Finishing a degree can be the least of a person’s worries when they don’t know where their next meal is coming from or where they’ll sleep at night. 

A new survey of more than 80,000 community college students found a third of respondents said they already struggled to get enough food to eat within the last month. The same survey found about a quarter of students who had to pay rent struggled at least once in the last year to cover their housing costs. 

Students who are focused on meeting their basic needs generally can’t direct their full attention to their coursework, which could lead to them dropping out at a time when community college enrollment already has fallen sharply. And people with student loans but no degree struggle both to find meaningful employment and to pay their debts. 

These findings come from the Center for Community College Student Engagement, a research institute at the University of Texas in Austin. Executive Director Linda García said students shared their responses anonymously, and that the results ought to be a “conversation starter for community colleges to dig in deeper to look at their students.” 

“We risk losing the opportunity to educate them,”  Garcia said. “But those most in need stand to lose the most.”

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The group administered the survey in spring 2021, and it includes responses from roughly 82,000 students at nearly 200 community or technical colleges across the country. It also comes at a time when community college enrollment has fallen steeply in the middle of the pandemic. These institutions had about 5 million students in spring 2020, but have since lost about 827,000 students, according to the National Student Clearinghouse.