1 / 4

All Student Lifecycle – Draft BPM

All Student Lifecycle – Draft BPM. DEMAND: 14k UG applications pa 23k PG applications pa 9k UG students taught pa 5.6k PG students res. & taught pa £163m of fee income pa. OPERATING MODEL: 9 campuses, main at Sth Ken Departments: 40+ Faculty Operations: 4 Registry: 1

watson
Download Presentation

All Student Lifecycle – Draft BPM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. All Student Lifecycle – Draft BPM • DEMAND: • 14k UG applications pa • 23k PG applications pa • 9k UG students taught pa • 5.6k PG students res. & taught pa • £163m of fee income pa • OPERATING MODEL: • 9 campuses, main at Sth Ken • Departments: 40+ • Faculty Operations: 4 • Registry: 1 • Central Services: 1 • RESOURCE: • 3.3k Academic staff (18%teaching time) • 12.5:1 students / academic • 3.7k support staff • 3,000 student bedrooms • 4 Faculties: • Business - 1k students (7% of total) • Engineering - 6k (41%) • Medicine - 3.4k (23%) • Natural Sciences - 4.4k (30%) • Interest in HE(HE study, STEM, etc) • Interest in Imperial (prospectus, visit, etc) • Students • 87% overall satisfaction (NSS) • 0.68% leave pa • Graduating salary av. £31k pa • Quality • 42% UG offered places • 56% UG accept offers • 86% receive 1st or 2:1 • 3 Student types: • UGT (62%) • PGT (18%) • PGR (20%) • 3 geographic groups of students: • UK (52%) • EU (19%: most from France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain) • International (29%: China, India, etc) Don’t accept • 3k UG arrive pa, 3k PGT, 1k PGR • 21% PG are part-time • 242 taught courses (110 UG, 132 PG) • REPUTATION: • “Imperial College London” brand • Research and Translation • Student surveys • UK league tables • International league tables • UK media • International media • High school staff • Social media • Parents, siblings, friends • Alumni Don’t arrive • 2.5k UG degrees awarded pa • 2.6k PGT degrees awarded pa • 1k PGR degrees awarded pa Leave Further study at Imperial • 170K Alumni • TBA K contactable • 4k pa

  2. Map created 12/05/14, revised following PUG 20/05/14 • 8.4k UK & EU UG applicants, 5.9k International pa (Engineering 46% UK & EU, Medicine 77%, FoNS 60%) • 6.5 average applicants per UG place (Engineering 6.1, Medicine 8.1, FoNS 6) • ~9000 UG students (stable) • 110 courses • ~2,500 degrees awarded pa. - 37% 1sts, 48% 2:1s, (Engineering 41, 46, Medicine, 33, 61, FoNs 36,45 ) UG Student Lifecycle - Draft BPM • Home & international reputation • Location & Cost • Courses & Course Reputation • Open Days, Campus Tours • Student Satisfaction i.e. League tables, NSS • Social Aspects, i.e. Union Opportunities, Lifestyle, Sports & Activities, ICU clubs • High Fees = High Expectation • Value for money Key contacts: Registry, Admissions Administrator / Assistant , Academic Tutor • UCAS, Tests, Interviews • Application packs • Communication – speed, efficiency, consistency, tone, quality, content • Setting expectations • Process bottlenecks • Answer students not parent • Resolve query don’t quote process • Arrival: • Keep in touch between offer & arrival • High Fee, demanding students, manage expectations • Campus Services & Union – Need joined up working • Credit Control, Induction to life, personal care, awareness • Shift from educate to commercial problem • Formal dinner for students with Staff • Departmental Welcome events • No benefit for Hall Seniors • Be realistic about living costs • Communication – what do students want? Facebook, social media • Conversion from offer to acceptance to start • Treating applicants as individuals not numbers • Study: • Field Trips • Early links with prospective employers • Lecture class size • Balance between lecture & discussion type forums • Cut in student funding • Accommodation • IMPROVEMENT PRIORITIES: • Communication with students & applicants • Quality, location and cost of accommodation • Joint up working between staff and ICU – are we duplicating information? • Improved relations between Students, Alumni & Staff • Improved systems and one source of information • Must strike assessment balance • More personalised Graduation • Medical Graduation always in evening - it should rotate • Make study blended learning • Key measures: • Student feedback • Offers made to acceptance ratio • Nationality and gender of applicants • Degree classifications • Graduate destinations / salaries • Alumni engagement / donations • Staff & Alumni involved in clubs & societies • Prospective employees • Excellent network for each other • Target individuals – course, involvement, clubs & activities • They will donate if they value their College education (might not be straight away)

  3. Map created 12/05/14, revised following PUG 20/05/14 • 18k PGT applicants pa (all PG = 5.8 per place (Engineering 6.9, Medicine 3.6, NS 4.6, Business 7.3). • ~2,900 students • ~300 part-time • 132 courses • All PG places up 25% in last 5 years • ~2,600 degrees awarded pa PGT Student Lifecycle - Draft BPM • Teaching quality / research • Course (product) design – modular? • Courses offered / explained • Information not data • Funding - scholarships • Fees • Value for money – added value? CPD • Employment prospects • Accommodation • Impressions of others (family, colleagues, friends) • Brand awareness • League tables • Careers • Communication quality / integration (digital) • Competitor analysis • USP • Marketing of courses • Put a face to it – named contact with cover / dept. • Ease of applying • 2 choices processed serially (one at a time) • Availability on course – ‘is it worth applying?’ • Acknowledgement, feedback, timeliness • Data warehouse / CRM • Decline and follow • Alternative • Student Union • Welfare • Student services • Withdrawals – not met conditions in time • Conversion requirements –meeting conditions, funding, degree, ATAS, Visa, deposit • Pre-arrival: • Fees paid • Employment / careers • Day 1: • Registration • Orientation • Timetable • Community • ID badges • College e-mail • IMPROVEMENT PRIORITIES: • Timetabling • Room management • Systematic MI to make decisions • Split of tutor time (management v teaching) • Swift decisions • Strong communication • Annual cycle • Coping with increase in numbers • NHS funding in Medicine • Open days • Reject & follow-up • Waiting list • Scholarships / Interviews • Student reps • Teaching • Feedback • Facilities • Supervision: access to tutors • Project availability • Links to employers • Check course meets College strategic needs • Don’t graduate • Appeal process – OI - PR • Ceremony • Key measures: • Student feedback • Offers made to acceptance ratio • Enquiries, open days, phone calls • Nationality and gender of applicants • Graduate destinations / salaries • Alumni engagement / donations • Careers • Employer • Rankings survey / feedback

  4. Map created 12/05/14, revised following PUG 20/05/14 • ~4,800 PGR applicants pa (all PG = 5.8 per place (Engineering 6.9, Medicine 3.6, NS 4.6, Business 7.3) • ~800 places pa • 80% former UGs / 20% other • 3,100 active students • ~300 part-time • All PG places up 25% in last 5 years • ~1,000 degrees awarded pa PGR Student Lifecycle - Draft BPM • Research portfolio • Meet academics • Word of mouth • Personal enquiry • Advertising • Scholarships (College PhD etc.) • Open days, joint with PGT – effectiveness? • Key contacts: Dir. Of Post-grad Studies, Dir. of Admissions, Supervisor, other academics, Research peer group, Group administrator, other departments’ groups, with industry, UGs (supervising), Graduate School, Students’ unions • Application form • 2 choices that can be processed in parallel • Interview • Masters qualification? • Arrival: • Welcome week in Oct • Other times = dependent on supervisor / dept. • Critical success factors: • Relationship with Supervisor • Size & dynamic of research group • Facilities available • Funding: • Res. Councils • Doctoral training account • Self funded / scholarship • EU funded • Industrial case scheme • Dept. Scholarship • Early Stage Assessment @ 8mths • MPhil, or PhD (95%) • Experimentation • Publications, citations, contributors • Writing up • 3.5 to 4 years • Talent loss: • Run out of bursary • Supervisor leaves or retires / student moves elsewhere or with them • Vivas • Pass, or corrections • Award • Publication? • IMPROVEMENT PRIORITIES: • Reduce talent loss – timing, funding, communication • Identify the best UGs for research • Good induction for internationals • Prepare for ‘working world’ (via Grad School) • Effective open days • Academia / post-doc • Research Institute • Industry (in discipline) • Industry (other disc.) • Talent loss: • Timing, funding, communication • Overseas - poor / no induction • EFL requirement (but courses) • Missing candidates at UG level • Talent /Funding / Advocate loss: • Inadequate MI on alumni • Treated as all other alumni • ‘Alumni fatigue’ – connections with other HEIs / charities Conversion requirements –meeting conditions, funding, degree, ATAS, Visa, deposit • Key measures: • Are we recruiting the best (how to measure)? • Drop out rate • Identifying the ‘success’ generated – positions of influence, eminent academia elsewhere, etc.

More Related