NEW YORK — U.S. college students are using marijuana at the highest rates in 35 years, according to a report released Thursday.

About 43 percent of full-time college students said they used some form of pot at least once in the past year, up from 38 percent, a University of Michigan survey found. About 25 percent said they did so in the previous month, up from 21 percent.

The latest figures are the highest levels seen in the annual survey since 1983.

About 6 percent of college students said they used marijuana 20 or more times in the past month. For adults the same age who weren't enrolled in college, the figure was 11 percent.

"It's the frequent use we're most worried about" because it's linked to poor academic performance and can be detrimental to mental health, said John Schulenberg, one of the Michigan researchers.

College-age adults are the biggest users of marijuana than any other age group. Use among high school students has been flat for a few years.

The 2018 findings are based on responses from about 1,400 adults age 19 to 22, including 900 who were full-time college students and about 500 who were not.

The survey only has comparable data on college kids going back to 1980. So it doesn't say how common marijuana use was in the 1960s and 1970s — a time when marijuana use on college campuses was considered widespread.

Marijuana use has been rising in college-age kids for more than a decade. Schulenberg said it seems to be tied to views about risk — in the early 1990s, about three-quarters of young adults said pot was risky. But last year it was down to 22 percent.

The survey also found about 11 percent of college students said they vaped marijuana in the previous month — more than double the figure in the 2017 survey.