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Agenda . PGC BasicsApportionment MethodsEfficiencyThe Numbers. PGC Basics . What is PGC?. PGC stands for Performance Goals Committee. It is an ACE committee whose membership is all the Division Chairs, as well as 2 administrators. It is discussed in the ACE contract, article 20.. Enrollment = number of students in the classUntil we know what the actual enrollments are we use estimates. As we plan, it is important to estimate what the enrollment will be for each individual class. .
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4. What is PGC? PGC stands for Performance Goals Committee. It is an ACE committee whose membership is all the Division Chairs, as well as 2 administrators. It is discussed in the ACE contract, article 20.
5. Enrollment = number of students in the class
Until we know what the actual enrollments are we use estimates. As we plan, it is important to estimate what the enrollment will be for each individual class.
6. WSCH = Weekly Student Contact Hours
Semester WSCH = WSCH x 16.2
(16.2 is our term length multiplier. The.2 comes from our Flex Day.)
FTES= Full-Time Equivalent Students
We report FTES not WSCH
1 FTES = 525 hours
(this is 15 units x 17.5 weeks x 2 semesters)
7. Example for a 3-Unit Class Example - A full-semester psychology class meeting 3.4
hours a week with 40 students enrolled accrues
3.4 x 40 = 136 WSCH.
The semester WSCH for the course is
136 x 16.2 = 2203.2 hours
2203.2 / 525 = 4.196 FTES
(The 525 is hours per 1 FTES).
8. We receive FTES funding for residents only (but PGC looks at total enrollment, not just CA residents)
Different kinds of courses use different methods for determining FTES
We report FTES three times a year on the 320 report (P1, P2, P3)
We are responsible for accurately reporting FTES but are subject to audit
9. Enrollments fluctuate through the semester.
For many courses we report FTES by taking a “snapshot” 20% of the way through the course. This is called the “census day”. It is very important to drop any “no shows”, since we can’t collect apportionment for students who haven’t attended class at all. Census day should be indicated on the 1st day roster on MyWebServices.
For a full semester course, this occurs Monday of the 3rd week.
11. The System Office calculates FTES with four main apportionment methods Weekly Census
Daily Census
Positive Attendance
Unit Attendance
12. Weekly Census Attendance reporting for courses that are regularly scheduled each week for the full semester
Includes most on-campus full semester courses.
Includes full term DL courses with labs (use the same contact hours as if it was an on-campus course)
13. Weekly Census Semester WSCH =
Contact hours per week x number of students on census day x term length multiplier (16.2)
(This gives the highest possible semester WSCH, since it includes holidays.)
14. Daily Census Attendance reporting type for sections that meet on a regular basis for at least five days, but for less than a full semester
Most Winter and Summer courses
Short-term courses that meet the same amount of time each day
15. Daily Census Semester WSCH =
Hours per day x number of students on census day x number of meeting days
(For weekly we get to count holidays, but with daily we don’t, so this is slightly less efficient).
16. Positive Attendance Attendance reporting based upon actual student attendance
Noncredit Courses
Irregularly Scheduled and Open Entry/Open Exit Courses
Courses meeting fewer than 5 times
17. Positive Attendance Semester WSCH =
Sum of total hours each student attends the class (even if student drops)
18. Unit Attendance Attendance reporting based upon units rather than contact hours
Work Experience and Internships
Independent and Directed Studies
DL lecture only courses
19. Unit Attendance Semester WSCH =
Number of units x number of students x term length multiplier
20. Efficiency
21. Unit A measure of student work
One unit is a minimum of 48 hours of student work
Lecture usually one hour with instructor, two without
Lab usually three hours with instructor
22. Contact Hour A measure of apportionment
One contact hour is 50 minutes
85 minutes is 1.7 contact hours
50 minutes = 1 hour
35 minutes = 35/50 = .7 hour
--------------------------
1.7 hour
(So a 3 unit class that meets twice a week for 1 hour and 25 minutes, will have 2 x 1.7= 3.4 contact hours)
23. Load A measure of faculty work
Under local control
Lecture has a base (traditional calendar) of 12, 15, or 18 contact hours per week
Lab has a base of 18, 20, 21, or 24 contact hours per week
26. WSCH/FTEF Average of 35 students per class is accepted norm for efficiency
For a typical full semester 3-unit lecture course with 35 students:
WSCH = 3.4 x 35 = 119
Assuming load is 0.2:
WSCH/FTEF = 119/0.2 = 595
27. WSCH/FTEF Average of 35 students per class is accepted norm for efficiency
For a full semester 5-unit lecture course with 35 students:
WSCH = 5.6 (contact hrs) x 35 = 196
Assuming load is 0.333 (5 unit class):
WSCH/FTEF = 196/0.333 = 589
28. Calculating the size of a class necessary to get a desired WSCH/FTEF Average of 35 students per class is accepted norm for efficiency
For a full semester 3-unit lecture course with 35 students:
WSCH = 3.4 (contact hrs) x 35 = 196
Assuming load is 0.2 (3 unit class):
WSCH/FTEF = 196/0.333 = 589
So, the WSCH = (the W/F goal) times 0.2
If you divide the WSCH by the contact hours, that will give you the size of the class necessary to reach a desired W/F.
31. Coding Methods