1 / 51

South Carolina Commission on Higher Education

South Carolina Commission on Higher Education. Overview of Major Issues. South Carolina Commission on Higher Education. Division of Planning, Assessment and Performance Funding WHAT’S NEW IN THE DIVISION?. MEASURING UP.

vail
Download Presentation

South Carolina Commission on Higher Education

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. South Carolina Commission on Higher Education Overview of Major Issues

  2. South Carolina Commission on Higher Education Division of Planning, Assessment and Performance Funding WHAT’S NEW IN THE DIVISION?

  3. MEASURING UP • State Report Card South Carolina 2002 ► Preparation D+ ► Participation D+ ► Affordability D+ ► Completion B ► Benefits C ► LEARNING INCOMPLETE

  4. GOAL 6: NATIONAL EDUCATION GOALS • … “to increase the proportion of college graduates who can communicate effectively, think critically, and solve problems.” To increase learning you have to measure where you are – States govern education – therefore comparative data up to now has been difficult to obtain

  5. FIVE STATES BEGIN • SOUTH CAROLINA • NEW MEXICO • KENTUCKY • ILLINOIS • OKLAHOMA Working with the National Forumon College Level Learningthese states are charged with creating a national model to measure student learning at the STATE level

  6. MEASURES USED IN PROJECT • Collect data from existing sources► GRE scores ► Licensure scores ► National Assessment of Adult Literacy • Test students on multiple measures ►National Survey of Student Engagement ►Work Keys ►Tasks in Critical Thinking ► Peterson’s On-Line Alumni Survey

  7. CHARGE FOR SC INSTITUTIONS • No more than 2 hours of testing time per campus: FALL 2003 • Students must be near degree completion • 1200-1500 students from 2-year public colleges take 2 Work Keys Tests (Oversampling possible at project price) • 1200-1500 students from 4-year private and public colleges take Tasks of Critical Thinking and NSSE • 1500 Alumni state-wide (4-yr colleges) to take 15 minute on-line Peterson’s Alumni Survey (Spring 2003)

  8. CHARGE FOR OUR DIVISION • Report required licensure scores • Serve as State Liaison to institutions • Work with National Forum to obtain GRE scores • Serve as central data source and control • Lead national conversations on what instruments can appropriately be used to measure student learning at the state level

  9. WHAT DO WE GET FROM THIS? • S.C. Colleges get free instruments • S.C. Colleges have a chance to critique the instruments and process at its most changeable point – the pilot • More years to improve before non-project states’ data is reported • The ability to wrap the outcomes into the FIPSE project

  10. FIPSE II PROJECT • SOUTH CAROLINAOKLAHOMACALIFORNIACONNECTICUTARKANSAS • Defining best practices in accountability that containcollege costs, measure student achievement, and re-new public trust in higher education

  11. FIPSE PROGRESS TO DATE • State Team – Reforming under Governor Sanford • Recruitment of American Association of State Colleges and Universities as partner in project • State Directors meeting for April in Oklahoma to structure state timelines, communication plans, share goal ideas • Proposals to be presented for conferences • Grant Pre-Proposal submitted to Lumina

  12. CONFERENCES/Presentations • Denver Colorado Jan. 9 -12 Measuring UP Project Directors • Clear Point, Alabama Feb. 6 -9 AASCU – Annual National Academic Affairs Conf. • Louisville, KY Feb12 -15 Measuring UP: State Leaders hosted by Gov. Patton • Myrtle Beach SC: Feb.22 -23 SC Association of Institutional Researchers • FIPSE Project Directors: Oklahoma City, April • World Future Conference, San Diego CA July 18-20

  13. SC WILL BECOME HIGHLY VISIBLE IN THE NATIONAL SCENE • State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) • National Council of State Legislatures (NCLS) • National Governors Association (NGA) • American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) • Education Commission of the States (ECS)

  14. COMMUNICATION Division of Planning, Assessment and Performance Funding

  15. Division of Academic Affairs and Licensing • Update on Endowed Chairs Program • New Initiatives in Teacher Education • NCATE Continuing Accreditation Visits • No Child Left Behind • Improving Teacher Quality State Grants Program

  16. Division of Academic Affairs and Licensing • Centers of Excellence • Teacher Transfer Track Subcommittee • Professional Review Committee

  17. South Carolina Commission on Higher Education Student Services Division

  18. Palmetto Fellows Scholarship Program: Established in 1988 to retain the “best and brightest” in South Carolina. Palmetto Fellows may receive up to $6,700 per academic year towards the cost-of-attendance at a participating senior institution within the State.

  19. Need-based Grants Program: Established in 1996 to provide additional financial assistance to the State’s neediest residents. South Carolina was one of the last states in the nation to implement a need-based grants program at the state level. • Full-time students may receive up to $2,500 per year and part-time students may receive up to $1,250 per year towards the cost-of-attendance at participating two- and four-year institutions.

  20. LIFE Scholarship Program: Established in 1998 to increase access to higher education. Recipients may receive up to $5,000 towards the cost-of-attendance at a four-year institution. • LIFE Scholarship recipients may receive up to the cost-of-tuition at a two-year public or technical institution. For the two-year independent institution in the state, recipients may receive up to $3,380.

  21. Lottery Tuition Assistance Program: Implemented in 2002 to provide tuition assistance for residents attending two-year public and independent institutions. For Spring 2003, full-time students may receive up to $1,044 per year and part-time students may receive up to $87 per credit hour towards the cost-of-tuition.

  22. SC HOPE Scholarship Program: Established in 2001 to provide funding for first-time entering freshman attending a four-year public or independent institution who do not qualify for a LIFE or Palmetto Fellows Scholarship. Recipients may receive up to $2,650 towards the cost-of-attendance for the first year of attendance only.

  23. 2002-03 Palmetto Fellows Scholarship All Recipients by County of Origin

  24. 2002-03 Need-based GrantAll Recipients by County of Origin

  25. Fall 2002 Total Reported LIFE Recipientsby County of Originas of February 3, 2003

  26. 2002-03 Lottery Tuition Assistance ProgramAll Recipients by County of Origin

  27. Fall 2002 Total Reported SC HOPE Recipientsby County of Originas of February 3, 2003

  28. South Carolina Commission on Higher Education Finance, Facilities, and MIS

  29. Tuition and Fees

  30. Tuition and Fees

  31. Tuition and Fees

  32. Tuition and Fees

  33. Tuition and Fees

  34. Tuition and Fees

  35. Tuition and Fees

  36. Tuition and Fees

  37. Tuition and Fees

  38. Tuition and Fees - Challenges • Relationship between Tuition and Financial Aid • Possible Impact on Accessibility and Affordability

  39. Capital Funding Capital Improvement Bond Funding Since 1980 $844,757,151

  40. Capital Funding -Deferred Maintenance • Study conducted in 1994 identified approximately $173 million in E&G deferred maintenance • Study currently being updated; preliminary estimates indicate deferred maintenance has increased to more than $500 million in 9 years • Since 1994, Legislature has appropriated approximately $70 million for renovations, repairs, and deferred maintenance through Capital Improvement Bond Funding

  41. Capital Funding 2003-04 Comprehensive Permanent Improvement Plan (CPIP) Requests • 85 Projects Requested by 33 Institutions • 20 of the requested projects have received partial funding

  42. Capital Funding - 2003-2004 CPIP(continued) • Request included: 20 Completion of Partially Funded Projects $201,381,947 42 Renov/Repair/Def. Maint $294,747,911 3 Replacement Bldgs. $ 61,643,000 15 New Buildings $102,562,053 5 Other (Land Improve.) $ 4,044,000 Total $664,378,911

  43. Capital Funding - Challenges • Need for Consistent Stream of Funding • Backlog of Existing Need

  44. Parity Funding • The Committee on Finance and Facilities adopted a position that Parity will be implemented when the General Assembly appropriates new funds, and should be a component of the allocation methodology. • The Committee charged the CHE staff and the institutions to work together to develop a plan.

  45. Parity Funding- Historical Recap • Formula Allocations • Hold Harmless Agreement • Advent of Performance Funding • “One Time” Adjustment • Current Funding Status • Overall Average (based on MRR) – 52% • Lowest funded institution – 38% • Highest funded institution – 67%

  46. Parity Funding Current Funding Levels • Total MRR $1.1 Billion • State Appropriations $584 Million • Overall Funding Level 52%

  47. Parity Funding Funding Levels by Sector Based on MRR • Research Universities 56% • Teaching Universities 53% • USC Regional Campuses 52% • Technical Colleges 45% • Overall 52% • Lowest funded institution38% • Highest funded institution67%

  48. Parity Funding Funding Levels By Sector ConsideringBased onActual FeeMRRRevenuesResearch Univ. 56%75%Teaching Univ. 53%79%USC-Regional 53%68%Tech. Coll. 45%65%Overall 52%73%Lowest Funded38%46%Highest Funded67%83%

  49. Parity Funding Parity Issue Review • Commission Charge • Study Group • Funding Advisory Committee • CHE Staff • Series of Meetings - Next Meeting this afternoon • Recommendation to be made to the Finance and Facilities Committee on February 18th • Recommendation to the full Commission on March 6th

More Related