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Essential Data for Admissions Advisers. August 6, 2010 Reuben Ternes , OIRA. Overview. Presentation in 6 Parts Introduction to OIRA Part I: FTIAC Growth Part II: Recruitment Data Part III: The Importance of Transfer Students Part IV: Comparing OU to National Data
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Essential Data for Admissions Advisers August 6, 2010 Reuben Ternes, OIRA
Overview • Presentation in 6 Parts • Introduction to OIRA • Part I: FTIAC Growth • Part II: Recruitment Data • Part III: The Importance of Transfer Students • Part IV: Comparing OU to National Data • Part V: Academic Success Indicators
What does OIRA do? • Tracks and projects enrollment • Reports to federal agencies (IPEDS) • Official record keeper for large amounts of university data • Analyzes policy decisions • i.e. Is it a good policy to encourage students to take 16 credits their first semester, regardless of their ACT score? What will happen to our retention rates if we change our admission requirements? • Reports graduation rates, retention rates, etc. • Gathers and reports on various student surveys. • …and much much more…
OIRA Website • Fastest way to get to the website is from the OU home page. • Mouse over to Faculty and Staff. • Selecting Assessment takes you directly to OIRA home. • Lots of potentially useful info on the website: • New student profiles • Enrollment data, current and historical • Ad hoc reports • Retention and Graduation Rate Data • NSSE Data • Assessment data and links • PowerPoint Presentations (including this one)
FTIAC Growth Part I
Understanding the Projections • There are two major obstacles responsible for the gap between the 2020 goal and the steady state projections • 1). High School Demographics • 2). Current Market Share
FTIAC Growth: good and bad news • Bad News for FTIAC Enrollment • High school graduates are down • We will need to do more with less • Over 80% of our FTIACs come from only 3 counties • Our market share in other counties is low and/or non-existent. • The Good News for FTIAC Enrollment • The decline in projected high school students is slightly less severe in Oakland and Macomb counties (at least for the next few years). • Our market share in both Oakland and Macomb county has increased since 2004.
Recruitment Data Part II
High Schools with Highest Yield * Represents one of the 22 highest feeder schools (by application)
Yield by HS GPA • Many variables are correlated with yield (the probability that an applicant will attend OU). • HS GPA and ACT scores come to mind, but there are lots of other variables too. • HS GPA is often thought of as the ‘better’ of the two predictors, but often they each add important information. • The relationship between HS GPA and yield follows a non-obvious (and non-linear) pattern.
Part III: Transfer Data • Historically, OU has focused much of its attention towards FTIACs, but transfers make up a large portion of new OU students too. • 2466 new FTIACs in 2009 • 1677 new transfer students in 2009 • So far, FTIACs for Fall 2010 are down 4%. Transfers are up 28%. • Will these numbers hold? • Final numbers won’t be in for some time, but this represents a huge surge in transfer students so far.
Transfer Student Profile (Fall 2009) • Approximately 66% come from 2-year colleges while 33% come from 4-year institutions. • Over 50% were under the age of 22. • 25% are over the age of 26. • 70% were full-time. • Most students had a GPA of a 2.5 or higher from their former institution. • Half had a GPA of 3.0 or higher.
Similarities and Differences: Comparing OU to National Data Part IV
Surveys • OU has two major student surveys. • CIRP (freshmen only) • NSEE (freshmen and seniors) • These surveys give us information about our student body. • How many hours they work? • How difficult they find courses to be at OU • How much money their parents make • How often they drink • Why they choose OU • Etc… • The NSSE data is available on the OIRA webpage. • Mostly, we find that OU is similar to other institutions. However, there are some differences.
“The Environment Emphasizes Spending Significant Amounts of Time on Academic Work”
Academic Success Indicators Part V
Questions • What questions do you have for me? • What questions do you have for OIRA? • What data do you use on a regular basis? • What information do you need? • What tools do you need to turn your data into information?