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Admission vs. Enrollment Management:

Separate but Equal?



Shani Lenore-Jenkins,

Assistant Vice President of Enrollment

Maryville University in St. Louis, Missouri

www.maryville.edu or 314-529-9300



Jay W. Goff,

Vice Provost and Dean of Enrollment Management

Missouri University of Science & Technology

Rolla, Missouri

www.mst.edu or 573-341-4378



NACAC 2008 - Seattle, Washington, USA

“If you don‟t know where you‟re going,

any path will take you there.”

Sioux proverb

CORE ENROLLMENT

PRINCIPLES

• No Enrollment Effort is Successful without QUALITY

Academic Programs to Promote

• Recruitment and Retention is an On-going, Multi-year

PROCESS with Strong Access to Research and DATA

• +80% of Enrollments come from REGIONAL student

markets for BS/BA degrees

• The Most Successful Recruitment Programs Clearly

DIFFERENTIATE the Student Experience from

Competitor‟s Programs

• The Most Successful Retention Programs Clearly

Address Students‟ Needs and Regularly ENGAGE

Students in Academic and Non-Academic Programs

Why Does Your Position Exist?

Are you an admission professional

or an enrollment management

professional?

Admission Goals

• Recruitment, Profile and Processing

Focused

– % of inquiries from search process

– # of campus visits & telecounseling calls

– # of qualified applications and enrollees

– % of enrollees that fit desired student profile

Basic Admissions/Recruitment

Funnel

Admissions/Recruitment Plan

• New Student Enrollment Goals

• Previous Recruitment Performance

• Market Assessment and SWOT Analysis

• Communication and Outreach Plan/Schedule

• What submarkets are being addressed by who,

when and how

 Pre-College Activities (camps, visits, etc)

 Freshmen

 Transfers

 Graduate Students

 Sub-Markets: traditional vs. non-traditional, campus

vs. distance/on-line

 Special Degree or Certificate Programs

The Power of Alignment









NORMAL IDEAL Doing Well

What is SEM?

• Strategic Enrollment Management (SEM) is defined as

“a comprehensive process designed to help an institution

achieve and maintain the optimum recruitment, retention,

and graduation rates of students where „optimum‟ is

designed within the academic context of the institution.

As such, SEM is an institution-wide process that

embraces virtually every aspect of an institution‟s

function and culture.”

Michael Dolence, AACRAO SEM 2001

• Research

• Recruitment

• Retention

Common Goals of SEM

• Stabilize, Growing, or • Evaluate Strategies and

Reducing Enrollments Tactics

• Increase Student Access • Improve Services

and Diversity • Improve Quality

• Reduce Vulnerabilities • Improve Access to

• Align EM with Academic Information

Programs

• Predict and Stabilize

Finances

• Optimize Resources



Adapted from Jim Black, 2003

Indiana University

Unite the Isolated

SEM builds an organizational culture that:



1. better motivates staff and faculty

collaboration,

2. demonstrates a dedication to intelligent

planning and strategy execution,

3. promotes a stronger passion for academic

and student success through shared

governance

4. embraces the regular use of solid analytical

and data-driven skill-sets.

SOURCE: Bob Wilkinson

What is included in a

Comprehensive SEM Plan?

1. Strategic Framework: Mission, Values, Vision

2. Overview of Strategic Plan Goals & Institutional Capacity

3. Environmental Scan: Market Trends & Competition Analysis

4. Evaluation and Assessment of Position in Market

5. Enrollment Goals, Objectives, & Assessment Criteria

6. Marketing and Communication Plan

7. Recruitment Plan

8. Retention Plan

9. Student Aid and Scholarship Funding

10. Staff Development and Training

11. Student/Customer Service Philosophy

12. Process Improvements and Technology System Enhancements

13. Internal Communication and Data Sharing Plan

14. Campus wide Coordination of Enrollment Activities

The enrollment plan serves as the road

map for achieving specific institutional

goals, typically connected to student body

size, enrollment mix, and revenue, while

also providing specific indicators on the

effectiveness of the learning environment.





-Janet Ward, 2005

The Purposes of SEM are

Achieved by…

 Establishing clear goals for the number and types of

students needed to fulfill the institutional mission

 Promoting students‟ academic success by improving

access, transition, persistence, and graduation

 Promoting institutional success by enabling effective

strategic and financial planning

The Purposes of SEM are

Achieved by…

 Creating a data-rich environment to inform

decisions and evaluate strategies

 Improving process, organizational and financial

efficiency and outcomes

 Strengthening communications and collaboration

among departments across the campus to support

the enrollment program

What SEM is Not

 A quick fix

 An enhanced admission and marketing

operation

 An administrative function separate from the

academic mission of the institution

 Solely an organizational structure

 A financial drain on the institutional budget

• Net Revenue!

SEM Operational Definition

• Strategic enrollment management (SEM) is an

institution's program to shape the type and size of its

student body in accordance with its educational mission

and fiscal requirements.



• ALIGNMENT: SEM centers on the integration and

improvement of traditional student services, such as

recruitment, admissions, financial aid, registration,

orientation, academic support, and retention. It is

informed by demographic and institutional research, and

advanced by media messages and public relations.

Ideally, SEM embraces all departments and functions in

a comprehensive framework to best serve the student

and hence the institution.

• Jim Black, 2003, AACRAO SEM

The Concept of Optimum Enrollment



Institutional Mission

Academic

profile Physical &

Degree Virtual

Special Programs Capacity

Skills Ethnicity & Undergrad/

Gender Grad



Residency &

Program

Housing Capacity

capacity

Promoting Student Success:

The Student Success Continuum





Recruitment / Classroom Co-curricular

Degree/goal

Marketing Orientation experience support

attainment

Student‟s college career





Admission Financial Academic

support support Retention

The Student Success Continuum

Traditional Enrollment Perspective





Recruitment / Classroom Co-curricular

Degree/goal

Marketing Orientation experience support

attainment

Student‟s college career





Admission Financial Academic

support support Retention

The Student Success Continuum

The SEM Perspective





Recruitment / Classroom Co-curricular Degree/goal

Marketing Orientation experience support attainment



Student‟s college career





Admission Financial Academic

Aid support Retention

Moving toward Proactive &

Purposeful

• Veteran admissions and financial aid professionals have

accumulated years of experience and often act instinctively

with tactical approaches to recruitment and pricing



• Student affairs professionals understand the need to connect

with students and frequently initiate new developmental

programs to help them succeed



• …But putting all of this together, while considering

changing environments, internal realities, and external

pressures, requires thoughtful planning, systems thinking,

and careful analysis





25

Strategic Enrollment Management Planning Elements



Planning Elements Constituents

• Mission • Academic Affairs

• Formal/Informal Expectations • Administrators

• Philosophical Underpinnings • Deans

• SWOT • Chairs

• Vision • Faculty

• Goals • Student Affairs

• Objectives • Fiscal/Business Affairs

• Strategies • Students

• Performance Indicators • Alumni

•High Schools





26

A Significant Challenge

• Creating a unified SEM structure is complicated

by the fact that the university is structured to be

decentralized and protect academic units from

environmental shifts (such as what occurs in

enrollments).

• Most faculty do not know about (and even more

do not understand the importance) of strategic

enrollment management.

• All faculty, staff and alumni need to know the

difference!

Core Objectives of SEM

• Make Enrollment Programs be Mission Driven

• Institutional Culture of Student Success

• Integrated in the Institution’s Strategic Plan

• Involves Everyone at the Institution

• External Partnerships

• Assess and Measure Everything

• Clear Enrollment Goals Based on Institutional Capacity

and Plan

• Maintain Appropriate Academic Programs

• Creativity and Look Outside of Higher Education for

Best Practices

• Appropriate Utilization of Technology to Enhance

Service

Tools & Resources for the

Transformation

• Data, Data, Data

• Strategic Plan

• Retention

• Financial Aid Leveraging

• Budget: income streams, expenditures

• Market Analysis/Marketing

• Course Offerings: capacity, scheduling,

duplication, waitlists

• Institutional Policies and Procedures

• Key Performance Indicators

• Collaboration

SEM helps Define and Refine

Institutional Vision

• Forces institutions to clarify their Market Position

• Builds a comprehensive enrollment management plan

• Focuses on strategies that will ensure colleges or

universities define and meet their objectives

• Engages students using creative recruitment, marketing,

and retention strategies

• Forges dynamic alliances across administrative

departments including- Marketing, Admissions,

Registration, Financial Aid, Student Services,

Recruitment, Retention, Orientation, Academic Support,

and Information Services

– AACRAO SEM 2003

SEM

CASE STUDIES

Maryville University's

Mission & Enrollment Challenges

• Define and Proclaim the Maryville Story

• Create an Engaging Campus Culture

• Build a Sustainable Environment

• Strengthen the Foundation of the University

• 3400 Total Students (2800 Undergrad, 600 Grad)

• Private Independent

• Commuter (1/3 live on campus)

• 70% Women, 30% Male

Maryville University‟s

Focus on Brand Identity

Consistency, Consistency!

A New Brand Identity Campaign

What is Missouri S&T?

• Top 50 Technological Research University

A Top 50 Technological Research University

• 6300 students: 4900 Undergrad, 1400 Graduate

• 90% majoring in Engineering, Science, Comp. Sci.

• ACT/SAT: upper 10% in nation

Ave. Student ACT/SAT: upper 10% in nation

• +60% of Freshmen from upper 20% of HS class

• 20% Out of State Enrollment

• Year Average Placement Rate within 3

96% 5 Year Average Placement Rate within 3 months

of Grad

months of Grad

• Ave. Starting Salary in 2008: +$56,000

Life as a National Outlier

Average enrollment is 6,457





75%

Average enrollment is 5,615 Missouri S&T



70%



65%

South Dakota School of Colorado School of Mines

% Engineering Enrollment









60% Mines and Technology

Michigan Technological

Georgia Institute of

University

Technology and State

55% Worcester Polytechnic

University

Institute

Polytechnic University Rensselaer Polytechnic

50% Institute



Clarkson University

45%

Massachusetts Institute of Stevens Institute of

New Jersey Institute of Technology Technology

40%

Technology



35% California Institute of

New Mexico Institute of Technology

Florida Institute of

30% Mining & Technology

Technology

Illinois Institute of

Technology

25%

50% 55% 60% 65% 70% 75% 80% 85% 90% 95%

% Engineering, Business, Science & Math Enrollment

WHY A NEW NAME for University of Missouri-Rolla?

effective Jan. 1, 2008









WWW.MST.EDU

Missouri S&T: 90% Engineering, Science,

& Computing Majors

Fall 2007 Total Students





139

2.25%

846

13.72%

Engineering



Business and IST

206

3.34% Arts and Social Sciences



Science and Computing

313

5.08% Non-Degree/Undecided









4,663

75.61%

Missouri S&T Enrollment

33% Growth since 2000

Since 2004, 60% of Growth due to Retention Increase



6,500



6,000

Total Number of Students









5,500



5,000



4,500



4,000



3,500



3,000 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007



Distance 314 227 233 308 392 476 471 501 469 518

On - Campus 4,673 4,517 4,393 4,575 4,848 4,983 4,936 5,101 5,388 5,649

Fall





On - Campus Distance

STUDENT RETENTION

Status in Fall Semester After One Year

Percent Still Enrolled









90



85



80



75



70









6









0

93



94

95



96

97



98

99



00

01



02

03



04



oa 5





06



oa 7

00









01

G 200









G 200

19



19

19



19

19



19

19



20

20



20

20



20









20

l2









l2

Year



Graduation Rates

2000 2005

General Student Body: 52% 64%

Undergraduate Demographics

• Average Age: 21.6 years old • From a Community <40,000: 55%

approx.

• Gender:

– 23% Female • Average Family Income: $72,000

– 77% Male

• Average Indebtedness at Graduation:

• First Generation College Students: – $21,000 USD approx.

– 2005-06: 37%

• High Financial Need (Pell qualifier): 24%

• Residency:

– Missouri Residents: 76% • Freshmen with Credit Cards:

– Out-State Students: 22% – 24%

– International: 2% – 6 arrive with over $1000 USD

standing balance

• Ethnicity:

– African-American: 4% • Students with PCs:

– Asian-American: 3% – 94%

– Caucasian: 83% – +70% laptops

– Hispanic: 2% – 7% Macs

– Native-American: 1% • Students with Cell Phones

– Non-resident, International: 2% – 97%

– Not Disclosed: 5%

SEM at MISSOURI S&T:

Record Setting Years

Enrollment By Ethnic Group

American Indian/Alaskan Native 24 26 23 27 23 21 20 33 38%



Asian-American 127 128 137 151 142 158 198 198 56%



Black, Non-Hispanic 168 197 213 230 218 237 245 271 61%

Hispanic-

American 58 63 83 100 100 126 137 139 140%



Non-Resident, International 590 723 819 749 600 565 585 619 5%



Ethnicity Not Specified 171 179 209 253 298 253 250 242 42%

4,66

White, Non-Hispanic 3,488 3,567 3,756 3,949 4,026 4,242 4,423 5 34%

6,16

Total 4,626 4,883 5,240 5,459 5,407 5,602 5,858 7 33%

BOLD: Missouri S&T Record

High

2007 International Student Representation: 2.6% of undergraduates, 2.5% of distance grad students, 53.3% of campus grad

students

Geographic Distribution by Students’

WASHINGTON

Home States

62

MAINE

MONTANA NORTH DAKOTA MINNESOTA



OREGON 1 4 VT

18 2 3

WISCONSIN NH

5 IDAHO 13

MA 12

SOUTH DAKOTA

3 5 15 NEW YORK CT

WYOMING MICHIGAN

2

16 RI

5 PENNSYLVANIA 2

IOWA

NEVADA NEBRASKA 26 OHIO

12 NJ

43 IN

5 UTAH ILLINOIS DE

15 18 DC

395 WV MD 10

4 COLORADO

VIRGINIA

KANSAS 16 4 DC 2

20 MISSOURI 12

CALIFORNIA 137 KENTUCKY

4,321

ALASKA 17 NO. CAROLINA

TENNESSEE

59 ARIZONA OKLAHOMA

5

ARKANSAS SO.

NEW MEXICO 59 CAROLINA

12 61 5

3 MS Legend

GEORGIA

ALABAMA

8 11 50 or more students

TEXAS LA 12



3 110 13 10 – 49 students

12

FL

1 - 9 students



All Students, Totals No students

HAWAII United States 5,605

1

Other Countries 564 Armed

Total 6,167 PUERTO Forces

RICO Pacific &

1 Africa

Note: Geographic Origin is defined as student's legal residence at time of original admission to S&T. 3

Source: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) frozen files, end of 4 th week of classes.

Revised 9-24-2007.

History of SEM

The Age of Recruitment

1970‟s thru the mid 1980‟s – Focus on

increasing enrollment through enhanced

recruiting models and the use of financial aid

packaging and leveraging.

– Jim Black

Suspect Who do we contact and are the specific activities successful





Prospect Who contacts us and do they become applicants





Applicant Who do we convert to applicants

Recruitment



Admitted Who do we admit





Enrolled Who enrolls

Retention/Success

Who is successful Graduate







Who loves us Active Alumni

Post-Enrollment

SOURCE: Bob Wilkinson

USING FUNNEL ANALYSIS

for GOAL SETTING

Prospects (10% inquire) 24,000

Inquiries (30% apply) 2,400

Applicants (80% admit) 825

Admits (65% attrition) 685

Enrollees (8% attrition) 270

Matriculated

Freshmen 250

History of SEM

The Age of Structure

Late 1980‟s thru 2005 – Focus on increasing

enrollment through enhanced recruiting models

and the use of financial aid packaging and

leveraging. However, the S.E.M. organizational

structure becomes the focal point for

implementation

– Jim Black

The Enrollment Management

Organizational Continuum,

Jim Black, 2003, EM Structure Whitepaper

History of SEM

The Age of the Academic Context

Focus on integrating S.E.M. models and involving the

academic side of the organization. The focus is still on

increasing enrollment through enhanced recruiting

models and the use of financial aid packaging and

leveraging coupled with establishing a S.E.M.

organizational structure within the institution but there is

now a recognition that academics are important.

– Stan Henderson

Traditional Core SEM Activities

• Determining, Achieving and Maintaining Optimum

Enrollment

• Establishing Clear Enrollment Goals

• Projecting Future Enrollments

• Promoting Student Success

• Enabling the Delivery of Effective Academic

Programs

• Generating Tuition

• Enabling Financial Planning

• Increasing Organizational Efficiency

• Improving Service Levels

Getting Started with SEM

Fundamental steps to the development of a comprehensive

recruitment and retention Plan



1. Determine the institution‟s capacity to serve students by

degree program and types of students (traditional, non-

traditional, graduate, etc.)

2. Establish Goals: need to be agreed upon by all involved

3. Formulate Strategies based on data

4. Develop action plan with tactics and an operational

calendar:

– What exactly is going to be done

– When will it be completed

– Who is responsible

– How much will it cost

– How will you know if it has been accomplished (evaluation)

SEM Success &

Innovation Models

RETENTION PLAN: Syracuse Univ., Youngstown State U

RECRUITMENT PLAN: University of Nebraska

FINANCIAL AID: Muhlenberg College

http://www.muhlenberg.edu/admissions/aid.html

STRUCTURE & RESPONSIBILITIES: Univ of Cincinnati

ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN: Slippery Rock University

BRANDING: Washington State University

CAMPUS VISIT: Ferris State University

ORIENTATION: Missouri University of Science & Technology

CO-OP/INTERNSHIPS: WPI

Learning Disabled: Southern Illinois Univ – Carbondale

Supplemental Instruction: Univ of Missouri – Kansas City

Cross-Campus

Enrollment Development Team

• Faculty from each division • Execs: Academic,

• Admissions Student & Enrollment

• Registrar Affairs

• Financial Aid • Advising

• Campus Housing • Info Tech

• Student Activities • Institutional Research

• Counseling Center • Minority Programs

• Orientation • International Affairs

• Teacher Training Director • Cashier/Billing

• Faculty Senate Leaders • Pre-College Programs

• Reporting Services

NOTE: The EDT does not replace the campus recruitment and retention committees

Research Plan: How Data Is Used In

Strategic Enrollment Management

1. To improve retention

2. To build relationships with high schools and community colleges

3. To target admissions efforts and predict enrollments

4. To recommend changes to admissions policy

5. To examine issues of how best to accommodate growth

6. To improve the educational experience of students

7. To identify needs of unique student groups

8. To project and plan for student enrollment behavior

9. To determine financial aid policies

10. To assess student outcomes

Today’s Enrollment Manager



• “Successful senior enrollment managers

have to operate simultaneously on multiple

levels. They need to be up to date, even

on the cutting edge of technology,

marketing, recruitment, the latest campus

practices to enhance student persistence,

and financial aid practices.”



SOURCE: THE ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT REVIEW Volume 23, Issue 1 Fall, 2007, Editor: Don Hossler

Associate Editors: Larry Hoezee and Dan Rogalski

Hossler continued

• “(Enrollment Managers) need to be able to

guide and use research to inform

institutional practices and strategies.

Successful enrollment managers need to be

good leaders, managers, and strategic thinkers.

• They have to have a thorough understanding of

the institutions where they work and a realistic

assessment of the competitive position in which

it resides and the niche within which it can

realistically aspire to compete. Furthermore, to

be effective, enrollment managers must also

have a sense of how public, societal, and

competitive forces are likely to move enrollment-

related policies and practices in the future.”

SOURCE: THE ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT REVIEW Volume 23, Issue 1 Fall, 2007, Editor: Don Hossler Associate Editors: Larry Hoezee and Dan Rogalski

Core SEM Reports



• Weekly “Funnel” Reports

• Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

• Annual Environmental Scans & SWOT updates

• New Student Profiles Prior to Start of Classes

• Student Profile after Census Date

• Admission Yield Reports by Major, Ethnicity,

Gender, Geography, Date of Application

• Re-enrollment Reports by Ethnicity, Gender,

Geography, GPA, ACT/SAT Scores, HS GPA &

Class Rank and Financial Income.

Benchmarking

Determine Competitors & Comparators:

• www.collegeresults.com

• College Board: Institutional Comparison

• US News (United States)

• McCleans (Canada)

• Higher Ed Times (Great Britain)

• Shanghi Jiaotong (China)

What do SEM Leaders Read?

In addition to ACT, College Board & AACRAO SEM

publications…..



• Chronicle of Higher Education

• Greentree Gazette

• University Business

• Inside Higher Ed (like Chronicle, but free)

• ACT News You Can Use (www.act.org)

• Google News Search: “University Enrollment”

• Postsecondary Education OPPORTUNITY

• State Economic & Demographic Reviews (OSEDA)

• Anything by Michael Dolence, Tom Mortenson, Bob

Bontager, David Kalsbiek, Bob Sevier, Richard Whitesides,

Bob Johnson, Stan Henderson, and Jim Black

• Much, much more

RESOURCES

• www.act.org (retention study and tracking charts, labor and education

policy/tends)

• www.ama.com (marketing trends and applications)

• www.collegeboard.org (student psychographics

• www.collegeresults.org (four-year retention benchmarking)

• www.educationalpolicy.org (retention calculator)

• www.nces.gov (2007 Digest of Education Statistics)

• www.higheredinfo.org (college participation rates)

• www.noellevitz.com (funnel analysis)

• www.stamats.com (teen and parent trend analysis)

• www.wiche.org (student projections)

• www.educationtrust.org (k-18 environmental scans and best practices)

• www.lumina.org (k-18 research and public policy analysis)

• www.greentreegazette.com (higher education issues and news)

• www.pewinternet.org (communication and internet trends)

• www.postsecondary.org (education trends and issues reports)

• www.communicationbriefings.com (tactics and analysis)

• Chronicle of Higher Education August Almanac

• Recruitment and Retention in Higher Education

US Student

Environmental Scan

Future Students: Demographic and

Population Changes

• Fewer first-time, traditional students in the

overall pipeline until between 2015 -- while older

population is growing

• More students of color

• More students of lower socioeconomic status

• More students unprepared college level work









WICHE, Knocking on College‟s

Door, 2003 & 2008

Factors Most Noted in

Choosing a College



• Majors & Career Programs Offered

• Location/Campus Characteristics

• Cost/Affordability

• Campus Size/Safety

• Characteristics of Enrolled Students

• Selectivity

Labor Demand vs. Student Interests









Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics,

www.bls.gov/emp/home.htm

New Students’ Intended Major

28%

1976-77 to 2006-07





21%









14%









7%









0%

Business Engineering Education Biological Computer Social Art, Music, Health

Sciences Science Sciences Drama Professions



College Board, 2007 76-77 86-87 96-97 06-07 SOURCE: CIRP

Student Interest Trends in

Engineering

Potential United States Undergraduate Engineering Majors

All College Bound, ACT Tested Students Interested in Any

Engineering Field



70000



65000



60000



55000



50000 (<5%)

45000



40000 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Number 63653 66475 67764 64571 64937 63329 63601 65329 65776 61648 54175 52112 51445 48438









SOURCE: ACT 2004, Engineering Workforce Study

SOURCE: STAMATS Teen Talk, 2005 & Chronicle of Higher Education 2007 Alamenac

In-state vs. out-of-state freshmen

recruitment funnel ratios









SOURCE: Noel Levitz 2006 Admissions Funnel Report

SOURCE: College Board, 2007

Constant Growth in One Demographic Market: Adults Over 60









SOURCE: US Census Bureau

WICHE, 2008

National vs. Regional Trends









WICHE, 2008

SOURCE: US Dept. of Education 2005

HOMESCHOOLED STUDENTS: Number and distribution of

school-age children who were home schooled, by

amount of time spent in schools: 1999 and 2003









NOTE: Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding. Homeschooled children are those ages 5–17 educated by their parents full or part time who are in a grade

equivalent to kindergarten through 12th grade. Excludes students who were enrolled in public or private school more than 25 hours per week and students who

were homeschooled only because of temporary illness.







SOURCE: Princiotta, D., Bielick, S., Van Brunt, A., and Chapman, C. (2005). Homeschooling in the United States: 2003 (NCES 2005–101), table 1. Data from U.S.

Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Parent Survey of the National Household Education Surveys Program (NHES), 1999 and Parent

and Family Involvement in Education Survey of the NHES, 2003.

PARTICIPATION IN REMEDIAL EDUCATION: Percentage of

entering freshmen at degree-granting institutions who enrolled

in remedial courses, by type of institution and subject area:

Fall 2000









NOTE: Data reported for fall 2000 are based on Title IV degree-granting institutions that enrolled freshmen in 2000. The categories used for analyzing these data include public 2-

year, private 2-year, public 4-year, and private 4-year institutions. Data from private not-for-profit and for-profit institutions are reported together because there are too few private

for-profit institutions in the sample to report them separately. The estimates in this indicator differ from those in indicator 18 because the populations differ. This indicator deals with

entering freshmen of all ages in 2000 while indicator 18 examines a cohort (1992 12th-graders who enrolled in postsecondary education).









SOURCE: Parsad, B., and Lewis, L. (2003). Remedial Education at Degree-Granting Postsecondary Institutions in Fall 2000 (NCES 2004–010), table 4. Data from U.S. Department of

Education, NCES, Postsecondary Education Quick Information System (PEQIS), “Survey on Remedial Education in Higher Education Institutions,” fall 2000.

SOURCE: http://www.postsecondary.org/archives/Posters/192Chart1.pdf

COLLEGE COST COMPARISON









SOURCE: The College Board 2006, MAP: TIME, November 6, 2006

Student Success Trends









SOURCE: ACT, 2007

SOURCE: ACT, 2007

Financial considerations the most common

reason for leaving college

Financial reasons

40%

Other

35%

Family responsibilities

30%

Class not available / scheduling

25% inconvenient

Dissatisfaction with program / school /

20% campus / faculty

Completion of degree / certificate

15%

Academic problems

10%

Finished taking desired classes

5%

Personal health reasons

0%

Reasons for discontinuing Traumatic experience



postsecondary education Military service



SOURCE: ELS:2002 “A First Look at the Initial Postsecondary Experiences of the

High School Sophomore Class of 2002 (National Center for Education Statistics)

MOBILITY OF COLLEGE STUDENTS: Percentage of freshmen who had graduated from high

school in the previous 12 months attending a public or private not-for-profit 4-year college in their

home state: Fall 2006









NOTE: Includes first-time postsecondary students who were enrolled at public and private not-for-profit 4-year degree-granting institutions that participated in Title IV federal financial aid programs.

See supplemental note 9 for more information. Foreign students studying in the United States are included as out-of-state students. See supplemental note 1 for a list of states in each region.







SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fall 2006 Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), Spring 2007.

Female Enrollments Exceed 57% of All College Students









SOURCE: NCES, The Condition of Education 2006, pg. 36

NATIONWIDE HS SENIORS ACT TESTED 2001-2007



1400000





1200000





1000000





800000 All Students

Female

600000 Male





400000





200000





0

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007



SOURCE: ACT

Top Twenty Graduate Degrees

Searched for on gradschools.com since 2004





1. History 11. Physician Assistant

2. Physical Therapy 12. Sports Administration

3. Journalism 13. MBA

Communications 14. Fine Arts

4. Social Work 15. International Relations

5. Fashion & Textile 16. Art Therapy

Design

17. Counseling & Mental Health

6. Clinical Psychology

Therapy

7. Law

18. Public Health

8. Architecture

19. Educational & School

9. Biology

Counseling

10. Creative Writing

20. School Psychology

HIGHEST ADVANCED DEGREE ATTAINED: Percentage of 1992–93

bachelor’s degree recipients who had earned an advanced degree by

2003, by bachelor’s degree field of study and highest degree attained









# Rounds to zero.









NOTE: Master‟s degrees include students who earned a post-master‟s certificate. First-professional programs include Chiropractic (D.C. or D.C.M.), Pharmacy (Depart), Dentistry (D.D.S. or D.M.D.),

Podiatry (Pod.D. or D.P.), Medicine (M.D.), Veterinary Medicine (D.V.M.), Optometry (O.D.), Law (L.L.B. or J.D.), Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), or Theology (M.Div., M.H.L., or B.D.). Detail may not

sum to totals because of rounding.









SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, 1993/03 Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study (B&B:93/03), previously unpublished tabulation (September

2005).

National Trends Summary

1. Decreasing numbers of high school graduates in

the Midwest and Northeast

2. Declining percentage of high school graduates

pursuing higher education directly out of high

school

3. Increasing numbers of freshmen choosing to start

at community colleges

4. Increasing diversity and financial need of future

high school graduates

5. Increasing dependence on student loans and a

larger percentage of household income needed to

pay for college

6. Continued growth in the college student gender

gap

7. Ongoing interest declines for non-biology STEM

majors

SEM Strategies for Success

1. Increase Student Retention

2. Reach-out Further in Student Markets

3. Increase College Participation in Primary

Markets

4. Look for Post Retirement Student

Opportunities - Certificate Programs

5. Focus on Transfers from 2-year Colleges

6. Further develop Graduate Outreach and

Graduate Certificate Programs

The Entire Campus Must be

Engaged in the Solution

“Changing demographics is not simply an issue

for enrollment managers—and enrollment

managers cannot “do magic” to perpetuate the

status quo.



Trustees, presidents, deans, faculty, and other

administrators need to engage in some

serious strategic planning to project

manageable goals, not only from the institution‟s

perspective, but also from the perspective of

providing access and opportunity to this new

group of students.”

SOURCE: College Board. (2005). “The Impact of Demographic Changes on Higher Education”

Additional SEM Professional

Development

AACRAO‟s Annual SEM Conference:

• November 16-19, Anaheim, California

• www.aacrao.org



EPI‟s Fall Leadership Institute: A Focuson

Student Success and SEM

• October 23-25, Tucson, Arizona

• www.educationalpolicy.org

QUESTIONS?


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