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Strategic Checkup Central Michigan University

Strategic Checkup Central Michigan University. Presented by: Sarah Petsis, MBA Senior Consultant Ad Astra Information Systems. CMU Strategic Checkup Goals. Alignment to CMU’s strategic plan: Focused on student success and student retention

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Strategic Checkup Central Michigan University

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  1. Strategic Checkup Central Michigan University Presented by: Sarah Petsis, MBA Senior Consultant Ad Astra Information Systems

  2. CMU Strategic Checkup Goals • Alignment to CMU’s strategic plan: • Focused on student success and student retention • Visibility into academic space utilization and management opportunities (Fall 2012 data used) • Address current, reported scheduling challenges: • Limited Classroom availability in primetime • Understand course offerings inefficiencies directly impacting budgets and capacity • Understand course offerings warning signals that potentially impact student access to required courses and graduation • Solution framework to leverage data from the SIS in future terms

  3. Overview

  4. Typical Strategic Issues • Academic schedules are vitally important • Means of allocating faculty and space • Means of providing students with a path to completion • Academic schedules are created in a decentralized process that is difficult to measure or manage • Strategic opportunities to efficiently and effectively allocate academic resources are rarely realized

  5. Typical Schedule Building Process Course offerings are based on a historical schedule, typically a roll-forward of a “like” term Departments refine offerings in silos (distinct processes and decision makers, limited collaboration and decision-support tools) Student Information System is updated Room assignments are made/refined “Final” schedule is posted (changes still occur after registration or even after classes start) The goal is commonly completion v. improvement

  6. Course Offering Complexity What is the impact of… • Students from other departments who need our courses? • Curriculum changes? • The incoming freshman class? • Changing classroom availability and capacity to add sections at certain times? • Faculty load and capacity? • Increasing retention rates? • Changing transfer student enrollment? • Improving graduation rates? • Changing course eligibility requirements? • Changes in my department’s headcount?

  7. Scheduling for Student Success • Noel Levitz 2011 National Student Satisfaction & Priorities Report • Identified key challenges for institutions • Student Response: “Ability to get the courses I need with few conflicts” was the top challenge for 4-Year Public institutions • Institution Response: “Ability to get the courses I need with few conflicts” was not ranked in top 25 for 4-Year Public institutions

  8. Strategic Checkup Approach Course Offerings + Capacity = High Impact Change Drill down from high-level metrics to related, and more granular and manageable, success drivers Benchmark existing efficiencies of granular success drivers Integrate relevant institutional goals and priorities (enrollment growth, cost savings, student outcomes, etc.) Identify, quantify and prioritize opportunities Select strategies that address opportunities and fit institution's culture Implement and continually refine policy supporting strategies

  9. Course Offerings Analysis

  10. Course Offering Analysis ConceptsGeneral Terms and Concepts • Seats – Seats offered in the term being analyzed • Blended Demand – Average of trend of historical course enrollment from like terms (Fall 2008, Fall 2009, Fall 2010, Fall 2011 and Fall 2012) and enrollments from last like term (Fall 2012) • Enrollment Ratio – Course-specific fill rate calculated as average enrollments divided by average enrollment caps (last like term) • Balanced Course Ratio – Courses wherein Enrollment Ratios are between 70% and 95% (last like term) • Overloaded Course Ratio – Courses wherein Enrollment Ratios are over 95% (last like term)

  11. Course Offering Analysis Concepts Analysis Term Disconnects • Statistical Excess Seats – Seats offered in excess of Blended Demand • Statistical Additional Seats Needed – Blended Demand in excess of Seats • Reduction Candidates – Potentially superfluous sections of courses that can be removed • Elimination Candidates – Courses that can potentially be removed from a schedule entirely • Addition Candidates – Potentially needed sections of courses that can be added to a schedule

  12. Course Offering Analysis – Fall 2012Undergraduate Only

  13. Course Offering Analysis – Fall 2013 Undergraduate Only

  14. Course Offering Analysis – By Level

  15. Course Offering Analysis – By Level

  16. Course Offering Analysis By Sections per Course • Undergraduate Only • Findings vary by Sections per Course:

  17. Course Offerings by Enrollment Ratio TierUndergraduate Only

  18. Course Offering Opportunities • Improved graduation rates from additional seats offered in “gateway” addition candidates (focus on required courses) • Reduction of inefficiency/expense from reduction and elimination candidates (224 total candidates; 8.06% of all sections) • Increased scheduling flexibility and capacity • Reallocation of faculty, moving from reduction candidates to addition candidates • Identification of unused faculty capacity (limited opportunity, CMU has already exceeded 85% enrollment ratio goal)

  19. Course Offering Analysis Dashboards

  20. Capacity Analysis

  21. Space Bottleneck Concept Average Utilization does not reflect capacity or inform space management

  22. Capacity Management Process • Identification of enrollment capacity for analysis term (Fall 2012): • 80% primetime utilization and/or • 95% effective utilization of any of the most dominant primetime meeting patterns • Analysis of strategies to maximize quality/capacity • Selection of scheduling strategies/policies • Scheduling policy refinement/enforcement (ongoing) • Strategic renovation/new construction planning

  23. Capacity Management Findings 1 • Average utilization of all instructional rooms: • 65-hour standard week (8am – 10pm M-R; 8am – 5pm F) – 37.44% • 32-hour prime week (9:00 am – 5:00 pm M-R) – 53.74% • Utilization is significantly higher in certain room types: • Classroom utilization during the standard week is Moderately High (69th Percentile) • Classroom Prime Ratio (percentage of all usage in primetime) is High (13th Percentile)* – 69.71% – Mean is 58.13% * Even spread would be 49% (32 of 65 hours)

  24. Capacity Management Findings 2 • CR - Classroom utilizationvaries by size category during the 32-hour primetime: • DS - DepartmentScheduled Classroom utilizationvaries by size category during the 32-hour primetime:

  25. Capacity Management Findings 3 • Classroom (CR & DS) utilization varies by region: • Top TenClassroom (CR & DS) regions by highest primetime utilization:

  26. Capacity Management Findings 3 • Classroom (CR & DS) utilization varies by region: • Bottom TenClassroom (CR & DS) regions by lowest primetime utilization:

  27. Capacity Management Findings 4 • Seat fill ratios in Classrooms (CR & DS) vary by capacity: • Classroom Seat Fill (Enroll) ratio comparison: 27th Percentile • Classroom Seat Fill (Cap) ratio comparison: 18th Percentile • CR - Classroom seat fill ratios: • DS - Department Scheduled Room seat fill ratios:

  28. Capacity Management Findings 5 • On-grid Primetime Meeting Pattern usage in Classrooms (CR & DS rooms) varies by Pattern: *Denominator = 489 total weekly hours

  29. Capacity Management Findings 5, continued (summary) • There is Moderately Low off-grid meeting pattern usage in Classrooms (CR & DS rooms) during primetime meeting patterns: • 30.76% (69th percentile)of usage for all Classrooms (CR & DS rooms) • There is a Moderately Low off-grid “waste factor” • 441 hours or 11.69% of all Classroom (CR & DS) capacity is wasted (71st Percentile)

  30. Capacity Management Opportunities • Evenly utilize all CR & DS Classrooms at 60% across the 65-hour standard week • Result: Balance scheduling across all Classrooms (15.83% capacity increase, or 3,246 students) • Graph category label: “Optimize Rooms” • Limit Off-Grid scheduling waste in CR & DS Classrooms from 11.69% to 5% • Result: Eliminate waste inherent in off-grid scheduling (6.69% capacity increase, or 1,372 students) • Graph category label: “Meeting Patterns” • Reduce primetime scheduling in CR & DS Classrooms to 60% • Result: Move activities outside of primetime to reduce prime ratios of 69.71% (13.93% capacity increase, or 2,856 students) • Graph category label: “Prime Ratio”

  31. CapacityManagement Dashboards

  32. CMU Strategy Options to Evaluate Course Offering Efficiency Strategies: • Evaluate Elimination Candidates for degree requirement impact • Select Reduction and Elimination Candidates (224 total candidates; 8.06% of all sections) to remove from Fall 2013 schedule Course Offering Student Access Strategies: • Evaluate Addition Candidates for degree requirement impact • Consider implementation of Platinum Analytics (uncover key Addition Candidates to improve student completion rates) Capacity Bottlenecks Strategies: • Optimize Rooms (15.83% potential capacity) • Meeting Patterns (6.69% potential capacity) • Prime Ratio (13.93% potential capacity)

  33. CMU Potential Next Steps • Develop a schedule review team and process • Senior leadership and academic department representation • Focused on leveraging and sharing schedule analysis • Develop data-driven scheduling policies • Course offering efficiency and effectiveness • Meeting pattern and room assignment efficiency • Integrate other academic planning processes (curriculum planning, academic space planning, student success initiatives, etc.)

  34. Category 1: • Motivated to aggressively improve student outcomes and address inefficiencies and capacity issues • Mobilized to implement change (a schedule review team is in place that includes senior administrative and academic representation) • Category 2: • Interested in understanding how to improve student outcomes and address inefficiencies and capacity issues • Considering needed process changes (candidates exist for a schedule review team, including senior administrative and academic representation) • Category 3: • Discussing and considering a need to improve student outcomes, address inefficiencies and capacity • Not ready to discuss needed process changes (no candidates identified for a schedule review team) Which Category Describes Your Institution?

  35. Questions? Sarah Petsis Senior Consultant spetsis@aais.com

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