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Report Shows Northeast Ohio's Need to Keep College Graduates

More than half of college graduates are leaving the region, according to a new report from Team NEO.
KAREN KASLER
/
STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
More than half of college graduates are leaving the region, according to a new report from Team NEO.

More than half of Northeast Ohio graduates leave the area once they get their degrees. That’s according to research from Team NEO. But that number can be deceiving.

Fewer than 47 percent of graduates stay in the region. While that may seem like a low number, Team NEO’s research chief Jacob Duritsky says it’s comparable to other large metropolitan areas. The problem is in the actual population.

“If you’re Chicago and you’re a much bigger market, and you keep 48 percent of your graduates, that’s almost 47,000 people. When you keep 47 percent of the graduates that go through our colleges and universities, that’s 14,000 people.”

Duritsky says it could take years to improve retention and see its effects on the economy, but people from business and higher education are already beginning to think more strategically about reaching students.

“How can we give them the best experience while they’re here that puts them in the best position to be employable here in the region? And hopefully that leads to keeping more of those people here over time.”

Duritsky says their study, Aligning Opportunities, found a high demand for graduates in information technology, health care and manufacturing.

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit WKSU.

Valerie Royzman joined WKSU in August 2019 as a news intern. She is a senior journalism major at Kent State University’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Valerie has spent the last few years in Northeast Ohio, but Toledo is home.