Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAugustus Mills Modified over 8 years ago
1
UNDERGRADUATE CREDIT HOUR ENROLLMENT PATTERNS AND OUTCOMES Rebecca E. Porter, Ph.D., PT Executive Director of Enrollment Management & Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Services Michele J. Hansen, Ph.D. Executive Director, Office of Student Data, Analysis, and Evaluation (OSDAE)
2
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment All Undergraduates IUPUI IN 1
3
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment Beginning Freshmen IUPUI IN 2
4
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment New Transfers, Continuing, and Returning Undergraduates IUPUI IN 3
5
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment All Undergraduates IUPUI IN 4
6
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment New Transfers, Continuing, and Returning Undergraduates IUPUI IN 5
7
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment New Beginners IUPUI IN 6
8
Fall 2013 Credit Hour Enrollment All Undergraduates IUPUI IN 7
9
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment New Beginners IUPUI IN 8
10
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment New Transfers IUPUI IN 9
11
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment Returning and Continuing IUPUI IN 10
12
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment Fall Beginners IUPUI IN 11
13
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment New External Transfers IUPUI IN 12
14
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment Continuing and Returning IUPUI IN 13
15
Fall 2014 Credit Hour Enrollment 21 st Century Scholars Over $5000 Unmet Need IUPUI IN 14
16
Fall 2013 Credit Hour Enrollment 21 st Century Scholars Over $5000 Unmet Need IUPUI IN 15
17
Fall 2013 Credit Hour Enrollment 21 st Century Scholars Over $5000 Unmet Need IUPUI IN 16
18
Conclusions New Beginners are more likely to enroll in 15 credit hours compared to New Transfers, Returning, and Continuing students. Students who enroll in 15 or more credit hours tend to have (compared to those who enroll in fewer): Lower DFW rates and higher one-year retention rates Higher levels of academic preparation (HS GPAs, Transfer In GPAs, and Fall Census GPA) Lower levels of unmet financial need (approximately $2,000 difference between students attempting 12 and those attempting 15) 17
19
21 st Century Scholar Students Must maintain satisfactory academic progress and complete 30 credit hours by the end of their first year, 60 credit hours by the end of their second year, and 90 credit hours by the end of their third year in order to continue receiving the award. Many of these students are encouraged to take 15 credit hours per semester. Fall 2013 21 st Century Scholar students with high levels of unmet financial need (above $5000) had lower one-year retention rates when they enrolled in 15, 16, 17 credit hours compared to 12. 18
20
Links to Interactive Reports and OSDAE Website Access to all Student Data Reports and More! http://osdae.iupui.edu/ 19 Link to credit hour report: https://tableau.bi.iu.edu/t/prd/views/SummaryofF13andF14UGRDSbycredithour/F13StudentDemographics#1
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.