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AASCU 2012 Academic Affairs Winter Meeting San Antonio, Texas, February 11, 2012

Shaping the Incoming Class Fosters Faculty Engagement Claudia Pinter-Lucke, AVP, Academic Programs Marten denBoer, Provost and Vice President Shanthi Srinivas, AVP, Planning, Policy & Faculty Affairs California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. AASCU 2012 Academic Affairs Winter Meeting

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AASCU 2012 Academic Affairs Winter Meeting San Antonio, Texas, February 11, 2012

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  1. Shaping the Incoming Class Fosters Faculty EngagementClaudia Pinter-Lucke, AVP, Academic ProgramsMarten denBoer, Provost and Vice President Shanthi Srinivas, AVP, Planning, Policy & Faculty AffairsCalifornia State Polytechnic University, Pomona AASCU 2012 Academic Affairs Winter Meeting San Antonio, Texas, February 11, 2012

  2. Transformation • From • Direct admission process • Use of minimum criteria • Sole goal - meeting enrollment FTES targets • To • Finding the “right students” in the “right place” to enhance student success

  3. Enrollment Management Then and Now Then: • Admission based on system-level criteria • All applicants who met criteria were admitted at same time • Programs with high demand could limit admissions (impaction) Automatic process with little engagement

  4. Enrollment Management Then and Now Impaction • Invoked when more applications are received than can be accommodated • Two levels • Campus Impaction • Program Impaction • Higher admission criteria (coursework, GPA, SAT) are applied • Additional information may be required

  5. Enrollment ManagementThen and Now Now: • Campus impacted • 14 programs impacted • Non-impacted programs submit suggested enrollment limits • Students admitted in waves in order of admission criteria

  6. Organizational Chart Provost & Vice President Academic Affairs Vice President Student Affairs Associate Vice President Enrollment Management & Services Associate Vice President Academic Programs Colleges Departments Admissions Registrar

  7. Differing Goals • Student Affairs • meeting system and University level goals • Academic Affairs • ensuring program and student success

  8. Role of Student Affairs, Academic Affairs, Colleges and Departments

  9. Enrollment Management as a Vehicle for Faculty Engagement Then: • Faculty’s perception that they must accommodate the students that show up Now: • Faculty’s perception that they have voice in shaping their incoming class

  10. Faculty Engagement • Nature of Engagement • Interviews with Deans, Associate Deans and Department Chairs • Examples

  11. Faculty Engagement • Lessons Learned • Know that asking for voice requires providing feedback and closing the loop • Understand the impact on the program • Ensure that discussions are occurring at the department level • Create ownership and buy-in • Key to success is communication

  12. Ideal Roles and Input From: Student Affairs HIGH Central Academic Affairs LOW Colleges, Departments LOW

  13. Ideal Roles and Input To: Central AcademicAffairs HIGH Student Affairs MEDIUM Colleges, Departments MEDIUM

  14. Persistence and Graduation 201

  15. The Future – Changing Roles • Colleges/Departments • From Observation to Voice/Influence • Academic Affairs • From Voice to Decision Making • Student Affairs • From Decision Making to Implementation

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