THECB 1/2007 Participation Forecast and Report on Participation and Success Progress January 25, 2007.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
by Steve H. Murdock Institute for Demographic and
Advertisements

Ph. D. Completion and Attrition: Baseline Program Data
The University of Texas at El Paso Building a National Reputation By Successfully Serving its Region The University of Texas at El Paso Building a National.
© 2006 POPULATION REFERENCE BUREAU Marlene A. Lee Senior Policy Analyst Domestic Programs 300 MILLION AND COUNTING Education and Workforce: The Critical.
Chapter 5: Workforce. Chartbook 2003 Physician Workforce After dropping slightly in 1999, the number of active physicians per thousand population rose.
Cultivating the Underrepresented Majority for STEM: Its Not Just About the Numbers Shirley M. Malcom.
Figure 1. There Are 13.3 Million Uninsured Young Adults Ages 19–29, 30 Percent of the Nonelderly Uninsured, 2005 Source: Analysis of the March 2006 Current.
New Jersey Statewide Assessment Results: Highlights and Trends State Board of Education, February 6, 2008 Jay Doolan, Ed.D., Assistant Commissioner,
The Supply of and Demand for Registered Nurses and Nurse Graduates in Texas Report to the Legislature.
Alaska Accountability Adequate Yearly Progress January 2008, Updated.
Alaska Accountability Adequate Yearly Progress February 2007, Updated.
1 Healthy Babies in Healthy Families Health Update Karen Remley, MD, MBA, FAAP Commissioner, Virginia Department of Health November 2011.
Recognition of Excellence Presentation: Affordability, Participation and Efficiency Initiatives Presented by the Tarrant County College District April.
An in-the-ballpark estimate based on hypothetical situations and their potential effects on earnings and tax revenue for the State of Nebraska. Presented.
Supported by ESRC Large Grant. What difference does a decade make? Satisfaction with the NHS in Northern Ireland in 1996 and 2006.
Non-credit ESL Student Transitions to Credit at CCSF
Del Mar College Developmental Education Needs of First-Time-In-College Students and High School Graduates
The Impact of Diabetes Mellitus in the United States
24 th June Widening Participation in the 21 st Century: A decade of learning Level Zero Foundation Years – the Cinderella Programmes of Widening.
© 2013 E 3 Alliance 2013 CENTRAL TEXAS EDUCATION PROFILE Made possible through the investment of the.
Higher Education: A Presentation to the Budget Trends Commission May 27, 2008 Mark Misukanis Director of Fiscal Policy and Research Office of Higher Education.
Minnesota Demographic Trends In A Changing World Tom Gillaspy, State Demographer Mn Dept of Administration August 2008.
January 29, Participation: By 2015, close the gaps in enrollment rates across Texas to add 630,000 more students.. Success: By 2015, award 210,000.
MCSD EQUITY UPDATE Presented by Sergio Sanchez K-12 Math and ESOL Program Specialist Educational Equity and ADA Coordinator MCSD sanchezs 1.
New York State’s Labor Force Drivers Presented by Kevin Jack, Statewide Labor Market Analyst July 2008.
THECB 7/2006 Closing the Gaps, by 2015 July 20, 2006.
1 OKLAHOMA STATE REGENTS FOR HIGHER EDUCATION Making Place Matter October 29, 2009.
1 Western Massachusetts: the Berkshires Regional Health Dialogue Massachusetts Department of Public Health June 13, 2007.
Ethnicity Category2 Years3 Years4 Years5 Years6 Years Asian or Pacific Islander (N=84) 10%11%17%27% Black Non-Hispanic (N=28) 0%7% Hispanic (N=316) 2%10%24%34%36%
Southeast Michigan Council of Governments. The Age Wave Data from SEMCOG’s 2040 Forecast Sirisha Uppalapati 2040 Forecast.
Challenge to Lead Southern Regional Education Board Maryland Challenge to Lead Goals for Education Maryland is On the Move Progress Report 2008 Challenge.
Next Steps of the P-20 Council Governor’s P-20 Council November 8, 2007.
Articulation & Transfer Report: AY Tennessee Higher Education Commission Fall Quarterly Meeting November 20, 2014.
School Grades Model and Historical Background
The Aging Population Source: U.S. Census Bureau Percent Growth in U.S. Population, by Age Bracket.
The Lumina Foundation Report: A Stronger Nation Through Higher Education and Arkansas’s Progress Dr. Karen Wheeler Associate Director Department of Higher.
1 Trends in Diversity: A National Perspective Bryan J. Cook Director Center for Policy Analysis American Council on Education.
STUDENT EQUITY: A PLAN FOR ACTION Planning Meeting May 23, 2013.
Student Equity Report Prepared by Berkeley City College, Faculty, Administrators, and Staff May, 2012 Data Sources: PCCD Institutional Research, CCCCO.
THECB 7/2007 Closing the Gaps by 2015 Progress Report Presentation for: Texas Community College Teachers Association David W. Gardner July 30, 2007.
THECB 1/2008 Report on Closing the Gaps Success Progress January 24, 2008.
Texas Higher Education Fall 2006 Preliminary Enrollment Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, October 26, 2006.
1. 2 What is the E 3 Alliance? A catalyst for change in Central Texas and in regions across the state Building a research-based regional blueprint to.
July 29, 2010 Closing the Gaps Progress Report THECB 6/2010.
November 5, 2010 Closing The Gaps by 2015 Where We Are Now Closing The Gaps by 2015 Where We Are Now.
Texas Higher Education Data Doug Bond TX Higher Education Coordinating Board SDC/BIDC Conference 5/22/2013
THECB 4/2003 Progress Toward Participation and Success goals of Closing the Gaps by 2015.
THECB 7/2003 Closing the Gaps by 2015 Education Commission of the States National Forum Session July 15, 2003.
THECB 7/2004 Closing the Gaps by 2015 Progress Report, July 2004.
ESC Region XI Module Two B Studying Local Data for Region XI Fort Worth Partners All AVATAR artifacts :
CLOSING the GAPS by 2015 The Texas Higher Education Plan October Presented to MVC faculty forum November.
THECB 7/2002 Closing the Gaps: 2002 Progress Report.
Data for Region 16 Vertical Alignment Partners September 24, 2012 All AVATAR artifacts :
THECB 7/2007 Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board Glenda Barron and Joe Stafford October 5, 2007.
California State University, Sacramento Nancy Shulock Institute for Higher Education Leadership & Policy Presentation to Conference: Policy Challenges.
1 Leadership Alliance !Buenos Dias!. A Commitment to Excellence “ The quality of a person’s life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence,
Data Highlight: 8th Grade Cohort Julie Eklund Interim Assistant Commissioner Strategic Planning and Funding.
Glendale Community College: Statewide Accountability Reporting Edward Karpp Associate Dean, Institutional Research & Planning January 24, 2008.
Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board Data Highlight: Completion CAAP Meeting March 30,
WOODY L. HUNT, CHAIRMAN HIGHER EDUCATION STRATEGIC PLANNING COMMITTEE THE FUTURE OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN TEXAS July 23,
Palomar College Presentation to Palomar College Board of Trustees March 11, 2008.
December 3, 2009 Closing The Gaps by 2015 Where We Are Now Closing The Gaps by 2015 Where We Are Now.
THECB 10/2007 Closing the Gaps by 2015 Presentation for: 2007 Governing Board Conference David W. Gardner October 29, 2007.
July 26, 2012 Closing the Gaps Progress Report. THECB 7/2012 ENROLLMENT GROWTH IS WELL ABOVE CLOSING THE GAPS TARGET 532, , ,483.
JANUARY 24, 2013 THECB 12/2012 Enrollment Forecast.
MIAIR, November 3, 2016 Jessica Kijek & Bin Ning
Participation Forecast
The Future of Higher Education in Texas
Data Highlight: 8th Grade Cohort
Presentation transcript:

THECB 1/2007 Participation Forecast and Report on Participation and Success Progress January 25, 2007

THECB 1/2007 Participation Forecast  Designed to reflect current trends, and be conservative  5 years of historical enrollment by age, race/ethnicity, and county  Uses new population projections  Projected population by age, race/ethnicity, and county  Non-resident participation factors  Institutional input on local conditions

THECB 1/ Projection is lower than previous forecast  Population projections decreased due to change in the recommended migration rate which: –Lowered statewide population projection –Difference largest for Hispanics  Most recent five-year enrollment trend flatter than that used two years ago

THECB 1/2007 Changes in Population Projections for Projection 2006 Projection % Change Total28,060,00026,160, % Anglo11,780,00011,690, % African-Am3,030,0002,910, % Hispanic11,860,00010,440, % Source: Texas State Data Center

THECB 1/2007 Five years of enrollment increases, but from 2004 to 2006, pace slackened 216,650

THECB 1/2007 Forecasted Enrollment Public Colleges and Universities

THECB 1/ and 2006 Participation Forecast Differences 1,317,000 1,292,000

THECB 1/ and 2006 Participation Forecasts for 2010 and

THECB 1/2007 Closing the Gaps vs Forecast Closing the Gaps  Based on where Texas wants be by 2015  Expect changes to happen to reach goals Forecast  Based on the historic trends  What will happen if current patterns do NOT change

THECB 1/2007 Close the Gaps in Participation By 2015, close the gaps in enrollment rates across Texas to add 630,000 more students.

THECB 1/2007 Given Current Trends Texas Will Not Reach Closing the Gaps 5.7% Goal Public Colleges and Universities

THECB 1/2007 Largest growth in enrollment continues to be at Two-Year Colleges 2% Health-Related University Independent Two-Year College 2000 – 2006 University Two-Year College Independent % Health-Related

THECB 1/2007 Higher Education is more diverse African-Am. HispanicWhite Other Fall 2006 African-Am. White Hispanic Fall 2000 Other

THECB 1/ Hispanic Target remains a big challenge * Asians are not targeted in the plan. WhiteHispanicAfrican-Am

THECB 1/ Regions account for 91% of Hispanic enrollment increase fall 2005 to fall 2006

THECB 1/2007 Changes In Rate of Increase  Decrease in the number of delayed-entry students  University –One-year persistence is stable –Two-year persistence dropped in 2002 and is rebounding  Two-Year Colleges –One- and two-year persistence is stable

THECB 1/2007 The percent of students entering from public high schools increased slightly. (44.1%) (43.6%) (43.4%) (44.1%) (44.2%) Percent of Graduating Class (44.4%) (45.4%) Into public higher education only. (44.5%)

THECB 1/2007 Participation Summary  Fall 2006 enrollments represented 2.1% growth over previous fall; low rate but better than 0.9% growth from fall 2004 to fall 2005  Hispanic enrollment growth was substantial but continues to trail targets  Percentage of students coming directly from high school increased slightly

THECB 1/2007 Close the Gaps in Success By 2015, award 210,000 undergraduate degrees, certificates and other identifiable student successes from high quality programs.

THECB 1/ ,460 more Bachelor’s, Associate’s and Certificates awarded than in ,460 93,765

THECB 1/2007 University Graduation Rates Increasing Graduation RateFY 1999FY Year19.9%24.3% 5-Year39.7%48.1% 6-Year49.2%56.7% Graduation & Persistence63.5%70.3% Transfers’ Grad Rate49.3%52.2% Students Receiving Pell25.7%31.6%

THECB 1/2007 Two-Year Colleges Graduation and Persistence Increasing FY 2000FY 2005 Bachelor’s Degrees12.6%16.3% Associate’s Degrees8.7%9.9% Certificates4.4% Persisting12.3%13.4% Total Grad & Persist Rate38.0%44.0%

THECB 1/2007 Public Institutions’ Bachelor’s targets still below the 2010 Closing the Gaps Bachelor’s Associate’s

THECB 1/2007 Public Doctoral Institutional targets Exceed 2010 Closing the Gaps target

THECB 1/2007 Institutional Targets for Undergraduate Minority Awards’ are Far Short * Not targeted in the Plan. White* Hispanic African-Am.

THECB 1/2007 How can we increase graduates in critical fields? TechnologyNursing/Allied Health

THECB 1/2007 Technology degree change is not consistent across disciplines

THECB 1/2007 UG awards in Allied Health and Nursing continue to improve

THECB 1/2007 Percentage increase in UG awards at public institutions greatest for underrepresented groups +15.0% +31.0% +51.4% +55.3%

THECB 1/2007 Next Steps?  Revise strategies for each Closing the Gaps area to focus efforts on pertinent activities that lead to genuine progress  Concentrate on Hispanic participation and success

THECB 1/ Enrollment Forecast Differences 2006 ForecastCTG Goal Public Universities 533, ,484 Public Two-Year Colleges 640, ,670 Independent Seniors 117, ,093 Total 1,291,993 1,590,246

THECB 1/2007 Closing the Gaps, by 2015 Participation and Success Update

THECB 1/2007 Participation Comparison for College and Universities Projection, Institutional Targets and CTG Goals

THECB 1/2007 Participation Comparison for Two-Year Colleges: Projections, Institutional Targets and CTG Goals

THECB 1/2007 Participation Comparison for Universities: Projections, Institutional Targets and CTG Goals

THECB 1/2007 Bachelor’s awarded to Hispanics at public institutions shows improvement

THECB 1/2007 Changes in 15 to 34 Year Old Population for 2015 Prior Projection 2006 Projection % Change Total8,250,0007,460, % Anglo2,920,0002,900, % African-Am970,000920, % Hispanic3,990,0003,360, %

THECB 1/2007 Higher Education 2000 and 2006 Two-Year Colleges Pub. Universities HRI Fall 2006 Fall 2000 Independents HRI Two-Year Colleges Pub. Universities

THECB 1/2007 Economically disadvantaged students less likely to enroll in higher education

THECB 1/2007 Large increases in the percent of entering students with the Recommended or above curriculum 55% 53% 65% 73% 78% 53% 84% 86%