled (11 percent, actually I expected it would be a little bit lower). Detroit is not the povertopolis that people this it is.

Oh and for the guy who said DC and ATL have terrible poverty levels, 25% and up is considered very high. Now subtract that number from 100, and it should equate pretty close the the % of HS graduates.
PotatoGuy said:
My God, Santa Ana puts OC and Southern California in general to shame..
Ironically across Highway 55 from Santa Ana is Irvine one of the best educated cities over 100,000 with over 60% of its 25+ population having at least a bachelor's degree. Even more ironically it's a GOP town.
Nice stat list.

The more smart people in a city the more skyscrapers.The stats speak for themselves.
jmancuso said:
DC is the seat of the government so besides the politicians, you have dipolamts, lawyers, lobbyists, variious beauracrats, federal agents, military officials and so on..
Understood but most of those professional families mentioned above would normally reside in Alexandria,Arlington,Fairfax,Silver Springs etc..

Wash DC criminal numbers are atrocious, Atlanta is not much better. I don't know much about either city but something seems amiss. Either the crime numbers are off or these College graduates living in the city limits are off. The two just do not go hand in hand given the extraordinary contrast of wealth and poverty.
According to the 2000 Census,
Washington DC(The City) has 69,483 residents with a Bachelors Degree and 80,700 residents with a Graduate Degree. That's about 150,000 people which I suppose constitute a significant percentage of that cities.

Atlanta(The City) has 56,318 bachelors degrees and 37,146 graduate degrees-totalling about 93,000. And that's also a big chunk of the adult population.
wonder where madison would place on this list.
bay_area said:
According to the 2000 Census,
Washington DC(The City) has 69,483 residents with a Bachelors Degree and 80,700 residents with a Graduate Degree. That's about 150,000 people which I suppose constitute a significant percentage of that cities.

Atlanta(The City) has 56,318 bachelors degrees and 37,146 graduate degrees-totalling about 93,000. And that's also a big chunk of the adult population.
I'm certainly not disputing the census, and there 's been some reasonable explanations but the contrasting data is indeed against the norm.

I can see young professionals gravitating to the low crime and low poverty cities like SF, Sea, Austin, and Boston. However Atlanta in 2004 was the 6th most dangerous city in the US and Wash DC was the 13th most dangerous. Both are also way up on the list of high poverty. These two cities are an anomaly in this regard.
All this shows is that DC and ATL have very split populations: one part highly educated, upper-middle class, and one part less educated and poor. Both are chiefly service sector and white collar cities, so this pattern is not an anomaly for this type of city.
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