1 / 15

T HE U SEFULLNESS OF C ENSUS D ATA IN R ESEARCH ON H IGHER E DUCATION

R. Michael Haynes, PhD Assistant Vice President Tarleton State University Stephenville, Texas rhaynes@tarleton.edu Gwenn E. Pasco, EdD Associate Dean University of North Texas Denton, Texas g.pasco@unt.edu. T HE U SEFULLNESS OF C ENSUS D ATA IN R ESEARCH ON H IGHER E DUCATION.

bobby
Download Presentation

T HE U SEFULLNESS OF C ENSUS D ATA IN R ESEARCH ON H IGHER E DUCATION

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. R. Michael Haynes, PhD Assistant Vice President Tarleton State University Stephenville, Texas rhaynes@tarleton.edu Gwenn E. Pasco, EdD Associate Dean University of North Texas Denton, Texas g.pasco@unt.edu THE USEFULLNESS OF CENSUS DATA IN RESEARCH ON HIGHER EDUCATION

  2. Census data provides a “portrait” of our citizenry • By location • (nation, state, county, city/town, region) • By race/ethnicity • By age • By income • By level of education

  3. The use of census data in my dissertation, • “A PREDICTIVE MODEL OF HISPANIC PARTICIPATION IN TEXAS HIGHER EDUCATION: INFERENCES DRAWN FROM INSTITUTIONAL DATA IN PREVALENT HISPANIC STATES”

  4. Why was this research important? • Hispanic population fastest growing in Texas • Hispanics projected to represent 37% of Texas population by 2015 (Texas State Data Center, 2007) • However, only 3.7% of Hispanic students participated in post-secondary education; lowest of all racial/ethnic groups (Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, 2007).

  5. What was the focus of this research? • Variables that explained Hispanic college enrollment percentages • Used 4 independent variables: • •Mean cost of attendance (Integrated Post-secondary Education Data System [IPEDS]) • Mean financial aid (IPEDS) • Mean expenditures per student (IPEDS) • AND • Hispanic population percentage at institution locale (US Census Bureau)

  6. Why include Hispanic population percentage? • Committee member recommended as more of a • “control” variable • Research indicates the importance of family/community/culture for Hispanics • Research further indicates that the ability to live at • home is critical in the college attendance/selection decision process • (Desmond & Turley, n.d.) • Hispanic population is increasing in Texas • (referenced above)

  7. Why include the top 10 Hispanic populated states? • Study related to public 4-year colleges and/or universities • Only 37 public 4-year colleges and/or universities in Texas….insufficient number of cases • US Census website used to identify the top 10 Hispanic populated states as of 2000 • California • Texas • New York • Florida • Illinois • Arizona • New Jersey • New Mexico • Colorado • Washington • This resulted in 190 public 4-year colleges and universities; US Census used to obtain local Hispanic population percentage for the 190 related cities

  8. Findings from our regression model: • Hispanic Enrollment % = y + x(COA) +x(Fin Aid) + x(Exp) + x(Hispanic Population%) • Independent variables accounted for 72.8% of the variance in Hispanic enrollment % (R² = .728) • A mathematical algorithm was used to decompose this .728 among the independent variables • COA, Fin Aid, Exp accounted for just over 12% of the R² value of 72.8% • Hispanic population at institution locale accounted for 87.78% of the total R² value of 72.8%!!

  9. Implications of this finding: • Reinforces Desmond & Turley’s (n.d.) research on the importance of being able to live at home • Reinforces the research on the importance of family/culture/community to Hispanic students • Identifies US Census data as the most important variable in this study with this population

  10. Implications of this finding: • Provides higher education administrators, state legislators, and civic leaders with information related to prediction/forecasting • For cities/towns with burgeoning Hispanic populations…what are the post-secondary options? • For those cities/towns WITHOUT 4-year institutions, what will be the impact on local community colleges? • For those cities/towns WITH 4-institutions, will there be sufficient resources in facilities, faculty, staff to accommodate potential increases? If not, again, impact on local community colleges? • How will Hispanic population increases potentially affect college going rates for other ethnicities/groups?

  11. Some additional thoughts just for Texas! • Remember our R² of .728 based on public 4-year institutions in the top 10 Hispanic populated states? • For the 37 Texas public 4-years, that R² increases to .872! • The passage of Texas House Bill 1403 allows certain undocumented immigrants to qualify for state financial aid….how will potential increases in qualified students affect already strained coffers? • The trickle down effect on community colleges; 62% of all Texas Hispanic college enrollments occurred at the community college level (THECB, 2008)

  12. In summary: • These implications were identified and supported by the inclusion of one variable: Hispanic population at the location of each college and/or university in the study….US Census data! • Arguably, understanding the characteristics of potential students (parent’s education level, family income, migratory patterns, etc….) is the key to effective enrollment management

  13. Additional research that will incorporate US Census data • Hierarchical linear modeling • Allows researchers to “layer” data to identify differences at various levels • For example, in the current example, state level data such as Hispanic education levels or median income could be used to determine if differences on the dependent variable (Hispanic enrollment percentage) exists at the state level

  14. Questions?

  15. References Desmond, M., & Lopez Turley, R. N. (n.d.) The role of familism in explaining the Hispanic-white college application gap [Electronic version]. Texas Higher Education Opportunity Project working paper, Princeton University, retrieved July 12, 2008, from http://www.texastop10.princeton.edu/workingpapers.html Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board (2007). Closing the gaps by 2015: 2007 progress report. Retrieved August 26, 2007, from http://www.thecb.state.tx.us/Reports/ Texas State Data Center and Office of the State Demographer (2007). Texas population projections program. Retrieved August 24, 2007, from http://txsdc.utsa.edu/tpepp/2006projections/ U.S. Census Bureau (2008). U.S. Hispanic population surpasses 45 million: Now 15 percent of total. Retrieved August 3, 2008, from http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/population/011910.html U.S. Census Bureau (2001). The Hispanic population: Census 2000 brief [Electronic version]. U. S. Department of Commerce, Economic and Statistics Adminstration. Retrieved August 3, 2008, from http://www.census.gov/prod/2001pubs/c2kbr01-3.pdf

More Related