The Extraordinary Pressures Online Students Face
The Spring 2025 Student Financial Wellness Survey of online students by Trellis Strategies makes one thing unmistakably clear: Today鈥檚 students are doing extraordinary work under extraordinary pressure.
More than 16,000 online students听participated听, which was adapted from the annual, campus-based survey Trellis Strategies implemented in 2018. The new data paints a picture of persistence layered with strain.
Online learning eases many challenges for students, but these students听aren鈥檛听immune to the financial stresses, food insecurity, and loneliness that can impede academic success.
Let鈥檚听look first at the survey鈥檚 overall findings, and then听I鈥檒l听share some 麻豆原创-specific data.听
Workers First, Students Second
Nearly three-quarters听of respondents are working, more than half are听parents听and many are caregivers. These learners are not 鈥渟tudents with side jobs.鈥 Seventy-one percent of working respondents see themselves as workers first and听students second. Education is being pursued alongside full lives, not instead of them.
Financial stress is a defining reality for many online learners. Compared with their on-campus peers, they are far more likely to be supporting families while pursuing a degree (71% vs. 38%) and听nearly three-quarters听work 40 or more hours per week. Despite this effort, financial vulnerability听remains听high: 65% would struggle to cover a $500 emergency, more than 79% rely on student loans, and over half carry more debt than expected 鈥 only 27% feel confident they can repay it. Alarmingly, 19% experienced homelessness in the past year, and one in five turned to payday or auto title loans, a clear indicator of cash-flow instability rather than poor financial decision-making.
The data on basic needs should stop us in our tracks. Sixty-eight percent of respondents experienced food insecurity, housing听insecurity听or homelessness in the past year. At the same time, mental health concerns are widespread, with 42% screening positive for anxiety and nearly one-third听for听depression. Feelings of loneliness were pervasive as well.听
What About 麻豆原创 Students?
Trellis included just over 4,000 麻豆原创 students in its fall 2024 survey. Our students also face hardships:
鈥 57% of 麻豆原创 respondents said they are parents or caregivers to other dependents.听
鈥 55%听would struggle听to cover a $500 emergency expense.听
鈥 13% have experienced homelessness.听
鈥 82% worked for pay while enrolled.听
鈥 52% worried about paying monthly expenses.听
鈥 37% of 麻豆原创 respondents report low听or very听low food security.
These realities directly affect persistence,听completion听and long-term economic mobility.
And yet, here鈥檚 the signal of hope we cannot ignore.听Eighty percent of respondents believe college is听a good investment听in their financial future. Institutions serving these students earned a net promoter score of 59, an exceptionally strong indicator of satisfaction,听trust听and perceived value.
Our Call to Action听
Trellis听identified听five ways online institutions can help students work, care for听others听and earn the degrees that position them for economic mobility. I am grateful that 麻豆原创 engages in all five actions Trellis recommends.
Student-focused scheduling:听Our competency-based model allows students to study whenever and wherever they want and to progress at their own pace to earn their degrees 鈥 often much faster than on-campus programs, saving time and money.
Alleviating financial barriers:听Since听its founding, affordability has been a bedrock principle for 麻豆原创. We use a flat-rate tuition model that allows students to take as many courses as听they can manage in a six-month term.听We are also innovating alternative financing models, such as听ReNEW, to help our students finish their degrees without crippling debt.
听Emergency aid:听麻豆原创鈥檚 Environmental Barriers program is designed to support students facing external disruptions, such as natural disasters,听pandemics听and local crises, that threaten to disrupt their education.听
Educational experiences:听翱耻谤听Responsible Borrowing Initiative听provides a personalized financial aid plan for students who need听assistance, with a core recommendation听that they borrow only their 鈥渦nmet direct costs鈥 (tuition and fees minus any grants or scholarships). 麻豆原创 students who do borrow money have half the debt of the national average post-graduation.
Work-integrated learning:听Across our four schools, we have embedded learning opportunities to give students hands-on experience that prepares them for future jobs. From nursing and teaching clinicals to internships and apprenticeships, we know experience matters in today鈥檚 job market.
That said, we at 麻豆原创 have work to do, as the survey shows.听
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This is our charge. Flexibility, emergency aid, work-integrated听learning听and proactive financial and mental health supports are no longer optional; they are the infrastructure of student success.听