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Meeting of the Board of Regents | December 2008

Monday, December 1, 2008 - 9:55am

sed seal                                                                                                 

 

 

THE STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234

not available at this time

TO:

Higher Education Committee

FROM:

Johanna Duncan-Poitier

 

 

SUBJECT:

The Board of Regents 2008 Progress Report on the Statewide Plan for Higher Education, 2004-2012 – 2nd Draft

 

DATE:

December 8, 2008

STRATEGIC GOAL:

Goals 1, 2, 3, and 4

AUTHORIZATION(S):

 

 


SUMMARY

 

Issue for Decision

 

Should the Board of Regents approve the 2008 Progress Report on the Statewide Plan for Higher Education, which has been modified consistent with your discussion in November, to ensure that critical priorities of the Board of Regents are emphasized?

 

Reason(s) for Consideration

 

Required by State Statute

             

Proposed Handling

 

This matter will come before the Higher Education Committee for approval at its December 2008 meeting.

 

Procedural History

 

The Committee reviewed a draft of the 2008 Progress Report at its November 2008 meeting, requested certain changes, and called for further discussion and possible approval of a revised draft in December.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Background Information

 

On June 21, 2005, the Board of Regents adopted its Statewide Plan for Higher Education, 2004-2012 and transmitted it to the Governor and the Legislature.  Section 237 of the Education Law requires that the Board report to the Governor and the Legislature on progress in carrying out the plan at its half-way mark.

 

In the Committee’s discussion of the draft in November 2008, several changes were requested to ensure that the critical priorities of the Board of Regents are emphasized.  In response, the following revisions have been made to the draft.

 

Strengthen emphasis on P-16 initiatives.

 

The report has been strengthened throughout to assure that it reflects the importance of systemic P-16 connections to college readiness and student success.  For example:

 

In “Preparation for College” (section B6):

 

  • Transition from high school to college is now included in Tables 33 – 38.
  • Progress made to review and update the State Learning Standards to strengthen the alignment between expectations and knowledge and skills needed for high school graduation as well as for college level work is now part of the Summary of Findings for this section and for the report as a whole.
  • The text now describes the educational activities provided through opportunity programs to middle and high school pupils through the Science and Technology Entry Program (STEP) and the Liberty Partnerships Program.
  • Specific findings regarding opportunity program outcomes of middle and high school pupils through STEP and the Liberty Partnerships Program has also been added to the Summary of Findings for this section and for the report as a whole.
  • The text discusses partnerships with schools by colleges.
  • Specific examples of Pre-K-12/college collaborations that help students graduate from high school prepared to succeed in college have been added to the Summary of Findings for this section and for the report as a whole.  

 

Disaggregate graduation rates by sector.

 

In “High Educational Quality” (section A1):

 

  • Persistence and graduation rates by sector are displayed in Tables 3 – 6.

 

Provide information on transfer students from other states and on students transferring from New York two-year to four-year colleges.

 

In “Articulation” (section A2):

 

  • Enrollment at New York institutions of undergraduates transferring from institutions outside the State is now displayed in Table 14.
  • Data on transfers from two-year to four-year colleges are now included in Tables 10 – 13.

 

In “High Educational Quality” (section A1):

 

  • Baccalaureate graduation rates including transfers from New York institutions are included in Table 7.

 

Reflect SUNY’s recent action on tuition.

 

In “Affordability” (section A3):

 

  • A discussion of the tuition policy and associated tuition increase adopted in November by the SUNY Board of Trustees, and its effect on TAP for the lowest income students has been added.

 

Provide strong data on the outcomes of the opportunity programs.

 

In “Closing Performance Gaps” (section A4):

 

  • Baccalaureate graduation rates for all students and opportunity program students are displayed in Figures 1 and 2.
  • Persistence rates as well as baccalaureate and associate degree graduation rates for all students and opportunity program students are displayed in Tables 20 – 28. 
  • Data on the Liberty Partnership Program are displayed in Figure 3.
  • The Summary of Findings for this section, and for the report as a whole, includes specific findings with respect to opportunity program outcomes.

 

In “Preparation for College” (section B6):

 

  • Examples of opportunity program services to middle and high school pupils through STEP and the Liberty Partnerships Program are included in the text.
  • Specific findings regarding opportunity program services to middle and high school pupils through STEP and the Liberty Partnerships Program has been added to the Summary of Findings for this section and for the report as a whole.

 

Provide information on Advanced Placement courses and on the geographic distribution of high school pupils taking college courses. 

 

In “Preparation for College” (section B6):

 

  • Indicators of student success in Advanced Placement courses are discussed in the text.

 

 

 

 

In “Information and Assistance in Preparing for College” (section B7):

 

  • An estimate of the percentage distribution upstate versus New York City/Long Island of schools where colleges offer credit-bearing courses for high school pupils has been added.

 

Highlight urban teachers and add information on preparation of teachers to use instructional technology.

 

In “An Adequate Supply of Qualified Teachers, School Leaders, and other School Professionals” (section D11):

 

  • The discussion of “Next Steps” has been reorganized to give more prominence to Teacher Preparation for Urban Schools.
  • A discussion of the preparation of teacher candidates to use instructional technology has been added.
  • A discussion of the services provided for employed teachers by Teacher Resource and Computer Training Centers has been added.  

  

Provide information on enrollment of foreign students.

 

In “Encouraging a Highly Effective Higher Education System” (section E12):

 

  • A discussion of trends since 2002 in enrollment of foreign students has been added, noting the New York institutions among the top 20 in the nation in enrollment of foreign students.

 

Other changes.

 

  • A list of Figures and Tables has been added.

 

In “High Educational Quality” (section A1):

 

  • A brief discussion of implementation of the Board of Regents vision for undergraduate education has been added.

 

In “Encouraging a Highly Effective Higher Education System” (section E12):

 

  • A discussion of fall 2008 enrollments and their effect on some institutions, together with the Department’s response, has been added.   

 

Recommendation

 

The Committee should discuss this draft of the Progress Report for adoption or for any further action needed.

 

 

 

 

Timetable for Implementation

 

Following the Committee’s discussion, if the Regents approve the 2008 Progress Report, it will be forwarded for submission to the Governor.  If the Regents request additional revisions, staff will make the requested revisions and prepare the Progress Report for adoption at the Board’s January 2009 meeting.

 

Attachment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2nd DRAFT

 

 

 

The Board of Regents 2008 Progress Report

on


The Statewide Plan for Higher Education,


2004-2012

not available at this time

 


 


 


 


 


 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The University of the State of New York

The State Education Department

Albany, New York 12234

November 2008




THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK

 

Regents of The University

 

Robert M. Bennett, Chancellor, B.A., M.S.   .........................................................................      Tonawanda

Merryl H. Tisch, Vice Chancellor, B.A., M.A., Ed.D.   .........................................................      New York

Saul B. Cohen, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.  ...........................................................................................      New Rochelle

James C. Dawson, A.A., B.A., M.S., Ph.D.   ...........................................................................      Peru

Anthony S. Bottar, B.A., J.D.   ...............................................................................................      Syracuse

Geraldine D. Chapey, B.A., M.A., Ed.D.   ...........................................................................      Belle Harbor

Arnold B. Gardner, B.A., LL.B.  ............................................................................................      Buffalo

Harry Phillips, 3rd, B.A., M.S.F.S.   .......................................................................................      Hartsdale

Joseph E. Bowman, Jr., B.A., M.L.S., M.A., M.Ed., Ed.D  ..................................................      Albany

James R. Tallon, Jr., B.A., M.A.    ...........................................................................................      Binghamton

Milton L. Cofield,  B.S., M.B.A., Ph.D.   ..............................................................................      Rochester

Roger B. Tilles, B.A., J.D.  .........................................................................................................      Great Neck

Karen Brooks Hopkins, B.A., M.F.A.  ..................................................................................      Brooklyn

Charles R. Bendit, B.A.   ..........................................................................................................      Manhattan

Betty A. Rosa, B.A., M.S. in Ed., M.S. in Ed., M.Ed., Ed.D………………………….  Bronx

Lester W. Young, Jr., B.S., M.S., Ed. D ……………………………………………….. Oakland Gardens

 

 

 

President of The University and Commissioner of Education

Richard P. Mills

 

Senior Deputy Commissioner of Education, P-16

Johanna Duncan-Poitier

 

Associate Commissioner for the Office of Higher Education

Joseph P. Frey

 

 

 

 

 

 

  The State Education Department does not discriminate on the basis of age, color, religion, creed, disability, marital status, veteran status, national origin, race, gender, genetic predisposition or carrier status, or sexual orientation in its educational programs, services and activities.  Portions of this publication can be made available in a variety of formats, including braille, large print or audio tape, upon request.  Inquiries concerning this policy of nondiscrimination should be directed to the Department’s Office for Diversity, Ethics, and Access, Room 530, Education Building, Albany, NY 12234. Requests for additional copies of this publication may be made by contacting the Publications Sales Desk, Room 309, Education Building, Albany, NY 12234.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Page

 

Letter of Transmittal  ....................................................................................................................... 7

 

Summary of Findings  .................................................................................................................... 8

 

Introduction  ................................................................................................................................... 15

 

  • Maximizing Success for All Higher Education Students  ............................................. 17

 

  • High Educational Quality  .......................................................................................... 17
  • Articulation  ................................................................................................................. 31
  • Affordability  ................................................................................................................ 38
  • Closing Performance Gaps  ..................................................................................... 50
  • Students with Disabilities  ......................................................................................... 64

 

  • Smooth Student Transition from PreK-12 to Higher Education  ................................. 70

 

  • Preparation for College  ............................................................................................ 70
  • Information and Assistance in Preparing for College  ............................................ 80

 

  • Meeting New York’s Needs through Graduate Programs

              and through Research  ..................................................................................................... 87

 

  • Strong Graduate Programs to Meet the State’s Needs  ........................................ 87
  • Creation of New Knowledge through Research  ..................................................... 95

 

  • Qualified Professionals for Every Community throughout the State  ........................ 101

 

  • An Adequate Supply of Qualified Professionals  ................................................. 101
  • An Adequate Supply of Qualified Teachers, School Leaders,

and other School Professionals  ............................................................................ 105  

 

  • A Balanced and Flexible Regulatory Environment to Support

              Excellence  ...................................................................................................................... 121

 

  • Encouraging a Highly Effective System  ................................................................ 121
  • Funding a Highly Effective System  ........................................................................ 130


Figures and Tables

 

Page

 

Figure 1.       NYS 6-Year Baccalaureate Graduation Rates by Race/Ethnicity,

                         All Students  ........................................................................................................ 53

Figure 2.       NYS 6-Year Baccalaureate Graduation Rates by Race/Ethnicity,

                         Opportunity Program Students  ........................................................................ 54

Figure 3.       Liberty Partnership Program Data  .................................................................. 79

 

Table 1.         Fall degree-Credit Enrollment in Institutions of Higher Education  ............... 16

Table 2.         New York State: Racial/Ethnic Distribution of Population, 2006;

                         2005-06 High School Graduates; and Fall 2006 Higher Education

                         Enrollment  .......................................................................................................... 16

Table 3.         First-Time Students in Baccalaureate Programs at Four-Year

                         Institutions Persisting from their First to Second Year, Fall 2004 to

                         Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007, by

                         Sector  ................................................................................................................. 19

Table 4.         First-Time Students in Associate Degree Programs at Two-Year

                         Institutions Persisting from their First to Second Year, Fall 2004 to

                         Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007, by

                         Sector  ................................................................................................................. 20

Table 5.         Proportion of First-Time Entrants Earning Baccalaureate Degrees

                         from the Same Institution in Six Years, by sector  .......................................... 21

Table 6.         Proportion of First-Time Entrants Earning Associate Degrees from

                         the same Institution in Three Years, by Sector  ............................................... 21

Table 7.         First-Time Entrants Earning Degrees from Some Institution, including

                         Transfers to Another New York Institution  ....................................................... 21

Table 8.         State University of New York, Baccalaureate Graduation Rate for All

                         Matriculated Entering Students, 2004 – 2007  ............................................... 23

Table 9.         Placement of Graduates of Occupational Associate Degree and

                         Certificate Programs, Institutions Aided under the Carl D.

                         Perkins Vocational-Technical Education Act, 2003 – 2005  ........................ 25

Table 10.      Ratio of Full-Time Undergraduate transfers from Two-Year Colleges

                         to Full-Time Undergraduate Enrollment at Two-Year Colleges in the

                         Preceding Year, 2003, 2005, 2007  ................................................................ 32

Table 11.      State University of New York, Ratio of Full-Time Undergraduate

                         Transfers to Full-Time Undergraduates at Two-Year Colleges the Year

                         Before, Fall 2003 – Fall 2007  .......................................................................... 33

Table 12.      Full-Time Undergraduates Enrolled at New York Four-Year

                         Institutions who Transferred from New York Two-Year Institutions  .............. 33

Table 13.      State University of New York, Students Transferring into SUNY

                         Four-Year Institutions fro Two-Year Institutions, Fall 2002 – Fall 2007  ....... 35

Table 14.      Full-Time Undergraduate Transfers from Institutions Outside the State,

                         2005 and 2007, by Sector and Level of New York Institution  ....................... 37

 

Table 15.      Annual Undergraduate Tuition and Fees, by Sector,

                         2001-02 – 2007-08  .......................................................................................... 40

Table 16.      Percent Change in Undergraduate Tuition and Fees, by Sector,

                         2001-02 – 2007-08  .......................................................................................... 40

Table 17.      Student Financial Aid at New York Colleges and Universities

                         2003-04 – 2005-06  .......................................................................................... 43

Table 18.      Proportion of Undergraduates Receiving TAP Awards or Pell

                         Grants, 2003-04 and 2005-06, by Level and Sector of Institution  ............... 44

Table 19.      Undergraduate Need-Based Grants Provided by Selected States,

                         FTE Undergraduate Enrollment, and Average Grant per FTE,

                         2006-07  ............................................................................................................. 47

Table 20.      Matriculated Full-Time Entrants Earning Baccalaureate Degrees

                         in 6 years from Institution Originally Entered, by Racial/Ethnic Category,

                         2003 – 2007  ...................................................................................................... 52

Table 21.      Matriculated Full-Time Entrants through Opportunity Programs

                         Earning Baccalaureate degrees in 6 Years from the Institution Originally

                         Entered, by Racial/Ethnic Category, 2003 – 2007  ....................................... 52

Table 22.      Matriculated Full-Time Entrants Earning Associate degrees in 3

                         Years from Institution Originally Entered, by Racial/Ethnic Category,

                         2003 – 2007  ...................................................................................................... 54

Table 23.      Matriculated Full-Time Entrants through Opportunity Programs

                         Earning Associate degrees in 3 years from the Institution Originally

                         Entered, by Racial/Ethnic Category, 2003 – 2007  ....................................... 55

Table 24.      State University of New York EOP Graduation Rates, 2001 – 2005  .......... 56

Table 25.      First-Time Baccalaureate Students Persisting from their First to

                         Second Year, Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall

                         2006 to Fall 2007, by Racial/Ethnic Category  ............................................... 56

Table 26.      First-Time Baccalaureate Students Admitted through Opportunity

                         Programs Persisting from their First to Second Year, Fall 2004 to

                         Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007, by

                         Racial/Ethnic Category  .................................................................................... 57

Table 27.      First-Time Associate Degree Students Persisting from their First to

                         Second Year, Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, Fall 2006

                         to Fall 2007, by Racial/Ethnic Category  ......................................................... 57

Table 28.      First-Time Associate Degree Students Admitted through

                         Opportunity Programs Persisting from their First to Second Year,

                         Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, Fall 2006 to Fall 2007,

                         By Racial/Ethnic Category  ............................................................................... 58

Table 29.      Time to Baccalaureate Degree, by Racial/Ethnic Category of Recipient,

                         2003 – 2007  ...................................................................................................... 62

Table 30.      Enrollment of Students with Disabilities, 2003 – 2007  ................................. 65

Table 31.      State University of New York, Students with Disabilities Transferring

                         into  Four-Year Campuses from Two-Year Institutions, 2003 – 2007  ......... 66

Table 32.      Graduation Rates of First-Time Students with Disabilities Compared to

                         All First-Time Students, 2004 – 2007  ............................................................. 67

 

Table 33.      Number of Pupils Scoring 65 or Higher on Selected Regents

                         Examinations, 2002-03 – 2006-07  ................................................................. 71

Table 34.      First-Time Baccalaureate Students Persisting from their First to Second

                         Year, Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to

                         Fall 2007, by Number of Remedial Courses Taken  ...................................... 72

Table 35.      First-Time Associate Degree Students Persisting from their First to

                         Second year, Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and

                         Fall 2006 to Fall 2007, by Number of Remedial Courses Taken  ................ 73

Table 36.      Three-Year Associate Degree Graduation Rates by High School

                         Grade Point Average, USNY-wide, 2005, 2005, 2006, 2007  ..................... 73

Table 37.      Six-Year Baccalaureate Graduation Rates by SAT/ACT Scores,

                         USNY-wide, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007  ............................................................ 74

Table 38.      Public High School graduation Rates, New York State, 2006 – 2007  ........ 78

Table 39.      Number of Full- and Part-Time Faculty at Four-Year and Higher

                         Institutions, by Sector and USNY-wide, 2003, 2005, 2007  .......................... 88

Table 40.      Number of Full-and Part-Time Faculty at Two-Year Colleges, by

                         Sector and USNY-wide, 2003, 2005, 2007  ................................................... 89

Table 41.      State University of New York, Share of Faculty Composed of Minority

                         Group Members, Fall 2003 – Fall 2007  ......................................................... 91

Table 42.      State University of New York, Share of Faculty that is Female,

                         Fall 2003 – Fall 2007  ....................................................................................... 92

Table 43.      Master’s and Doctoral Degrees Awarded, 2003-04 – 2006-07, by

                         Sector  ................................................................................................................. 92

Table 44.      Research and Development Expenditures at Higher Education

                         Institutions, Selected States, 2002 and 2006  ................................................ 96

Table 45.      Change in Research and Development Expenditures at Higher

                         Education Institutions, Selected States, 2002 – 2006, Total and Per

                         Capita  ................................................................................................................ 97

Table 46.      State University of New York, Invention Disclosures, Patents, Royalty

                         Income and Start-Ups, 2004-05 – 2007-08  ................................................... 98

Table 47.      Professional Licensees Registered to Practice in New York State  ......... 101

Table 48.      Cycle Time for First Teaching Certificates, 2006-07 – 2008-09  .............. 110

Table 49.      Teacher Certification Examination results, Statewide, 2004-05 –

                         2006-07  ........................................................................................................... 115

Table 50.      Review of Proposed CUNY and SUNY Academic Programs by SED  .... 127

Table 51.      New York State Expenditures for Higher Education, 2001-02,

                         2003-04 – 2007-08  ........................................................................................ 132

Table 52.      Funding Per Full-Time Equivalent Student, Public Institutions in New

                         York and Nationwide, 2001-02, 2005-06, and 2006-07  ............................ 133

Table 53.      Invest in CUNY, Invest in New York Campaign   ........................................... 136


Letter of Transmittal

 

To Be Added
Summary of Findings

 

  • Maximizing Success for All Higher Education Students

 

  • High Educational Quality

 

  • In 2007, New York’s six-year baccalaureate graduation rate was 6.8 percentage points higher than the national average; since 2003, it improved by 2.4 percentage points (as cited in the Statewide Plan).  Including students transferring to another institution raised the 2007 rate by a further 10.0 percentage points, to 72.9 percent.

 

  • The three-year associate degree graduation rate was 4.4 points lower than the national average and 0.9 percentage points lower than in 2003.  Including students transferring to another institution raised the 2007 rate by 2.8 points, to 26.2 percent.

 

  • SED closed one two-year college following findings that the programs it offered did not meet college-level standards and repeated failure to improve.    

 

  • To protect students and to assure the effective use of the Tuition Assistance Program, in 2007, the Board of Regents approved regulations regulating the use of federally approved Ability to Benefit (ATB) tests to qualify students without a U.S. high school diploma for State student aid and identified only four of the federally approved AtB tests as adequate to test ability to undertake college-level work and therefore suitable for use by New York higher education institutions. 

 

  • In order to protect the educational and financial interests of students and their families, and to protect the integrity of the proprietary sector of higher education, the Board of Regents adopted new rules to strengthen oversight of proprietary higher education institutions.  They require new owners of proprietary colleges to demonstrate the capacity to meet educational and financial standards to operate institutions.  Among other provisions, the new rules require:
    • a transition period before a new proprietary college is granted final authority to award degrees, similar to the provisional charter granted to a new independent institution; and
    • that the Board of Regents approve the transfer of a proprietary college’s degree powers to a prospective new owner before a sale is consummated. 

 

  • Articulation

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the number of students transferring from two-year colleges to four-year institutions remained steady; however, the proportion of two-year college full-time students declined from 13.6 percent to 12.8 percent.

 

  • For New York two-year college associate degree graduates, the trend of increasing difficulty to earn baccalaureate degrees in only two more years, described in the Statewide Plan, continued.  In 2003, 69.8 percent of all transferring associate degree graduates were admitted to the upper division of the receiving institution, down from 75.6 percent in 1999; in 2007, the proportion had dropped to 67.4 percent. 

 

  • Affordability

 

  • New York funds more grant aid per student than any other state and is fourth in the nation in the proportion of low-income students in college.  New York exceeded California’s need-based grant program by 14 percent in 2006-07, when it provided 15 percent of all need based grants – and ten percent of all state student financial aid – in the nation.

 

  • In 2007-08, students with a family income of $10,766 (the median income of the lowest quintile) attending SUNY community colleges while living at home had no net cost of attendance.  TAP and Pell met full costs.  At CUNY community colleges, such students had a net cost of attendance – after TAP and Pell – equal to four percent of family income. 

 

  • Despite this, undergraduate education has become less affordable.  While a maximum TAP award covers tuition at SUNY and CUNY for full-time students, it does not cover fees, which have risen by $1,800 at SUNY.  At four-year independent institutions, the share of tuition and fees paid by a maximum TAP award has fallen from 30.0 percent to 20.7 percent.  The increase in the maximum Pell Grant will help to meet need; however, New Yorkers whose costs of attendance exceed the combination of TAP, Pell, and expected family contribution may have to rely on loans to meet need.

 

  • The new program of TAP for part-time students is available only to those beginning as full-time students and changing to part-time.  Students not able to begin on a full-time basis are not eligible. 

 

  • Closing Performance Gaps

 

  • In baccalaureate programs, 82.2 percent of all first-time students in the fall of 2006 returned in the fall of 2007.  By racial/ethnic category, 87.3 percent of Asian first-time students returned as did 83.3 percent of White students (both rates higher than the rate for all students), compared to 76.9 percent of Native American students, 77.7 percent of Hispanic students, and 75.2 percent of Black students.

 

  • Some progress has been made in closing the gap.  Between 2004 and 2007, Black students’ baccalaureate graduation rate improved from 43.6 percent to 46.9 percent; however, it was 16 points below the rate for all students.  The graduation rate of Native American students got slightly worse.  Hispanic students’ graduation rate improved significantly, from 43.4 percent to 48.3 percent. 

 

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the baccalaureate graduation rate of students in the opportunity programs (EOP, HEOP, and SEEK) improved more than the rate for all students.  It was 20.7 points lower than the rate for all students in 2003 and only 15.4 points lower in 2007.  In 2007, Black opportunity program students’ rate was the same as for all Black students (47.3 percent vs. 46.9 percent).  For Hispanic opportunity program students it was only 1.9 points below the rate for all Hispanic students (46.4 percent vs. 48.3 percent).

 

  • In associate degree programs, 60.3 percent of all first-time students in the fall of 2006 returned in the fall of 2007, a persistence rate 21.9 percentage points below that for baccalaureate students.  By racial/ethnic category, 67.3 percent of Asian first-time students returned as did 63.1 percent of White students (higher rates than for all students), 57.8 percent of Hispanic students, 53.1 percent of Black students, and 49.7 percent of Native American students. 

 

  • At the associate degree level, the Black graduation rate was the same in 2007 (15.9 percent) as in 2004 (15.8 percent); however, the gap between it and that of all students narrowed slightly.  For Native American students, the gap got significantly worse, declining from no gap in 2004 to a 7.6 point gap in 2007.

 

  • The three-year associate degree graduation rate for matriculated full-time entrants admitted through opportunity programs was 7.3 percentage points lower than the rate for all matriculated full-time entrants.  However, the gap between Black students admitted through opportunity programs and all Black entrants was only 2.1 points (13.8 percent vs. 15.9 percent).  At 1.4 points, the gap for Hispanic students was even narrower (15.1 percent vs. 16.5 percent).         

 

  • Students with Disabilities

 

  • Between 2003 and 2006, the number of students with self-reported disabilities grew by 8.2 percent, at a time when total enrollment grew by only 3.6 percent.

 

  • Six-year baccalaureate graduation rates for students with self-reported disabilities improved by 2.8 percentage points between 2004 and 2007 and were only 1.0 point lower than the rate for all students in 2007.

 

B. Smooth Student Transition from PreK-12 to Higher Education

 

  • Preparation for College

 

  • To assure that every high school graduate is prepared for higher education, work, and citizenship, the Board of Regents is reviewing and updating the State Learning Standards.  The reviews are being undertaken in collaboration with representatives from higher education institutions, including those with teacher preparation programs, to strengthen the alignment between expectations and knowledge and skills needed for both high school graduation and college-level work.

 

  • The first annual Excelsior Scholars Program was launched in 2007-08 to provide an opportunity for high performing 7th grade pupils to participate in advanced mathematics and science coursework at local colleges.  In the summer of 2008, 642 7th grade pupils engaged in rigorous, hands-on, real world math and science applications at 13 colleges and universities.

 

  • The public high school graduation rate, statewide, improved from 65.8 percent in 2005 to 68.6 percent in 2007.  At the end of August 2007, the rate increased to 71.1 percent.  For pupils taking up to five years, the completion rates were 71.8 percent in 2005 and 73.3 percent in 2006.

 

  • In 2007, more than 23 percent of the high school graduating class in New York earned scores of three or higher on Advanced Placement exams -- the nation’s highest percentage – compared to about 15 percent for the nation as a whole.

 

  • In 2007-08, over 60,000 pupils USNY-wide benefited from coordinated high school – college connections through programs including Liberty Partnerships, Learn and Serve America, and the Science and Technology Entry Program.

 

  • In 2006-07, 89 percent of graduating pupils who participated in the Science and Technology Entry Program (STEP) earned Regents diplomas and 85 percent entered college.

 

  • Through the Liberty Partnership Program (LPP) 55 colleges and universities collaborated with schools and other stakeholders to deliver comprehensive pre-college drop-out prevention programs to at-risk pupils.  The LPP drop-out rate declined from two percent in 2004-05 to only 0.8 percent in 2006-07; the pupil/school persistence rate exceeded 98 percent in each of the three years; the 12th grade graduation rate exceeded 80 percent; and the college-going rate exceeded 70 percent.  A majority of college-going pupils planned to enter college in New York.

 

  • Public and independent colleges and universities, USNY-wide, work with schools and districts to strengthen and enrich the education they provide.

 

  • Information and Assistance in Preparing for College

 

  • Some 70,000 high school pupils annually take college credit courses while still in high school.

 

  • The Board of Regents has proposed a Smart Scholars program that would transform the traditional four year high school to college model by giving historically underrepresented pupils an opportunity to graduate from high school with as many as 30 hours of college credit, putting them on a fast track to college readiness and completion without remediation.

 

C. Meeting New York’s Needs through Graduate Programs and through Research

 

  • Strong Graduate Programs to Meet the State’s Needs

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the number of faculty, USNY-wide, grew by 11,987 (12.1 percent).  Nearly all growth (95.1 percent) was at four-year and graduate institutions; the growth at two year colleges accounted for only 4.9 percent.

 

  • The State Labor Department projects a 24 percent growth between 2004 and 2014 in employment of all faculty at all institutions, with an average of about 6,200 openings per year, about half from replacement and half from growth.

 

  • The number of master’s degrees earned remained was almost the same in 2006-07 as in 2003-04.  The number of doctorates earned grew by 17.7 percent, from 3,952 in 2003-04 to 4,650 in 2006-07.  In both years, independent institutions awarded the largest number of both master’s and doctoral degrees, followed by SUNY, CUNY, and proprietary colleges (only a few of which offer graduate study).   

 

  • Creation of New Knowledge through Research

 

  • New York academic institutions spend $3.8 billion on research and development, more than those in any other state except California.  Between 2002 and 2006, their R&D expenditures’ growth rate was 4.4 percentage points higher than California’s.  However, Florida and Ohio institutions had far higher growth rates. 

 

D. Qualified Professionals for Every Community throughout the State

 

  • An Adequate Supply of Qualified Professionals

 

  • Over the last four years, the Legislature created eight new licensed professions under the Board of Regents jurisdiction.

 

  • Between 2003 and 2008, the number of licensed practitioners of all professions in New York grew by 13.5 percent, to a total of 761,000. 

 

  • An Adequate Supply of Qualified Teachers, School Leaders, and other School Professionals  

 

  • The Board of Regents has initiated a comprehensive strategy to help assure that all students are taught by qualified, certified teachers that includes regional forums across the State to discuss the future of teaching and school leadership.

 

  • SED issued three annual reports on teacher supply and demand to provide educators, policy makers, students, and parents with information on where workforce needs are growing and where teacher surpluses exist.

 

  • In collaboration with institutions offering teacher preparation programs, pre-K-12 schools, the Professional Standards and Practices Board, professional associations, unions, government leaders, members of the business community, and other partners, a series of steps have been identified to address teacher supply and demand and to strengthen teacher preparation, including:
  • strengthening alignment among teaching policy, practice, emerging research and data, and funding;
  • reviewing and, where appropriate, updating the teacher certification structure and requirements in subject shortage areas, such as special education, languages other than English, career and technical education, and bilingual education;
  • enhancing SED’s new on-line teacher certification system, TEACH;
  • systematizing P-16 partnerships to enhance teaching and learning; and
  • improving data systems in cooperation with the education community.

 

  • In July 2008, the Regents accepted a $3 million grant from the Wallace Foundation to build capacity to support educational leadership.  The grant will support:
  • transformation of institutions’ school leadership preparation programs,
  • establishment of leadership professional development programs focused on teaching and learning and provided through regional leadership academies, and
  • creation of school leader performance evaluations.

 

  • With the support of institutions offering teacher preparation programs, SED has overhauled the teacher certification process:

 

  • prospective teachers now can apply for certification, and colleges can recommend program graduates, electronically; 96 percent of all applications are submitted electronically
  • between 2006-07 and 2007-08, SED reduced the time to certify graduates of registered teacher preparation programs from two months to one day;
  • 2007-08 saw 20,000 more certificates issued than in 2006-07; and
  • SED provides expedited service for prospective teachers who have secured teaching jobs and need certification for employment.

 

  • Teacher Preparation for Urban Schools. To close the performance gap for all students, more emphasis must be placed on addressing the problem where the need is greatest – in the high need schools across the State SED has convened a work group composed of P-16 educators who are charged to examine the requirements for teacher preparation and professional development with the goal of strengthening them to better serve the needs of teachers and students in urban schools. Work in underway in forming this work group. 

 

  • The standards for the registration of programs preparing classroom teachers require that candidates for initial certificates be provided study that permits them to learn “uses of technology, including instructional and assistive technology, in teaching and learning – and skill in using technology and teaching students to use technology to acquire information, communicate, and enhance learning.”  SED will convene P-12 educators and teacher educators to examine existing provisions in the Commissioner’s Regulations to ensure that all newly prepared teachers have the knowledge and skill to integrate instructional technology into teaching and learning.  The objective will be to create technology standards for new teachers that all teacher preparation programs will implement. 

 

E. A Balanced and Flexible Regulatory Environment to Support Excellence

 

  • Encouraging a Highly Effective System

 

  • Consistent with the Commission on Higher Education’s recommendations, SED, SUNY, and CUNY are collaborating to streamline and expedite the review of proposals for new programs of study and changes to existing programs.  The Commission’s report commends SED, CUNY, and SUNY for this.  Improvements that have been identified will expedite the program registration time for all sectors.

 

  • In the past two years, SED has received 3,263 proposals from USNY’s 271 public, independent, and proprietary higher education institutions; approximately two-thirds of the reviews were completed within 30 days.

 

  • Since adopting the Statewide Plan, the Board of Regents has established five new higher education institutions: (1) the American Museum of Natural History (the first museum in the nation with its own Ph.D. program), (2) Bethel Seminary of the East, (3) Finger Lakes Health College of Nursing, (4) the Mandl School, and (5) the New York Studio School.

 

  • A group of CUNY, SUNY, and independent colleges and universities is working with the State Department of Economic Development and the U.S. Department of Commerce on developing a Study New York consortium to position the State as the destination of choice for students from around the world.    

 

  • Funding a Highly Effective System

 

  • New York State operating funds for higher education grew from $3.5 billion in fiscal 2001-02 to $5.1 billion in FY 2007-08.  This was a 45.3 percent increase, compared to 15.1 percent across all states during that period.


Introduction

 

On June 21, 2005, the Board of Regents adopted its Statewide Plan for Higher Education for the period 2004-2012.  The Plan delineates priorities, initiatives, and indicators for the higher education members of The University of the State of New York (USNY) to focus on over the eight year period.  Tracking USNY’s progress across hundreds of initiatives for 271 institutions is challenging; however, it is not impossible.  With all its complexities, the Plan’s focus can be summarized as:

 

  • Student Needs

 

  • Access to quality and affordable education
  • Less reliance on loans, especially high interest loans
  • Close the performance gap in higher education by ethnicity
  • Support services are made available to help students be successful, especially students who traditionally have been underrepresented in higher education

 

  • State Needs

 

  • Qualified teachers, school leaders, and licensed professionals
  • More New Yorkers having access to higher education to meet future economic and workforce needs
  • Research

 

  • Institutional Needs

 

  • Capacity (human and fiscal resources) to assist in meeting student needs along with New York State’s workforce, economic, and societal needs

 

For each of the Statewide Plan’s 13 Regents Priorities, the Plan identified categories of measurement called Indicators of Progress.  For the period 2005-2008, this Progress Report reviews selected Indicators of Progress as well as related developments reported by The City University of New York (CUNY), independent colleges and universities, proprietary colleges, the State University of New York (SUNY), and by the State Education Department (SED) (as appropriate) and discusses other accomplishments and actions taken to implement the Plan.

 

The P-16 Plan.  In November 2006, the Board of Regents adopted P-16 Education: A Plan for Action with two overarching goals: (1) close the great divide in achievement along lines of income, race and ethnicity, language, and disability; and (2) keep up with growing demands for still more knowledge and skill in the fact of increasing competition in a changing global economy.  The P-16 Plan, which is wholly consistent with the Statewide Plan, calls for actions in 13 areas to achieve those goals.

 

 

 

Table 1

 

Fall Degree-Credit Enrollment in Institutions of Higher Education

 

Fall

 

Undergraduate

First-Professional Degree

 

Graduate

Total

Headcount

2003

891,113

29,965

191,960

1,113,038

2004

907,125

30,389

192,434

1,129,948

2005

916,656

30,592

195,479

1,142,727

2006

926,244

31,116

196,046

1,153,406

2007

938,723

33,236

198,011

1,169,970

2008*

959,683

33,311

200,150

1,193,144

* Preliminary

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Table 1 shows that, since 2003, enrollment at USNY’s colleges and universities grew from 1,113,038 to 1,193,144 (7.2 percent).  In 2008, the 271 degree-granting institutions offered their students more than 29,000 degree and certificate programs.

 

Table 2

 

New York
State
:

Racial/Ethnic Percent Distribution of Population, 2006; 2005-06 High School Graduates; and Fall 2006 Higher Education Enrollment

Racial-Ethnic Category

Total Population

High School Graduates**

Higher Education Enrollment

 

 

 

Under-

Graduate

First-Professional Degree

Graduate

Black

17.4%

14.9%

13.8%

6.1%

8.2%

Hispanic

13.1%

13.3%

11.7%

5.0%

6.1%

Native American

0.5%

0.3%

0.4%

0.4%

0.3%

Asian/Pacific Islander

7.0%

7.3%

7.2%

16.7%

5.5%

White, Not Hispanic

60.5%

64.1%

53.1%

53.0%

49.7%

Unknown/More than One*

1.5%

0.1%

9.2%

15.4%

14.9%

Non-Resident Alien

----------

----------

4.6%

3.4%

15.3%

Total

100.0%

100.0%

100.0%

100.0%

100.0%

 * More than One Racial/Ethnic Category applies only to Total Population.  Unknown applies otherwise.

** Public and Nonpublic High Schools

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2006 Population Estimates (Total Population).

NYSED: Distribution of High School Graduates and College-Going Rate, 2007 (High School Graduates).

NYSED: Office of Research and Information Systems, 2008 (Higher Education Enrollment).              

 

              Table 2 shows that an estimated 31.0 percent of all New Yorkers were Black, Hispanic, or Native American in 2006, as were 28.5 percent of the 2005-06 high school graduates and 25.9 percent of all undergraduates, 11.5 percent of first-professional degree students, and 14.6 percent of all graduate students in the fall of 2006.   


  1. Maximizing Success for All Higher Education Students

 


  1. High Educational Quality

    .  The Regents ask institutions to describe in their master plans how the results of their ongoing self-study processes improve the quality of students’ education.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • In 2007, New York’s six-year baccalaureate graduation rate was 6.8 percentage points higher than the national average; since 2003, it improved by 2.4 percentage points (as cited in the Statewide Plan).  Including students transferring to another institution raised the 2007 rate by a further 9.7 percentage points, to 72.6 percent.

 

  • The three-year associate degree graduation rate was 4.4 points lower than the national average and 0.9 percentage points lower than in 2003.  Including students transferring to another institution raised the 2007 rate by 1.6 points, to 25.0 percent.

 

  • SED closed one two-year college following findings that the programs it offered did not meet college-level standards and repeated failure to improve.    

 

  • To protect students and to assure the effective use of the Tuition Assistance Program, in 2007, the Board of Regents approved regulations regulating the use of federally approved Ability to Benefit (AtB) tests to qualify students without a U.S. high school diploma for State student aid and identified only four of the federally approved AtB tests as adequate to test ability to undertake college-level work and therefore suitable for use by New York higher education institutions. 

 

  • In order to protect the educational and financial interests of students and their families, and to protect the integrity of the proprietary sector of higher education, the Board of Regents adopted new rules to strengthen oversight of proprietary higher education institutions.  They require new owners of proprietary colleges to demonstrate the capacity to meet educational and financial standards to operate institutions.  Among other provisions, the new rules require:
    • a transition period before a new proprietary college is granted final authority to award degrees, similar to the provisional charter granted to a new independent institution; and
    • that the Board of Regents approve the transfer of a proprietary college’s degree powers to a prospective new owner before a sale is consummated. 

 

The Statewide Plan set aspirations for the quality of education at New York’s colleges and universities:

 

Undergraduate education helps assure academic, civic, and cultural success.  It is the door to opportunity for effective participation in and contribution to society and prepares students to succeed in postgraduate study.  New York has a highly effective higher education system in which institutions give students the ability to develop ethical, intellectual, and social values; contribute to society; succeed in the workplace; and engage in lifelong learning.  Within the context of diverse institutional missions and individual aspirations and talents, New York’s higher education community helps all students to attain the knowledge, skills, and ethical grounding to contribute to society and succeed in the workplace in responsible ways.

 

All students will attain progressively advanced levels of knowledge and the ability to apply that knowledge effectively to problems in the field of study and to new areas of study.  Students will learn from experts, printed and electronic documents, collaboration with peers, and their own observations and reasoning.  They will learn independently, integrating and synthesizing different aspects of knowledge, extending and creating knowledge, thinking critically, and engaging in reflective self-critical thought.  They will listen, speak, and write clearly and effectively. They will develop global consciousness and an adaptability to changing environments and conditions.  They will become self-directed, life-long learners capable of self-renewal.

 

Institutions of higher education are communities of disciplined learning and reflection in which competent professionals actively and cooperatively engage in creating, providing, and improving educational offerings and services to achieve high quality outcomes.  This relates to the element of a highly effective system that calls on institutions to seek excellence through ongoing self-study.

 

The Department promotes these aspirations through the guidelines it issues and in peer reviews of institutions.

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Institutional self-assessment of progress and achievement on its master plan.

 

The City University of New York

 

Since adoption of the Statewide Plan, CUNY has worked to meet its promise to ensure and enhance the quality of undergraduate and graduate programs, as well as post-doctoral training and adult and continuing education.  This work has evolved through multiple endeavors, articulated within the goals and targets of the University’s Performance Management Program (PMP).  Broadly speaking, these efforts focus on raising academic quality (through building and retaining a world-class faculty, strengthening programs, and updating curricula), and improving student success (encompassing a strong and effective general education program, increased retention and graduation rates, and robust support services.)

 

Accountability.  CUNY’s system administration has taken important steps that allow it to set goals for the University and monitor the progress of every college toward them.  Central to this effort is PMP, in which the chancellery sets broad targets to raise academic quality, improve student success, and enhance financial and management effectiveness.  At the end of each fiscal year, indicators of college progress toward the goals are compiled and reported.  Raises for each college’s president and executive team are partly dependent on their institution’s performance.

 

CUNY’s ability to track progress on the PMP indicators, conduct system wide assessments, and generate data for decision support in general depends in large part from creation of a data warehouse over the past several years that was designed specifically to facilitate the tracking of students within and between colleges.  Institutional research staff at each college and in the central administration have access to the data in the warehouse as well as to a wide range of standardized reports.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              The Association of Proprietary Colleges (APC) reports that proprietary colleges have adopted long-range strategic plans, prepared institutional self-studies leading to program and curricular revisions and increased institutional effectiveness.  Some have used the National Survey of Student Engagement to inform academic decision-making.  APC has sponsored workshops for its member colleges, several of which used a “best practices” format, with regular participation.

 

  • Change over time in the persistence of first-time students to the next fall.

 

Tables 3 and 4 show the rate at which entering full-time baccalaureate students at four-year and associate degree students at two-year institutions, respectively, returned for a second year, by sector.

 

Table 3

 

First-Time Students in Baccalaureate Programs at Four-Year Institutions

Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007, by Sector

 

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

CUNY

79.3%

79.4%

80.0%

Independent

82.5%

82.2%

82.7%

Proprietary

64.2%

63.5%

69.7%

SUNY

82.4%

82.6%

83.0%

USNY-wide

81.8%

81.3%

82.2%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

              USNY-wide, over 80 percent of entering full-time baccalaureate program students returned for a second year in each of the three years.

 

 

 

Table 4

 

First-Time Students in Associate Degree Programs at Two-Year Institutions

Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007, by Sector

 

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

CUNY

62.0%

61.6%

62.5%

Independent

61.6%

61.8%

51.5%

Proprietary

42.2%

45.0%

47.9%

SUNY

61.7%

61.0%

60.9%

USNY-wide

59.9%

59.4%

60.3%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008

 

              USNY-wide, each year about 60 percent of entering full-time associate degree program students returned for a second year.  This rate was about 20 points lower than the persistence rate of full-time entering baccalaureate students.

 

  • Graduation rates for all matriculated entering students (not just first-time, full-time students).

 

In relation to the second and third indicators, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Publish freshman to sophomore student persistence and graduation rates pf associate and baccalaureate programs in New York State.  Analyze by sector, proportion of under-represented students, and other key criteria.  Draw comparisons to national averages and to states with similar demographics.

 

  • Research and benchmark practices that improve persistence and graduation rates.  Share them with colleges and universities through field visits, best practices guidelines, forums, and web-based resources, and help them to replicate successful strategies.

 

  • Monitor high-risk institutions and take action when standards are not met.

 

Undergraduate Progress and Graduation.  Tables 5 and 6 show the six-year baccalaureate graduation rates and three-year associate degree graduation rates, respectively, in 2004 through 2007, by sector, only for matriculated first-time, full-time students earning a degree from the institution they entered initially.  The associate degree data include associate degree programs at four-year institutions as well as those at tow-year colleges.  The number of entering matriculated associate degree students includes those subsequently transferring without a degree.  

 

 

 

 

 

Table 5

 

Proportion of First-Time Entrants Earning Baccalaureate Degrees

from the Same Institution in Six Years, by Sector

 

Graduation Year

 

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

CUNY

39.6%

38.5%

41.2%

42.3%

43.9%

Independent

65.4%

65.9%

66.0%

66.8%

67.3%

Proprietary

53.0%

47.8%

47.1%

49.0%

46.3%

SUNY

58.2%

59.0%

58.9%

59.5%

60.3%

USNY-Wide

60.5%

61.0%

61.4%

62.2%

62.9%

Nationwide

54.3%

55.3%

55.5%

56.4%

56.1%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008 for New York; NCES, IPEDS and longitudinal surveys for USA.

 

Table 6

 

Proportion of First-Time Entrants Earning Associate Degrees

from the Same Institution in Three Years, by Sector

 

Graduation Year

 

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

CUNY

10.0%

10.6%

11.1%

10.8%

10.1%

Independent

33.6%

37.1%

38.4%

38.9%

39.7%

Proprietary

32.0%

31.5%

29.2%

27.5%

33.9%

SUNY

26.7%

26.3%

25.3%

24.9%

23.9%

USNY-Wide

24.3%

24.5%

23.8%

23.5%

23.4%

Nationwide

30.6%

30.0%

29.3%

29.1%

27.8%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008 for New York; NCES, IPEDS and longitudinal surveys for USA.

 

Baccalaureate Degrees.  The proportion of matriculated full-time students earning baccalaureate degrees over six years from the institution they entered initially remained almost unchanged between 2003 and 2007, growing only from 60.5 percent in 2003 to 62.9 percent in 2007.  Throughout the period, however, New York’s six-year baccalaureate graduation rate was higher than that of the nation as a whole; the 2007 rate was 6.8 points above the national rate.

 

Nearly 65 percent of the institutions awarding baccalaureate degrees in 2007 had graduation rates lower than the USNY-wide average (86 out of 133), however, including 13 with graduation rates of less than 30 percent.  On the other hand, 27 institutions had graduation rates at least ten points above the average, including five with rates above 90 percent: Columbia University, Cornell University (endowed), The Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Vassar College, and Webb Institute.  Columbia, Cornell, Jewish Theological Seminary, and Vassar also had rates of better than 90 percent in 2006.  

 

Associate Degrees.  The proportion of matriculated full-time students earning associate degrees in three years from the institution they entered initially also remained virtually unchanged, falling from 24.3 percent in 2003 to 23.4 percent in 2007 (4.4 percentage points below the national average).  However, the national rate declined by 2.8 percentage points over the period; New York’s declined by only 0.9 point. 

 

A majority of the institutions awarding associate degrees in 2007 (50 out of 98) had graduation rates below the USNY-wide average, including 16 with rates below ten percent.  On the other hand, 48 institutions had graduation rates at least ten points above the average, including two with graduation rates above 90 percent: Katharine Gibbs School (Melville) and Long Island College Hospital School of Nursing.

 

Table 7

 

First-Time Entrants Earning Degrees from Some Institution,

including Transfers to Another New York Institution

Year

First-Time Entrants Earning Associate Degrees from Some New York Institution in 3 Years

First-Time Entrants Earning Baccalaureate Degrees from Some New York Institution in 6 Years

2003

27.9%

70.6%

2004

26.9%

68.4%

2005

25.9%

70.5%

2006

25.4%

71.5%

2007

26.2%

72.9%

N.b.  Data are not available by sector. 

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

              Taking Transfers into Account.  Comparing the graduation rates in Table 7 with those in Tables 5 and 6 makes plain the importance of transfers between institutions.  Including students transferring between New York institutions, the associate degree rate averaged almost 2.6 percentage points higher than the rate of students not transferring.  For students earning baccalaureate degrees, the rate including students transferring between New York institutions averaged nearly 9.2 percentage points higher than the rate of students not transferring.  In 2007, it was 10.0 percentage points higher.  This highlights the concern about graduates of New York associate degree programs’ ability to enter the upper division of baccalaureate programs, in the next priority, ”Articulation.”

 

              Using a Longer Time Horizon.  Students persist for more than three or six years in seeking degrees.  A further one to two percent of full-time entrants matriculating in baccalaureate programs take ten years before earning baccalaureate degrees, raising the baccalaureate graduation rate to nearly 75 percent.  For students in associate degree programs, the effect is even stronger.  About ten percent of full-time entrants matriculated in associate degree programs take ten years – not just three -- to earn an associate degree, raising associate degree graduation rates to over 35 percent.  A further 12 to 14 percent of them transfer to baccalaureate programs without an associate degree and earn baccalaureate degrees.     

 

The City University of New York

 

Improving Success Rates.  Over the past several years, performance in CUNY’s baccalaureate programs has improved.  One-year retention rates have risen from 79.6 percent for the cohort of first-time freshmen entering in the fall of 2002 to 80.0 percent for the 2006 cohort.  Six-year graduation rates rose from 36.5 percent for the fall 1997 cohort to 43.9 percent for the 2001 cohort.

 

While one-year retention rates for CUNY’s associate degree programs fell slightly, from 62.5 percent (2002 cohort) to 61.5 percent (2006 cohort), three-year graduation rates trended upward, from 9.9 percent to 10.1 percent (2000 and 2004 cohorts).  Graduation rates for associate programs rise substantially when the tracking period is extended.  For example, when tracking for the 2001 cohort of freshmen pursuing associate degrees is extended from three to six years, the graduation rate more than doubles (from 10.7 percent to 23.8 percent).

 

IndependentCollegesand Universities.

 

              As noted above, five independent four-year colleges and universities had baccalaureate graduation rates of better than 90 percent in 2007: Columbia University, Cornell University, The Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Vassar College, and Webb Institute.  Columbia, Cornell, Jewish Theological Seminary, and Vassar also had rates of better than 90 percent in 2006.    

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              APC reports that proprietary colleges have created academic standards committees, increased the periodic review of curricula by external reviewers, heightened graduation requirements, engaged in continuous assessment of student learning outcomes, identified good practices in pedagogy, hired more academic supervisory personnel, increased hiring standards for both full-time and part-time faculty, carried out rigorous evaluation of faculties, and provided for faculty mentoring and development.  They have seen increases in persistence and completion rates.  

 

State
University of New York

 

              SUNY reports the following baccalaureate graduation rates for all matriculated entering students (not just first-time, full-time), 2004 through 2007:

 

Table 8

 

State
University of New York

Baccalaureate Graduation Rates for

All Matriculated Entering Students, 2004 – 2007

 

4-Year

5-Year

6-Year

Fall 1998 as of Fall 2004

41.4%

56.2%

59.1%

Fall 1999 as of Fall 2005

42.0%

57.0%

59.9%

Fall 2000 as of Fall 2006

41.3%

56.7%

59.6%

Fall 2001 as of Fall 2007

41.9%

57.7%

60.7%

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

For all students, the six-year graduation rate remained stable across the last four years.

 

State Education Department

 

Peer Reviews.  SED reviews institutional graduation rates as part of its process of deciding whether to teams of peer reviewers to visit institutions to evaluate compliance with the quality standards for the registration of undergraduate and graduate curricula in the Commissioner’s Regulations.  Graduation rates significantly below average, or which have declined over time, indicate that an institution’s compliance may be weak.  To date, however, no significant improvements in graduation rates have followed these visits.  In 2007, the Board of Regents received grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and The Wallace Foundation for work to improve college completion rates, high school graduation rates, and college readiness. 

 

Monitor At-Risk Institutions and Take Action When Standards Are Not Met.  SED uses a risk analysis approach to quality assurance in higher education and took aggressive action concerning a number of high profile institutions providing a substandard education, academic misconduct, and fraud.  Between 2005 and now, teams of peer reviewers made 82 visits to such institutions.

 

Over 7,610 students at proprietary colleges were directly affected by the Regents and SED’s actions concerning colleges identified as at-risk.  These students make up one-third of the total population of students (24,171) enrolled in two-year degree programs in USNY’s proprietary colleges.  In 2006, SED closed one such institution, Taylor Business Institute, after repeated site visits that revealed serious deficiencies in educational processes and outcomes.  To provide the 600+ students affected by its closure with opportunities to continue their education, SED sponsored a first-of-its-kind College Transfer Fair.  In partnership with 23 colleges, students were given information on transfer opportunities and next steps for continuing their educations, and how to pay for it by representatives from the U.S. Department of Education (USDE) and the Higher Education Services Corporation (HESC).

 

              Since Taylor’s closure, the Board of Regents has conferred 139 Associate in Occupational Studies (A.O.S.) degrees on its former students.  In addition, SED is the custodian of Taylor’s transcripts.  It has sent over 1,000 transcripts to students, colleges, and potential employers; responded to over 500 e-mails and hundreds of phone calls; and reviewed 97 transcripts for a high school equivalency diploma.

 

  • For occupational programs at institutions receiving federal Perkins Act funding and other institutions agreeing to provide that information, change in the rate of placement of graduates in jobs in, or closely related to, the field of study, or in further education, within six months of graduation.

 

 

 

Table 9

 

Placement of Graduates of Occupational Associate Degree and Certificate Programs, Institutions Aided under the Carl D. Perkins Vocational-Technical Education Act, 2003 --  2005

Graduation

Year

Number of Graduates

Number in Related Employment or Further Education

Percent in Related Employment or Further Education

2003

15,716

15,164

96.5%

2004

15.605

15,158

97.1%

2005

11,583

11,230

97.0%

Source: NYSED, Office of Research and Information Systems, 2008.

 

              Over the three years, more than 96 percent of the students graduating from occupational associate degree and credit-bearing certificate programs at Perkins-aided institutions were placed in related occupations or continued their educations.

 

The City University of New York

 

CUNY has made progress on a key component of the mission for associate degree programs, vocational training.  Graduates of the vocational and technical degree programs enjoy high placement rates, which have improved steadily in recent years, from 79 percent for the class of 2002-03 to 88 percent for the class of 2005-06.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              No proprietary colleges receive Perkins Act funding.

 

  • Findings in final reports of Regents institutional accreditation and similar Department visits to colleges and universities (including Institutional Capability Reviews).

 

Example of Good Practices Found in Institutional Accreditation Peer Review Visits.  Between 2005 and 2008, SED made 17 peer review visits to institutions accredited by the Board of Regents.  Among the findings of those teams:

 

  • A proprietary college’s students heavily use its Learning Center.  The Center’s dean or a representative goes to all classes at the start of each term to inform students about the Learning Center and does orientation sessions for each Humanities freshman seminar.  A peer review team was particularly struck by a rich placement of notices of Learning Center workshops and resources all around the building.  As the team toured, the notices could be found down every hallway and near every elevator and staircase.  For evening students, the Learning Center is open Tuesday evening and Saturday; many students stop in at lunchtime.  The Center tracks performance overall as well as by individual students; it has data demonstrating that students using it have better success.

 

  • Ongoing review of CUNY’s College Proficiency Examination (CPE) results.

 

The City University of New York

 

Through the CUNY Proficiency Examination (CPE), CUNY has since 2001 conducted a rigorous assessment of the academic literacy and quantitative reasoning skills imparted in its general education curriculum.  A requirement for graduation for all undergraduates, the CPE is administered each year to approximately 25,000 students.  The cumulative pass rate (calculated by following a cohort of test takers over three administrations) has risen from 88.4 percent to 91.0 percent over the past five years.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

The City University of New York

 

MacaulayHonors College.  One of the CUNY’s most noteworthy recent successes in focusing on high educational quality is development of the Macaulay Honors College (MHC).  Launched as the CUNY Honors College in 2001, and renamed to honor a generous 2006 gift from William E. Macaulay, a 1966 Honors graduate of The City College of New York, and his wife, Linda, MHC has grown from an inaugural class of 189 to a four-year student population of over 1,200.  Applications have increased, with 3,846 students competing for 350 available spots in the class of 2012.  Within the applicant group, increasing numbers of students from New York City’s most selective secondary schools are seeking admission.  In its short history, MHC has emerged as an important center of excellence.

 

Community College Education.  Community college education at CUNY broke new ground in the fall of 2007, when more than 1,000 students at the six community colleges became participants in a new initiative supported by the Mayor’s Center for Economic Opportunity: Accelerated Study in Associate Programs (ASAP).  The goal is for 50 percent of ASAP participants to earn associate degrees and either enter baccalaureate programs or find employment within three years.  ASAP’s key components include a cost-free education for students eligible for State/federal financial aid; small-group study organized according to academic interest; block scheduling that takes into account the family and work demands prevalent among community college students; intensive academic support and advising; free use of books; MetroCards; and career counseling and job placement assistance.  The Mayor’s Center for Economic Opportunity has funded ASAP for three years to cover a single cohort; additional funding would be needed to recruit another cohort into the program.

 

A central component of the mission of CUNY’s associate degree programs is remedial education.  In the fall of 2007, about six in ten associate degree students took at least one remedial course in their first term, down from two-thirds in 2003.  In recent years, CUNY has made progress in its efforts to facilitate completion of remedial courses in a timely fashion.  The percentage of students who are able to complete their remedial course work by the 30th credit has risen from 61 percent in 2004 to 68 in 2007.

 

Coordinated Undergraduate Education.  On the undergraduate level, academic excellence at CUNY is managed largely through a system of Coordinated Undergraduate Education (CUE).  The CUE initiative was launched in 2004 by reorganizing discrete programs (University Summer Immersion Programs, Coordinated Freshman Programs, Writing Across the Curriculum, Faculty Development Grants, and Academic Support).  It is an effective vehicle for integrating disparate components, in significant part thanks to a new administrative structure, the CUE Directors, a group of deans and associate provosts charged with implementing and assessing annual CUE plans.  These plans are embedded in CUNY’s Performance Management Plan, and have been structured in line with the goals for its Campaign for Student Success.

 

General Education.  Begun in 2003, the CUNY General Education Project seeks to strengthen the undergraduate curriculum across the University by engaging faculty, students, and administrators in the revision of general education requirements at the colleges.  The Project has brought together representatives of undergraduate campuses to define the ways that general education is conceived and practiced throughout CUNY and to support campus work on general education.

 

Improved Support Services and Activities.  Recognizing that student success involves life within as well as outside the classroom, CUNY has remained steadfast in its commitment to improving the quality of support services and recreational activities to students.  Developments include:

 

  • Since 2004 CUNY has implemented degree audit software (Degree Works) at all of its undergraduate colleges.  Degree Works allows students and advisers to assess student progress toward degree requirements with ease in an online format.  The new software has greatly speeded the evaluation of student transcripts and guided students in selecting the courses they need to   complete their degree requirements.

 

  • Child care services for the many CUNY students who are raising families remain a priority.  CUNY operates 17 campus-based child care centers.  An 18th center is opening at York College in the fall of 2008.  Funding has been provided to help campus child care center staff obtain appropriate training to comply with new and changing State regulations.  Funding also has been provided to assist teachers and child care staff to obtain specialized certifications and skills.  Data among the child care centers are being centralized and shared.  Finally, CUNY is engaged in a study exploring the link between student retention and child care services.

 

  • Career Services staff members have received professional development opportunities and resources.  CUNY is in the process of obtaining additional technology to offer students career tools.  An Optimal Resume online resume-writing tool is set for a fall 2008 launch.  CUNY is also promoting the review and application of national standards in career services and seeking to align the career services offered on CUNY campuses with them.

 

  • Much work is under way in Health Services.  CUNY has been collaborating with the Office of Citywide Health Insurance to launch a Web-based health insurance tutorial that will be available on the CUNY portal.  It continues to develop and strengthen collaborations with community-based organizations (including the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation and Planned Parenthood of New York City, Inc.) to enhance services.  CUNY also continues to work with the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to provide supplies of Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR) vaccine to its students.  It is further working to automate transfer of immunization records for students coming to CUNY from New York City public schools.

 

In a major development, CUNY doctoral students employed at the University will now be eligible for health insurance, with the basic premium covered by CUNY.

 

CUNY has engaged the services of a medical consultant who is actively engaged with the campuses on disease prevention and health promotion efforts.  This consultant will also work with each campus to ensure CUNY’s compliance with medical protocols and State and public health laws.

 

  • Much work is similarly under way in Mental Health and Counseling services.  The CUNY Clinical Psychology Fellowship program has been developed to increase the number of counseling hours available to students on CUNY campuses, while simultaneously training CUNY’s doctoral students in Clinical Psychology at The City College.  CUNY Counseling Directors have participated in a major professional development event to discuss good practices.  Upcoming efforts include training for campuses to develop campus-based Behavioral Intervention teams and a major survey and study of CUNY’s Counseling Centers.

 

  • The CUNY Leadership Academy has been created to afford CUNY students leadership development opportunities system wide.

 

  • Investment in CUNY’s athletics programs is key to the cultivation of world-class co-curricular experiences and, ultimately, to student success.  Over the next four years, CUNY will upgrade both indoor and outdoor athletic facilities and continue its efforts to staff its campus athletic programs with experienced and dedicated full-time coaches.  It will assess the feasibility of establishing the CUNYAC Foundation for the purposes of athletic program development, and will consider establishing a University-wide athletics fee to allow its athletics programs to achieve parity and compete with programs at similarly-situated higher education institutions.

 

CUNY assesses satisfaction with its student support services every other year through a system-wide survey of undergraduates.  Over the last four biennial surveys, satisfaction with a wide array of services has been increasing.

 

Libraries.  CUNY has continued to realize the economic rewards of centrally acquiring digital data to support its programs.  The Office of Library Services has purchased two landmark collections of historic material:  Eighteenth Century Collections Online and Making of the Modern World, which will be accessible to all CUNY faculty and students.  Purchasing digital resources centrally frees the campuses to buy resources that fit better with their own curricula and to provide greater access to print resources.  CUNY has also purchased linking software to enhance full text as a research aid to faculty and students; a bibliographic software tool to provide convenience and facilitate sharing of citation information; and joined Portico to protect its investment in access to digital resources.  Further, CUNY established expedited intra-campus lending in 2006.  Since that time, more than 40,000 requests have been made using the new procedures.   CUNY has also developed a University-wide set of learning outcomes for information literacy for students through the 60th credit.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              APC reports that some proprietary colleges have received initial or renewed Middle States Association accreditation.  Some have initiated faculty ranks to tie together teaching and research quality, years of service, and professional development.  Proprietary colleges have increased the number and proportion of faculty who are full-time and sought to increase faculty diversity.  Some have enhanced resources for faculty; some have improved internal communication between academic and student services offices.  Some proprietary colleges have been authorized to move to higher degree levels or to add programs in disciplines not previously offered.  They have expanded learning opportunities, including distance education, increased general education requirements, and expanded library collections.

 

State Education Department

 

Academic Review.  SED has fully implemented the Regents risk analysis approach to quality assurance in higher education, and has taken action against a number of institutions providing a substandard education, academic misconduct, and fraud.  It made peer review visits to two proprietary colleges as follow up to previous visits that found serious deficiencies in educational processes and outcomes.  Both institutions had made changes resulting in substantial compliance with the standards for registration in the Commissioner's Regulations.  However, each institution’s owner subsequently decided to close it.

 

In 2006, SED successfully handled over 1,700 requests from colleges and universities for program registrations, curriculum changes, and other actions to ensure academic quality and drive over $4 billion in federal and State student financial aid to hundreds of thousands of students.

 

Tuition Assistance Program Grants to Students Without a U.S. High School Diploma.  Chapter 57 of the Laws of 2007 required the Board of Regents to identify federally approved Ability-to-Benefit (AtB) tests appropriate for use by higher education institutions to qualify for State student aid applicants who do not have U.S. high school diplomas or their equivalent.  Following SED’s consultation with a working group of academic and financial aid administrators from the four sectors and HESC, the Regents approved an amendment to the Commissioner’s Regulations regarding such use.  In September 2007, the Board identified four of the federally approved AtB tests as appropriate for use by higher education institutions for this purpose: Accuplacer, ASSET, COMPASS, and CELSA.  Use of the other exams, which did not adequately assess students’ ability to benefit from college level work, was eliminated.   

 

In December 2007, the owner of one proprietary college decided to close the institution following the Board of Regents action to strengthen standards for students without high school diplomas seeking to qualify for State student aid.  The institution recruited significant numbers of students without high school diplomas who were eligible to receive federal and State student aid by demonstrating “an ability to benefit” from higher education.  The College reported that only one-third of its applicants who passed AtB tests in the past could pass the new, more rigorous tests available for use for State student aid.  SED worked closely with the college and its owner to ensure that students enrolled at the time of closure could continue their educations and earn their degrees.

 

Institutional Accreditation.  The Regents renewed the accreditation of all accredited institutions, following self-studies, peer review visits, and advice from the Regents Advisory Council on Institutional Accreditation, and granted initial accreditation to two additional institutions.

 

In January 2007, after a four-year review of the Regents standards and requirements for institutional accreditation that involved all accredited institutions and other USNY higher education institutions, the Board amended its rules for institutional accreditation to strengthen and clarify some standards and to add new one, as the review recommended.  Following an evaluation by the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity that found the Board of Regents and the Commissioner in full compliance with the U.S. Secretary of Education’s criteria for recognition of accrediting agencies, in the fall of 2007 the Secretary renewed or the maximum term of five years the Board’s recognition as a Nationally Recognized Accrediting Agency for degree-granting institutions in New York voluntarily seeking its institutional accreditation

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • To rebuild the faculty ranks and enhance research capacity, a minimum of 2,000 additional full-time faculty members from diverse backgrounds should be hired by SUNY and CUNY during the next five years, including 250 eminent research faculty.
  • Access to electronic information should be expanded throughout the State by facilitating college and university libraries replacement of individual licenses with state-wide shared licenses.
  • New York’s strength as a leader in international education should be increased through efforts by the State’s international trade offices and SUNY and CUNY to attract more international students and expand international research links.  The State should establish an advisory council on international education.  In addition, SUNY and CUNY should expand study abroad opportunities and international internship programs.
  • Funding should be provided to community colleges for vocational non-credit training courses, enhanced for targeted high-cost training areas, and the State should also commit resources to the development of new credit-bearing programs.
  • A statewide clearinghouse for community service programs should be established to connect students to service opportunities throughout the State.  CareerZone, the job-clearing website of the Department of Labor, could be expanded to include community service postings.   

 

  • SED will consult with USNY’s higher education community about ways to improve significantly baccalaureate and, especially, associate degree graduation rates.

 

  • The new ATB regulation requires colleges to identify and seek the Regents approval of appropriate pass points on their ATB examinations.  In approving a college’s pass point, the following factors will be considered:

 

  • the level of curricula the institution offers;
  • the admission criteria and procedures it uses to evaluate an applicant’s capacity to undertake a course of study and its capacity to provide instructional and other support services to ensure that the applicant can complete the course of study;
  • evidence that its admission criteria and procedures are effective in admitting only persons with the capacity to undertake a course of study;
  • the adequacy of the academic support services it provides; and
  • evidence that it evaluates the success of its academic and other support services in providing services that its students need to complete their programs.

 

SED has worked with representatives from the four sectors of higher education to implement this requirement.  In 2009 colleges will submit their plans to SED to help ensure that ATB students, who may be educationally at risk, receive State student aid only at institutions and programs that will provide appropriate academic support to help them achieve their educational goals.

 

 


  1. Articulation

    .  The Regents ask institutions to describe in their master plans how they will improve articulation between two- and four-year colleges, among public, independent, and proprietary colleges and universities, and between undergraduate and graduate programs and institutions to assist students at every level in their progress towards a degree.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the number of students transferring from two-year colleges to four-year institutions remained steady; however, the proportion of two-year college full-time students declined from 13.6 percent to 12.8 percent.

 

  • For New York two-year college associate degree graduates, the trend of increasing difficulty to earn baccalaureate degrees in only two more years, described in the Statewide Plan, continued.  In 2003, 69.8 percent of all transferring associate degree graduates were admitted to the upper division of the receiving institution, down from 75.6 percent in 1999; in 2007, the proportion had dropped to 67.4 percent. 

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan: 

 

  • Change over time in the ratio of full-time undergraduate transfers to the number of full-time undergraduates enrolled at two-year colleges in the preceding year.

 

Between 2003 and 2007, the number of students transferring from two-year colleges remained steady; however, the proportion of two-year college full-time students declined from 13.6 percent to 12.8 percent.

 

Table 10

 

Ratio of Full-Time Undergraduate Transfers from Two-Year Colleges to Full-Time Undergraduate Enrollment at Two-Year Colleges in the Preceding Year, 2003, 2005, 2007

Year

Transfers from USNY Two-Year Colleges

Full-Time Undergraduate Enrollment Preceding Year

Ratio of Transfers to Full-Time Enrollment

2003

23,082

170,305

13.6%

2005

22,540

184,275

12.2%

2007

22,989

179,836

12.8%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

State
University of New York

 

SUNY reported the following ratios of full-time undergraduate transfers to the number of full-time undergraduates at two-year colleges in the preceding year:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 11

 

State
University of New York

Ratio of Full-Time Undergraduate Transfers to Full-Time Undergraduates at Two-Year Colleges the Year Before Fall 2003 – Fall 2007

Fall 2003

Fall 2004

Fall 2005

Fall 2006

Fall 2007

0.087

0.085

0.087

0.089

0.086

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

The ratio remained stable over the period.

 

  • Change over time in number of students transferring from two- to four-year colleges in New York State.

 

Table 12, below, shows that, between 2003 and 2007, the number of two-year college students transferring to a four-year college without a degree grew by 5.4 percent while the total number of two-year college transfer students remained almost unchanged, declining by 1.6 percent.

 

Table 12

 

Full-Time Undergraduates Enrolled at New York Four-Year Institutions

who Transferred from New York Two-Year Institutions

 

Lower Division

Upper Division

Total

Fall 2003 with Associate Degree

2,311

5,332

7,643

  From SUNY campuses

1,567

4,322

5,889

  From CUNY colleges

613

849

1,462

  From Independent institutions

64

94

158

  From Proprietary institutions

58

71

129

Fall 2003 without a Degree

7,916

3,690

11,606

Fall 2003 Total

10,227

9,022

19,249

Fall 2005 with Associate Degree

2,110

5,588

7,698

  From SUNY campuses

1,552

4,375

5,927

  From CUNY colleges

428

977

1,405

  From Independent institutions

67

95

162

  From Proprietary institutions

63

141

204

Fall 2005 without a Degree

7,691

3,463

11,154

Fall 2005 Total

9,801

9,051

18,852

Fall 2007 with Associate Degree

2,190

4,520

6,710

  From SUNY campuses

1,597

3,470

5,067

  From CUNY colleges

443

784

1,227

  From Independent institutions

60

60

120

  From Proprietary institutions

90

206

296

Fall 2007 without a Degree

8,528

3,703

12,231

Fall 2007 Total

10,718

8,223

18,941

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

 

For New York two-year college associate degree graduates, the trend of increasing difficulty to earn baccalaureate degrees in only two more years, described in the Statewide Plan, continued.  In 2003, 69.8 percent of all transferring associate degree graduates were admitted to the upper division of the receiving institution, down from 75.6 percent in 1999; in 2007, the proportion had dropped to 67.4 percent.  The number of students with associate degrees from USNY two-year colleges who entered the upper division at USNY four-year colleges declined by 15.2 percent.  The increasing difficulty affected graduates of SUNY, CUNY, and independent two-year colleges; transfer rates improved for holders of proprietary college associate degrees. 

 

The City University of New York

 

CUNY’s initiatives in response to the Regents priority for articulation have progressed considerably.  Its policies encourage transfer by guaranteeing associate degree completers admission to a baccalaureate program and 60 credits toward the baccalaureate degree.  Probably the best evidence of progress in promoting transfer lies in transfer enrollments.  Nearly one-half (49.2 percent) of all recipients of a CUNY A.A. or A.S. degree transfer to a baccalaureate program in CUNY within one year of graduation.  When transfers to institutions outside CUNY are included, the rate approaches 70 percent. 

 

Articulation Agreements.  Particularly noteworthy is the development of additional articulation agreements among and between community and senior colleges to enhance transfer options.  Examples include:

 

  • Pathways to Business at Baruch: Signed A June 2006 Memorandum of Understanding between Baruch College and CUNY colleges that offer pre-B.B.A. associate degree programs details the “pathways” to major in business in the B.B.A. program at Baruch’s Zicklin School of Business.  The partnership makes explicit Zicklin’s eligibility requirements and pre-B.B.A. equivalencies so that CUNY associate degree students are able to plan effectively what to do for admission to Baruch and the Zicklin School.

 

  • Educational Partnership Initiative: John Jay College of Criminal Justice is collaborating with all six CUNY community colleges in the design of specific “2+2” degree programs that promote access to John Jay’s baccalaureate degrees.  The first cohorts will be recruited into forensic science programs in 2008-09.  Similar “2+2” arrangements are in place throughout CUNY in many fields (teacher education and engineering among them).  In accordance with CUNY’s Master Plan for 2008-2012, recently submitted to SED, information about these programs will be better collected, analyzed, and published.

 

Online Transfer Guide.  Over the past several years, CUNY has made great progress in improving its online transfer guide, the Transfer Information and Program Planning System (TIPPS).  TIPPS allows students to determine the amount and type of credit they would receive for courses taken at their current college, should they opt to transfer to any other CUNY college.  In addition to redesigning the site to facilitate the entry of course equivalencies by faculty and administrators, CUNY has targeted the completion of all course equivalencies as a goal that is monitored in the annual PMP report.  In 2006, 76.5 percent of all course equivalencies had been completed; one year later this total had risen to 92 percent.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

              The Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities (CICU) reports that independent sector institutions have numerous, individually tailored articulation agreements with community colleges and other two-year institutions and programs to assure a seamless transition from the associate to the baccalaureate level.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              As Table 12 shows, transfer rates have improved for holders of proprietary college associate degrees.  APC reports that proprietary colleges have greatly increased the number of articulation agreements between proprietary two-year colleges and public and independent four-year colleges, as well as between proprietary four-year colleges and public and independent two-year colleges.  They have held faculty-to-faculty meetings with institutions with which they have agreements.  To better serve transfer students, they have sought to address their unique needs.

 

State
University of New York

 

              Table 13, below, shows that, between the fall of 2002 and the fall of 2007, the number of students transferring into SUNY four-year campuses grew by 8.5 percent.  A majority came from SUNY campuses offering associate degree programs and SUNY community colleges, followed by other institutions and CUNY.

 

Table 13

 

State
University of New York

Students Transferring into SUNY Four-Year Institutions from Two-Year Institutions

Fall 2002 – Fall 2007

 

Fall 2002

Fall 2003

Fall 2004

Fall 2005

Fall 2006

Fall 2007

Total

9,586

9,675

9,912

10,473

10,774

10,399

From SUNY

8,186

8,229

8,528

8,935

9,129

8,798

From CUNY

462

462

458

423

498

449

From Other

938

984

926

1,115

1,147

1,152

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

  • Growth in the number of institutions accepting transfer credit from all institutions accredited by nationally recognized accrediting agencies rather than only from those that are regionally accredited.

 

State
University of New York

 

              In 2005, SUNY informed SED that it does not have a policy requiring campuses to limit transfer credit only to regionally accredited institutions, as distinct from those accredited by national accrediting agencies recognized by the Secretary of Education.

 

State Education Department

 

In January 2007, the Regents added to their standards for voluntary institutional accreditation by the Board of Regents requirements that (1) learning objectives for each course be of a level and rigor that warrant acceptance in transfer by other institutions of higher education and (2) that an institution shall not refuse a student’s request for transfer of credit based solely upon the source of accreditation of the sending institution, where the sending institution is institutionally accredited for Title IV purposes by an accrediting agency recognized by the Secretary of Education for such purposes.  

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

              In 2005-06, 95 percent of students in postsecondary programs receiving support from the federal Carl D. Perkins Act continued in advanced study or were employed following completion of career and technical education programs (see Table 7, above).

 

Transfers from Institutions Outside New York State.

 

In 2007, 10,101 full-time undergraduates transferred into New York institutions from institutions outside the State, 1.4 percent of all full-time undergraduates that year.  Table 14, below, shows the number transferring from outside the State in 2005 and 2007.   The number transferring to baccalaureate institutions in 2007 was 6.3 percent lower than the number in 2005, resulting from a 15.4 percent decline at independent four-year institutions.  Four-year colleges of CUNY and SUNY, and in the proprietary sector, saw more transfers from outside the State in 2007 than in 2005.

 

New York two-year colleges, on the other hand, had 8.2 percent more transfers from outside the State in 2007 than in 2005.  Two-year colleges of CUNY and SUNY, and in the independent sector, shared in the increase; proprietary colleges had a smaller number of transfers from outside the State in 2007 than in 2005.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 14

 

Full-Time Undergraduate Transfers from Institutions Outside

the State, 2005 and 2007, by Sector and Level of New York Institution

 

Entering Lower Division

Entering Upper Division

Total

Baccalaureate Institutions

CUNY

 

 

 

2005

719

279

998

2007

802

295

1,097

Independent

 

 

 

2005

3,996

1,231

5,227

2007

3,326

1,097

4,423

Proprietary

 

 

 

2006

421

142

563

2007

461

105

566

SUNY

 

 

 

2005

1,177

708

1,885

2007

1,330

711

2,041

All Sectors

 

 

 

2005

6,313

2,360

8,673

2007

5,919

2,208

8,127

Two-Year Institutions

CUNY

 

 

 

2005

448

 

448

2007

558

 

558

Independent

 

 

 

2005

127

 

127

2007

138

 

138

Proprietary

 

 

 

2005

164

 

164

2007

114

 

114

SUNY

 

 

 

2005

1,086

 

1,086

2007

1,164

 

1,164

All Sectors

 

 

 

2005

1,825

 

1,825

2007

1,974

 

1,974

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • Presidents of the [SUNY and CUNY] colleges must be held accountable for establishing mechanisms under which faculty, within each discipline and across sectors, strengthen course-to-course and program-to-program articulation with a goal of full system-wide articulation of comparable courses and seamless transfer of AA and AS students into parallel programs by 2011-12.  As an initial milestone, the Commission recommends campuses focus on the major transfer pathways, so that by the start of the 2010-11 academic year, articulation agreements are in place that specify how every comparable lower-division course can be transferred for credit, as prerequisites for more advanced courses in parallel programs and counted toward baccalaureate degree requirements at receiving institutions within the system.  This includes agreement about required courses at the lower division, acceptable minimum standards for all lower-division courses, and levels of student performance, for each baccalaureate degree program.

 

A SUNY task force of community college and four-year college faculty will execute this recommendation.

 

  • Entry-level advisement for community college students should be strengthened overall, especially with respect to transfer options and requirements, and comprehensive information on credit transfer should be available to students on-line.  An annual audit should be undertaken for three years to determine compliance with transfer policies.

 

  • CUNY will charge an Articulation and Transfer Task Force with auditing compliance with CUNY transfer policies, reviewing transfer policies and practices, and making recommendations to facilitate transfer within CUNY, both laterally from program to program at the same degree level and vertically, from associate degree programs to baccalaureate programs, and vice versa.

 

  • SED will consult with USNY’s higher education community regarding inclusion in the standards for program registration in the Commissioner’s Regulations the provisions regarding transfer added to the Regents accreditation standards (described above) and other steps that would improve the ability of associate degree graduates of New York colleges to enter the upper division of baccalaureate programs.

 

 


  1. Affordability

    .  The Regents will continue to collaborate with higher education institutions to advocate with State and federal elected officials for an effective fiscal strategy to ensure access and an affordable higher education for all students.

 

A fall 2008 report by Fidelity Investments found that, nationwide, parents will meet only 21 percent of the cost of their children’s higher education, down from 24 percent in 2007.  A spring 2008 nationwide survey found that Americans’ most important concern about higher education is “controlling costs”; 42 percent said that it was “extremely important” for the next U.S. President to address.  A majority (51 percent) favored federal action to control public and private college tuitions.  The proportion rose to 55 percent of parents, 60 percent of those in the Northeast, and 65 percent of those with incomes below $35,000. 

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • New York funds more grant aid per student than any other state and is fourth in the nation in the proportion of low-income students in college.  New York exceeded California’s need-based grant program by 14 percent in 2006-07, when it provided 15 percent of all need based grants – and ten percent of all state student financial aid – in the nation.

 

  • In 2007-08, students with a family income of $10,766 (the median income of the lowest quintile) attending SUNY community colleges while living at home had no net cost of attendance.  TAP and Pell met full costs.  At CUNY community colleges, such students had a net cost of attendance – after TAP and Pell – equal to four percent of family income. 

 

  • Despite this, undergraduate education has become less affordable.  While a maximum TAP award covers tuition at SUNY and CUNY for full-time students, it does not cover fees, which have risen by $1,800 at SUNY.  At four-year independent institutions, the share of tuition and fees paid by a maximum TAP award has fallen from 30.0 percent to 20.7 percent.  The new increase in the maximum Pell Grant will help to meet need; however, New Yorkers whose costs of attendance exceed the combination of TAP, Pell, and expected family contribution, may have to rely on loans to meet need.

 

  • The new program of TAP for part-time students is available only to those beginning as full-time students and changing to part-time.  Students not able to begin on a full-time basis are not eligible. 

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • For low- and middle-income students, change over time in the average undergraduate tuition and fees net of TAP entitlement, by institutional type.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 15

             

Annual Undergraduate Tuition and Fees, by Sector, 2001-02 – 2007-08

Year

SUNY*

CUNY*

Independent

Proprietary

 

Four-Year

2001-02

$4,193

$3,336

$16,665

$11,988

2002-03

$4,248

$3,486

$17,794

$12,696

2003-04

$5,131

$4,286

$18,364

$13,729

2004-05

$5,247

$4.286

$19,951

$13,650

2005-06

$5,444

$4,309

$21,044

$13,787

2006-07

$5,505

$4,309

$22,762

$14,290

2007-08

$5,536

$4,311

$24,125

$15,194

 

Two-Year

2001-02

$2,641

$2,605

$8,136

$9,745

2002-03

$2,740

$2,763

$8,883

$10,422

2003-04

$2,919

$3,066

$8,851

$10,912

2004-05

$3,057

$3,066

$9,238

$11,393

2005-06

$3,243

$3,093

$9,395

$12,483

2006-07

$3,394

$3,093

$9,968

$13,052

2007-08

$3,558

$3,093

$10,567

$12,726

*for New York residents.

Note: For SUNY Four-Year, the statutory colleges at Alfred and Cornell are excluded.

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

              Table 16, below, shows the percent change in tuition and fees from 2001-02 to 2007-08, by sector and level of institution, with the change in the Consumer Price Index.

 

Table 16

 

Percent Change in Undergraduate Tuition and Fees, by Sector, 2001-02 – 2007-08

Four-Year

SUNY

32.0%

CUNY

29.2%

Independent

44.8%

Proprietary

26.7%

All Public, Nationwide

64.2%

All Private, Nationwide

36.5%

Two-Year

SUNY

34.7%

CUNY

18.7%

Independent

29.9%

Proprietary

30.6%

All Public, Nationwide

46.8%

All Private, Nationwide

N/A

Consumer Price Index

17.0%

Source: New York data -- NYSED, Higher Education Data System, National data -- College Board, “Trends in College Pricing, 2007.” Consumer Price Index -- Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2008.

 

              Between 2001-02 and 2007-08, tuition and fees for full-time undergraduates at SUNY four-year campuses who are New York State residents grew by 32.0 percent, those at CUNY senior colleges grew by 29.2 percent.  These increases were much smaller than the 64.2 percent increase in public four-year college tuition and fees (weighted by enrollment) over the same period, nationwide, reported by the College Board.  Independent four-year institution tuition and fees for full-time undergraduates grew by 44.8 percent; at four-year proprietary colleges the increase was 26.7 percent.  In comparison, the nationwide increase, weighted by enrollment at private (independent and proprietary) four-year colleges was 36.5 percent, according to the College Board. 

 

              At two-year colleges, tuition and fees for full-time students at SUNY campuses and community colleges grew by 34.7 percent (a higher rate than at SUNY four-year campuses); those at CUNY community colleges grew by 18.7 percent.  Like their four-year counterparts, these increases were much smaller than the 46.8 percent increase, in public two-year college tuition and fees (weighted by enrollment), nationwide, reported by the College Board.  Independent two-year college tuition and fees for full-time students grew by 29.9 percent.  At two-year proprietary colleges, they grew by 30.6 percent.  Nationwide data for private two-year colleges are not available.    

 

              Between 2001 and 2007, the Consumer Price Index grew by only 17 percent.

 

              SUNY Tuition Policy.  In keeping with its authority under the Education Law to regulate tuition charges following enactment of the annual budget, in November 2008, the SUNY Board of Trustees established a policy governing future tuition increases.  The new policy calls for annual increases equal to the increase in the Higher Education Price Index (HEPI) or, in years in which the State appropriation does not meet increases in fixed costs, up to a ten percent increase.  SUNY stated that the policy will provide a basis for both SUNY and its students to plan for a number of years into the future and enables students and parents to better plan the cost of obtaining a SUNY degree.  The Legislature, however, retains the power to limit the amount of tuition revenue SUNY may use to support operations.

 

              In keeping with the new policy, the Trustees increased tuition for undergraduates who are New York State residents by $310 for the spring of 2009 (a 14.3 percent increase to meet the change in HEPI since the last tuition increase, in 2003-04), to a total of $4,660 for 2008-09, and by $620 for 2009-10, to a total of $4,970 for that year.  Tuition charges for out-of-state students, for graduate study, and for professional degree programs also were increased.  

 

              Public Institutions.  The Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) provides an annual grant equal to tuition up to $5,000 for students in the lowest income categories for up to four years of undergraduate study, reducing as family income rises to a minimum of $500 for students with incomes of $80,000.  At SUNY State-operated campuses and community colleges and at CUNY senior and community colleges, students from the lowest income categories pay no net tuition; TAP covers the entire charge.  However, TAP covers only tuition, not fees.  At SUNY State-operated campuses, full-time undergraduate tuition for New York state residents accounted for 78.6 percent ($4,350) of the $5,536 charge for tuition and fees in 2007-08.  The other 21.4 percent ($1,186) was not covered by TAP (except the $75 University fee).

 

              In 2007-08, students with family incomes of $10,766 (the median income of the lowest quintile) attending SUNY community colleges while living at home had no net cost of attendance; TAP and Pell met the full cost.  At CUNY community colleges, their net cost – after TAP and Pell – equaled four percent of family income.  Students not living at home did have higher net costs resulting from food and housing costs. 

 

              Independent and Proprietary Institutions.  In the independent and proprietary sectors, TAP also provides aid equal to tuition up to $5,000.  In 2001-02, at four-year independent institutions a maximum award equaled 30.0 percent of tuition and fees.  By 2007-08, it had fallen to 20.7 percent.  At four-year proprietary colleges, it was 41.7 percent in 2001-02 and 32.9 percent in 2007-08.  At two-year independent colleges, it was 61.5 percent in 2001-02 and 47.3 percent in 2007-08.  At two-year proprietary colleges, it was 51.3 percent in 2001-02 and 39.3 percent in 2007-08.  

 

              TAP for Part-Time Study.  In 2006, the Legislature replaced the pilot part-time TAP program at CUNY with a permanent, statewide program of TAP for part-time study at independent, SUNY, and CUNY institutions.  Part-time undergraduates who had been full-time, first-time students in the prior year earning 12 semester hours in each of two consecutive terms with C averages may receive pro-rated part-time study awards.

 

              Academic Competitiveness Grants and SMART Grants.  In addition to Pell Grants, in 2006-07, nearly 25,000 New Yorkers were awarded federal Academic Competitive Grants (about 8.1 percent of all such grants that year) and more than 4,000 received SMART grants (about 6.3 percent of the nationwide total).  These were the third and second highest numbers, respectively, among states.  The grant programs are intended to encourage low-income pupils to take academically rigorous courses in high school and prepare to enter scientific and other high-demand fields.

 

              Expanded Veterans’ Tuition Program.  Legislation enacted as part of the 2008-09 State budget increased the amount veterans can receive to attend an approved college or vocational school from $1,000 per term to $2,000 per term, or the resident undergraduate tuition charge at SUNY, whichever is less.

 

Grant Recipients.        Table 17 shows student grants, loans, and supported work, by sector, for undergraduates and for graduate students, 2003-04 through 2005-06.  Table 18 shows the shares of undergraduates in each sector receiving TAP awards or Pell Grants in 2003-04 and 2005-06.  The proportion receiving TAP in 2005-06 ranged from 31.1 percent at SUNY two-year campuses to 46.9 percent at two-year proprietary colleges.  The proportion receiving Pell Grants ranged from 21.3 percent at SUNY two-year colleges to 77.5 percent at four-year proprietary colleges.

 

 

 

 

Table 17

 

Student Financial Aid at New York Colleges and Universities
2003-04 – 2005-06

Year

Grants

million $

Loans

million $

Work

million $

% Grants

% Loans

% Work

Annual FTE

Aid/FTE

Change in Aid/ FTE

Aid to Undergraduates

2-Year Colleges

CUNY Community Colleges

2003

$157.5

$16.8

$4.0

88%

9%

2%

69,796

$2,555

 

2004

$161.1

$19.1

$5.3

87%

10%

3%

71,003

$2,611

2%

2005

$153.1

$20.5

$3.7

86%

12%

2%

70,388

$2,519

-4%

Independent 2-Year Colleges

2003

$24.8

$23.3

$0.4

51%

48%

1%

4,822

$10,052

 

2004

$30.0

$25.6

$0.3

54%

46%

1%

5,419

$10,322

3%

2005

$25.7

$24.8

$0.3

51%

49%

1%

5,418

$9,377

-9%

Proprietary 2-Year Colleges

2003

$203.6

$185.7

$3.4

52%

47%

1%

31,799

$12,352

 

2004

$206.0

$190.8

$3.2

51%

48%

1%

31,875

$12,549

2%

2005

$209.2

$194.4

$3.2

51%

48%

1%

40,359

$10,081

-20%

SUNY Campuses and Community Colleges

2003

$259.4

$164.0

$6.4

60%

38%

1%

200,857

$2,140

 

2004

$273.8

$181.8

$6.2

59%

39%

1%

189,529

$2,436

14%

2005

$265.1

$196.8

$6.5

57%

42%

1%

194,627

$2,407

-1%

4-Year/Graduate Institutions

CUNY Senior Colleges

2003

$327.6

$100.2

$5.6

75%

23%

1%

110,847

$3,917

 

2004

$337.3

$91.1

$6.6

77%

21%

2%

114,181

$3,813

-3%

2005

$338.9

$94.2

$5.6

77%

21%

1%

117,280

$3,742

-2%

Independent Colleges and Universities

2003

$2,276.8

$1,913.8

$112.7

53%

44%

3%

272,129

$15,815

 

2004

$2,443.1

$1,944.8

$110.4

54%

43%

2%

268,352

$16,765

6%

2005

$2,573.1

$2,212.6

$102.2

53%

45%

2%

271,553

$18,001

7%

Proprietary Colleges

2003

$110.1

$137.8

$3.5

44%

55%

1%

22,657

$11,093

 

2004

$118.7

$150.4

$3.8

44%

55%

1%

23,394

$11,663

5%

2005

$96.9

$182.9

$3.5

34%

65%

1%

18,128

$15,629

34%

SUNY Campuses and Fashion Institute of Technology 

2003

$429.2

$679.8

$28.2

38%

60%

2%

180,283

$6,309

 

2004

$443.8

$725.4

$29.4

37%

61%

2%

174,772

$6,858

9%

2005

$464.1

$789.2

$31.3

36%

61%

2%

178,631

$7,191

5%

Aid to Graduate Students

CUNY Senior Colleges

2003

$22.4

$32.3

$8.1

35%

50%

13%

20,292

$3,173

 

2004

$25.3

$65.7

$8.3

25%

66%

8%

20,313

$4,901

54%

2005

$30.6

$71.4

$9.4

27%

64%

8%

20,488

$5,438

11%

Independent Colleges and Universities

2003

$495.2

$1,606.9

$189.2

22%

70%

8%

116,825

$19,626

 

2004

$522.2

$1,960.4

$185.9

20%

73%

7%

106,184

$25,148

28%

2005

$596.2

$1,967.9

$178.5

22%

72%

7%

118,007

$23,257

-8%

Proprietary Colleges

2003

$0.5

$10.8

$0.4

4%

92%

4%

1,292

$9,092

 

2004

$0.5

$15.6

$0.4

3%

95%

3%

1,447

$11,371

25%

2005

$0.7

$17.3

$0.5

4%

93%

3%

1,513

$12,214

7%

SUNY Campuses and FIT

2003

$77.4

$243.5

$71.5

20%

62%

18%

37,124

$10,569

 

2004

$70.1

$309.3

$70.7

16%

69%

16%

34,592

$13,010

23%

2005

$76.8

$287.9

$80.0

17%

65%

18%

33,211

$13,389

3%

FTE = Full Time Equivalent and is calculated as:

      Undergraduates: Full Time * 1/3 Part Time

      Graduates and First Professionals: Full Time + .4 * Part Time

The major aid totals include all student aid reported by institutional aid offices and the administering agencies. Federal, state, local, private, and institutional sources are included for both grants and loans (including PLUS loans). Work includes work-study programs, wages, and assistantships.
Source: NYSED, Office of Research and Information Systems, 2008.

 

Table 18

 

Proportion of Undergraduates Receiving TAP Awards or Pell Grants

2003-04 and 2005-06, by Level and Sector of Institution

Level and Sector

TAP Recipients*

Pell Grant Recipients

 

2003-04

2005-06

2003-04

2005-06

Four-Year SUNY

42.9%

43.5%

27.9%

26.5%

Four-Year CUNY

44.5%

44.3%

37.4%

37.0%

Four-Year Independent

32.1%

30.7%

26.2%

23.8%

Four-Year Proprietary

64.3%

33.7%

67.2%

77.5%

Two-Year SUNY

32.9%

31.1%

23.3%

21.3%

Two-Year CUNY

37.1%

37.5%

39.2%

39.5%

Two-Year Independent

65.4%

41.4%

58.8%

46.8%

Two-Year Proprietary

53.8%

46.9%

81.1%

60.0%

*Percent of Full-Time Undergraduates

Source: NYSED, Office of Research and Information Systems, 2008.

 

The City University of New York

 

Tuition and Fees.  CUNY continues to offer educational opportunities at a price that is well within the means of most New Yorkers.  Tuition and fees average $2,156 per semester at the senior colleges and $1,546 at the community colleges.  Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of senior college undergraduates are New York State residents attending full-time, making them eligible for both TAP and Pell grants.  The tuition of 43 percent of these students is covered completely by federal and State grants.  At the community colleges, 50 percent of students are full-time and State residents; the tuition of 57 percent of these students is covered completely by federal and State grants.  A much higher percentage of first-time freshmen than of undergraduates in general is eligible for full benefits because the rate of full-time attendance among first-year students is comparatively high: 92 percent of senior college freshmen are full-time and State residents, as are 81 percent at community colleges.

 

In addition to TAP and Pell, 5,062 CUNY students received Academic Competitiveness Grants in the fall of 2007.  Another 113 received SMART grants.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

              CICU reports that 14 percent of all New Yorkers enrolled at independent institutions come from families earning less than $20,000 annually.  Table 14, above, shows that more than 30 percent of the full-time undergraduates at four-year institutions receive TAP awards.  About 25 percent of all undergraduates receive Pell grants.  As Table 16 shows, between 2001-02 and 2007-08, average tuition and fees rose by 44.8 percent at independent four-year institutions, to $24,125 (table 15).  A maximum TAP award met only 20.7 percent of that charge.

 

              CICU states that independent four-year colleges and universities award $2.2 billion in institutional grants.  In 2004-05, the average annual grant was $7,425.

 

              At independent two-year colleges, nearly half of all full-time students receive TAP and about half of all undergraduates receive Pell.  Between 2001-02 and 2007-08, average tuition and fees rose by 29.9 percent, to $10,567.  A maximum TAP award met 47.2 percent of that charge.  

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              APC reports that it and its member colleges advocate vigorously with the Governor and the Legislature on behalf of a strong TAP program.  APC also reports that many proprietary colleges maintain lower tuition and fees than institutions in other sectors, with reduced percentage increase from year to year. (See Tables 15 and 16, above.)  They have maintained activity and technology fees level.  Some offer a guarantee to entering full-time students that they will face no tuition increases so long as they maintain full-time enrollment.  Some offer a tuition-free final semester to evening students who maintained full-time enrollment.  Some offer travel abroad scholarships for students with demonstrated financial need.  Some institutions offer credit-bearing summer courses to high school pupils at a reduced tuition charge.  

 

  • Change over time in total grant dollars per student, institutional grant dollars per student, and loan dollars per student, by institutional type.

 

The City University of New York

 

A review of trends in student financial aid received by CUNY students suggests a growing reliance on loans.  Between 2001 and 2005, loans to students at CUNY’s two-year colleges rose from seven to 12 percent of total aid packages; at its four-year colleges, loans rose from 18 to 21 percent of total aid.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

Proprietary colleges are reported to have significantly increased institutional scholarships and grants; some offer to meet full need for all graduates of local high schools.  Some have established not-for-profit foundations to raise scholarship funds.

 

  • Comparison of the amount of New York need-based undergraduate grants to the amount of state-funded, need-based undergraduate grants offered by key states and nationwide.
  • Comparison of the amount of New York need-based undergraduate grants per full-time equivalent undergraduate to the amount of state-funded, need-based undergraduate grants per full-time equivalent undergraduate offered by key states [combined].   

 

In 2006-07, states awarded $9.3 billion in aid to undergraduate and graduate students in the form of need-based grants, other grants, and non-grant aid (principally work, waivers, and loans).  Need-based grants constituted $5.5 billion (59.0 percent of the total), other grants were $2.1 billion (22.8 percent), and non-grant aid $1.7 billion (the remaining 18.2 percent). Of the $5.5 billion, $4.4 billion went to undergraduates.

 

Only seven states, including New York, provided 63 percent of the $4.4 billion in need-based grants to undergraduates.  (The other six were California, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Texas, New Jersey, and Indiana.)  Table 19, below, shows the aid from each of those states and the total for all states and the District of Columbia in 2006-07.  New York provided 19.0 percent of all the need-based undergraduate grants from states in 2006-07, and 10.1 percent of all such student financial aid.  New York’s need-based grants provided twice as much per FTE as did California’s.   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 19

 

Undergraduate Need-Based Grants Provided by Selected States, FTE Undergraduate Enrollment, and Average Grant per FTE

2006-07

State

Need-Based Undergraduate Grants

($ thousands)

Undergraduate FTE Enrollment

Average grant per FTE

New York

$827,920

800,960

$1,049.27

California

$763,008

1,500,282

$508.58

Pennsylvania

$452,928

512,715

$893.25

Illinois

$383,193

520,619

$804.37

New Jersey

$217,907

266,377

$932.86

Texas

$175,072

818,011

$458.10

Indiana

$163,394

260,404

$734.91

All 44 Others

$1,384,374

7,344,122

$188.50

51 Jurisdictions Total

$4,367,796

12,023,490

$440.23

Source: National Association of State Student Grant and Aid Programs, 2008.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

Textbook Access Act

 

              The New York State Textbook Access Act of 2008 (Article 15-C of the Education Law) requires textbook publishers to make available to faculty or other textbook adopters at institutions of higher education, recognized and approved by the Regents, the price at which it would make instructional products available to the college bookstore that would offer them to students.  It requires that textbooks be sold in the same manner as ordered by a faculty member or other textbook adopter and, in the event such a product is not available, that the bookstore, faculty, and publisher work together to provide the best possible substitute that most closely matches the requested item or items and that the publisher make the price of such item readily available.  It encourages faculty members or other textbook adopters to place orders with sufficient lead time to enable the bookstore to confirm the availability of the requested materials and, when appropriate, the availability of used textbooks or alternate digital formats.  Finally, it prohibits faculty members from demanding or accepting payment for adopting specific course materials.  The Act goes into effect on July 1, 2009.  

 

The City University of New York

 

Improving Information about Financial Aid and Improving the Application Process.  Recognizing the importance of streamlining the financial aid process and of providing students with easily accessible information, CUNY has worked hard.  Achievements include:

 

  • Merging admissions and financial aid recruiting brochures to better meet the needs of prospective students;
  • Putting the financial aid supplement questions online so that there is no longer any need for paper;
  • Writing the electronic Financial Aid Packaging (eFAP) system to allow students to view their financial aid online;
  • Improving the financial aid brochure that is included with financial aid offers to give students the rules and regulations for receiving financial aid;
  • Piloting ways for the admissions system to identify potential Academic Competitiveness Grant recipients, increasing the opportunities for students to receive these federal awards; and
  • Enhancing electronic fund transfer for student aid disbursement checks, allowing disbursement directly to student checking accounts rather than by cutting checks.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

CICU’s annual publication, “Affording College,” explains financial aid to students and families to assist them in applying for public and institutional grants and loans.  CICU also offers Paying for College workshops to help high school pupils and their families understand options.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

To assist students to make optimum use of grants and loans, some proprietary colleges offer financial aid workshops for students and parents focusing on scholarship availability, others offer scholarship, personal finance, and financial literacy workshops throughout the year.  Some offer on-line payment planning software.      

 

State Education Department

 

Student Lending, Accountability, Transparency and Enforcement Act (SLATE).  Chapter 41 of the Laws of 2007 enacted the Student Lending, Accountability, Transparency and Enforcement Act (SLATE), effective December 1, 2007.  It establishes a code of conduct for colleges, vocational institutions, and programs recognized and approved by the Board of Regents (referred to as “covered institutions”), employees of such institutions (referred to as “covered institution employees”) and lending institutions, relating to the marketing and issuance of educational loans to students and their parents to pay for or finance higher education expenses.  SLATE is a comprehensive law designed to regulate a $6 billion industry that affects 1.1 million New Yorkers at over 700 separate educational institutions/locations, nationwide, annually.  Its provisions are as follows:

 

  • Prohibits lending institutions from making gifts to covered institutions and their employees in exchange for any advantage or consideration provided to the lending institution related to educational loan activities, including revenue sharing.

 

  • Bans covered institutions and their employees from soliciting, accepting, or receiving gifts from lending institutions for any advantage related to educational loan activities, including revenue sharing.

 

  • Bans covered institution employees from receiving any remuneration for serving as a member of a lending institution’s advisory board.

 

  • Prohibits employees and agents of a lending institution from posing as covered institution employees, including staffing the covered institution’s financial aid offices with employees of the lending institution.

 

  • Bans lending institutions and covered institutions from agreeing to certain quid-pro-quo high-risk loans that would prejudice potential borrowers.

 

  • Requires any covered institution that makes a preferred lender list available to potential borrowers to disclose the process by which it selects lending institutions for its list and requires that the list contain a statement that borrowers have the right to select the education loan of their choice.

 

  • Prohibits covered institutions from linking or directing potential borrowers to any electronic master promissory notes or other loan agreements that do not provide a reasonable and convenient alternative for the borrower to complete a master promissory note with any federally approved lending institution offering the relevant loan in the state.

 

  • Requires lending institutions to disclose to covered institutions, upon request, the historic default rates of the borrowers from the covered institution, the interest rates charged to borrowers, and the number of borrowers obtaining each interest rate.

 

  • Authorizes SED to impose a civil penalty on any covered institution, covered institution employee or lending institution that violates any provision of SLATE. 

 

  • Establishes a student lending education account to receive monies from penalties.

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • The Tuition Assistance Program award schedule should be modified to provide enhanced benefits for wards of the State, excluding incarcerated persons; independent students; graduate students; and students whose family adjusted gross income falls within the $40,000 to $60,000 range.  In addition, SUNY and CUNY should develop multi-year plans to significantly reduce fees not covered by TAP or other Federal and State aid programs, and work with the State to offset campus financial losses from fee reductions with additional resources.
  • The State should establish a low-interest subsidized loan program, to be financed through the issuance of tax-exempt bonds.  All resident undergraduate and graduate students enrolled full-time in a degree program at a college or university in New York State would be eligible to apply for a low-interest loan to supplement other aid.

 

  • The Governor announced that the 2009 Executive Budget will include establishment of the low-interest loan program.

 

  • To support research on student price, beginning in 2008-09, SED will expand the Higher Education Data System’s collection of data on institutional price.

 

 


  1. Closing Performance Gaps

    .  The Regents ask institutions to focus in their master plans on student retention and on activities to help close performance gaps based on students’ economic status, ethnicity, race, or gender.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • In baccalaureate programs, 82.2 percent of all first-time students in the fall of 2006 returned in the fall of 2007.  By racial/ethnic category, 87.3 percent of Asian first-time students returned as did 83.3 percent of White students (both rates higher than the rate for all students), compared to 76.9 percent of Native American students, 77.7 percent of Hispanic students, and 75.2 percent of Black students.

 

  • Some progress has been made in closing the gap.  Between 2004 and 2007, Black students’ baccalaureate graduation rate improved from 43.6 percent to 46.9 percent; however, it was 16 points below the rate for all students.  The graduation rate of Native American students got slightly worse.  Hispanic students’ graduation rate improved significantly, from 43.4 percent to 48.3 percent.

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the baccalaureate graduation rate of students in the opportunity programs (EOP, HEOP, and SEEK) improved more than the rate for all students.  It was 20.7 points lower than the rate for all students in 2003 and only 15.4 points lower in 2007.  In 2007, Black opportunity program students’ rate was the same as for all Black students (47.3 percent vs. 46.9 percent).  For Hispanic opportunity program students it was only 1.9 points below the rate for all Hispanic students (46.4 percent vs. 48.3 percent).

   

  • In associate degree programs, 60.3 percent of all first-time students in the fall of 2006 returned in the fall of 2007, a persistence rate 21.9 percentage points below that for baccalaureate students.  By racial/ethnic category, 67.3 percent of Asian first-time students returned as did 63.1 percent of White students (higher rates than for all students), 57.8 percent of Hispanic students, 53.1 percent of Black students, and 49.7 percent of Native American students.

 

  • At the associate degree level, the Black graduation rate was the same in 2007 (15.9 percent) as in 2004 (15.8 percent); however, the gap between it and that of all students narrowed slightly.  For Native American students, the gap got significantly worse, declining from no gap in 2004 to a 7.6 point gap in 2007.

 

  • The three-year associate degree graduation rate for matriculated full-time entrants admitted through opportunity programs was 7.3 percentage points lower than the rate for all matriculated full-time entrants.  However, the gap between Black students admitted through opportunity programs and all Black entrants was only 2.1 points (13.8 percent vs. 15.9 percent).  At 1.4 points, the gap for Hispanic students was even narrower (15.1 percent vs. 16.5 percent).         

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Persistence rates from the first to second year, statewide, for all undergraduates, by racial/ethnic category, and by regular and opportunity program admission.
  • Graduation rates, statewide, for all undergraduates, by racial/ethnic category, and by regular and opportunity program admission
  • Length of time to degree, statewide, for all undergraduates, by racial/ethnic category, and by regular and opportunity program admission [combined].

 

              In relation to these indicators, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Seek additional State and federal investment to expand the highly effective opportunity programs and financial aid for needy students.             

 

Racial/Ethnic Gaps in Degree Completion.  Figures 1 and 2 and Tables 20 and 21, below, show six-year baccalaureate graduation rates, USNY-wide, by racial/ethnic category for all matriculated first-time, full-time entrants and for those admitted through the educational opportunity programs (SEEK and College Discovery at CUNY, EOP at SUNY, and HEOP at independent institutions).  Tables 22 and 23 show the equivalent three-year graduation rates for associate degree program students.  Students in the opportunity programs must be both economically and educationally disadvantaged.  They may not exceed statewide family income ceilings and must have been inadmissible by the institution’s regular admission standards.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 20

 

Matriculated Full-Time Entrants Earning Baccalaureate Degrees in 6 Years from Institution Originally Entered, by Racial/Ethnic Category, 2003-2007

Racial/Ethnic Category

Year

 

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

Black

42.1%

43.6%

43.5%

45.2%

46.9%

Hispanic

43.1%

43.4%

45.3%

48.1%

48.3%

Native American

50.9%

53.9%

43.8%

43.1%

52.6%

Asian

64.2%

65.1%

67.4%

66.8%

67.8%

White

65.3%

65.2%

65.9%

66.7%

67.5%

Nonresident Alien

60.4%

60.9%

59.2%

62.3%

62.8%

Category Unknown

61.3%

65.2%

62.2%

58.4%

57.8%

All Categories

60.5%

61.0%

61.4%

62.2%

62.9%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Among full-time students earning baccalaureate degrees from the institution they first entered six years earlier, Black students earned degrees in 2007 at a slightly higher rate than in 2004; however, it was 16 percentage points below the rate for all full-time students; graduation rates of Native American students became slightly poorer; the gap between them and all students widened from 7.2 points in 2004 to 10.3 points in 2007; graduation rates of Hispanic students became significantly better, with the gap closing from 17.7 points in 2004 to 14.6 in 2007.  In both years, Asian students had higher baccalaureate graduation rates than all students.

 

Table 21

 

Matriculated Full-Time Entrants through Opportunity Programs Earning Baccalaureate Degrees in 6 Years from the Institution Originally Entered,

by Racial/Ethnic Category, 2003-2007

Racial/Ethnic Category

Year

 

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

Black

39.3%

46.5%

40.1%

45.7%

47.3%

Hispanic

38.2%

45.1%

42.1%

45.2%

46.4%

Native American

24.1%

36.8%

37.5%

42.1%

28.6%

Asian

49.1%

51.3%

53.3%

51.7%

51.7%

White

36.7%

45.8%

42.3%

44.9%

43.3%

Nonresident Alien

--

40.0%

37.5%

42.9%

23.5%

Category Unknown

49.6%

57.3%

51.7%

57.4%

61.2%

All Categories

39.8%

46.8%

43.5%

46.7%

47.5%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Comparing Tables 20 and 21 shows that the graduation rate of students in the opportunity programs improved more than the rate for all students.  It was 20.7 points lower than the rate for all students in 2003 and only 15.4 points lower in 2007.  In 2007, Black opportunity program students’ rate was the same as for all Black students (47.3 percent vs. 46.9 percent).  For Hispanic opportunity program students it was only 1.9 points below the rate for all Hispanic students (46.4 percent vs. 48.3 percent).

 

In 2007, there was a 24 point gap between the graduation rate of Native American opportunity program students and all Native American students; however, there was considerable variation from year to year in their graduation rates.  The opportunity program student rate rose from 37.5 percent in 2005 to 42.1 percent in 2006, then fell to 28.6 percent in 2007, as an example.

 

Figure 1

 

not available at this time

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Figure 2

 

not available at this time

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

             

Table 22

 

Matriculated Full-Time Entrants Earning Associate Degrees in 3 Years from Institution Originally Entered, by Racial/Ethnic Category, 2003-2007

Racial/Ethnic Category

Year

 

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

Black

13.9%

15.8%

14.8%

15.1%

15.9%

Hispanic

14.4%

15.7%

15.5%

16.5%

16.5%

Native American

21.3%

24.6%

15.1%

17.2%

15.8%

Asian

22.4%

21.1%

23.3%

20.3%

22.8%

White

29.4%

29.6%

29.1%

28.4%

27.5%

Nonresident Alien

29.2%

29.8%

27.2%

26.5%

26.4%

Unknown

33.4%

29.0%

24.0%

26.3%

26.1%

Total

24.3%

24.5%

23.8%

23.5%

23.4%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

For students enrolling in associate degree programs three years earlier:

 

  • Black full-time students earned associate degrees from the institution they first entered three years earlier at the same rate in 2007 as in 2004; the gap narrowed from 8.7 to 7.5 percentage points below the rate for all full-time students.

 

  • In 2004, associate degree graduation rates of Native American students equaled the rate for all students; by 2007, it had fallen 7.6 points below the rate for all students.

 

  • The gap narrowed for Hispanic full-time students (as it did for those earning baccalaureate degrees), from 8.8 points below the associate degree graduation rate for all students in 2004 to 6.9 points below in 2007.

 

  • For Asian students, the gap was almost eliminated, narrowing from 3.4 percentage points below the rate for all students in 2004 to 0.6 percent below in 2007.

 

Table 23

 

Matriculated Full-Time Entrants through Opportunity Programs Earning Associate Degrees in 3 Years from the Institution Originally Entered

by Racial/Ethnic Category, 2003-2007

Racial/Ethnic Category

Year

 

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

Black

11.7%

13.9%

15.1%

14.7%

13.8%

Hispanic

13.6%

15.2%

15.8%

15.9%

15.1%

Native American

18.2%

41.2%

17.6%

25.0%

--

Asian

20.2%

20.0%

25.0%

18.9%

17.5%

White

21.0%

18.7%

22.1%

19.9%

20.0%

Nonresident Alien

25.0%

--

27.3%

20.0%

100.0%

Unknown

14.0%

23.6%

18.0%

22.7%

16.3%

Total

15.4%

16.2%

17.9%

16.9%

16.1%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

              Tables 22 and 23 show that the three-year associate degree graduation rate for matriculated full-time entrants admitted through opportunity programs was 7.3 percentage points lower than the rate for all matriculated full-time entrants in 2007.  However, the gap between Black students admitted through opportunity programs and all Black entrants was only 2.1 points (13.8 percent vs. 15.9 percent).  At 1.4 points, the gap for Hispanic students was even narrower (15.1 percent vs. 16.5 percent).     

 

StateUniversity of New York.  SUNY reports the following graduation rates for students enrolled through the Educational Opportunity Program (EOP):

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 24

 

State
University of New York

EOP Graduation Rates

2001 -- 2005

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

48.2%

47.1%

45.0%

51.9%

50.1%

Source; SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

EOP students’ graduation rates were stable over the period.

 

Racial/Ethnic Gaps in Retention.  Lower graduation rates of some racial/ethnic groups stem in part from lower first- to second-year retention rates.  Tables 25 through 28 show those rates for all students and students admitted through the opportunity programs.

 

In baccalaureate programs, 82.2 percent of all first-time students in the fall of 2006 returned in the fall of 2007.  By racial/ethnic category, 87.3 percent of Asian first-time students returned as did 83.3 percent of White students (both rates higher than the rate for all students), compared to 76.9 percent of Native American students, 77.7 percent of Hispanic students, and 75.2 percent of Black students.  Changes from the prior year did not show significant improvement.

 

In associate degree programs, 60.3 percent of all first-time students in the fall of 2006 returned in the fall of 2007, a persistence rate 21.9 percentage points below that for baccalaureate students.  By racial/ethnic category, 67.3 percent of Asian first-time students returned as did 63.1 percent of White students (higher rates than for all students), 57.8 percent of Hispanic students, 53.1 percent of Black students, and 49.7 percent of Native American students.  Changes from the prior year did not show significant improvement.

 

Table 25

 

First-Time Baccalaureate Students Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007,

by Racial/Ethnic Category

Racial/Ethnic Category

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

Black

73.0%

73.6%

75.2%

Hispanic

75.7%

76.5%

77.7%

Native American

68.2%

72,9%

76.9%

Asian

86.1%

86.7%

87.3%

White

82.4%

82.0%

83.3%

Nonresident Alien

78.8%

84.8%

84.3%

Unknown

78.2%

79.3%

81.1%

Total

81.8%

81.3%

82.2%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Table 26

 

First-Time Baccalaureate Students Admitted through Opportunity Programs

Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007,

by Racial/Ethnic Category

Racial/Ethnic Category

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

Black

80.2%

82.9%

79.7%

Hispanic

80.3%

80.6%

80.1%

Native American

73.3%

91.7%

100.0%

Asian

87.4%

85.1%

85.3%

White

81.0%

76.2%

77.9%

Nonresident Alien

90.6%

89.5%

95.2%

Unknown

86.5%

86.2%

84.3%

Total

81.8%

81.8%

81.0%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Table 27

 

First-Time Associate Degree Students Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007,

by Racial/Ethnic Category

Racial/Ethnic Category

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

Black

53.9%

56.7%

53.1%

Hispanic

55.3%

55.7%

57.8%

Native American

52.0%

54.0%

49.7%

Asian

67.0%

67.0%

67.3%

White

63.0%

63.0%

63.1%

Nonresident Alien

70.3%

71.1%

70.1%

Unknown

58.1%

54.6%

53.8%

Total

59.9%

59.4%

60.3%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Comparing Tables 27 and 28 (below) shows that entering full-time opportunity program students in associate degree programs return for a second year at a higher rate than the rate for all students, although the general population is catching up.  In 2005, they bettered the general population by 3.4 points, in 2006, by 3.1 points, and in 2007 by 2.3 points.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 28

 

First-Time Associate Degree Students Admitted through Opportunity Programs Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007,

by Racial/Ethnic Category

Racial/Ethnic Category

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

Black

63.1%

62.0%

61.2%

Hispanic

65.8%

62.5%

63.3%

Native American

46.7%

40.9%

33.3%

Asian

76.4%

75.4%

76.7%

White

58.4%

59.4%

59.4%

Nonresident Alien

100.0%

62.5%

61.0%

Unknown

51.3%

64.2%

56.3%

Total

63.3%

62.5%

62.6%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

             

The picture for Black and Hispanic students is similar.  The average persistence rate of Black opportunity program students over the three years was 7.5 points higher than the rate for all Black students.  The average for Hispanic opportunity program students was 7.6 points higher than that for all Hispanic students.  The persistence rates of Native American opportunity program students, however, were lower than the rates for all Native American students, by an average of nearly 12 percentage points.     

 

The City University of New York

 

Since the Statewide Plan was submitted, CUNY has continued to attract students of color, women, and students with disabilities.  While total freshman admissions grew by 20 percent between 2003 and 2007, Hispanic enrollments in the freshman class rose by 26 percent and Black enrollment by 18 percent.  Similarly, as the size of the freshman class entering associate degree programs expanded by 22 percent, Hispanic enrollment rose by 37 percent, while Blacks posted a growth rate of only 16 percent.  Women now constitute 60 percent of undergraduates, a percentage that has remained fairly constant in recent years. 

 

Performance Gaps.  CUNY closely monitors the academic performance of its students, including that of members of groups traditionally under-represented in higher education.  As part of the Access to Success Initiative sponsored by the Education Trust and the National Association of System Heads, CUNY has committed itself to reducing by one-half the access and performance gaps between under-represented minorities and other students by 2015.  As a part of this initiative, CUNY has also targeted the deficits between low-income students and their peers.

 

On some measures, CUNY’s Black and Hispanic students do about as well as other students.  For example, for the 2006 cohort of first-time freshmen entering baccalaureate programs, the difference in one-year retention rates between Black students and White students was only 3.3 percentage points and for Hispanic and White students, only 4.2 percentage points.  Over time these differences widen, however, a matter of great concern to the University.  After six years, the graduation rate for Black students was 13.1 points lower than that for White students in the 2001 freshman class, while for Hispanic students the differential was 14.6 percentage points.

 

For the class of students beginning CUNY associate degree programs in fall 2006, the gaps in the one-year retention rate were somewhat larger than they were for baccalaureate students, at 8.5 points for Black and White students, and 6.4 percentage points for Hispanic and White students.  The differential in six-year graduation rates is of the same order of magnitude, with a Black-White difference of 7.7 points and a Hispanic-White disparity of 7.0 points.

 

New Program Implementation.  To address differences in entrance to CUNY and academic performance between members of underrepresented and other groups, CUNY has advanced significantly with implementation of programs that were anticipated four years ago.  The Chancellor’s Initiative on the Black Male in Education (BMI) is now well under way and has established a strong foundation of work.  Projects have been undertaken on all CUNY senior, comprehensive, and community college campuses, focusing primarily on outreach and retention through mentorship, student development, and pipeline programs.  Though targeted toward Black males, projects do not discriminate on the basis of race or gender and serve as models for improving educational outcomes for all students.  All BMI programs and activities are open to all eligible students, faculty and staff, without regard to race, gender, national origin or other characteristic.  Over 3,000 CUNY students and prospective students have been reached through BMI-sponsored diversity recruitment and academic support activities.

 

During the program’s first two academic years, funds from the New York City Council provided BMI’s sole funding source.  As part of an ongoing effort to obtain external funding, in 2007 BMI secured $35,000 from the Goldman Sachs Foundation to supplement funds for three projects: the College Success Initiative: Learning by Teaching at the College of Staten Island; the Male Educational Ladders Initiative, a targeted GED program at Medgar Evers College; and the College Initiative, a University-wide program based at Lehman College that assists formerly incarcerated individuals in making the transition to higher education.

 

BMI also secured a large grant from the Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation and the Schott Foundation for Public Education to implement an education awareness and teacher development project, the Teachers as Leaders Project.  The project represents a novel strategy that exposes underrepresented students, particularly Black males, to education and teaching careers within the context of a BMI program that also offers appealing mentorship, academic, and social supports.  The Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation signed a Memorandum of Understanding with The Schott Foundation for Public Education providing for funding up to $365,000 per year for 2007-08 and 2008-09 to support this Project.  In addition to serving as the fiscal manager for this grant, The Schott Foundation provides support for two external researchers to evaluate the project and conduct related research.

 

University Summer Immersion Programs.  CUNY has fulfilled its promises to continue the University Summer Immersion Programs to build students’ college preparation in reading, writing, and math; continued summer programs (including ESL, orientation sessions, and math and science bridge courses) to address particular student needs; continued the SEEK and CD programs to provide academic and counseling support; and offered academic support (including advising and tutorial programs).  Learning communities, which have shown notable promise at Kingsborough Community College, are also being introduced elsewhere in CUNY.  In addition, the University has improved the quality of information available about the assessment tests that are used to place students into developmental course work and determine their readiness to exit from it and take credit-bearing courses.  A number of colleges are now offering test preparation workshops to assist students taking the tests for the first time.

 

International Student Services.  Efforts continue to centralize and develop CUNY’s international student services.  A centralized, Web-based guide for international students has been developed.  Professional development opportunities for campus-based international student advisors have increased awareness of new federal regulations and of trends in cross-cultural communication.  A Request for Proposals has been developed to promote good practices, including retention/mentoring initiatives for international students on the CUNY campuses.  Finally, the Central Office of Student Affairs established an ongoing relationship with the Department of State in which it serves as the official sponsor for the CUNY J-1 Student Exchange Consortium Program.  The Consortium allows all CUNY institutions, notably the community colleges, to benefit equally from international student exchange programs.

 

Veterans Services.  Serving veterans also remains an important priority at CUNY.  The University has implemented Project PROVE (Project for Return and Opportunity in Veterans Education) to support and mentor students who are veterans.  Responses to a Request for Proposals have identified and developed good practices in facilitating outreach to veterans; promoted program enhancement for student veteran retention; and worked to strengthen the academic success of student veterans.  Nine campus RFP projects were awarded in the summer of 2008 in the project’s third year. 

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

              CICU reports that 41 percent of Hispanic students, statewide, are enrolled in independent four-year colleges and universities.  In 2005-06, independent institutions awarded 57 percent of all baccalaureate and graduate degrees conferred on Hispanic students.

 

              Recognizing that the availability of Hispanic faculty can stimulate Hispanic students to enroll in college, CICU reports that, between 2001 and 2005, independent four-year colleges and universities added 158 full-time faculty members who were Hispanic (from 743 to 901), for a 21.3 percent increase.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              APC reports that some proprietary colleges are basing admission decisions on ability-to-succeed criteria.  Some are providing strong guidance on choice of program, making increased use of placement exams, tracking attendance to spot problems, requiring weekly meetings with students struggling academically, mandating use of learning centers, requiring students to take more time in remedial classes, added staff for tutoring and support services, and assigning tutors to students in remedial classes.  Some have developed first-year experience programs, initiated success skill seminars and required study skills courses, required increased writing in order to improve written communication skills, and fostered both faculty and peer support.

 

State Education Department

 

An SED report highlighting programs and pathways that smooth the transition and broaden access to college summarizes institutional practices associated with improved persistence and learning.  SED uses its findings in working with institutions with substantial numbers of high-risk students or that are addressing issues relating to student persistence or attainment.

 

              OpportunityPrograms.  Annually, the Collegiate Science and Technology Entry Program (CSTEP) enrolls approximately 4,500 students at 50 USNY higher education institutions.  In 2005-06, 73 percent of CSTEP seniors graduated and 48 percent of students enrolled attained a 3.0 or better GPA.  Thirty percent of graduating seniors enrolled in graduate or professional studies; another 31 percent were employed in targeted professional fields.

 

              The Arthur O. Eve Higher Education Opportunity Program (HEOP) has a success rate unparalleled in higher education nationwide.  To participate, students must be inadmissible according to the independent college’s or university’s regular admission criteria and meet the economic criteria common to HEOP, EOP at SUNY, and SEEK and College Discovery at CUNY.  For the most recent student cohort, 58 percent of HEOP entering freshmen at the 59 participating institutions graduated, exceeding the national rate of 51.8 percent for four-year institutions; 75 percent of those graduates went on to graduate or professional education or were employed on graduation. 

 

  • Length of time to degree, statewide, for all undergraduates, by racial/ethnic category and by regular or opportunity program admission.

 

              There has been some progress in closing the gap.  Table 29 shows time to baccalaureate degree, 2003 through 2007, by racial/ethnic category of degree recipient. 

 

 

Table 29

 

Time to Baccalaureate Degree, by Racial/Ethnic Category of Recipient, 2003 -- 2007

Year

Completed

In 4 Years

Completed

In 5 Years

Completed

In 6 Years

4 Years as %

of 6 Years

Black Recipients

2003

22.7%

37.1%

42.1%

53.9%

2004

24.4%

39.0%

43.6%

56.0%

2005

25.4%

38.8%

43.4%

58.5%

2006

27.5%

40.9%

45.2%

60.8%

2007

28.8%

42.6%

46.9%

61.4%

Hispanic Recipients

2003

24.8%

37.9%

43.1%

57.5%

2004

25.1%

38.9%

43.4%

57.8%

2005

27.4%

41.0%

45.3%

60.5%

2006

30.2%

43.9%

48.1%

62.8%

2007

29.9%

44.0%

48.3%

61.9%

Native American Recipients

2003

35.5%

47.4%

50.9%

69.7%

2004

29.7%

50.6%

53.9%

55.1%

2005

27.7%

41.0%

43.8%

63.2%

2006

30.8%

41.7%

43.1%

71.5%

2007

34.9%

50.2%

52.6%

66.3%

Asian Recipients

2003

44.0%

60.1%

64.2%

68.5%

2004

46.0%

60.4%

65.1%

70.7%

2005

48.1%

63.2%

67.4%

71.4%

2006

48.1%

62.5%

66.8%

72.0%

2007

48.7%

63.2%

67.8%

71.8%

White Recipients

2003

50.1%

62.8%

65.3%

76.7%

2004

50.6%

62.6%

65.2%

77.6%

2005

51.7%

63.7%

65.9%

78.5%

2006

51.8%

64.1%

66.7%

77.7%

2007

52.6%

64.7%

67.5%

77.9%

Nonresident Alien Recipients

2003

47.4%

57.9%

60.8%

78.0%

2004

47.8%

58.5%

60.9%

78.5%

2005

47.3%

57.2%

59.2%

79.9%

2006

49.4%

59.4%

62.3%

79.3%

2007

49.0%

60.2%

62.6%

78.3%

All Recipients

2003

44.2%

57.2%

60.5%

73.1%

2004

45.1%

57.4%

61.0%

73.9%

2005

64.2%

58.7%

61.4%

75.2%

2006

46.6%

59.1%

62.2%

74.9%

2007

47.3%

59.7%

62.9%

75.2%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Between 2003 and 2007, the six-year graduation rate for all baccalaureate degree recipients improved by 2.4 percentage points, from 60.5 percent to 62.9 percent.  In 2007, 75.2 percent of those earning a degree in six years did so in only four years.  Black baccalaureate degree recipients’ graduation rate increased at twice the rate for all students (4.8 percentage points), from 42.1 percent to 46.9 percent.  In 2007, 61.4 percent of those earning a degree in six years did so in four years.  Hispanic recipients’ rate also improved more than did the rate of all students, by 5.3 percentage points, from 43.1 percent to 48.3 percent.  In 2007, 61.9 percent of those earning a degree in six years did so in four.  The graduation rate of Native American students was almost unchanged, improving by only 1.7 percentage points, from 50.9 percent to 52.6 percent.  In 2007, 66.3 percent of those earning a degree in six years did so in four.  The six-year graduation rate of Asian recipients improved by 3.6 percentage points (1.5 times the rate for all recipients), from 64.2 percent in 2003 to 67.8 percent in 2007.  In 2007, 71.8 percent of those earning a degree in six years did so in four years.

             

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • Given their importance and long-standing track record of success, increased financial support should be provided for the opportunity programs for economically and academically disadvantaged citizens, including: College Discovery (CD) and Search for Education, Elevation and Knowledge (SEEK) at CUNY; Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) at SUNY; and the independent sector’s Higher Education Opportunity Program (HEOP).

 

  • The Regents seek funding to expand the HEOP and CSTEP programs to assist greater numbers of disadvantaged students to finish college.

 

  • The Statewide Plan identified the following steps to improve retention and graduation and urged all institutions enrolling undergraduates to implement them:

 

  • Adopting retention and improvement plans (if they have not already done so) with concrete goals to be met and resources to be allocated and assess their activities to achieve those goals.

 

  • Continuing to increase educational quality and to demand that students -- especially first-year students -- meet high standards.

 

  • Giving students clear information and advisement on the institution’s expectations of performance in terms of its standards, especially for first-generation higher education students and students from at-risk backgrounds or with marginal prior preparation.

 

  • Working with feeder schools to help them meet the Regents goal that graduating high school seniors are prepared for college and to assure that middle school and high school pupils have the information they and their families need concerning academic demands, costs of attendance, and sources of financial aid. 

 

  • Providing academic, financial, social, and personal support - including faculty, staff, and peer advising; counseling and mentoring; and other resources - when students need such support in order to help them stay in college.

 

  • Increasing opportunities for student interactions with students, faculty, and staff to minimize isolation, particularly in classes and other student-learning activities, especially for first-generation college students and those from groups underrepresented in higher education, from at-risk backgrounds, or with marginal prior preparation.

 

  • Focusing on students newly admitted to the institution to assure that they are well oriented to its expectations and services, are able to access academic, social, and personal support, and interact with their fellow students and with faculty and staff.  

 

  • Adopting policies that recognize transfer credit on the basis of course equivalency to maximize retention of credit transfer students.

 

  • Using institutional financial aid to encourage full-time attendance rather than part-time attendance, and to reduce the need to hold off-campus jobs demanding more than 20 hours of work per week.

 

SED will continue to encourage institutions to adopt these strategies.  Self-study instructions for reregistration peer reviews and for peer reviews related to requests to move to a new level of study now ask the institution to analyze its use of these steps and directions to peer review teams ask that their reports assess their use. 

 

 


  1. Students with Disabilities

    .  The Regents as institutions to focus in their master plans on access and success for their students who have disabilities.  The Regents will work with the higher education community to assure that institutions have adequate financial support to maintain and initiate appropriate programs and services for these students.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the number of students with self-reported disabilities grew by 8.2 percent, at a time when total enrollment grew by only 3.6 percent.

 

  • Six-year baccalaureate graduation rates for students with self-reported disabilities improved by 2.8 percentage points between 2004 and 2007 and were only 1.0 point lower than the rate for all students in 2007.

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Change over time in enrollment, statewide and by sector, of students self-reporting disabilities.

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Increase the number of students with disabilities transitioning directly from high schools to vocational rehabilitation training programs, employment and/or college.

 

Table 30 shows that, between 2003-04 and 2007-08, the number of students with self-reported disabilities enrolling USNY-wide continued to increase.  It grew by 8.2 percent between fall 2003 and fall 2006, from 38,230 to 41,383.  Table 1, above, shows that total enrollment grew by only 3.6 percent over the same period.  Consequently, in 2003, students with self-reported disabilities constituted 3.4 percent of all students; by 2006, they were 3.6 percent of all students.

 

 Table 30

 

Enrollment of Students with Disabilities, 2003-2007

 

State University of New York

The City University of New York

Independent Institutions

Proprietary Colleges

USNY

Total

2003

18,762

4,481

14,121

866

38,230

2004

20,219

4,467

15,207

921

40,824

2005

20,274

4,356

14,822

793

40,245

2006

21,196

4,544

14,891

752

41,383

2007

to be added

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

The City University of New York

 

In 2003, CUNY colleges had 4,481 students with self-reported disabilities and 4,544 in 2006 (a 1.4 percent increase).  They were 2.1 percent of all CUNY students in 2003 and 2.0 percent in 2006.  CUNY reported 4,561 such students in the fall of 2007.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

Independent institutions enrolled 14,121 students with self-reported disabilities in 2003 and 14,871 in 2006, for a 5.3 percent increase.  They were 3.2 percent of all independent sector students in 2003 and in 2006. 

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

Proprietary colleges had 866 students with self-reported disabilities in 2003 and only 752 in 2006, for a decrease of 13.2 percent.  They were 1.9 percent of all proprietary sector students in 2003 and 1.6 percent in 2006. 

 

State
University of New York

 

In all four years, SUNY campuses and community colleges enrolled the most students with self-identified disabilities, followed by independent institutions, CUNY colleges, and proprietary colleges.  SUNY had 18,762 such students in 2003 and 20,921 in 2006, for an 11.5 percent increase (about one and one-half times the USNY-wide percentage increase).  They were 4.6 percent of all SUNY students in 2003 and 5.0 percent in 2006. 

 

  • Students with self-reported disabilities transferring from two-year to four-year institutions, statewide.

 

State
University of New York

 

              SUNY reports the following numbers of students with disabilities transferring from two-year institutions to SUNY four-year campuses:

 

Table 31

 

State
University of New York

Students with Disabilities Transferring into Four-Year Campuses from Two-Year Institutions, 2003 – 2007

Fall 2003

Fall 2004

Fall 2005

Fall 2006

Fall 2007

219

243

256

199

589

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

Over the period, the number of students with disabilities transferring to SUNY four-year campuses from two-year institutions grew by 168.9 percent.

 

  • Graduation rates of students with self-reported disabilities, statewide and by sector.

 

Table 32 compares associate degree and baccalaureate graduation rates of first-time students with disabilities with all first-time students’ rates.  The proportion of full-time students with self-reported disabilities earning baccalaureate degrees over six years from the institution they entered initially grew from 59.1 percent in 2004 to 59.9 percent in 2005, to 64.2 percent in 2006, which was higher than the proportion of all full-time, first-time students, then declined to 61.9 percent in 2007.

 

Table 32

 

Graduation Rates of First-Time Students with Disabilities

Compared to All First-Time Students, 2004 – 2007

 

First-Time Entrants Earning Associate Degrees from the Same Institution in Three Years

First-Time Entrants Earning Baccalaureate Degrees from the Same Institution in Six Years

Year

Students with Disabilities

All Students

Students with Disabilities

All Students

2004

23.8%

24.5%

59.1%

61.0%

2005

19.8%

23.8%

59.9%

61.4%

2006

18.7%

23.5%

64.2%

62.2%

2007

20.3%

23.4%

61.9%

62.9%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Six-year baccalaureate graduation rates of full-time students with self-reported disabilities improved in each sector as well.  At SUNY campuses, the proportion increased from 52.1 percent in 2004 to 53.0 percent in 2006.  At CUNY, it nearly doubled, growing from 28.2 percent in 2004 to 55.1 percent in 2006.  At independent institutions, the six-year baccalaureate graduation rate increased from 64.1 percent in 2004 to 67.2 percent in 2006.  In the proprietary sector, it increased from 50.0 percent in 2004 to 72.1 percent in 2006, the highest of any sector.

 

USNY-wide, the proportion of full-time students with self-reported disabilities earning associate degrees in three years from the institution they initially entered declined from 23.8 percent in 2004 to 19.8 in 2005 to 18.7 percent in 2006.

 

SUNY campuses and community colleges and independent institutions both saw declining graduation rates.  At SUNY, the proportion of students with self-reported disabilities earning associate degrees in three years declined from 24.4 percent in 2004 to 20.0 percent in 2006.  At independent institutions, the proportion was 26.4 percent in 2004 and only 4.3 percent in 2006.

 

CUNY colleges and proprietary colleges both saw increases.  At CUNY the proportion increased from 12.2 percent in 2004 to 13.1 percent in 2006.  In the proprietary sector, it grew from 26.7 percent in 2004 to 36.8 percent in 2006.  

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              APC reports that early and continuous intervention is important.  Some proprietary colleges have increased the use of such technological aids as specialized software for the visually hearing, Kurzweil scanners, specialized keyboards, sound devices, and posture support systems.  Some augment counseling staffs with personnel with training and experience in working with students with disabilities, including full-time coordinators of services to students with disabilities.  Some have introduced on-line programs to meet the needs of students with physical disabilities. 

 

  • Success of a Regents priority legislative proposal to provide funds to colleges to improve services for students with disabilities.

 

State Education Department

 

During this period, the Legislature did not enact the Regents proposal to provide funds to colleges to improve services for students with disabilities.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

The City University of New York

 

In keeping with its plans and projections, CUNY has achieved remarkable progress in its efforts to serve students with disabilities.

 

  • In order to establish a disability Web site on its Portal, CUNY first undertook a comprehensive effort to ensure, to the greatest extent possible, that the Portal itself was accessible to students with disabilities.  It has contracted with Kognito, Inc., to develop an accessible, interactive Web site to provide information and training to all members of the CUNY community on disability issues; the site should be launched by the spring of 2009.  “Reasonable Accommodations,” a resource guide for faculty and staff, has been placed on the CUNY Portal..

 

  • The CUNY Office of Student Affairs has established the Learning Disabilities Project at City College, which supplies technical assistance to all CUNY disability services professionals and faculty in their efforts to provide reasonable accommodation and support to students with learning disabilities. This project also offers students low-cost referrals to community providers for psychoeducational assessments.

 

  • Each April, CUNY Disability Awareness Month features significant faculty and staff development programs centered on disability issues.  Activities have included a three-day training program for faculty and staff on the Americans with Disabilities Act, and CUNY’s hosting of the Society of Disability Studies annual conference, a gathering of the world’s foremost disability studies scholars.

 

  • Pre-production work on a marketing video for use by disability coordinators and admissions officers is complete.  CUNY is beginning discussions with PBS about producing this video as a public service announcement and running it in regular rotation via PBS affiliates.

 

  • CUNY has developed a strategic plan to create more meaningful access to college for high school pupils with disabilities.  Conceived in order to meet the burgeoning demand for higher education opportunities for these pupils and to ensure that they are prepared for the demanding transition to college life, CUNY proposes creating “College Access Now,” a comprehensive, holistic program.

 

  • Over the last four years, more than 2,000 CUNY students with disabilities have received accessible transportation services to participate in co-curricular opportunities through the New York Community Trust Transportation Grant.

 

  • CUNY has established an Office of Deaf & Hard-of-Hearing Services to assist campuses in lowering costs and improving quality of services to deaf and hard-of-hearing students.  It has recently hired its first full-time interpreter and expects to dramatically lessen CUNY’s reliance on agency-provided services by 2009.

 

  • Accessibility solutions have been devised to make the CUNY COMPASS and CPE exams accessible to most students with disabilities.  CUNY has established a University-wide committee to consider waivers and substitutions for students for whom these exams prove inaccessible.

 

  • Through a USDE grant, a PeopleTech project has been created to integrate faculty, students with disabilities, and assistive technology and related teaching strategies.

 

  • Students with disabilities are represented on roughly half of campus Technology Fee committees.  The Central Administration will not approve any campus Tech Fee plan that does not explicitly address the access needs of students with disabilities.

 

State Education Department

 

              In 2008, SED and CUNY established the Linking Employment, Academics and Disability Services (LEADS) project to address the underemployment and unemployment of students with disabilities through comprehensive support and facilitated referral for services from SED’s Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities office.  LEADS is operational on 17 CUNY campuses.

 

Next Steps

 

  • SED will continue implementing activities in the Statewide Plan and the P-16 Plan, including increasing “the number of students with disabilities transitioning directly from high schools to vocational training programs, employment and/or college.”

 

  • SED will seek to increase the number of New York college students with disabilities accessing VESID and related supports with a focus on improved employment outcomes on graduation.


  • Smooth Student Transition from PreK-12 to Higher Education

 


  1. Preparation for College

    .  The Regents will strive to eliminate gaps in student performance (PreK-12) based on economic status, race, ethnicity, or gender.

 

The P-16 Plan identifies as one of USNY’s Aims that “Everyone will graduate from high school ready for work, higher education, and citizenship.”  Most 12th grade pupils plan to go on to some form of postsecondary education (degree or nondegree).  In 2003-04, an estimated 82.6 percent planned to do so, including 66.4 percent inside and 16.2 percent outside the State.  For the 2004-05 class, 82.9 percent planned to go on to postsecondary education, including 66.0 percent in the State and 16.9 percent outside the State.  (A change in the way the New York City Department of Education computes estimated proportions means that 2005-06 data are not comparable.)

 

Education Week’s “Quality Counts 2008” identifies New York as one of only three states that require all pupils to finish a college-preparatory curriculum in order to graduate from high school.  (The other two are Rhode Island and Texas.)

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • To assure that every high school graduate is prepared for higher education, work, and citizenship, the Board of Regents is reviewing and updating the State Learning Standards.  The reviews are being undertaken in collaboration with representatives from higher education institutions, including those with teacher preparation programs, to strengthen the alignment between expectations and knowledge and skills needed for both high school graduation and college-level work.

 

  • The first annual Excelsior Scholars Program was launched in 2007-08 to provide an opportunity for high performing 7th grade pupils to participate in advanced mathematics and science coursework at local colleges.  In the summer of 2008, 642 7th grade pupils engaged in rigorous, hands-on, real world math and science applications at 13 colleges and universities.

 

  • The public high school graduation rate, statewide, improved from 65.8 percent in 2005 to 68.6 percent in 2007.  At the end of August 2007, the rate increased to 71.1 percent.  For pupils taking up to five years, the completion rates were 71.8 percent in 2005 and 73.3 percent in 2006.

 

  • In 2007, more than 23 percent of the high school graduating class in New York earned scores of three or higher on Advanced Placement exams -- the nation’s highest percentage – compared to about 15 percent for the nation as a whole.

 

  • In 2007, over 60,000 pupils USNY-wide benefited from coordinated high school – college connections through programs including Liberty Partnerships, Learn and Serve America, and the Science and Technology Entry Program.

 

  • In 2006-07, 89 percent of graduating pupils who participated in the Science and Technology Entry Program (STEP) earned Regents diplomas and 85 percent entered college.

 

  • Through the Liberty Partnership Program (LPP) 55 colleges and universities collaborated with schools and other stakeholders to deliver comprehensive pre-college drop-out prevention programs to at-risk pupils.  The LPP drop-out rate declined from two percent in 2004-05 to only 0.8 percent in 2006-07; the pupil/school persistence rate exceeded 98 percent in each of the three years; the 12th grade graduation rate exceeded 80 percent; and the college-going rate exceeded 70 percent.  A majority of college-going pupils planned to enter college in New York.\

 

  • Public and independent colleges and universities, USNY-wide, work with schools and districts to strengthen and enrich the education they provide.

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Change over time in the number of pupils passing Regents exams with 65 or greater.

 

Table 33

 

Number of Pupils Scoring 65 or Higher on Selected Regents Examinations

2002-03 -- 2006-07

(000’s omitted)

Examination

2002-03

2003-04

2004-05

2005-06

2006-07

English Language Arts

140

152

151

163

171

Global History & Geography

148

152

153

154

153

U.S. History & Government

150

142

145

160

164

Living Environment

151

146

156

163

170

Mathematics A

131

176

177

185

196

Source: NYSED, Office of P-16 Education, 2008.

 

              Table 33 shows that the number of pupils scoring 65 or higher on the English Language Arts exam improved by 22.1 percent between 2003 and 2007.  The number doing so on the Global History and Geography exam grew by 3.4 percent.  On the U.S. History and Government exam, the number scoring 65 or higher improved by 9.3 percent.  On the Living Environment exam, the number grew by 12.6 percent.  On the Mathematics A exam, the number scoring 65 or higher improved by 49.6 percent.

 

  • Change over time in the number, statewide, of recent New York high school graduates taking remedial college courses.

 

              Remediation and Retention.  Tables 34 and 35 show the percentage of full-time, first-time students in baccalaureate programs and associate degree programs in 2004, 2005, and 2006 taking three or more, two, one, or no remedial courses in their first year and returning for a second year of study.  About 11 percent of the full-time, first-time students in four-year colleges took one or more remedial course.  This includes about five percent of those enrolled  in baccalaureate programs and about 40 percent of those enrolled in the four-year colleges’ associate degree programs.  At two-year colleges, more than 48 percent of the full-time first-time students in associate degree programs took at least one remedial course.

 

              Troubling as these proportions may be, they are lower than those found in other states.  A 2008 report in Inside Higher Education stated that, nationwide, more than 60 percent of community college students who enroll immediately after high school take at least one remedial course and that 56 percent of entering freshmen in the California State University system are in remediation. 

 

              In New York, at both two-year and four-year institutions, most students taking remedial work do so in mathematics or in writing.  At four-year institutions, there has been a downward trend since 1998 in the number taking remediation in any subject.  At two-year colleges, the proportion of full-time, first-time students taking remedial mathematics or remedial writing in growing; the proportion taking remedial courses in any other subject (including ESL) is declining.  The growth in remediation in math and writing has been so great that it more than offset the declines in other subjects.

 

Table 34

 

First-Time Baccalaureate Students Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007,

by Number of Remedial Courses Taken

 

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

No Remedial Courses

82.4%

82.0%

82.9%

One Remedial Course

73.4%

71.6%

70.3%

Two Remedial Courses

68.5%

65.5%

68.2%

Three or More Remedial Courses

62.5%

60.2%

66.0%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

              In baccalaureate programs, retention of full-time, first-time students to the second year of study decreases as the number of remedial courses taken increases.  Of full-time, first-time baccalaureate students in the fall of 2006 taking no remedial courses, 82.9 percent returned in the fall of 2007; for those taking one remedial course, the retention rate dropped to 70.3 percent.  It dropped to 68.2 percent for those taking two remedial courses and to 66.0 percent for the small proportion taking three or more.

 

              Table 35, below, shows the same retention pattern for full-time, first-time students in associate degree programs, where 62.2 percent of those entering in the fall of 2006 who took no remedial courses returned in the fall of 2007.  The rate dropped to 59.2 percent for those taking one remedial course and to 55.2 percent for those taking two.  Only 53.1 percent of full-time, first-time associate degree program students who took three or more remedial courses in the fall of 2006 returned for the fall of 2007. 

 

Table 35

 

First-Time Associate Degree Students Persisting from their First to Second Year,

Fall 2004 to Fall 2005, Fall 2005 to Fall 2006, and Fall 2006 to Fall 2007

by Number of Remedial Courses Taken

 

Entering Fall 2004

Returning Fall 2005

Entering Fall 2005

Returning Fall 2006

Entering Fall 2006

Returning Fall 2007

No Remedial Courses

63.5%

63.4%

62.2%

One Remedial Course

58.1%

58.4%

59.2%

Two Remedial Courses

52.0%

52.8%

55.2%

Three or More Remedial Courses

47.2%

49.0%

53.1%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

             

  • Change over time in associate and baccalaureate degree graduation rates by high school grade point average and by SAT/ACT score.

 

              Table 36 shows that success in earning an associate degree between 2004 and 2007 is strongly related to high school grade point average.  Of the full-time students entering an institution with grade point averages of 90 or higher, by 2007 47.1 percent had earned associate degrees within three years (compared to 23.4 percent of all full-time, first-time students).  Only 8.2 percent of those with averages below 70 did so.

 

Table 36

 

Three-Year Associate Degree Graduation Rates

by High School Grade Point Average,

USNY-wide, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007

 

Percent Graduating After Three Years

Grade Point Average

2004

2005

2006

2007

100.0-90.0

61.6%

59.4%

44.8%

47.1%

89.9-80.0

39.8%

39.7%

37.5%

35.8%

79.9-70.0

18.8%

17.7%

17.0%

15.4%

69.9 and below

11.0%

10.7%

8.6%

8.2%

Unknown

20.9%

20.3%

20.9%

21.5%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

             

              Table 37 shows that success in earning a baccalaureate degree between 2004 and 2007 is strongly related to SAT and ACT scores.  Of the full-time students entering an institution with SATs of 1200 or higher (or ACTs of 26.6 or higher), by 2007, 77.8 percent had earned baccalaureate degrees within six years (compared with 62.9 percent of all full-time, first-time students).  Only 43.4 percent of those with SATs below 800 (or ACTs below 16.5) did so. 

 

 

 

Table 37

 

Six-Year Baccalaureate Graduation Rates by SAT/ACT Scores,

USNY-wide, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007

 

Percent Graduating After Six Years

SAT/ACT Score

2004

2005

2006

2007

1600-1200/36.0-26.6

78.9%

78.5%

76.8%

77.8%

1199-1000/26.5/21.6

66.0%

64.1%

63.5%

63.5%

999-800/21.5-16/6

53.3%

53.2%

52.1%

53.0%

799 and below/16.5 and below

44.9%

43.0%

43.4%

44.0%

Unknown

49.4%

51.7%

52.1%

51.7%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

  • Illustrative examples of institutional efforts to improve public school student achievement and evidence of the efforts’ success.

 

The City University of New York

 

Partnerships with the New York City Department of Education have been strengthened to enhance pupil participation in, and preparation for, higher education.  Today, CUNY has one of the most comprehensive programs of K-12 collaborations of any university in the country.  Fifteen CUNY-affiliated high schools operate on its campuses, and ten early college secondary schools have been developed through a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.  CUNY’s flagship collaborative program, College Now, which helps pupils meet high school graduation requirements and prepare for success in college, is now reaching over 30,000 pupils in almost 300 public high schools.  Research indicates that College Now participants tend to do better academically than their counterparts once they enter college.

 

Over the past year, College Now has worked closely with New Visions for Public Schools on an array of efforts to better understand college preparedness and to increase the likelihood that graduates from New Visions-managed New Century High Schools who matriculate at CUNY are successful when they do so.  This partnership is ongoing.  Further, the Manhattan Hunter Science High School, which graduated its first class a year ago, has achieved remarkable results by virtually all objective measures and is nationally recognized as a model for small science high schools.

 

Over the past five years, the academic preparation of first-time freshmen entering CUNY has improved and, on some measures, improved considerably.  For example between 2003 and 2007, the mean high school grade point average of freshmen enrolling in baccalaureate programs rose from 83.1 to 84.5, the mean score on the Regents English Language Arts exam increased from 81.4 to 83.0, and the mean score on the Math A Regents improved dramatically from 71.9 to 81.9.   The academic profile of freshmen matriculating in CUNY’s associate degree programs arced upward, with gains in high school GPA from 74.0 to 74.8, English Regents from 68 to 71.5 and Math A Regents from 57.6 to 71.0.  Over this period the size of the entering classes grew, increasing access to higher education to the people of New York.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

              Individual independent institutions offered a broad variety of enrichment opportunities for high school pupils.  A small sample of opportunities provided in 2008 includes the following:

 

  • Albany College of Pharmacy offered high school juniors six-week summer opportunities to work with faculty members conducting research in the pharmaceutical sciences.

 

  • Alfred University offered a variety of short institutes for high school pupils in a variety of areas, including astronomy, computer engineering, creative writing, entrepreneurial leadership, and theatre.

 

  • BarnardCollege offered a four-week Summer in NYC liberal arts program for rising juniors and seniors combining pre-college classes and opportunities to explore New York City.

 

  • ClarksonUniversity’s Horizons program offered girls in grades 7 and 8 two one-week sessions designed to encourage exploration of science, mathematics, and engineering through hands-on projects and personal enrichment activities.

 

  • The College of New Rochelle’s America Reads program provided tutors in schools throughout the academic year to work with pupils beginning in first grade.

 

  • CornellUniversity’s Camp $tart-Up was a one-week interactive business and leadership experience for girls ages 14 to 19.

 

  • HamiltonCollege offered Leaders for Life – High School Leadership Camps to pupils in grades 7 through 12 to enhance their leadership skills through work in small and large groups.

 

  • HartwickCollege offered its 60th annual two-week Summer Music Festival and Institute to outstanding musicians aged 13 through 18.

 

  • LeMoyneCollege’s Scholars Institute promotes the sciences and scientific careers throughout the academic year for pupils in grade 12.

 

  • New York Institute of Technology’s HORIZON program provided a summer program for the personal development of pupils aged 3 through14.

 

  • New York University provided a variety of opportunities, including College Preview, through which grade 11 and 12 pupils in partner schools audit regular NYU courses, Looking for Shakespeare, in which an ensemble of pupils aged 13 through 18 create and perform an original adaptation of one of Shakespeare’s plays, and the High School Law Institute, in which pupils in grades 10 and 11 take courses in law and participate in mock trials.

 

  • Syracuse University offered The Syracuse Challenge to Syracuse City School District pupils in grades 9 though 12 opportunities to achieve academic goals they contracted in grade 8 to reach and guaranteed successful pupils admission to Syracuse University’s College of Arts and Sciences and individualized financial aid packages. 

 

Independent institutions also have established partnerships with school districts to improve performance.  A few examples include:

 

  • DaemenCollege has partnered with the City of Buffalo to improve math and science achievement in four city schools.

 

  • ElmiraCollege and the Elmira City School District offer an America Reads program in selected high-need schools.

 

  • ManhattanCollege engages in on-going outreach with elementary and secondary schools in the Bronx providing tutorial services.

 

  • ManhattanvilleCollege has a mentoring program with Port Chester Middle School through which 7th and 8th grade pupils meet monthly with Manhattanville undergraduates for lunch and discussion.

 

  • NazarethCollege’s Partners for Learning program with the Rochester City School District provides Nazareth students as tutors and classroom assistants at six schools.

 

State Education Department

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Set a State graduation rate standard, publish four- and five-year graduation rates by school and specify a schedule of improvement targets for schools to close the gap between their graduation rate and State standard.  Set targets now for the students who entered 8th grade in 2004 and will graduate in 2008.  This action is especially important to assure that more schools intervene to help the most underserved students, such as Black males, English Language Learners, and students with disabilities.

 

  • Research and benchmark other states for effective, innovative strategies that improve high school graduation and attendance rates.  Include strategies that begin in middle school and focus on the transition from middle to high school.  Emphasize a meaningful curriculum that includes the arts, music, physical education and career and technical programs.  Provide effective strategies to schools to enable them to achieve the State targets through regional networks.

 

  • Align the Regents and Big Five districts’ strategies for improving high school graduation.

 

  • Benchmark the knowledge and strategies that link high school and college experiences in highly effective programs such as the Liberty Partnership Program and the Science and Technology Entry Program, advocate for additional resources to reach more students, and promote good practices USNY-wide to improve high school and college graduation rates among low income students.

 

  • Adopt a schedule and process to raise the student learning standards, using expert panels.  The schedule will address standards in science, U.S. and global history and geography, English and other languages, career development and occupational studies, and pre-kindergarten.  Benchmark the standards of other states and nations to match the demands of citizenship, higher education, and work.

 

  • Revise State assessments based on the higher standards.

 

Regents Learning Standards (P-12). With about 48 percent of first-time students in two-year colleges, and 11 percent of first-time students in four-year colleges, taking one or more remedial course, it is critically important that there be alignment between the expectations for high school graduation and college readiness across all the State Learning Standards.  To assure that they are aligned with the Regents goal that every New York high school graduate will be prepared for work, higher education, and citizenship, the Board has begun a comprehensive review of the Learning Standards, most of which have not been updated for ten years.  The review began with the English Language Arts standards and will continue through the core subjects.  The reviews are being undertaken in collaboration with representatives from higher education institutions, including those with teacher education programs, teachers, administrators, and other interested parties.  The intent is to put in place a system that will review Standards for a subject at least every five years.   

 

              Pupil Achievement.  USNY-wide, improved pupil achievement is becoming evident (e.g., see Table 33, above).  Table 38 shows that the four-year high school graduation rate of the 2003 entering cohort was more than two percentage points higher than that of previous cohorts (68.6 percent graduated in June 2007, compared to 65.8 and 67.2 percent for the 2001 and 2002 cohorts).  By August 2007, the rate had increased to 71.1 percent.  (Another six percent of the 2001 and 2002 cohorts graduated after a fifth year.)

 

 

 

 

 

Table 38

 

Public
High School Graduation Rates, New York State, 2005 -- 2007

 

Entering 9th Grade in

Graduating in:

2001

2002

2003

4 School Years

65.8%

67.2%

68.6%

4 School Years plus a Summer

N/A

N/A

71.1%

5 School Years

71.8%

73.3%

N/A

Source: NYSED, Office of P-16 Education, 2008.

 

              The graduation rates of Black and Hispanic pupils also improved.  Between 2005 and 2007, the four-year graduation rate of Black 9th grade pupils improved by 5.5 percentage points, from 45.3 percent to 50.8 percent, while that of Hispanic 9th grade pupils improved by 5.2 percentage points, from 42.2 to 47.4 percent.  An additional ten percent of each group graduated after a fifth year.

 

The period 2006 to 2008 saw significant improvements in grades 3-8, USNY-wide.  Mathematics achievement increased, especially in grades 5-8.  Across grades 3-8, almost 73 percent of pupils met the mathematics standards in 2007 as did nearly 81 percent in 2008.  English Language Arts achievement also increased, especially in the middle grades.  Across grades 3-8, more than 63 percent of pupils met the English language arts standards in 2007; for 2008, the proportion increased to 68.5 percent.

 

In both fields, achievement gaps narrowed.  The proportion of Black pupils achieving the math standard improved by 11 percentage points (from 55 percent in 2007 to 66 percent in 2008), compared to an eight percentage point improvement for all pupils.  The proportion of Hispanic pupils doing so improved by ten percentage points, from 61 to 71 percent.  In English Language Arts, the proportion of Black pupils achieving the standard improved by eight percentage points (from 45 to 53 percent), compared to a 5.5 percentage point improvement for all pupils.  The proportion of Hispanic pupils doing so improved by seven percentage points, from 45 to 53 percent.   

 

              New York had the nation’s highest percentage of 2007 high school graduates earning a score of three or better on Advanced Placement exams, according to the College Board.  In New York, more than 23 percent of the class of 2007 earned such scores; for the nation as a whole, the proportion was about 15 percent.

             

              On the other hand, New York has a limited ability to affect the preparation of students entering college in the State.

 

  • In the fall of 2006, one out of five first-time students came from outside New York State.  Of the 80 percent who were New York residents, an unknown share received their elementary and secondary educations outside the State.

 

  • While 88 percent of the New York residents matriculating at four-year institutions in the fall of 2006 were recent high school graduates, that was true only for 62.1 percent of the residents matriculating at two-year colleges. 

 

Notwithstanding this limitation, the Statewide Plan recommended to colleges and universities steps to take to improve retention and graduation (see Priority A4, above).         

 

              OpportunityPrograms.  In 2006-07, 89 percent of graduating pupils who participated in the Science and Technology Entry Program (STEP) earned Regents diplomas and 85 percent entered college.  That year, 51 postsecondary institutions across New York State with STEP and/or CSTEP conducted “Day of Service” outreach to 51,294 secondary school pupils, encouraging minority pupils to prepare for careers that require the study of math and science.  This included current CSTEP students visiting classrooms and speaking to secondary school pupils about opportunities in math, science, engineering and other technical fields.

 

              STEP celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2006-07.  Celebration activities included regional symposia to engage pupils and partners in promoting careers in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields, statewide conferences, and recognition ceremonies.

 

Through the Liberty Partnership Program (LPP) 55 colleges and universities across the State collaborated with schools and other local stakeholders to deliver comprehensive pre-college drop-out prevention programs to at-risk pupils.  Figure 3 shows that the LPP drop-out rate declined from two percent in 2004-05 to only 0.8 percent in 2006-07; the pupil/school persistence rate exceeded 98 percent in each of the three years; the 12th grade graduation rate exceeded 80 percent; and the college-going rate exceeded 70 percent.  A majority of college-going pupils planned to enter college in New York.

Figure 3

not available at this time

Source: NYSED, Office of K-16 Initiatives and Access Programs, 2008.

 

Other Collaborations in Support of Pupil Achievement.  All SUNY and CUNY community colleges belong to Tech-Prep consortia with local school districts to provide seamless articulation of occupational study including at least the last two years of high school and the first two of college.

 

Most of the seven Local Education Agencies that were designated as “Districts in Corrective Action” are participating with the College Board and Syracuse University to expand their AP placement efforts, including pupil participation in a campus-based six-week summer program where participating students will receive college credits.

 

              In 2006-07, SED identified a record number of schools and districts as high performing or rapidly improving: 1,658 public schools, 14 charter schools, and 288 districts; a further 220 schools and 26 districts were rapidly improving.  The percent of eligible schools recognized as high performing increased from 33 percent in 2005-06 to 48 percent.  The high performing share of eligible districts grew from 18 to 42 percent.

 

In May 2007, representatives of selected high performing schools and districts were invited to participate in a forum on “Learning from Leaders.”  Information about the recognition of high performing schools and districts was posted to SED’s Web site. Recognition was also given to Schools removed from Registration Review, Outstanding Early Childhood Programs, Title Distinguished Schools, Title I National Board Certified Teachers, Special Parent Advocacy Organizations, and Special Reading and Mathematics and Early Childhood Honorees.

 

Next Steps

 

  • SED will continue efforts to raise the graduation rate for all pupils, with particular emphasis on Black and Hispanic pupils, English language learners, and pupils with disabilities.

 

  • As work on the Learning Standards progresses, SED will convene representatives of the four higher education sectors to review draft standards and performance indicators and assess their alignment with readiness for freshman courses.

 

  • As directed by the P-16 Plan, SED will analyze and publish retention and graduation statistics.  It also will research and benchmark practices in other states found to improve persistence and completion and encourage higher education institutions to adopt those that are consistent with their missions.

 

 


  1. Information and Assistance in Preparing for College

    .  Beginning with pupils in the middle school grades, the Regents encourage collaborative efforts among the Department, colleges, and school districts to publicize the variety of services and information available to help K-12 pupils and their families access and prepare for success in future college study and to assure that information is clear and understandable by potential students and their families.

 

A 2008 USDE report, “Parent Expectations and Planning for College,” reinforces the importance of this priority.  It reports the results of a 2003 survey of expectations of parents of middle school and high school pupils for their children’s higher education.  Nationwide, nearly two-thirds of the responding parents expected their children to earn at least a baccalaureate degree.  However, there was a significant difference of opinion about the adequacy of the information about college that parents received from their children’s schools.  Parents of older pupils were more likely to regard as good the advice they were receiving than were parents of younger (i.e., middle-school) pupils.   

 

With respect to information about cost of attendance, while 81 percent of parents with annual household incomes of more than $75,000 had enough information, the proportion dropped to 68 percent for those with incomes between $50,000 and $75,000, to 57 percent for those with incomes between $25,000 and $50,000.  Only 49 percent of parents with family incomes of $25,000 or less said they had enough information about the cost of college for their children.  These results confirm the need to improve the provision of information to families at lower income levels and to families at all income levels beginning in the middle school grades.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • Some 70,000 high school pupils annually take college credit courses while still in high school.

 

  • The Board of Regents has proposed a Smart Scholars program that would transform the traditional four year high school to college model by giving historically underrepresented pupils an opportunity to graduate from high school with as many as 30 hours of college credit, putting them on a fast track to college readiness and completion without remediation.

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Change over time in the grade in which information about higher education is first provided to elementary, middle, and high school pupils and their families.

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Require colleges and universities to provide prospective students with accurate information on the institution, job placement where appropriate, student financial assistance, and transfer opportunities before they enroll.

 

  • Systematize linkages between the professions community and school districts to encourage middle and high school students to consider careers in the licensed professions, particularly in high-need areas, and help them to prepare for the advanced education they will need to qualify for licensure.

 

Advertising, Student Recruitment, and Admission Standards and Procedures.  The Commissioner’s Regulations require higher education institutions to provide specified types of information to students and potential students.  Standards for their advertising, however, exist now only as a non-regulatory code of conduct.  Recent years have seen an increase in questionable advertising and aggressive recruitment practices.  SED is considering amending the Regulations to set standards for advertising and assure that advertising, student recruitment, and admission standards and procedures are linked strongly to an institution’s academic programs. 

 

  • Change over time in parent involvement in schools.

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Create a Family Partnerships policy and action plan that will improve the involvement of parents in their children’s schools.  Provide parents with the information and skills they require to support and advocate on behalf of their children.  Build capacity in schools to increase parental involvement in activities to improve student achievement.

 

Parent Involvement in Schools.  In 2006-07, more than 300 persons attended SED’s seven public forums across the State to solicit comment on proposed revisions to the Parent and Family Partnerships policy.  More than 250 parents, teachers, and community members completed an SED-developed online survey in English and Spanish.

 

  • SED received comments from teachers, administrators, and school boards.  There is strong support for the policy and its principles.

 

  • In February 2007, the Regents directed SED to strengthen communication, increase regulatory enforcement, evaluate program and policy effectiveness, and allocate or reallocate resources needed for implementation.

 

  • In May 2007, SED developed an action plan to implement seven priorities identified in the 2005 and 2006 public sessions.  It emphasizes recurring recommendations from the public: improve communication, establish a clear complaint process for parents, enforce existing rules and regulations, and make partnerships more accessible for parents and families. 

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

College Courses for High School Pupils.  In the fall of 2007, the Community College Research Center at Teachers College, Columbia University, reported the results of a study of high school pupils in Florida and in New York City taking courses for both college and secondary credit.  It found that they were (1) more likely than their peers to earn a high school diploma, (2) significantly more likely to go to college, (3) more likely to go to a four-year college, and (4) more likely to enroll full-time. In college, they were more likely to persist and earned significantly higher grade-point averages.

 

USNY has more than a thousand opportunities for high school pupils to take college courses and well over 70,000 of them are taking advantage of those opportunities.  An estimated 40 percent of the opportunities are in New York City and on Long Island, with 60 percent upstate.

 

  • CUNY’s College Now program annually gives tens of thousands of qualified high school pupils’ opportunities to take college credit courses while still in high school.  All 17 undergraduate CUNY colleges offer College Now programs at almost 300 of the City’s 425 public high schools, serving over 30,000 students per year.

 

  • USNY-wide, more than 31,000 public high school pupils enrolled in SUNY college courses in the fall of 2005.  Individual campuses have many programs in a variety of academic fields targeted directly at such pupils.

 

  • At least 56 independent colleges and universities offer courses to high school pupils for college credit, including Adelphi University, Bard College, Cornell University, Daemen College, Mount Saint Mary College, Paul Smith’s College, Polytechnic University, Roberts Wesleyan College, St. Lawrence University, and Vaughn College of Aeronautics and Technology.

 

  • Early College/Middle College programs integrate high school instruction with programs leading to an associate degree.  Various models are offered by CUNY colleges, Bard College, Syracuse University, and other higher education institutions.

 

The City University of New York

 

CUNY has recently adopted a revised statement on college preparatory coursework, incorporating an explicit recommendation for four years each of English, history or social studies, and mathematics; three years of science; three to four years of foreign language; and one or two years of performing or visual arts.  Pupils are encouraged to take the PSAT or PLAN in their sophomore year, and to prepare for either the SAT or ACT before completing high school.  These recommendations appear prominently on CUNY’s admissions Website.

 

Within the last year, leaders of CUNY and the New York City Department of Education have committed themselves to working together to implement a comprehensive approach to ensuring college preparedness for graduates of the City’s schools and to enact a more consistent and comprehensive sharing of data regarding the performance of graduates at different CUNY colleges and within different programs.  The two agencies are close to agreement on a protocol for exchanging data that will allow the tracking of pupils from grades 9 to 12 in high school into CUNY.  The agreement will make possible analyses of college readiness and curriculum alignment.

 

In addition, the strategic plan proposing “College Access Now” (see Priority A5, above) would identify potential CUNY students with disabilities as high school freshmen and sophomores.  It would engage them in a rigorous, pre-college curriculum designed to raise their readiness and expectations for participation in college; facilitate their transitions to college; improve their retention and graduation rates; facilitate their employment placement or acceptance to graduate and professional school; and improve CUNY colleges’ capacity to ensure their access and promote their success.

 

IndependentCollegesand Universities.

 

              CICU publishes an annual “Your College Search” guide to give pupils and their family’s profiles of independent institutions and other information, and advice on choosing a college.  Its monthly “College Connections” newsletters provide high school guidance counselors with information and sources of advice on visiting, comparing, and choosing colleges, as well as additional sources of information for college searches.

 

In 2007 and 2008, CICU partnered with school districts on three “College Quest” tours for 79 middle school and high school pupils who visited multiple independent college campuses, giving them opportunities to visit classes, meet students and faculty members, and learn about admission and financial aid processes.  Through GEAR-UP, it also arranged tours of 15 institutions in 2007-08 and six in the fall of 2008.

 

Through its GEAR-UP grant, CICU conducts professional development workshops for GEAR-UP staff, district teachers, tutors, school counselors, and administrators across the State.  Subjects have included: “Successful Support Networks to Ensure Academic Achievement,” “”Transitioning to College Life: Issues, Resources and Special Programs,” “Admissions: Processes, Decisions, Visits,” and “Academic Preparation and Career Awareness.”

 

Individual independent institutions also have taken steps to give pupils and their family’s information needed for college choice.  A few examples include:

 

  • AlfredUniversity’s “How to Get into a Top Art School” course for high school juniors and seniors prepares art students for the college admission process.

 

  • ManhattanCollege gives 11th and 12th grade pupils an introduction to engineering and SAT preparation.

 

  • New YorkUniversity’s High School Law Institute offers New York City 10th and 11th grade public school pupils courses on aspects of the law and participation in mock trials.

 

  • St. John Fisher College’s Summer Institute is designed to assist motivated pupils in grades 9 through 12 in the college selection and application process, including interviewing techniques, developing personal statements and admission essays, and financial aid.

 

  • UnionCollege’s Camp College gives traditionally underserved pupils in grades 9 through 11 advice and guidance in beginning the college selection and admission process and a simulation of the college experience.

 

Next Steps

 

  • The Regents seek creation of a Smart Scholars program to transform the traditional four-year high school to college model. This $100 million initiative:

 

  • Give at least 12,000 disadvantaged pupils the support to graduate from high school on time with as much as 30 college credits, and then complete college in three years.
  • Encourage at risk pupils by providing advice to middle and high school pupils and by providing college courses in high school.
  • Build on the success of CUNY, SUNY, and many independent colleges to offer college courses in high school, inspiring high school pupils to go to college. 
  • Reduce the cost of college for students and families by reducing from eight years to seven the time between entering high school and graduating from college.

 

The Legislature did not fund this initiative in 2008.

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • New York State should create “Education Partnership Zones” in which institutions of higher education and schools collaborate on a full range of educational development including early learning and pre-kindergarten, elementary and adolescent literacy, math and science studies, restructuring of schools, and building teacher capacity.  Students’ access to higher education would be supported through the “Million Dollar Promise,” under which EPZ students are guaranteed the opportunity to attend, tuition-free, with State payment for unmet needs, a community college or a four-year CUNY or SUNY college if they met certain standards and graduate from high school.  Participating independent colleges and universities would support graduates from EPZ schools with special financial assistance, as needed.  In addition, an award of $1,000 would be available from state funds to support exceptionally qualified EPZ students who choose to attend institutions of higher education in the State.
  • High school students whose basic academic skills are insufficient must be offered a new opportunity to become college-ready while still enrolled in high school, at no cost to them.  After high school assessments, those students in need of remediation should be offered appropriate supplementary coursework developed by teams of high school and college faculty.  Students who opt not to take remediation courses while in high school could enroll in total immersion programs during the summer prior to college enrollment.  The costs of supplementary course instruction would be funded through a College Readiness Act.  

 

  • SED will continue working with its USNY partners to create more effective strategies for school/parent partnerships.


C. Meeting New York’s Needs through Graduate Programs and through Research

 


  1. Strong Graduate Programs to Meet the State’s Needs

    .  The Regents will advocate that our colleges and universities, and the State and federal governments, strengthen graduate study and State and federal support for graduate students.  Institutions are asked to identify the emerging areas of scholarship for which they will need faculty, their needs for new faculty to replace those departing or retiring, and the extent of their need for faculty reflecting the diversity of New York’s student body. 

 

USNY-wide, enrollment of graduate students grew by 4.3 percent between 2004 and 2007, from 192,426 in the fail of 2004 to 200,652 in the fall of 2007.  In the fall of 2007 they were enrolled in nearly 13,000 graduate degree and certificate programs.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • Between 2003 and 2007, the number of faculty, USNY-wide, grew by 11,987 (12.1 percent).  Nearly all growth (95.1 percent) was at four-year and graduate institutions; the growth at two year colleges accounted for only 4.9 percent.

 

  • The State Labor Department projects a 24 percent growth between 2004 and 2014 in employment of all faculty at all institutions, with an average of about 6,200 openings per year, about half from replacement and half from growth.

 

  • The number of master’s degrees earned remained was almost the same in 2006-07 as in 2003-04.  The number of doctorates earned grew by 17.7 percent, from 3,952 in 2003-04 to 4,650 in 2006-07.  In both years, independent institutions awarded the largest number of both master’s and doctoral degrees, followed by SUNY, CUNY, and proprietary colleges (only a few of which offer graduate study).   

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Change over time in the number of full-time and part-time faculty, statewide.

 

In 2007, USNY institutions of higher education employed 111,399 faculty.  Between 2003 and 2007, the number of faculty, USNY-wide, grew by 11,987 (12.1 percent).  Independent institutions had 61.9 percent of the growth, followed by SUNY campuses (17.0 percent), CUNY colleges (15.6 percent), and proprietary colleges (5.6 percent).  Nearly all the growth (95.1 percent) was at four-year and graduate institutions; the increase at two year colleges accounted for only 4.9 percent.

 

As Table 1 shows, between 2003 and 2007, total enrollment grew by 5.1 percent.  The ratio of students to faculty, USNY-wide, was reduced from 11.2:1 to 10.5:1.

 

The Commissioner’s Regulations require that, “To foster and maintain continuity and stability in academic programs and policies, there shall be in the institution a sufficient number of faculty members who serve full-time at the institution.”  The 2004 Statewide Plan pointed out that the proportion of faculty who served full-time declined from 52.1 percent in 1995-96 to less than half by 2003.  In that year, 49.9 percent of all faculty served full-time.  Since then, the proportion of faculty that is full-time has declined slightly, to 49.2 percent in 2007.  Patterns differed between four-year and graduate institutions and two-year colleges.  

 

Four-Year and Graduate Institutions.  Table 39 shows that, four-year and graduate institutions, USNY-wide, increased the number of both full-time and part-time faculty.  However, the number of part-time faculty grew by 17.5 percent while the number of full-time faculty grew by only 11.4 percent.  Consequently, the proportion of all faculty at four-year and graduate institutions that was full-time was virtually unchanged in 2007 (53.2 percent) from 2003 (53.8 percent).

 

Table 39

 

Number of Full- and Part-Time Faculty at Four-Year and Higher Institutions,

By Sector and USNY-wide, 2003, 2005, 2007

 

Full-Time

Part-Time

Total

 

Number

Percent

Number

Percent

Number

Percent

 

2003

SUNY Campuses

9,191

57.5%

6,803

42.5%

15,994

100.0%

CUNY Colleges

4,435

47.0%

5,003

53.0%

9,438

100.0%

Independent Institutions

29,044

55.0%

23,886

45.0%

52,930

100.0%

Proprietary Colleges

435

28.7%

1,365

71.3%

1,800

100.0%

USNY-wide Total

43,105

53.8%

37,057

46.2%

80,162

100.0%

 

2005

SUNY Campuses

9,308

56.8%

7,089

43.2%

16,397

100.0%

CUNY Colleges

4,544

44.1%

5,760

55.9%

10,304

100.0%

Independent Institutions

30,802

55.6%

24,643

44.4%

55,445

100.0%

Proprietary Colleges

484

26.8%

1,606

73.2%

2,090

100.0%

USNY-wide Total

45,138

53.6%

39,098

46.4%

84,236

100.0%

 

2007

SUNY Campuses

9,803

56.2%

7,635

43.8%

17,438

100.0%

CUNY Colleges

4,860

43.7%

6,271

56.3%

11,131

100.0%

Independent Institutions

32,758

55.6%

27,588

44.4%

60,346

100.0%

Proprietary Colleges

584

26.0%

2,064

74.0%

2,648

100.0%

USNY-wide Total

48,005

53.2%

43,558

47.6%

91,563

100.0%

 

Change, 2003 – 2007

SUNY Campuses

612

6.7%

832

12.2%

1,444

9.0%

CUNY Colleges

425

9.6%

1,268

25.3%

1,693

17.9%

Independent Institutions

3,714

12.8%

3,702

15.5%

7,416

14.0%

Proprietary Colleges

149

34.3%

699

51.2%

848

47.1%

USNY-wide Total

4,900

11.4%

6,501

17.5%

11,401

14.2%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

Similar patterns were seen in all sectors.  Four-year proprietary colleges had a 34.3 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 51.2 percent increase in part-time faculty.  Independent four-year and graduate institutions had a 12.8 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 15.5 percent increase in part-time faculty.  CUNY senior colleges had a 9.6 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 25.3 percent increase in part-time faculty.  SUNY four-year and graduate campuses had a 6.7 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 12.2 percent increase in part-time faculty. 

 

Two-Year Colleges.  Table 40 shows that two-year colleges also increased the number of both full-time and part-time faculty.  However, the number of part-time faculty grew by only 2.4 percent, while the number of full-time faculty grew by nearly double that rate (4.3 percent). The proportion of all two-year college faculty who were full-time was almost unchanged, growing only from 33.8 percent to 34.2 percent.

 

Table 40

 

Number of Full- and Part-Time Faculty at Two-Year Colleges,

by Sector and USNY-wide, 2003, 2005, 2007

 

Full-Time

Part-Time

Total

 

Number

Percent

Number

Percent

Number

Percent

 

2003

SUNY Campuses

4,127

33.4%

8,244

66.6%

12,371

100.0%

CUNY Colleges

1,494

34.6%

2,828

65.4%

4,322

100.0%

Independent Institutions

268

41.0%

422

59.0%

690

100.0%

Proprietary Colleges

609

32.4%

1,258

67.6%

1,867

100.0%

USNY-wide Total

6,498

33.8%

12,752

66.2%

19,250

100.0%

 

2005

SUNY Campuses

4,238

32.8%

8,669

67.2%

12,907

100.0%

CUNY Colleges

1,675

39.1%

2,612

60.9%

4,287

100.0%

Independent Institutions

299

45.5%

395

54.5%

694

100.0%

Proprietary Colleges

575

28.9%

1,410

71.1%

1,985

100.0%

USNY-wide Total

6,787

34.2%

13,086

65.8%

19,833

100.0%

 

2007

SUNY Campuses

4,199

32.4%

8,770

67.6%

12,969

100.0%

CUNY Colleges

1,719

38.2%

2,778

61.8%

4,497

100.0%

Independent Institutions

327

53.5%

356

46.5%

683

100.0%

Proprietary Colleges

530

34.0%

1,157

66.0%

1,687

100.0%

USNY-wide Total

6,775

34.2%

13,061

65.8%

19,836

100.0%

 

Change, 2003 – 2007

SUNY Campuses

72

1.7%

526

6.4%

598

4.8%

CUNY Colleges

225

15.1%

-50

-1.8%

175

4.0%

Independent Institutions

59

22.0%

-66

-15.6%

7

-1.0%

Proprietary Colleges

-79

-13.0%

-101

-8.0%

-180

-9.6%

USNY-wide Total

277

4.3%

309

2.4%

586

3.0%

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

By sector, independent two-year colleges had a 22.0 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 15.6 percent decrease in part-time faculty.  CUNY community colleges had a 15.1 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 1.8 percent decrease in part-time faculty.  SUNY two-year campuses and community colleges had a 1.7 percent increase in full-time faculty and a 6.4 percent increase in part-time faculty.  At proprietary two-year colleges, the number of both full-time and part-time faculty decreased, the former by 13.0 percent and the latter by 8.0 percent.  

 

The City University of New York

 

A World-Class, Diverse Full-time Faculty.  CUNY is continuing toward its goal of assuring that full-time faculty offer 70 percent of courses.  This work has required a vigorous hiring effort and major resource investment.  CUNY reports that, since 1999, the number of full-time faculty has increased by almost 1,000.  Cluster hiring has added new faculty lines across CUNY in selected disciplinary areas, including photonics, digital media, U.S. history, teacher education, biosciences, urban environment, demography, art history, visual art, and foreign language.  Since 2004, 166 hires have been made in these areas, including 59 in STEM disciplines (35.5 percent of the total), 54 in teacher education (32.5 percent), and nine in U.S. history (5.4 percent).

 

CUNY has committed itself to recruiting and maintaining a diverse faculty by establishing an Office of the University Dean for Recruitment and Diversity charged with implementing an Inclusive Excellence initiative.  Another example of its commitment to a diverse faculty is the Latino Faculty Recruitment Initiative, launched in 2006 by the Chancellor.  The Initiative’s mission is outreach to the Latino community in higher education in order to attract a significantly larger pool of applicants for existing faculty openings.  Within a brief period, it has made great strides in attracting high performing Latino faculty to CUNY.  In the process, it has identified a number of good practices in the areas of faculty recruitment, faculty retention, and pipeline strategies.

 

  • Final reports of Regents accreditation and Department site visits. 

 

              Since adopting the Plan, the Board of Regents has acted on institutional accreditation for 11 institutions, of which six (54.5 percent) offer only graduate study and one offers both undergraduate and graduate study.  The term of accreditation ranged from two years to ten (which is the maximum term), averaging 5.6 years. 

 

  • An independent graduate school’s mission is “to train the next generation of leaders in the field of translational research” in the medical sciences, which takes findings of the research lab to the clinic and findings of the clinic to the lab.  The team found that the school effectively engages its students in cutting-edge research and provides an impressive environment for the training of translational scientists.  Ease of student interaction with faculty members is a strength.

 

  • A specialized graduate school in figurative art publishes a high quality catalog of the diploma projects of all its recent graduates.  It annually brings to the campus, esteemed professionals in figurative art from Europe and elsewhere to review and provide written commentary on M.F.A. student project.  Faculty have intensive and continuous mentoring relationships with each student.

 

  • Labor market trends and institutional projections of needs for new faculty.

 

              The U.S. Department of Labor projects a 23 percent increase in employment of faculty (full- and part-time, tenure-track and non-tenure-track) at postsecondary institutions of all types between 2006 and 2016, an increase “much faster than the average for all occupations.”  The Occupational OutlookHandbook states that a significant number of openings will be created, nationwide, by enrollment growth and the need to replace large numbers of faculty who are likely to retire.  Many faculty members “were hired in the late 1960s and the 1970s to teach members of the baby boom generation, and they are expected to retire in growing numbers in the years ahead.“  “As a result,” across all types of postsecondary institutions, Ph.D. recipients seeking jobs as faculty “will experience favorable job prospects over the next decade.”

 

              The New York State Labor Department projects a 24 percent growth between 2004 and 2014 in employment of all faculty at all institutions, with an average of about 6,200 openings per year, about half from replacement and half from growth. 

 

  • Change over time in faculty distribution by gender and racial/ethnic characteristics, statewide.

 

State
University of New York

 

              The shares of SUNY faculty who are members of minority groups or are female have remained stable over the period.  Tables 41 and 42show the proportions of SUNY faculty that are members of minority groups or female, as reported by SUNY.

 

Table 41

 

State
University of New York

Share of Faculty Composed of Minority Group Members, Fall 2003 – Fall 2007

 

Fall 2003

Fall 2005

Fall 2007

SUNY Total

12.7%

13.2%

13.3%

State-Operated

14.5%

15.2%

15.3%

Community Colleges

8.4%

8.5%

8.4%

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 42

 

State
University of New York

Share of Faculty that is Female, Fall 2003 – Fall 2007

 

Fall 2003

Fall 2005

Fall 2007

SUNY Total

39.1%

40.8%

41.5%

State-Operated

34.7%

36.4%

37.4%

Community Colleges

49.5%

51.0%

 51.9%

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

              CICU reports that the racial/ethnic composition of faculty at independent colleges and universities has changed from 91 percent White and nine percent Asian, Black, and Hispanic in 1987 to 85 percent White and 15 percent Asian, Black, and Hispanic in 2001, to 83 percent White and 17 percent Asian, Black, and Hispanic in 2007.  As noted above, CICU reported that independent four-year colleges and universities increased the number of full-time faculty who are Hispanic be 21 percent between 2001 and 2007. 

 

  • Change over time in the number of master’s and doctoral degrees conferred, by level, discipline, gender, and ethnicity.

 

              Table 43 shows the number of master’s and doctoral degrees awarded, 2003-04 through 2006-07, by sector.

 

Table 43

 

Master’s and Doctoral Degrees Awarded, 2003-04 – 2006-07, by Sector

 

2003-04

2004-05

2005-06

2006-07

 

M

D

M

D

M

D

M

D

SUNY

10,945

901

9,186

753

10,217

1,057

9,867

1,094

CUNY

7,095

298

6,960

298

7,262

330

7,660

303

Independent

45,208

2,753

43,055

3,002

46,231

3,118

46,479

3,253

Proprietary

336

---

423

---

403

---

453

---

Total

63,584

3,952

59,624

4,053

64,113

4,505

64,403

4,650

Source: NYSED, Higher Education Data System, 2008.

 

              USNY-wide, the number of master’s degrees earned remained was almost the same in 2006-07 as in 2003-04.  However, the number of doctorates earned grew by 17.7 percent, from 3,952 in 2003-04 to 4,650 in 2006-07.  In both years, independent institutions awarded the largest number of both master’s and doctoral degrees, followed by SUNY, CUNY, and proprietary colleges (only a few of which offer graduate study).

 

The City University of New York

 

Over the past five years, CUNY has experienced growth in graduate enrollment, particularly at the doctoral level.  While master’s degree enrollment has grown by 3.2 percent since 2003, doctoral enrollment rose by 14.5 percent, to 4,252 students.  Over the same period, the number of graduate degrees conferred grew by 17.3 percent.

 

  • Change over time in aggregate financial support for graduate and first-professional degree students, statewide.

 

The City University of New York

 

CUNY recently completed an operational review of its Ph.D. programs in some of the laboratory-based sciences and is now recruiting students nationally in biology, biochemistry, chemistry, and physics under the restructured programs, with support packages that include paid tuition, health insurance, and stipends of $24,000 per year.  A new doctoral science Web page coordinates and directs prospective students to information on each program, as well as information about CUNY’s science consortium.  The restructuring of the science doctoral programs is also leading to new investments in graduate student support so that CUNY may attract the best qualified students.

 

In other disciplines, doctoral student support has improved significantly, enabling competition for the best candidates for advanced studies.  Packages now provide five years of in-state tuition and stipends of $18,000 per year, leading to new records in Graduate Center applications, yield, and total enrollment.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

In 2005, the Legislature established the Senator Patricia K. McGee Nursing Faculty Scholarship Program to increase the number of regular and adjunct clinical nursing faculty in the State.  It makes competitive grants to RNs who are New York residents enrolled in a master’s degree program in nursing in the State that will qualify them as nursing faculty or adjunct clinical faculty.  Recipients may receive up to three years of aid, which may not exceed the tuition and average non-tuition cost for New York residents in a SUNY master’s degree program, up to $20,000 per year.  The number of awards is determined by annual appropriations; however, the annual cost of the program is capped at $600,000.  Recipients who do not teach after graduation for at least four years as nursing faculty members or adjunct clinical faculty members at a New York institution must repay the aid plus interest.  The program sunsets in 2010.

 

The City University of New York

 

CUNY has responded to specific academic and training needs by establishing entire schools as well as new programs.  The new Graduate School of Journalism, for example, the Northeast’s only public graduate school of journalism, is enabling students of high academic attainment and limited financial means to further their education in the media capital of the world.  It graduated its first class in December 2007.

 

CUNY looks forward to opening a new CUNY School of Public Health, to be sited at Hunter College.  Currently building the components for full accreditation by 2011 from the Council on Education for Public Health, the planned school will fulfill a variety of workforce development, teaching, research, and urgent public health needs.

 

System wide emphasis on strong graduate and professional programs is also manifested by the achievements of the CUNY School of Law.  Its graduates achieved a first-time pass rate of 82.8 percent on the July 2007 New York State Bar Exam, the highest pass rate in the School’s history and a dramatic improvement from the 50 percent rate in 2002 (and higher than the statewide average of 79.1 percent for first-time bar exam test-takers).  The School also recently received membership in the Association of American Law Schools, joining 160 other law schools that have attained membership standing through a rigorous review process.

 

Science doctoral education at CUNY has been restructured.  Approved by the Board of Trustees and by the Regents and the Governor in 2008, the new structure will allow City College and Hunter College to grant Ph.D.s in biochemistry, biology, chemistry, and physics jointly with the Graduate Center.  City College will also grant the Ph.D. in five engineering disciplines.  This restructuring is expected to strengthen CUNY’s offerings in laboratory sciences and to enable flagship campuses to showcase their doctoral programs for federal grants and for general philanthropy.

 

CUNY’s individual colleges also recognize the need for professional credentials beyond the undergraduate degree.  To that end, a number are expanding their professional degree offerings and enrollments.  CUNY and its colleges also understand that changes in licensure laws will drive new programs in the health sciences.  For example, in response to a new licensure requirement for mental health counselors in New York State, CUNY is developing master’s degree programs in Mental Health Counseling.  Developments in other fields — for instance, a need for graduates who combine a solid background in natural sciences with other specialized skills — has stimulated creation of such programs as the M.S. program in Biological Laboratory Management.  CUNY also is pursuing the possibility of offering some professional graduate programs online.  The School of Professional Studies, for example, expects to launch five to seven master’s degree programs by 2012; at least one will be fully online.

 

State Education Department

 

In October 2006, the Regents authorized the American Museum of Natural History to award Ph.D. degrees, making it the first museum in the nation to offer its own doctoral program.  SED is reviewing the American Museum of Natural History for institutional accreditation by the Board of Regents. 

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • A minimum of 4,000 SUNY and CUNY doctoral students should be recruited over the next five years, and offered salaries that are competitive with levels at similar institutions.  SUNY and CUNY should set a new standard for inclusion and equity by adopting special recruitment strategies aimed at rectifying the low percentage of doctoral students and faculty from historically underrepresented populations.  To achieve greater equity in the doctoral student population and to strengthen the pool of future faculty, additional funding should be allocated for the purpose of recruiting and retaining doctoral students from underrepresented groups.

 

  • SED will continue to monitory the number of full-time faculty at individual higher education institutions in terms of the requirements of the Commissioner’s Regulations that, “To foster and maintain continuity and stability in academic programs and policies, there shall be in the institution a sufficient number of faculty members who serve full-time at the institution.” 

 

 


  1. Creation of New Knowledge through Research

    .  The Regents encourage institutional initiatives, consistent with their educational missions, and ask institutions to describe in their master plans their research priorities and their recommendations to New York State relating to the discovery and dissemination of new knowledge, including knowledge to inform and support the development of policies to help meet the State’s economic and social needs.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • New York academic institutions spend $3.8 billion on research and development, more than those in any other state except California.  Between 2002 and 2006, their R&D expenditures’ growth rate was 4.4 percentage points higher than California’s.  However, Florida and Ohio institutions had higher growth rates. 

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Comparison of research expenditures at New York doctoral degree institutions with those in key other states and their change over time.
  • Increases in aggregate and per capita college and university research and development expenditures in New York compared to competing states, as reported by the National Science Foundation [combined].

 

Table 44 compares 2002 and 2006 research and development expenditures at New York higher education institutions with those in the six states used by the New York State Commission on Higher Education for comparison purposes plus the four additional states whose institutions also generate significant R&D expenditures that were included in the Statewide Plan’s analysis.  Table 45 shows the change in academic R&D expenditures per capita for the same states and the nation. 

 

In both years, New York institutions spent more on R&D than those in any other state except California.  New York institutions increased R&D expenditures by 37.3 percent between 2002 and 2006.  California institutions’ expenditures grew by only 32.9 percent.  Institutions in Texas (the state with the third highest total in the nation) increased their research and development spending by only 29.0 percent.  Consequently, New York’s share of the nation’s academic R&D expenditures increased from 7.6 to 7.9 percent, California’s increased from 13.4 to only 13.6 percent, and Texas’ declined from 7.0 to 6.8 percent.  However, institutions in Florida and Ohio increased R&D expenditures at a much greater rate than did New York’s, 40.7 percent and 46.6 percent, respectively.  

 

Table 44

 

Research and Development Expenditures at Higher Education Institutions

Selected States, 2002 and 2006

(in $ thousands)

 

2002

2006

State

Total Research & Development Expenditures

Share of National Total

Total Research & Development Expenditures

Share of National Total

New York

$2,759,478

7.6%

$3,789,658

7.9%

Commission on Higher Education Comparison States

California

$4,887,606

13.4%

$6,493,388

13.6%

Texas

$2,535,237

7.0%

$3,270,728

6.8%

Pennsylvania

$1,913,121

5.3%

$2,428,346

5.1%

Massachusetts

$1,697,182

4.7%

$2,158,748

4.5%

Illinois

$1,440,716

4.0%

$1,823,787

3.8%

Ohio

$1,116,116

3.1%

$1,636,473

3.4%

Florida

$1,085,764

3.0%

$1,527,666

3.2%

Other Major States (in Statewide Plan)

Maryland

$1,895,382

5.2%

$2,530,231

5.3%

North Carolina

$1,279,377

3.5%

$1,710,496

3.6%

Michigan

$1,233,511

3.4%

$1,472,727

3.1%

Georgia

$1,076,706

3.0%

$1,302,570

2.7%

U.S. Total

$36,393,689

100.0%

$47,760,402

100.0%

Note: Expenditures are from all sources (federal, state, and local governments; industry; institutional funds; and other sources).

Source: National Science Foundation, Division of Science Resources, Survey of Research and Development Expenditures at Universities and Colleges, fiscal year 2006.

 

 

 

 

 

Table 45

 

Change in Research and Development Expenditures

at Higher Education Institutions, Selected States, 2002 – 2006, Total and Per Capita

State

Change in  R&D Expenditures

($ thousands)

Percent Change,

2002-2006

Estimated Population, July 1, 2006

Change in  R&D Expenditures Per Capita

New York

$1,030,180

37.3%

19,281,988

$53.43

Commission on Higher Education Comparison States

California

$1,605,782

32.9%

36,249,872

$44.30

Texas

$735,491

29.0%

23,407,629

$31.42

Pennsylvania

$515,225

26.9%

12,402,817

$41.54

Massachusetts

$461,566

27.2%

6,434,137

$71.74

Illinois

$383,071

26.6%

12,777,042

$29.98

Ohio

$520,357

46.6%

11,463,513

$45.39

Florida

$441,902

40.7%

18,057,508

$24.47

Other Major States (in Statewide Plan)

Maryland

$634,849

33.5%

5,602,017

$113.33

North Carolina

$431,119

33.7%

8,869,442

$48.61

Michigan

$239,216

19.4%

10,102,322

$23.68

Georgia

$225,864

21.0%

9,342,080

$24.18

U.S. Total

$11,366,713

31.2%

298,754,819

$38.05

Note: Expenditures are from all sources (federal, state, and local governments; industry; institutional funds; and other sources).

Source: National Science Foundation, Division of Science Resources, Survey of Research and Development Expenditures at Universities and Colleges, fiscal year 2006.  U.S. Census Bureau, Population Estimates Program, 2008.

             

  • Increases in university-related licensing income, licenses generating income, U.S. patents issued, U.S. patent applications filed, and start-up companies formed in New York compared to competing states, or comparable indicators from surveys published by the Association of University Technology Managers.

 

State
University of New York

 

              SUNY reported the following information related to patents, licenses, and start-up companies:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 46

 

State
University of New York

Invention Disclosures, Patents, Royalty Income and Start-Ups, 2004-05 – 2007-08

 

2004-05

2005-06

2006-07

2007-08

Invention Disclosures Received

 245

284

268

290

U.S. Patent Applications Filed

 193

195 

 208

209

U.S. Patents Issued

 34

33

41

44

License/Option Agreements Executed

 78

45

54

52

Total License Income Received (Gross)

 $13.6 M

$10.8 M

$11.6 M

$18.4 M

Number of Operating Start-Up Companies at Close of Year

 47

54

60

69

Source: SUNY System Administration, 2008.

 

Between 2004-05 and 2007-08, patent applications filed grew by 8.3 percent, while the number of patents issued grew by 29.4 percent.  The number of license agreements fluctuated during the period; however, gross license income grew by 35.3 percent ($4.8 million).  Start-up companies in operation grew by 46.8 percent, from 47 to 69.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

Undergraduate Research.  The Statewide Plan encouraged baccalaureate institutions “to provide opportunities for undergraduates to participate in research and similar scholarly endeavors.”  A 2008 report by the Association of American Colleges and Universities, however, found that, nationwide, only 19 percent of college seniors reported having worked with a faculty member on a research project.  On the other hand, four New York institutions (Hunter College, CUNY; Barnard College; Colgate University; and Vassar College), were among 48 recipients, nationwide, of grants in 2008 from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute to improve undergraduate education in the biological sciences.  At least three of the New York recipients will use the grants to support undergraduate participation in research. 

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

At least 28 independent colleges and universities participated in CICU’s 2008 Independent Sector Undergraduate Research Exposition, which showcased completed research projects by 70 teams of their undergraduates.

 

CICU also said that an undergraduate team at Iona College helped NASA survey the atmosphere of Mars, an NYU undergraduate contributed to the understanding of the brain of an individual with Down Syndrome, and research by a Clarkson University undergraduate demonstrated that closed primary elections bring more voters to the polls than do open primaries.

 

 The City University of New York

 

Enhanced Research Activity and Research Character.  CUNY has advanced the mission to enhance research activity and the research character of the entire University.  Since 2002, research and development expenditures from all sources, including federal, State, local, and CUNY itself, have increased by 28.4 percent.  Much of this progress has been accomplished within the framework of CUNY’s Decade of Science Initiative (2005-2015), which has proven and will continue to be instrumental in achieving CUNY’s activities in response to this priority.  Notable developments include:

 

  • Since 1999, CUNY has added approximately 80 new full-time faculty in the sciences through cluster hiring efforts focused on photonics, environmental sciences, engineering, and biosciences.  Significant start-up packages, including funds for high-end equipment, have been included to recruit top talent.

 

  • Understanding that a top-flight research faculty requires state-of-art facilities, planning is under way to construct and modernize science facilities.  Construction of a CUNY-wide Advanced Science Research Center (ASRC), focusing on photonics, nanotechnology, biosensing and environmental sensing, structural biology, and neuroscience, will begin in 2008.  Construction and improvements are also taking place on many campuses, including a new science building at City College and the total refurbishment of another science building there; a new building at John Jay College to provide science labs and support its high-end research in forensic science; and a new science building on the site of Roosevelt Hall at Brooklyn College.  The Capital Improvement Program also includes lump sum appropriations providing for immediate individual lab upgrades at various campuses.

 

  • Another example of CUNY’s enriched research environment is the expanded capacity and reach of its new High Performance Computing Facility.  Located on the campus of the College of Staten Island, and accessible by all campuses through the CUNY network, it comprises three commodity cluster-based supercomputers that support interactive and batch computing and visualization.

 

  • Other enhancements of the research environment include sustained support for internal funding programs and the hiring, effective July 2008, of a Vice Chancellor for Research, whose will lead research and technology development and assume a major role in advancing CUNY’s science agenda.

 

Contributions to Economic Development.  CUNY has established a Technology Commercialization Office to protect and commercialize faculty intellectual property as well as to contribute to the economic development in the City and State.  This fully staffed office is now working to commercialize specific faculty projects.

 

Greater Institutional Support for Post-Doctoral Research Students.  In the years to come, new knowledge through research will come through the work of those now at the very beginning of their scholarly careers.  To that end, CUNY has made progress in its efforts to provide greater institutional support for post-doctoral research students.  Its Postdoctoral Development program offers innovative career development and networking events, both through the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and in collaboration with other member institutions of the Northeast Postdoctoral Office Consortium.  Plans are also under way to provide funds to extend first-year membership in the New York Academy of Sciences’ Science Alliance — a benefit offered to CUNY doctoral students — to the University’s postdoctoral fellows.

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • An Empire State Innovation Fund should be established to provide grants for research in the physical sciences, bioscience, engineering and medicine at public and private research universities located in the State.  This $3 billion fund, disbursed in equal annual amounts over a ten-year period, would support research that holds significant promise for economic development, cementing New York’s long-tern commitment to science.
  • NYSTAR’s capacity to guide investment and interaction between businesses and academia, initiate experimental programs in emerging technologies and facilitate the commercialization of results of public and private university research should be strengthened.
  • To encourage collaboration among New York State’s leading scientists, the New York Academy of Sciences should develop “Global Science Excellence Clusters” to be located in upstate New York, patterned after the cluster created by the Academy in New York City.
  • Researchers’ access to the high performance computing capacity of NYSGRID should be expanded, and the bandwidth of NYSERNet, which provides next-generation Internet connectivity, should be increased throughout the State.


D. Qualified Professionals for Every Community throughout the State

 


  1. An Adequate Supply of Qualified Professionals

    .  The Regents and the Department will continue to monitor supply, demand, and changing conditions of all licensed professions and will strengthen efforts to:
  • Communicate to the institutions of higher education the results of their monitoring activities.
  • Seek input on changes in the licensed professions from the institutions with professional preparation programs, based on their research and experience, and
  • Encourage and enable institutions to respond to existing and emerging needs by keeping pace with technology, supporting the continuing education of licensed professionals, ensuring a close link between preparation and practice, and working to improve access to the professions and to provide an adequate supply of professionals throughout the State.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • Over the last four years, the Legislature created eight new licensed professions under the Board of Regents jurisdiction.

 

  • Between 2003 and 2008, the number of licensed practitioners of all professions in New York grew by 13.5 percent, to a total of 761,000. 

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Change over time in the number of newly licensed practitioners of key professions.

 

Table 47 shows the number of professional licensees registered to practice in New York State, across all licensed professions since April 1, 2003.  Today, the 47 licensed health, business, and design professions have 760,929 registered practitioners.  Over the six-year period, the number of professional licensees registered to practice in New York State grew by 13.5 percent.

 

Table 47

 

Professional Licensees Registered to Practice in New York State

 

Number Registered on April 1 of Year

Profession

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

 2008

Acupuncture

2,168

2,391

2,583

2.782

2,935

3,110

Architecture

14,629

13,731

14,104

14,375

14,422

14,877

Athletic Trainer

910

974

1,075

1,143

1,178

1,281

Audiology

1,190

1,184

1,195

1,221

1,237

1,271

Certified Dental Assistant

516

574

645

674

739

819

Certified Public Accountant

35,915

35,469

36,967

37,528

37,664

39,064

Certified Shorthand Reporting

302

308

303

299

290

284

Chiropractic

6,328

6,251

6,245

5,978

5,796

5,568

Certified Clinical Lab Technician

----

----

----

----

1,384

1,886

Clinical Laboratory Technologist

----

----

----

----

10,377

13,217

Creative Arts Therapist

----

----

----

463

1,123

1,182

Cytotechnologist

----

----

----

----

152

431

Dental Hygiene

9,112

9,149

9,392

9,517

9,668

9,866

   3-year limited license

----

1

3

4

4

4

Dentistry

17,366

17,408

17,844

18,107

18,382

18,170

   3-year limited license

----

13

27

43

58

52

Dietetics-Nutrition

4,531

4,622

4,559

4,642

4,800

4,736

Interior Design

201

211

214

217

227

240

Land Surveying

1,718

1,696

1,688

1,618

1,567

1,527

Landscape Architecture

1,101

1,113

1,159

1,193

1,199

1,232

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

----

----

18,324

24,050

24,883

24,978

Licensed Master Social Worker

----

----

24,605

25,350

25,172

24,491

Licensed Practical Nurse

68,754

66,746

69,467

69,855

69,342

71,381

Marriage & Family Therapist

----

----

----

181

670

707

Massage Therapy

11,612

12,360

13,218

13,964

14,908

15,634

Medical Physics - Diagnostic radiological

----

 

135

 

152

 

149

 

147

 

147

Medical Physics - Medical health

----

 

100

 

115

 

115

 

105

103

Medical Physics - Medical nuclear

----

 

102

 

115

 

111

 

110

107

Medical Physics - Therapeutic radiological or radiation oncology

----

 

 

238

 

 

285

 

 

283

 

 

287

284

Medicine

75,067

75,559

77,606

79,276

80,737

82,908

   3-year limited license

782

824

952

997

1,002

1,008

Mental Health Counselor

----

----

----

1,250

3,997

4,124

Midwifery

963

960

988

1,017

1,015

1,017

Nurse Practitioner

11,195

11,717

12,344

12,902

10,281

14,139

Occupational Therapy

8,697

8.946

9,137

9,367

9,615

9,889

Occupational Therapy Assistant

3,591

3,614

3,592

3,626

3.657

3,713

Ophthalmic Dispensing

3,649

3,593

3,632

3,675

3,698

3,757

Optometry

2,816

2,815

2,878

2,907

2,947

2,975

Pharmacy

18,950

19,036

19,130

19,723

20,282

20,373

   3-year limited license

79

100

113

109

123

94

Physical Therapist Assistant

4,417

4,367

4,365

4,458

4,579

4,662

Physical Therapy

16,152

16,556

16,958

17,639

18,420

18,752

Podiatry

2,450

2,429

2,454

2,471

2,462

2,434

Professional Engineering

27,381

27,483

27,849

26,849

25,605

24,507

Psychoanalyst

----

----

----

360

817

837

Psychology

10,423

10,382

10,727

11,103

11,181

11,479

Public Accountant

346

267

272

249

207

199

Registered Professional Nurse

235,663

238,192

242,067

246,958

255,382

259,694

Registered Physician Assistant

6,806

7,229

7,747

8,221

8,660

9,157

Registered Specialist Assistant

62

62

67

71

77

83

Respiratory Therapist

4,655

4,504

4,662

4,703

4,732

4,971

Respiratory Therapy Technician

1,649

1,519

1,590

1,619

1,651

1,664

Social Work

40,892

41,413

----

----

----

----

Speech-Language Pathology

10,525

10,914

11,342

11,846

12,400

13,066

Veterinary Medicine

4,207

4,345

4,542

4,685

4,848

4,997

   3-year limited license

36

53

70

80

90

84

Veterinary Technology

2,684

2,803

3,050

3,247

3,466

3,691

   3-year limited license

4

10

12

14

11

6

Total:

670,494

674,468

692,430

713,284

740,766

760,929

Source: NYSED, Office of the Professions, 2008.

 

Over the past four years, the Legislature has placed eight additional professions under the Regents jurisdiction.  As a result of implementation of the mental health therapy professions, the conversion of social work, and the initial licensure of the new clinical laboratory technology professions, 107,000 more individuals were licensed.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

Increasing Capacity to Educate Nurses.  The 2008-09 budget provided nearly $5 million to increase the capacity of USNY’s higher education institutions to enroll nursing students, including $2 million to SUNY, nearly $2 million to CUNY, and $1 million to independent institutions.

 

The City University of New York

 

As anticipated four years ago, CUNY colleges have responded to the educational needs of New York City regional workforce demands.  CUNY has inaugurated new programs to meet workforce demands and challenges of the current professions.  Several of these have been mentioned earlier.

 

CUNY has substantially improved its performance in the training of nurses.  Since 2003 the number of students taking the NCLEX-RN examination has grown by 78.7 percent, from 606 to 1,083.  Given that pass rates on the examination have also been on the rise (from 81.4 percent in 2003 to 86.3 percent in 2007), CUNY has been able to almost double the number of nurses it produces annually, from 493 to 935.

 

CUNY has been consistent in graduating health professionals in other high-demand career areas, such as speech-language pathologists, physician assistants, physical therapists, medical laboratory technologists, nutritionists, social workers, respiratory therapists, occupational therapy assistants, and dental hygienists.  In the last four years, new social work (Master of Social Work) and physician assistant programs have graduated their first students.  Other new allied health programs are under development and important changes — such as transitioning City College’s established physician assistant program to a master’s degree program — are under way.  CUNY’s commitment to doctoral education in the health professions is seen in its development of Health Sciences doctoral programs at the Graduate Center in partnership with Hunter College, Lehman College, Brooklyn College, and the College of Staten Island.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

  • New YorkUniversity’s Nursing Bound program informs pupils in grades 9 through 12 about nursing as a profession and assists pupils in completing applications to nursing schools.

 

  • Phillips Beth Israel School of Nursing’s Future Nurses Club offers pupils in grades 9 through 12 hands-on opportunities to learn about the nursing profession, including measuring blood pressure and bandaging, and group discussions and videos on such pertinent topics as therapeutic communication.

 

  • IthacaCollege’s Health Quest five-day summer camp enables pupils in grades 10 and 11 to explore health careers.

 

  • St. Joseph’s College of Nursing sponsors an Allied health Explorer Post the enables pupils in grades 9 through 12 who are at least 14 years old to explore health fields.

 

  • Individual CICU “College Connections” newsletters have focused on information about nursing and other health careers, including information on resources for guidance counselor and families.

 

State Education Department

 

Public Outreach.  SED has conducted extensive outreach to ensure the integrity of the licensed professions and protect the public.  Millions received information from the Web site, E-mail, telephone, and postal communications.

 

  • In 2006, over 199,000 licensed professionals and nearly 48,000 students in professional education programs, as well as professional associations, were given information to help ensure competent and ethical practice.

 

  • More than 15,000 consumers and representatives of consumer groups were given information to help them understand their rights when receiving professional services through outreach activities at libraries, nursing homes, community centers, and other locations.

 

  • SED staff and members of State Boards for the Professions reached out to nearly 23,000 K-12 pupils to encourage them to consider, and help them prepare for, careers in the licensed professions.

 

  • In 2006, over 4.7 million visits were made to SED’s Web site for information on professional practice, Regents actions, news and alerts, and consumers’ rights to professional services, an average of over 12,800 visits per day.  Over 13.5 million professional licenses were verified on the Web that year.  Since online verification was launched in 1997, over 56 million individual licenses have been verified.

 

Next Steps

 

  • SED will continue steps to implement the activities set forth in the Statewide Plan.

 

 


  1. An Adequate Supply of Qualified Teachers, School Leaders, and other School Professionals

    .  To provide all pupils with the high-quality education to which they are entitles, the Regents will wok with the State’s higher education institutions and K-12 educational community to meet the needs of the schools for decades to come by:
  • Recruiting, preparing, and retaining an adequate supply of qualified teachers for all subject matter areas and for all geographic locations throughout the State; and
  • Recruiting, preparing, and retaining outstanding school leaders.

 

In 1996, the Regents Task Force on Teaching identified four gaps between the educational system’s condition and the goal of one with qualified teachers for all:  

 

Gap 1. Recruitment and retention:  New York does not attract and keep enough of the best teachers where they are needed most.

 

Gap 2. Higher education/pre-service:  Not enough teachers leave college prepared to ensure that New York’s pupils reach higher standards.

 

Gap 3. Professional development for existing classroom teachers.  Not enough teachers maintain the knowledge and skills needed to teach to high standards throughout their careers.

 

Gap 4.    Environment.  Many school environments actively work against effective teaching and learning.

 

The Statewide Plan addresses these gaps insofar as higher education programs and services may address them.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • The Board of Regents has initiated a comprehensive strategy to help assure that all students are taught by qualified, certified teachers that includes regional forums across the State to discuss the future of teaching and school leadership.

 

  • SED issued three annual reports on teacher supply and demand to provide educators, policy makers, students, and parents with information on where workforce needs are growing and where teacher surpluses exist.

 

  • In collaboration with institutions offering teacher preparation programs, pre-K-12 schools, the Professional Standards and Practices Board, professional associations, unions, government leaders, members of the business community, and other partners, a series of steps have been identified to address teacher supply and demand and to strengthen teacher preparation, including:
  • strengthening alignment among teaching policy, practice, emerging research and data, and funding;
  • reviewing and, where appropriate, updating the teacher certification structure and requirements in subject shortage areas, such as special education, languages other than English, career and technical education, and bilingual education;
  • enhancing SED’s new on-line teacher certification system, TEACH;
  • systematizing P-16 partnerships to enhance teaching and learning; and
  • improving data systems in cooperation with the education community.

 

  • In July 2008, the Regents accepted a $3 million grant from the Wallace Foundation to build capacity to support educational leadership.  The grant will support:
  • transformation of institutions’ school leadership preparation programs,
  • establishment of leadership professional development programs focused on teaching and learning and provided through regional leadership academies, and
  • creation of school leader performance evaluations.

 

  • With the support of institutions offering teacher preparation programs, SED has overhauled the teacher certification process:
  • prospective teachers now can apply for certification, and colleges can recommend program graduates, electronically; 96 percent of all applications are submitted electronically;
  • between 2006-07 and 2007-08, SED reduced the time to certify graduates of registered teacher preparation programs from two months to one day;
  • 2007-08 saw 20,000 more certificates issued than in 2006-07; and
  • SED provides expedited service for prospective teachers who have secured teaching jobs and need certification for employment.

 

  • The standards for the registration of programs preparing classroom teachers require that candidates for initial certificates be provided study that permits them to learn “uses of technology, including instructional and assistive technology, in teaching and learning – and skill in using technology and teaching students to use technology to acquire information, communicate, and enhance learning.”  SED will convene P-12 educators and teacher educators to examine existing provisions in the Commissioner’s Regulations to ensure that all newly prepared teachers have the knowledge and skill to integrate instructional technology into teaching and learning.  The objective will be to create technology standards for new teachers that all teacher preparation programs will implement. 

 

Indicators of Progress

 

The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Numbers of teachers and school leaders certified, by certification area, gender, race/ethnicity, and geographic location, compared to the demand.

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

    • Ensure all students are taught by qualified, certified teachers.
  • Require all teachers in core academic subjects to be certified in the subject they are teaching by July 2007.
  • Report the percentage of low income and minority students, as compared to other students, who are assigned unqualified, out-of-field, and inexperienced teachers in core courses.
  • Set escalating targets to reduce the percentage of teachers without experience authorized to teach in SURR schools and Schools in Need of Improvement (SINI).

 

  • Expand the pool of qualified teachers in areas where they are needed most, based on school district need and provide existing teachers with the supports they need to remain in the profession. Identify specific needs and set targets.
    • Revise the teacher certification structure to provide greater flexibility (e.g., reciprocity options for out-of-state teachers) without compromising quality.
    • Provide regional teacher supply and demand data to school districts and colleges to align workforce demands, the types of teacher education programs colleges decide to offer or expand, and the subjects in which prospective teachers seek certification.
    • Expand the Teachers of Tomorrow Program and the Teacher Opportunity Corps to provide incentives to an additional 7,500 qualified teachers to teach in school districts with shortages, to provide an additional 1,200 teachers with training, professional development, and/or mentoring, and to increase support for teaching assistants and paraprofessionals to become teachers.
    • Foster new alternate teacher education programs where they are most needed and support the development and expansion of innovative programs that link P-12, higher education, business, community organizations, and other USNY partners. Encourage colleges to create programs for teaching assistants and paraprofessionals who want to become teachers.
    • Working with school districts and their leaders, identify and improve environmental conditions that affect teacher retention.
    • Advocate for legislation to provide loan forgiveness for teachers who teach in high need schools.

 

Gap 1. Recruitment and Retention.  There are clear shortages of Black and Hispanic teachers compared to the pupil population.  In the fall of 2004, 40 percent of all public school pupils were Black and Hispanic; however, only 15 percent of all teachers were Black and Hispanic.  In 2006-07, only six percent of the certificates issued to new teachers whose race/ethnicity was known went to those who were Black or Hispanic. 

 

Research indicates that teachers with no prior experience are less likely than other teachers to be effective at raising student achievement.  In 2006-07, five percent of teachers in the State had no prior teaching experience, a slight decline from earlier years.  In New York City, more than eight percent had no prior teaching experience.

 

In 2006-07, five percent of full-time equivalent teaching assignments in all subjects in public schools USNY-wide were taught by teachers without appropriate certification.  The percentage was higher in New York City and in certain subject areas USNY-wide: bilingual education, languages other than English, library/school media specialists, sciences, middle/secondary level special education, and bilingual special education.  Local shortages existed in some other fields.

 

Increasing the Supply of Teachers in Subject Areas of Shortage.  Demand for new teachers is likely to continue as baby boomers continue to retire.  In 2006-07, teachers aged 55 or older held 18 percent of FTE teaching positions, a larger share than in prior years, with large percentages in every subject area and region. 

 

In 2006, the Regents initiated a comprehensive strategy to help ensure that all school districts have qualified teachers in hard-to-staff subjects, including both short- and long-term initiatives to have both immediate and sustaining effect.  They include (1) using workforce data to help students choose to pursue teaching careers in subjects of greatest need, (2) expanding the number of alternative teacher preparation programs where needed, (3) examining certification requirements, (4) initiatives to improve teacher retention, (5) examining reciprocity policy, (6) legislation for retired teachers, and (7) linkages with the business community.

 

              In 2008, SED issued its third annual report on teacher supply and demand,   which is part of the ongoing evaluation of the teaching policies established by the Board.  In 2006, SED shared first-of-its-kind regional teacher supply and demand data with colleges and universities with teacher education programs and school districts USNY-wide as a part of the Regents strategy to support regional teacher workforce planning.  In March 2007, it released the second annual report.  The 2008 report contains multiple indicators of progress based on data from the 2006-07 school year.  Statewide, public schools made progress toward meeting Regents and federal teacher quality goals.  In 2006-07, pupils were more likely to be taught by appropriately certified, highly qualified and experienced teachers than in prior years; however, gaps remained, particularly in high-need, low-performing districts. 

 

              SED’s collaborative efforts with the New York City Department of Education and district administrators to improve teacher qualifications in New York City have helped to raise the percentage of core classes in the City’s schools taught by highly qualified teachers from 78 percent in 2004-05 to 87 percent in 2005-06. 

 

SED’s Higher Education Act Teacher Recruitment Grant project yielded 845 new teachers in shortage subjects for high-need schools in New York City, of whom 671 (79.4 percent) were still teaching in the fall of 2006 (more than twice as many as the proposal projected).  The project gave financial incentives to independent colleges and universities that created alternative teacher preparation programs in partnership with the New York City Teaching Fellows program.  SED received USDE’s approval to continue funding Transition to Teaching, an alternative route program that prepares teachers in shortage areas in New York City schools. This is SED’s fourth year of participation.

 

              The Teacher Opportunity Corps continues recruiting underrepresented minorities into teaching careers and training teachers to work with high need, at-risk populations. In 2005-06, it had 461 participants, 133 graduates, 99 applicants for certification, and 87 and 97 percent passing rates on the LAST and ATS-W Teacher Certification Exams. On graduation, 77 participants were employed and 28 continued in graduate school.  Teachers of Tomorrow supported 39 high need, low performing districts to recruit 2,944 new teachers and assisted such districts to permanently certify 707 existing teachers.

 

              Certification of Teachers.  In 2006-07, SED issued more than 30,000 certificates to new teachers (those who had not been in the public school workforce in the prior five years).  More than two certificates were issued to new teachers for each vacancy for a new teacher that year in most subject areas and geographic regions, suggesting that there were enough teachers to meet districts’ needs if teachers were willing and able to work where needed.  However, in New York City shortages persist in many subject areas. USNY-wide, three areas had two or fewer certificates issued to new teachers for each vacancy for a new teacher – career and technical education, languages other than English, and library/school media specialist -- suggesting potential shortages.

 

SED’s “TEACH” computer system has provided expedited, efficient processing of certification applications.  In the spring of 2008, over 96 percent of applications were received on line.  TEACH also has provided the ability, for the first time, to track and document aspects of the services it provides.

 

Table 48

 

Cycle Time for First Teaching Certificates, 2006-07 – 2008-09

 

2006-07

2007-08

2008-09

College Program Graduates

6-8 weeks

1 day

1 day

Individual Evaluations

20 weeks

8 weeks

11 weeks*

Expedited Service

1 week

1 week

1 week

*Increase resulted from loss of overtime and temporary staff due to budget constraints.

Source: NYSED, Office of Teaching Initiatives, 2008.

 

              These improvements, along with changes in SED’s approach, have resulted in:

 

  • A 27.1 percent increase in certificates issued between 2005-06 and 2007-08, from 75,498 to 95,982.

 

  • Automatic issuance in one day of initial certificates as classroom teachers to candidates whose applications are submitted by New York teacher preparation institutions and who have paid the application fee on line and met testing requirements and fingerprint clearance.  Applications for permanent or professional certification are processed within one week of receipt.

 

  • Reducing from 20 weeks in 2006-07 to 11 weeks in 2008-09 the time to review applications for individual evaluation.  (In 2006-07, 11 percent of the more than 30,000 initial teaching certificates were of this type.) 

 

  • Reducing from five months to five weeks the time to review applications from teachers moving from their Initial or Provisional certificate in a subject area to the Professional or Permanent certificate in the same subject area.

 

  • Reducing from 16-20 weeks to seven to nine weeks the time to review applications for certification through reciprocity with other states.

 

  • Processing within seven to ten days of receipt, requests for time extensions of the validity period of initial and provisional certificates.

 

Moral Character Investigations for School Personnel.  SED must investigate complaints against certified educators and provide clearance for all personnel seeking employment in the public schools.  Between 2001 and 2007 complaints against teachers increased 400 percent, to 5,500 in 2007.  Private and non-public schools now have the option to require fingerprint checks of educators.  SED investigates and processes 65,000 to 75,000 fingerprint checks of applicants a year.  In 2006, it handled some 118 legal cases against certificate holders and applicants, reviewed 4,100 fingerprint-generated rap sheets, denied 253 individuals clearance for employment in schools, and issued some 3,000 subsequent arrest letters to school districts.

 

  • Evidence of the classroom effectiveness of graduates of current teacher preparation programs as found in RATE, NCATE, and TEAC accreditation site visit final reports.
  • Other pertinent findings of final reports of accreditation visits to programs preparing teachers and school leaders [combined].

 

In relation to these indicators, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

    • Strengthen the knowledge and skills of teachers and prospective teachers by assessing teacher education programs and professional development and improving as needed.
  • Review requirements for teacher preparation based on areas of greatest academic need.  Work with colleges and universities to establish a schedule for strengthening the content of teacher education programs so that all new teachers have necessary knowledge and skills in four priority areas – literacy, mathematics, teaching students with disabilities, and teaching English Language Learners.  Evaluate and incorporate recognized effective practices in teacher education programs as needed.
  • Partner with the New York Comprehensive Center to ensure faculty in college teacher education programs prepare all prospective teachers to use scientifically based reading instruction in the classroom.
  • Evaluate the quality of professional development and ensure current teachers get adequate knowledge and skills in how to teach reading and other key areas.  Align the 175-hour professional development requirement with effective instructional practices related to improving student achievement.  Monitor school districts’ implementation.
  • Using recommendations from the USNY Technology Policy and Practices Council, strengthen the use of technology in teacher education programs and professional development and encourage its use in the classroom.  Ensure that technology resources be provided equitably among all students and educators.

 

Gap 2. Higher Education/Pre-service.  On-going evaluation of implementation of the Regents Teaching Policy continues with the New York Comprehensive Center to examine and improve college curricula for preparing teachers to teach literacy; Professor James Wyckoff’s examination of the effectiveness of the pathways to teaching and the effect on student learning; data on special education certification; and discussions on the possible effect of the certification structure on shortages.

 

All teacher education programs that were required to be accredited by the close of 2006 have completed their accreditation visits.  To date, 74 percent have achieved accreditation.  Two examples of good practice found in the visits are:

 

  • A college’s resource room for student teachers includes a computer, references, and materials for planning lessons with a focus on materials that support literacy, numeracy, and culturally, linguistically inclusive practices.

 

  • A college expanded its curriculum library to include additional training videos on Universal Design for Learning, differentiated instruction, team teaching, and assessment using two well known early childhood tools: The Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test and the Brigance Early Learning Inventory.

 

The City University of New York

 

Teacher education continues to be a CUNY flagship program to meet New York City’s needs.  CUNY has continued to improve the rigor of its programs.  Over the past five years, the pass rate on the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test has increased from 93.2 percent to 97.1 percent, while that on the Assessment of Teaching Skills-Written has risen from 94.5 percent to 99.0 percent.  These indicators have been tracked closely by the CUNY system administration through their inclusion in the reporting associated PMP.  All initial and advanced teacher education programs at its campuses have National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) accreditation.

 

Hiring Outstanding Faculty in Teacher Education.  CUNY has been recruiting outstanding faculty in teacher education as part of its cluster hiring program.  Since 1999, hires in this cluster have totaled 54, with 40.7 percent (22 hires) since 2004.

 

Alternate Route Programs.  Alternate teacher preparation (ATP) programs have continued to expand at CUNY so that colleges now offer an array of options, including two programs operated in collaboration with the New York City Department of Education (New York City Teaching Fellows and the Teaching Opportunity Program), Teach for America, and a new Charter School program at Hunter College.

 

Expanded Programs to Prepare Future Educators.  In addition to the ATP programs, CUNY continues to prepare new teachers through established, traditional routes.  The CUNY Teacher Academy, launched in 2006, has sought to build a new model for teacher education in mathematics and the sciences through its coordination work on multiple campuses.  A University Working Group, chaired by the University Dean for Teacher Education, will spend 2008-09 studying the Teacher Academy’s successes to date and analyzing how CUNY can best continue to train new public school mathematics and science teachers.

 

The expansion of the ATP programs, together with the growth and success of the traditional programs, has generated substantial growth over the past few years in the number of certified teachers produced by CUNY.  Between 2002-03 and 2006-07, the number of teachers produced rose by 57.6 percent, from 1,829 to 2,883.

 

Independent
Colleges
and Universities

 

              CICU points to the independent institutions offering ATP programs, including:

 

  • AdelphiUniversity’s early childhood education program that serves 60 master’s degree students.

 

  • Bank Street College of Education’s Master of Education programs serving traditional pre-service candidates, interns and teaching assistants, and in-service teachers.  A Bank Street program prepares minority students as teachers of special education.  Training for All Teachers helps graduate students develop the skills needed to teach students learning English as a second language.

 

  • FordhamUniversity’s Intern Fellowship Program leading to an M.S. in Ed. degree in elementary education is offered in collaboration with metropolitan area school districts.

 

  • IonaCollege’s ATP program leads to an M.S.T. degree in either early childhood/childhood education or in adolescence education in partnerships with several school districts and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York.

 

  • Long Island University’s Brooklyn Center serves 68 New York City teaching fellows.

 

  • MercyCollege works with The New Teacher Project, a spin-off from Teach for America, designed to address pressing social problems and prepare new teachers for the unique challenges of the New York City public schools.

 

  • New YorkUniversity offers full fellowships to uncertified and novice teachers in New York City and trains uncertified elementary and middle school teachers in individual Community School Districts in Brooklyn and the Bronx.

 

  • Pace University’s ATP programs work with New York City schools and the Putnam/Northern Westchester BOCES to prepare second career teachers.  

 

  • RobertsWesleyan College and the Rochester City School District offer the Urban Teachers for Tomorrow program to resolve the City’s growing shortage of teachers.

 

  • St. John’sUniversity’s ATP program attracts diverse young professionals from architecture, art, business, medical fields, physical therapy, and science to teaching.  

 

State Education Department

 

              As required by §305 of the Education Law, in December 2007, the Regents received the report of SED’s study of the evaluation of teacher preparation programs in consultation with the P-16 education community and national experts.

 

              As required by statute, the Regents approved amendments to the Commissioner’s Regulations to assure that all teachers newly certified in special education have received course work on the needs of children with autism.  

 

              Instructional Technology.  For the past eight years, the standards for the registration of programs preparing classroom teachers have required that candidates for initial certificates be provided study that permits them to learn “uses of technology, including instructional and assistive technology, in teaching and learning – and skill in using technology and teaching students to use technology to acquire information, communicate, and enhance learning.”  The Statewide Plan reinforces that mandate.  All accreditation visits to teacher education programs review the technology made available to teacher candidates and the evidence that candidates use it in preparing lessons, in demonstrating lessons, and in teaching during student teaching and other field work.

 

              However, many candidates have reported to SED and members of accreditation teams that they run into obstacles in schools that block their use of technology.  They report not having sufficient technology available in the schools in which they are placed for student teaching and in which they gain employment.  They find outdated equipment in classrooms.  Some districts have firewalls so strong that they prevent access to legitimate educational Web sites.  Cooperating teachers, mentors, and principals may be less current on use of technology than the candidates.  

 

  • Change over time in the number, statewide, of joint programs between two- and four-year institutions leading to certification.

 

The Statewide Plan reported the existence, across USNY, of joint programs operated by eight community colleges and five four-year colleges.  Today, four CUNY community colleges (Borough of Manhattan, Kingsborough, LaGuardia, and Queensborough) offer 43 joint programs with three CUNY senior colleges (Brooklyn, City, and Queens) and 14 SUNY community colleges offer 146 joint programs with five four-year SUNY campuses and four independent colleges.

 

  • Change over time in the number, statewide, of two- and four-year programs articulated under the teacher education articulation template.

 

Since adoption of the template, 11 SUNY community colleges have developed or revised A.A. or A.S. programs to meet the template.

 

  • Change over time in pass rates on teacher certification exams, statewide.

 

Table 49, below, shows pass rates for 2004-05 through 2006-07, by type of test.  Rates are not shown for cohorts of fewer than ten test-takers.  In 2006-07, pass rates ranged from 86 percent in Dance to 100 percent on several content tests.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 49

 

Teacher Certification Examination Results,
Statewide, 2004-05 – 2006-07

 

2004-05

2005-06

2006-07

Assessment

# Tested

# Passed

Pass Rate

# Tested

# Passed

Pass Rate

# Tested

# Passed

Pass Rate

 

Test of Liberal Arts and Sciences

LAST

17733

17506

99

20860 

20619

99

21202

20920

99

 

Test of Professional Knowledge

ATS-W

17757

17629

99

20887

20772

99

21156

21050

99

 

Content Specialty Tests

ASL

4

--

--

 7

--

--

7

 --

 --

Biology

507

499

98

492 

488

99

537

533

99

Chemistry

89

86

97

109 

107

98

114

112

98

Dance

5

--

--

16 

16

100

23

19

83

Earth Science

111

103

93

136 

132

97

112

110

98

English Lang Arts

1307

1213

93

1501 

1412

94

1467

1405

96

French

59

48

81

70 

58

83

78

67

86

German

6

--

--

--

--

4

 --

 --

Italian

31

27

87

19 

16

84

31

28

90

Japanese

2

--

--

--

--

2

 --

 --

Latin

2

--

--

--

--

--

 --

 --

Mandarin

0

--

--

--

--

2

 --

 --

Mathematics

930

902

97

1266 

1243

98

1209

1177

97

Multi-Subject

9168

8735

95

11413 

10875

95

11603

11011

95

Music

297

277

93

382 

362

95

400

384

96

Physics

52

51

98

62 

62

100

46

45

98

Social Studies

1368

1249

91

1528 

1402

92

1552

1400

90

Spanish

171

157

92

230 

212

92

270

250

93

Theatre

39

38

97

36 

35

97

27

27

100

Visual Arts

420

392

93

461 

430

93

431

406

94

Agriculture

9

--

--

--

--

6

 --

 --

Bus & Marketing

84

78

93

125 

119

95

89

83

93

Ed Tech Special

17

17

100

26 

26

100

56

55

98

Famly & Con Sci

34

34

100

17 

17

100

25

25

100

Health Education

136

132

97

181 

174

96

175

173

99

Library Med Spec

46

40

87

78 

74

95

83

77

93

Physical Educ

625

568

91

700 

656

94

727

667

92

Technology Educ

65

62

95

114 

114

100

38

35

92

BEA Spanish

--

--

--

-- 

--

--

92

92

100

BEA H/Creole

--

--

--

-- 

--

--

1

 --

 --

BEA Cantonese

--

--

--

-- 

--

--

1

 --

 --

BEA French

--

--

--

-- 

--

--

1

 --

 --

BEA Korean

--

--

--

-- 

--

--

1

 --

 --

Blind & Visl Imp

7

--

--

--

--

10

10

100

Deaf & Hear Imp

44

37

84

42 

34

81

48

41

85

ESOL

344

330

96

318 

311

98

418

415

99

Gifted Education

0

--

--

--

--

6

 --

 --

Literacy

1171

1156

99

1512 

1478

98

1719

1696

99

Studnts w Disabil

2969

2621

88

4269 

3832

90

4730

4248

90

Source: NYSED, Office of Research and Information Systems, 2008.

 

  • Retention in the schools of graduates of current teacher and school leader preparation programs.

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Make online professional development courses available to all teachers, (such as the PBS TeacherLine NY and NYS Virtual Learning System).  Create standards-aligned content with teacher guides, extensive online library resources, and interactive flexibility to fit classroom needs.

 

              Gap 3. Professional Development for Existing Classroom Teachers.  Through the Teacher/Leader Quality Partnerships program (TLQP), 33 projects, with 42 higher education institutions serving as partners in professional development for pre-service and in-service teachers and administrators, are being offered in 46 school districts, two BOCES districts, 51 additional school buildings, and 55 private and charter schools.  Of the 3,935 teachers who participated in TLQP for at least one of the first three years of the program’s current five-year grant cycle, only 140 (3.6 percent) have left teaching and do not plan to return to a career in education

 

              In January 2007, the 12th annual Interagency Early Childhood Professional Development Institute was conducted, giving over 1,800 participants an opportunity for early childhood teachers, directors, parents, and administrators to explore good practices in early childhood education.  In addition, the revised Regents Policy on Early Childhood Education was presented to special invitees.  In July 2007, a three-day Summer Science Discovery Institute, attended by more than 400 persons, was held for K-12 science teachers, coordinators, and school administrators.  The Learning Standards were used as a basic framework in involving the participants in hands-on activities to enhance teaching and learning.

 

              SED ensured that Staff and Curriculum Development Network members received timely and useful information that supports their work in professional development.

 

              SED crafted an 18-hour core curriculum for adult educators to provide the foundation skills essential for teaching adult learners.

 

              The New York State Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching is drafting a statement of standards to define high quality, effective professional development; provide a framework focused on local district needs and priorities; support districts’ professional development planning; and align them with the Learning Standards.  It intends to present the statement to the Board of Regents during 2008.

 

              Holders of professional-level teaching certificates can access on-line their professional development records to check that they are accurate and current.

 

              Teacher Resource and Computer Training Centers.  SED developed and implemented multiple mechanisms to ensure that Teacher Center professional development provision is both high quality and aligned with the needs of identified LEAs.

 

              The Legislature established Teacher Resource and Computer Training Centers in 1984 to provide systematic, on-going opportunities for professional education for teachers.  Statewide, 126 Centers serve teachers and other professionals in 660 districts and BOCES, as well as non-public schools.

 

              The goals of the Teacher Centers include:

 

  • providing opportunities for teachers to improve teaching skills;
  • assisting educators in assessing and meeting the learning needs of students;
  • training teachers to prepare pupils to use high technology and to teach the critical thinking and related skills needed for the changing world community;
  • providing computer demonstration and training sites and programs;
  • promoting use of and involvement in education research to develop and produce curricula and curricular material; and
  • fostering sharing and increased understanding of resources, ideas, methods, approaches, information, and materials among educators.

 

To implement these goals, Teacher Center staffs develop workshops, seminars, consultations, visitations, teacher exchanges, conferences, research studies, and other activities determined by each Center’s governing Policy Board on the basis of its assessment of the information teachers provide about the programs and services that would be of value to them, including use of technology in instruction.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

The City University of New York

 

New Certificate Programs for School Leaders.  All colleges with teacher education programs have registered new School Building/District Leader programs in one or another combination.

 

State Education Department

 

School Leadership.  In 2004, the Regents established new educational leadership standards after receiving input from thousands of educators in regional forums over the course of 18 months and culminating in the work of the Commissioner’s Blue Ribbon Panel on School Leadership.  These new standards led to new regulations for the preparation, examination, and certification of school leaders.  Over 50 school leadership preparation programs revised their programs based on the new standards.

 

Cohesive Leadership System.  In July 2008, the Wallace Foundation awarded the Board, in conjunction with State and national partners, an additional grant of $3 million over two years to build on the work of its current grant to implement a Cohesive Leadership System.  This includes transforming colleges’ school leadership preparation programs, establishing leadership professional development programs focused on teaching and learning, and creating school leader performance evaluations.  The goal is to create a comprehensive system of career-long training based on the higher standards encompassing programs in universities, districts, leadership academies, and other providers, and focusing on leaders of high need districts and schools.

 

In year one of the grant, SED will create a model leadership academy that could be replicated in other parts of the State.  The first model is being developed to serve the school leaders in the Rochester City School District in conjunction with SED’s partners, including the faculty in the Executive Leadership Program at St. John Fisher College.  The academy’s core principle is that school leaders can and must have a pivotal role in student learning.  The curriculum will be tailored to align with the needs of the school leaders, grounded in research-based practices, to strengthen teaching and learning.

 

No Child Left Behind.  SED developed and implemented New York's Revised Plan to Enhance Teacher Quality, as required by the No Child Left Behind act (NCLB), which USDE approved in November 2006.  It has dozens of action steps that are being implemented.  School and district report cards have new indicators of teacher quality, such as the percent of teaching assignment held by teachers without appropriate certification and turnover rates for new teachers.  P-16 teacher quality partnerships of schools and teacher preparation institutions are being piloted in several regions.

 

NCLB Title IIA and Highly Qualified Teacher (HQT) Requirements:

 

  • Two-day turnaround for phone notification of all 137 Local Education Agencies (LEAs) not meeting the HQT AMO of 90 percent for 2004-05;

 

  • Developed 2006-07 Teacher Quality (TQ) Plan format and review protocols;

 

  • Reviewed and approved 137 TQ plans/addendums;

 

  • Provided technical assistance to about 300 LEAs in analyzing teacher data;

 

  • Worked with the Office of Public School Choice and IRS to develop mechanisms for review of Charter School teacher quality data;

 

  • Monitored some 50 LEAs for implementation of HQT requirements, TQ plans, Title IIA professional development requirements, and Professional Development Plan requirements of the Commissioner’s Regulations;

 

  • Provided phone and E-mail assistance on appropriate uses of Title IIA funds to districts, schools, charter schools, and SED colleagues; reviewed and approved 83 Title IIA applications and budgets; reviewed some 3,000 Title IIA amendments.

 

New York was one of three states selected to pilot the Leadership Excellence Academy for adult education program managers, a series of six courses combining face-to-face activities with Web-based activities over an 18-month period.  Participants design and implement a project that will increase program performance.

 

Next Steps

 

  • The Regents use several approaches to help districts meet hiring needs and will continue to seek new approaches until all pupils have qualified teachers.  Five strategies to address shortages include strengthening teacher preparation for urban schools, certification policy review; improving teacher certification processing; regional partnerships; and coherence between research, policy, and funding. 

 

  • Teacher Preparation for Urban Schools. To close the performance gap for all students, more emphasis must be placed on addressing the problem where the need is greatest – in the high need schools across the State. In May 2008, the Regents Higher Education Committee held a regional meeting in Yonkers on Improving the Preparation, Recruitment, and Retention of Teachers in Urban Education.  To follow up, SED has convened a work group composed of Regents, deans of education whose graduates work in urban districts, practitioners from the Big 5 school districts, the New York State United Teachers, the PSPB, and other groups.  The work group’s charge is to examine the requirements for teacher preparation and professional development with the goal of strengthening them to better serve the needs of teachers and students in urban schools.  Work is underway in forming this work group.

 

  • Strengthening Instructional Technology in Teacher Preparation.  SED will convene P-12 educators and teacher educators to examine existing provisions in the Commissioner’s Regulations to ensure that all newly prepared teachers have the knowledge and skill to integrate instructional technology into teaching and learning.  The objective will be to create technology standards for new teachers that all teacher preparation programs will implement.  The recommendations from this work group will be provided to the Regents work group on Teacher Preparation for Urban Schools.

 

  • Certification Policy Review.  To ensure that certification requirements do not inadvertently contribute to teacher shortages, the Regents plan to continue the Individual Evaluation certification pathway beyond February 2009, when it is scheduled to expire.  In addition, it will consider certification reforms in shortage subject areas such as special education, career and technical education, languages other than English, and science to increase the supply of certified teachers without compromising quality.

 

    • Improving Teacher Certification Processing.  Despite the efficiencies in certification processing afforded by the TEACH system, staffing issues will continue to hamper efforts to further streamline services in those areas that are not fully automated: handling and processing mail; responding to mail, email and telephone inquiries; providing technical help; and evaluating applicants’ credentials. With the present State budget difficulties, SED will closely monitor staffing and its effect on providing efficient service to teachers and districts.
  •  
    • Regional Partnerships.  SED is working with BOCES, districts, teacher preparation institutions, and others to create or strengthen partnerships to support teacher quality in five regions: the Rochester area, the Syracuse area, the Southern Tier, the Mid-Hudson area, and Long Island.  The partnerships address such issues as obtaining regional data on districts’ hiring needs, improving pre-service field experience and student teaching, and extending the knowledge, skills, and abilities of new and veteran teachers.  SED plans to extend partnerships to all regions of the State.

 

SED is releasing reports and databases for use in these regional partnerships to inform school districts, BOCES, teacher preparation institutions, and the general public about the subject areas and regions where new teachers are needed or not needed.  The information can help colleges and universities recruit for their programs, districts and BOCES plan their recruitment strategies, and students and their families make better informed educational and career choices.

 

6.           Coherence between Research, Policy, and Funding.  SED will align research, policy, and financial resources and adopt a more strategic approach to use of existing financial and human resources, which will help to ensure that all children are taught by highly qualified teachers.  


E. A Balanced and Flexible Regulatory Environment to Support Excellence

 


  1. Encouraging a Highly Effective System

    .  The Regents and the Department will maintain avenues of communication to assure that colleges and universities are aware of regulations and their application and have an opportunity for input.  The Regents priority will remain to ensure a regulatory environment that helps to sustain and support a highly effective system of higher education.

 

Recent Trends in Institutional Growth.  Higher education institutions often see enrollment growth in economic hard times as individuals seek to improve their employability.  The fall of 2008 is not an exception. Table 1, above, shows that total undergraduate and graduate enrollment at New York’s higher education institutions grew by 2.0 percent between the fall of 2007 and the fall of 2008.

 

Not all institutions shared equally in the growth.  Generally, enrollment growth was concentrated at two-year colleges.  While enrollment at SUNY four-year and higher institutions grew by 2.1 percent, its two-year community colleges saw a 3.6 percent increase in enrollment.  Enrollment grew by 3.4 percent at CUNY’s senior colleges and by 5.9 percent at its community colleges.  Independent four-year and higher institutions saw no significant enrollment growth (a 0.3 percent increase); however, independent two-year colleges enjoyed a 7.9 percent increase in enrollment.  In the proprietary sector, four-year and higher colleges had a 2.7 percent increase in enrollment while two-year colleges saw a 6.8 percent decrease; however, the decrease was the result of the closing of one large proprietary two-year college and the phase-out of a second.

 

Some independent and proprietary institutions had significant decreases in both total enrollment and first-time enrollment this year.  SED will monitor the ability of these institutions to adhere to the quality standards for the registration of their programs that the Commissioner’s regulations require.   

 

Over the last three years, institutions in both the public and independent sectors have sought to expand their missions.  One institution started a pharmacy school and is considering starting a law school.  An institution with a medical school also wants a law school, while one with a law school wants a medical school.  Another institution started an osteopathic medical school and is seeking a school of pharmacy.  Institutions that have been primarily undergraduate seek to offer master’s degree programs.  Many institutions are attempting to attract increased numbers of foreign students.  Some colleges are seeking to add doctoral programs and become universities.

 

These appear to be institutions’ attempts to find sources of students other than full-time undergraduates – graduate students and students in professional schools.  Demography predicts a sharp decline in the number of traditional-age students entering as first-time undergraduates over the next seven years.  For several years, colleges have known this.  In both New York and nationwide, the number of high school graduates is estimated to peak this year and then decline each year until 2015.  The drop in the number of high school graduates in the Midwest and Northeast is projected to be ten percent or more.  Only a few southwestern Sun Belt states are projected to see increases over the next seven years.  In addition, the prestige associated with graduate programs, medical schools, and law schools can help institutions find stronger positions in the competition for a declining pool of traditional undergraduates. 

             

Summary of Findings

 

  • Consistent with the Commission on Higher Education’s recommendations, SED, SUNY, and CUNY are collaborating to streamline and expedite the review of proposals for new programs of study and changes to existing programs.  The Commission’s report commends SED, CUNY, and SUNY for this.  Improvements that have been identified will expedite the program registration time for all sectors.

 

  • In the past two years, SED has received 3,263 proposals from USNY’s 271 public, independent, and proprietary higher education institutions; approximately two-thirds of the reviews were completed within 30 days.

 

  • Since adopting the Statewide Plan, the Board of Regents has established five new higher education institutions: (1) the American Museum of Natural History (the first museum in the nation with its own Ph.D. program), (2) Bethel Seminary of the East, (3) Finger Lakes Health College of Nursing, (4) the Mandl School, and (5) the New York Studio School.

 

  • A group of CUNY, SUNY, and independent colleges and universities is working with the State Department of Economic Development and the U.S. Department of Commerce on developing a Study New York consortium to position the State as the destination of choice for students from around the world.    

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Evidence, statewide, that the higher education part of The University of the State of New York has the Elements of a Highly Effective Higher Education System identified in this Plan:

 

Consistent with their missions, all higher education institutions in New York State:

  • avidly pursue knowledge related to their missions, through research where appropriate, and share that knowledge with other institutions and individuals wishing to learn;

 

  • give students the ability, through quality education, to develop ethical, intellectual, and social values; effectively contribute to society and the workplace; and engage in lifelong learning;

 

  • admit all qualified applicants within the institution’s resource capability to offer them a quality education, provide adequate financial assistance to help increase access and affordability for those applicants, and assist them to succeed in their studies;

 

  • cooperate with other higher education institutions, individually and in consortia and networks, in sharing resources for an efficient and cost-effective system, and to avoid unnecessary duplication of effort by students in their progress toward degrees;

 

  • collaborate with elementary and secondary schools to assist, where possible, in preparing pupils to enter and succeed in higher education and, if teacher education is their mission, to prepare quality teachers to meet the State’s need for certified teachers;

 

  • collaborate withgovernment and community organizations to identify those pressing and emerging societal needs that can be addressed by higher education, and devise effective ways to address those needs;

 

  • collaborate with thelicensedprofessions and the people they serve to identify related needs that can be addressed by higher education, through new research initiatives or preparation of professionals with new knowledge and skills, and to devise effective ways to address those needs;

 

  • collaborate withbusinesses and other organizations to identify issues that higher education can address through new research initiatives or preparation of a workforce with new knowledge and skills, and to devise effective ways to address those needs individually and in networks, thus advancing development of intellectual capital, the economy, and related needs of New York;

 

  • provide New Yorkers with opportunities to learn using technological resources, quality distance education and other means; and

 

  • seek excellence through ongoing self-study and study of the environment in which they operate for the purpose of continual improvement.

 

The City University of New York

 

CUNY’s greatest single administrative reform effort, one that will resound in changes and efficiencies in many business processes, is implementation of CUNYfirst (Fully Integrated Resources and Services Tool), its Oracle/PeopleSoft based enterprise resource planning system.  This five-year effort will standardize campus information related to student records, human resources, and finance into one integrated central data base that will replace several dozen aging legacy applications that are very difficult to maintain, upgrade, and interrogate for meaningful, cross silo, information.

 

CUNYfirst will modernize information systems and integrate data across functional areas of responsibility and, most importantly, has allowed the user community to participate in a common design for dozens of disparate campus processes and create a series of University-wide "best practices" to which all colleges will adhere.  In addition to streamlining processes using workflow available in the new software and gaining decision making data across all its functions, the process of configuring the system has allowed CUNY to behave as one institution, rather than many.  Examples of increased efficiencies include:

 

  • CUNY now has a unified General Ledger, covering both tax-levy funds and non-tax-levy funds, complete with a uniform chart of accounts, the development of which all colleges participated in and which all colleges have agreed to use.

 

  • A soon-to-be-deployed Human Resources system that will standardize and reduce the number of idiosyncratic job descriptions by more than two-thirds.

 

  • A new student registration and records system that will be truly Web-based, allowing access from any location, and that will include new features important to students, such as wait lists for high-demand classes and full access to financial aid information.  This new system will be phased in starting in spring 2009.

 

  • State-of-the-art information security that will reduce opportunities for identity theft.

 

  • An expanded data warehouse to accommodate information from many functional areas, allowing for improved reporting of all types via upgraded integration and query functions.

 

Enrollment Management.  Given the size of its student population — CUNY credit-bearing enrollment was more than 232,000 for the fall 2008 semester, the highest enrollment since imposing tuition more than 30 years ago — encouraging effectiveness in enrollment management has been a major priority.  Developments include:

 

  • Promoting the use of CUNY’s Web-based application for admission.  For fall 2008, more than 95 percent of freshman applicants used the on-line application.

 

  • Creating two new enrollment management bodies.  CUNY’s Enrollment Management Council, which meets monthly, consists of the senior enrollment manager at each campus in addition to representatives from a number of central office areas.  The Enrollment Policy Group, which helps to review and set enrollment policy, is chaired by the Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and includes the Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Operating Officer, the Senior Vice Chancellor for University Relations and Secretary of the Board of Trustees, and the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, as well as other senior university officials.

 

Promoting Environmental Health and Safety.  CUNY has

 

  • established an environmental, health and safety compliance system revolving around auditing and training programs;
  • facilitated environmental, health, and safety collaboration among New York City area colleges, universities, and teaching hospitals by creating a consortium, the New York Campus Environmental Resource; and
  • developed emergency preparedness and business continuity tools for potential environmental, health, and safety risks, such as avian influenza pandemic.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

Proprietary colleges have developed strategic plans, according to APC, making extensive use of self studies to improve institutional effectiveness, regularly reviewing compliance with federal State, and accrediting agency standards and regulations, and using data to assure that outcomes are at acceptable levels.

 

State Education Department

 

In relation to this indicator, the P-16 Plan directs SED to:

 

  • Benchmark existing P-16 data systems in other states.

 

  • Engage all the partners in K-12 and in SUNY and CUNY.  Define the system requirements in terms of expected outcomes, content (the data elements), personnel, and technology.  Establish a schedule to construct the system.

 

  • Begin an initial project with SUNY and CUNY to identify, collect, integrate, and report on pertinent data to meet mutual goals.  Create a fully integrated system for public schools and public colleges and universities.

 

New CUNY and SUNY Master Plans.  By law, the Statewide Plan covers an eight-year period.  However, the SUNY and CUNY master plans are only for four years.  In June 2008, CUNY adopted a new master plan for 2008-2012; SUNY will adopt its new plan in 2009.  The Regents are required to review and act on both plans and, to the extent they approve them, incorporate them into the Statewide Plan. 

 

Information about Higher Education.  SED annually collects data from all USNY higher education institutions to monitor Indicators of Progress and provide data and analytical support to external customers.  It has:

 

  • Updated the Indicators of Progress in the Statewide Plan.

 

  • Redesigned collection of career and technical education performance data to meet federal requirements and to align it with the coming P-16 Data System.  The $2 million Gates Foundation grant received in 2007 will help to develop a strategic plan for a P-16 Data System to track individual student progress in order to increase high school and higher education graduation rates.  SED, SUNY, CUNY, the New York City Department of Education, and the Syracuse and Yonkers school districts, are partnered to develop the system.  

 

  • Conducted a major review and edited ten years of student aid data, enhancing SED’s ability to assess student aid policy and affordability measures.

 

  • Provided technical assistance and data on the quality and status of higher education in the State to all colleges and universities, the Executive and the Legislature, students, parents, professional associations, unions, school districts, members of the public, and others to support academic quality.

 

Proprietary Sector of Higher Education.  In 2006, the Regents approved five recommendations to strengthen oversight of proprietary colleges, protect students and their families, and ensure the integrity of that higher education sector, which received national attention as a model of effective regulation.

 

  • A new Regents Rule requires a prospective owner of a proprietary college to secure Regents approval to continue authority to award degrees before the change in ownership.  Prospective new owners now must demonstrate the capacity to operate the institution in compliance with State law, rules, and regulations before gaining approval to continue to conduct registered programs.  The new Rule also provides for a period of provisional authority for new proprietary colleges to award degrees before the Board makes such authority absolute.

 

  • Three recommendations address defining remedial coursework and differentiating it from credit-bearing college coursework; strengthening admissions policies, and seeking funds to enhance SED’s capacity to monitor proprietary colleges.

 

Review of Regulations.  The Statewide Plan states that SED will review statutes and regulations in collaboration with the sectors to identify requirements that may no longer be necessary.  The following reviews have taken place:

 

  • To meet institutions’ needs, the Regents added new titles to the degrees available for use in New York.  In 2005, it added the Doctor of Nursing Practice (D.N.P.) as an earned entry-level doctoral degree in nursing.  In 2008, it added 12 honorary associate degree titles to the degrees that may be awarded on an honorary basis.

 

  • SED began a review of the standards and procedures for Regents consent to the transfer of degree powers when an institution changes ownership or control.

 

  • In response to the Commission on Higher Education’s recommendation, SED collaborated with the SUNY System Administration and the CUNY Central Administration on ways to expedite the review of proposals for new or revised credit-bearing programs and reported the result to the Commission and to the Board of Regents.  The review identified five potential mechanisms for improvement:
    • Regulation review
    • Program registration application materials
    • Collaborative review by SED and SUNY or CUNY
    • Tracking of program proposals
    • Communication between SED and the SUNY and CUNY systems and institutions

 

SED, SUNY, and CUNY will implement the improvements identified.  In 2006, SED received 1,584 program proposals; 33 percent of which were from CUNY and SUNY.  In 2007, 41 percent of 1,679 proposals were from those systems.  Table 50 shows time frames for the SED phase of the program proposal evaluation process.

 

Table 50

 

Review of Proposed CUNY and SUNY Academic Programs by SED

 

CUNY Proposals

SUNY Proposals

2006

2007

2006

2007

Within 30 days

62%

(65)

69%

(150)

57%

(240)

67%

(319)

31-60 days

13%

(14)

14%

(30)

23%

(95)

18%

(86)

61-90 days

13%

(13)

11%

(24)

10%

(43)

7%

(33)

Over 90 days

12%

(12)

6%

(14)

10%

(41)

8%

(36)

Total Registered

104

218

419

474

Source: NYSED, Office of Higher Education, 2008.

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

New Institutions of Higher Education.  In 2005, the Board of Regents granted power to award degrees to the Mandl School, a two-year proprietary college in New York City.  In 2006, it granted degree powers to two independent institutions: the American Museum of Natural History (the first museum in the nation with its own Ph.D. program) and Bethel Seminary of the East, both in New York City.  In 2008, it granted provisional charters as degree-granting institutions to Finger Lakes Health College of Nursing, a two-year institution in Geneva, and the New York Studio School, a graduate institution in New York City.

 

Cost Containment.  SED has identified some measures that institutions and the State can take to constrain increases in the cost of education:

 

  • Include constraint of growth in operating cost in institutions’ self-study processes.

 

  • Resist allocating resources to support activities not central to an institution’s mission.

 

  • Prepare every New York high school graduate for college study, minimizing the use of resources for remediation.

 

  • Encourage SUNY campuses and independent and proprietary four-year colleges to require applicants for admission to baccalaureate study to demonstrate readiness for college study, as CUNY senior colleges do; shift remediation to postsecondary bridge institutions, similar to the EOCs.

 

  • Encourage independent colleges to purchase commodities under State contracts.

 

  • Encourage institutions in a region, or with similar missions, to share rather than needlessly duplicate resources.

 

  • In reviewing the Commissioner’s Regulations and statutes to identify those that may no longer be needed, give priority to identifying those that are high cost.

 

SUNY has developed a catalog of productivity and cost-avoidance initiatives by its campuses.  The catalog, available on SUNY’s Web site, identifies 257 initiatives totaling more than $9.6 million.

 

Disaster Preparedness.  SED is working with the higher education sectors, the Department of Health, HESC, and USDE on preparedness for disaster, ranging from pandemic flu to responding to hurricanes and flooding, for more than one million students in over 1,000 higher education locations in the State.  In December 2007, the Regents approved an amendment to the Commissioner’s Regulations authorizing the Commissioner to waive certain registration standards in a duly declared emergency.

 

Foreign Students

 

The Statewide Plan reviewed recent trends in enrollment of foreign students.  Between 2002-03 and 2003-04, foreign student enrollment in American higher education institutions declined for the first time since 1971-72.  The decline was thought to be a result of increased competition for foreign students from other countries, especially Australia, Britain, and Canada; growth of higher education systems in China, India, and other Far Eastern nations; new stringent requirements for visas imposed after 9/11; and a perception that the U.S. no longer welcomed foreign students.  Some observers predicted that the 2.8 percent decline between 2002-03 and 2003-04 was the beginning of a long-term trend.

 

Open Doors 2008, published by the Institute for International Education, shows that the last five years have not seen those predictions borne out.  Foreign student enrollment, nationwide, did decline by a further 1.3 percent in 2004-05; however, enrollment was essentially flat in 2005-06 (decreasing by only a further 0.1 percent).  Since then, foreign student enrollment has grown as institutions took steps to improve their image abroad and to compete more effectively and as processing of student visas improved significantly.  Enrollment increased by 3.2 percent (18,218) in 2006-07 and by a further 7.0 percent (40,821 students) in 2007-08, erasing the earlier declines and setting the highest number of foreign students ever enrolling in the United States.

 

The largest number of foreign students continues to come from India, followed by China, South Korea, Japan, and Canada.

 

Institutions in California hosted the largest number of foreign students (84,800, up nine percent from the year before), followed by New York (69,844, up six percent).  Institutions in Texas had the third largest number (51,824, also up six percent).  New York University had 6,404 foreign students, the second largest number in the nation (after the University of Southern California), followed by Columbia University with 6,297.  Also among the 20 institutions with the largest number of foreign students in the nation are SUNY Buffalo (#12) and Cornell University (#19).  No other state had more than two higher education institutions among the top 20. 

 

Study New York.  In the fall of 2008, a group of CUNY, SUNY, and independent colleges and universities began working with the State Department of Economic Development and the U.S. Department of Commerce on developing a Study New York consortium of public and independent institutions to position the State as the destination of choice for students from around the world.  They plan cooperative development and distribution of marketing materials, collaborative student recruitment events, and deployment of Web-based tools to support the activities.     

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • Responsibility for statewide workforce planning should be assigned to a single entity to guide investment in the training and education capacity of New York State’s colleges and universities, particularly community colleges.  This coordinated workforce planning effort should identify regional training needs and capacities of training providers, ensure alignment of higher education policies, and collect data to facilitate planning and assessment of program quality.
  • The Board of Regents should review the process for program approval to develop mechanisms for expedited review.  SUNY and CUNY should coordinate with the Board of Regents to ensure that their internal processes for program review are conducted simultaneously and collaboratively with those of the Regents.
  • There should be significantly greater recognition of, support for and enforcement of campus strengths and specializations, at all levels of SUNY.  In addition, to increase the focus on the development of SUNY’s research capacity, the SUNY Board of Trustees has appointed a new committee of the Board to focus on the needs of the four university centers and the College of Environmental Science and Forestry, similar to the Health Sciences and Hospitals Committee that oversees health sciences and hospitals, including SUNY Upstate, Downstate and the College of Optometry.  The SUNY Board has established two new senior positions who should work with the Board committees to further support the advancement of these institutions.
  • Statutory change should be sought to lessen regulation in three areas.  SUNY’s Board of Trustees should have authority to lease SUNY property for purposes that support SUNY’s mission without prior legislative approval, the SUNY Construction Fund should be granted necessary operational flexibility, and the procurement process for SUNY and CUNY should be streamlined.

 

Legislation accompanying the 2008-09 Executive Budget to lessen regulation in ways similar to those proposed by the Commission was not enacted by the Legislature.

 

  • The Governor should call upon the Chair of the SUNY Board of Trustees and the Chancellor to commission an outside review of the structure and role of SUNY’s System Administration to determine how it can best support and enhance the various SUNY sectors.

 

  • The Regents accepted the Commission’s request to review the program review process, as discussed above under Review of Regulations.  The Commission’s Final Report “commends the State Education Department, along with SUNY and CUNY, for undertaking this rigorous analysis of the program review process. . . .”

 

  • An SED group comprising representatives of proprietary colleges, Regents, and SED staff will examine the regulations relating to oversight of proprietary colleges.  

 

  • The Regents seek to develop a P-16 Data System that would use existing systems to supply data to analyze and improve the effectiveness of P-12 programs and services and to analyze student performance in higher education.

 

 


  1. Funding a Highly Effective System

    .  The Regents will advocate for increased State funding for higher education in New York.  New York State ranks 30th among states in per capita state expenditures for higher education.

 

Summary of Findings

 

  • New York State operating funds for higher education grew from $3.5 billion in fiscal 2001-02 to $5.1 billion in FY 2007-08.  This was a 45.3 percent increase, compared to 15.1 percent across all states during that period.

 

Indicators of Progress

 

              The sectors and SED report developments related to the following Indicators of Progress for this priority in the Statewide Plan:

 

  • Annual
    State
    expenditures for higher education as a percentage of annual general State revenues and of total general fund expenditures.
  • Annual
    State
    expenditures for higher education as a percentage of higher education operating expenditures (from all revenue sources).
  • Annual
    State
    expenditures for higher education per capita and per $1,000 of personal income, and comparison to key states.
  • State and local appropriations for public higher education institutions per full-time equivalent student
  • Comparison of the share of funding for public higher education from net tuition revenues in New York to key states and the nation [combined].

 

Fiscal 2006-07 Compared to Fiscal 2001-02 in New York and the Nation.

 

Table 51, below, shows that, in current dollars, total New York State operating funds for higher education grew from $3,510,233,000 in fiscal 2001-02 to $5,101,117,000 in FY 2007-08.  This was a 45.3 percent increase, compared to 15.1 percent across all states.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 51

 

New York
State
Expenditures for Higher Education, 2001-02, 2003-04 – 2007-08

(Current Dollars, 000’s Omitted)

 

2001-02

2003-04

2004-05

2005-06

2006-07

2007-08

State
University of New York

Gross Total

$2,313,558

$2,570,663

$2,736,516

$3,059,704

$3,312,688

$3,517,031

Less Tuition & Fees

 

($662,891)

 

($983,101)

 

($1,001,561)

 

($1,014,834)

 

($1,038,423)

 

($1,050,023)

Subtotal

$1,650,667

$1,587,562

$1,734,955

$2,044,870

$2,274,265

$2,467,008

City
University of New York

Subtotal

$628,293

$605,980

$625,256

$691,157

$868,079

$965,043

Aid to Community Colleges

SUNY

$328,162

$364,712

$366,730

$383,243

$419,829

$444,284

CUNY

$128,615

$133,825

$146,516

$154,331

$163,377

$170,502

Subtotal

$456,777

$498,537

$513,246

$537,574

$583,206

$614,786

Aid to Independent Colleges

Bundy Aid

$44,250

$44,250

$42,038

$42,038

$46,238

$46,238

Other Aid

$16,400

$22,000

$20,900

$22,000

$24,200

$26,264

Subtotal

$60,650

$66,250

$62,938

$64,038

$70,438

$72,502

Student Aid

Tuition Assistance (TAP/APTS)

 

 

$651,030

 

 

$878,100

 

 

$921,230

 

 

$916,808

 

 

$890,535

 

 

$888,901

Scholarships & Fellowships

 

$21,918

 

$28,418

 

$32,668

 

$36,068

 

$37,768

 

$39,968

Subtotal

$672,948

$906,518

$953,898

$952,876

$928,303

$928,869

Other Programs

Academic Library Aid

 

$3,327

 

$3,435

 

$2,939

 

$2,889

 

$3,030

 

$3,664

Aid to Native Americans

 

$635

 

$635

 

$635

 

$635

 

$635

 

$635

Cornell Extension

 

$3,863

 

$3,863

 

$3,670

 

$3,670

 

$3,670

 

$4,170

Technology Initiatives

 

$33,100

 

$55,220

 

$56,465

 

$45,115

 

$41,265

 

$44,440

Subtotal

$40,898

$63,153

$63,709

$52,309

$48,600

$52,909

 

Grand Total

$3,510,233

$3,728,000

$3,954,002

$4,342,824

$4,772.891

$5,101,117

Note: Total omits SED administrative expenditures.

Source: NYSED, Office of Research and Information Systems, 2008.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table 52

 

Funding Per Full-Time Equivalent Student, Public Institutions in New York and Nationwide, 2001-02, 2005-06, and 2006-07 (in constant 2007 dollars)

 

2001-02

2005-06

2006-07

State Funds for Public Institutions*

New York

$7,870

$7,505

$8,080

Nation

$7,339

$6,538

$6,718

Public Institutions’ Tuition Revenue**

New York

$3,140

$3,484

$3,436

Nation

$3,152

$3,740

$3,907

State Funds Plus Net Tuition Revenue

New York

$11,011

$10,989

$11,516

Nation

$10,491

$10,278

$10,625

*Excluding medical schools.

** Net of medical school tuition revenue and State or institutional student aid, waivers,

   and discounts.

Source: State Higher Education Executive Officers, 2008.

 

The State Higher Education Executive Officers association’s State Higher Education Finance data (Table 52) show that, in constant 2007 dollars, New York State funds for public institutions (excluding medical schools) declined from $7,870 per FTE in FY 2001-02 to $7,505 in 2005-06, then grew to $8,080 in 2006-07, for a 2.7 percent increase.  Across all states, funds for public institutions (excluding medical schools) declined from $7,339 in FY 2001-02 to $6,538 in 2005-06, then grew to $6,718 in 2006-07, for an 8.5 percent decline.  In 2006-07, New York State funds for public institutions (excluding medical schools) per FTE were 1.2 times the amount across all states.

 

In constant 2007 dollars, New York public institutions’ tuition revenue, net of medical school tuition revenue and State or institutional student aid, waivers, and discounts, grew from $3,140 per FTE in FY 2001-02 to $3,484 in 2005-06, then declined to $3,436 in 2006-07, for a five-year increase of 9.4 percent (compared to 2.7 percent for State funding).  Across all states, such revenue grew from $3,152 per FTE in 2001-02 to $3,740 in 2005-06 to $3,907 in 2006-07, for a five-year increase of 24.0 percent, about 2½ times New York’s growth rate.  In 2006-07, New York public institutions’ net tuition revenues were 0.88 times the amount across all states.

 

The combination of State funds and net tuition revenues yielded educational revenues per FTE at New York public institutions of $11,011 in FY 2001-02 in constant 2007 dollars, an amount that declined to $10,989 in 2005-06, then grew to $11,516 in 2006-07, for a five-year increase of 4.6 percent.  In 2001-02, State funds were 71.5 percent of educational revenues; in 2006-07, they were 70.2 percent.  In comparison, across all states, public institution educational revenues per FTE declined from $10,491 in 2001-02 to $10,278 in 2005-06, then grew to $10,625 in 2006-07, for a five-year increase of only 1.3 percent.

 

  • Annual State funding for the Bundy program of State aid for independent colleges and universities compared to full funding of the formula set forth in §6401 of the Education Law.

 

Bundy aid is unrestricted aid to support the operating expenditures of independent higher education institutions.  It is apportioned on the basis of a formula, set in the Education Law, of payments per earned degree conferred in the preceding year.  During this period, Bundy aid continued to be underfunded.  The appropriation decreased from $44.3 million in 2003-04 (30.5 percent of the $145.4 million to which the institutions were entitled) to $42.0 million in 2004-05 and 2005-06 (about 27.5 percent of the maximum entitlement) before increasing to $46.2 million in 2006-07 (29.6 percent of the maximum entitlement of $157.2 million), where it remained for 2007-08.  For 2008-09, the Legislature’s decision to reduce local assistance program funds by six percent of unexpended balances had the effect of reducing Bundy aid to $44.2 million. 

 

Other Accomplishments and Actions

 

Endowment for Public Higher Education.  Legislation in 2008 authorizes creation of an endowment for SUNY and CUNY that would provide a permanent source of recurring revenue.  The funding source will be determined in the future.

 

The City University of New York

 

In FY2007, CUNY established a new, comprehensive multi-year approach to financing the University – a “COMPACT” – to ensure investment of sufficient funds tied to the CUNY Master Plan’s goals and objectives.  It calls for the State and City to commit to tax-levy funding covering 100 percent of CUNY’s mandatory costs (e.g. labor contracts, fringe benefits, and energy) and at least 20 percent of its “investment” plan.  CUNY commits to funding the balance of the investment plan through a combination of sources, including philanthropy, increased revenue from enrollment growth, redeployment of resources to achieve greater efficiency, and modest tuition increases.

 

CUNY has invested $117 million of new COMPACT resources in college-based investments and University-wide initiatives.  They were used to enhance programmatic initiatives, including hiring full-time faculty; creating a flagship environment; fostering a research environment; and strengthening academic and student support services, workforce and economic development, and information management systems.  CUNY exceeded its goal of hiring 800 full-time faculty, through the COMPACT.

 

Redeployment of Existing Resources.  A component of the COMPACT is redeployment of resources to achieve greater efficiencies with the continuation and expansion of CUNY’s Productivity Initiative.  As stated in its Master Plan, CUNY redirected adjunct funding to convert adjunct positions into full-time faculty.  In addition, it has achieved $25 million in restructuring and efficiencies since FY2005 and has redirected the savings to programmatic initiatives.  It will continue to identify efficiency and productivity savings through the effective use of technology and centrally administered initiatives, such as bulk computer purchasing, multi-campus software licensing agreements, and multi-campus telecommunications contracts.

 

Productivity Initiatives.  To date, CUNY has achieved over $50 million in productivity savings.  This sum reflects actual administrative savings, not cost avoidance, and the funds are redirected from administrative areas to academic and student development purposes.  Building on the theme of the integrated university, the savings have resulted from inter college collaborations on issues such as:

  • procurement, exemplified by the “big buy” in which the colleges standardized on a single PC design and saved almost 25 percent on each machine; implemented a CUNY-wide policy and contract for the purchase of copiers that standardized the supplies as well as the devices; and created job advertising standards that reduced expenditures by pushing vacancy notices to the Web;
  • sustainability, including reduced PC networks energy use by $16 per machine per year for each of 20,000 PCs by installing Surveyor software on the network;
  • telecommunications initiatives, which renegotiated contracts and consolidated systems and brought maintenance in house;
  • computer applications, such as Web grade and Web attendance, that saved tens of thousands of dollars in P T payroll costs;
  • staffing more productively, exemplified by eliminating the storekeeper function at some campuses by implementing virtual stockrooms supported by immediate vendor deliveries of office supplies.

 

These savings were redirected in several directions, including support for student scholarships, increases in the numbers of full-time and part-time faculty, laboratory equipment replacement, and funding services for students with disabilities.

 

New Resource Allocation Methodologies.  CUNY has implemented an allocation model to distribute all new resources, not just those for new faculty.  This model has been employed to develop annual budget requests and to allocate any new funding appropriated in State and City adopted budgets. It will continue to review and update its allocation models to ensure maximum efficiency.

 

Fundraising.  In November 2004, the Chairman of the CUNY Board of Trustees, the Chancellor, and the Presidents of the colleges announced the University’s first comprehensive fundraising campaign.  The campaign, whose motto is “Invest in CUNY, Invest in NY,” set a goal of raising $1.2 billion from alumni, corporations, foundations, and friends.  Intended to supplement CUNY’s public funding, these monies are to fund student and faculty support and provide for new program initiatives.  In October 2008, CUNY will announce that it has already reached its initial goal (four years ahead of schedule) and will launch the campaign’s second phase.

 

 

 

 

 

Table 53

 

Invest in CUNY, Invest in NY Campaign

 

Launch Date,  November 2004

(July 1999 – November 2004)

Through June 2008

Campaign Goal

$1.2 Billion

$1.2 Billion

Total Raised

$477 Million

$1.42 Billion

Percent of Goal

56%

110%

Source: CUNY Central Administration, 2008.


 

Facilities.  CUNY has 19 campuses on over 651 acres.  It occupies 290 buildings and encompasses approximately 26.1 million gross square feet (GSF) of space.  The objective of its capital program is to provide safe and functionally adequate facilities that encourage teaching and learning and that are well-designed, well-built, and operated in a cost-effective manner.  Under the guidance of the Board of Trustees, the capital program incorporates these considerations along with established academic objectives.

 

In 2006, The Towers at CCNY, a residence hall, opened.  The fact that 98 percent of the beds are rented for the fall 2008 semester indicates clearly that the residence hall is an amenity that CUNY students desire.  Another residence hall is in construction at Queens College, with occupancy planned for fall 2010.

 

A number of CUNY colleges have attracted donations for capital projects.  Examples include:

  • a $30 million gift from City College alumnus William E. Macaulay that enabled the purchase of 35 West 67th Street to give the CUNY Honors College (renamed the William E. Macaulay Honors College) a facility that includes state-of-the-art classrooms, a lecture hall, student performance space, a fully equipped screening room, seminar and meeting rooms, administrative offices, and a café and other common gathering spaces for students;
  • Brooklyn College’s receipt of some $25 million for its Performing Arts Center ($10 million of which came from Leonard and Claire Tow [Class of 1950 and 1952, respectively]), which is in design; and
  • $4 million from Max Kupferberg (Class of 1941) for the Kupferberg Center for the Arts at Queens College, also in design.

 

Capital Budget Program and Priority Guidelines.  CUNY’s capital program addresses its colleges’ needs for major new construction, rehabilitation, and capital equipment.  It is developed in accordance with the University’s established priority system.  The program ensures that capital projects contribute to the achievement of CUNY’s academic, research, and administrative goals; conform to University design and construction standards; and make the best use of resources.  Since 2004, CUNY has received approximately $4.3 billion from the State and the City for the senior and community colleges capital programs.  It is preparing its next five-year Capital Budget Request (FY2009-10 to 2013-14), which is anticipated to be over $7 billion.

  •  

Funding for CUNY's capital program is requested according to priorities approved by the Board of Trustees that, beginning with the highest, are assigned to projects that:

 

  • Correct life-safety, security, and code violations: Fire alarm system installations and emergency exit renovations have been completed with funding in this category.

 

  • Preserve facilities and assets: Façade restorations and roof replacements have been completed with funding in this category.  One of the largest projects category is the City College Marshak building façade replacement, which is underway.

 

  • Address technology needs: These projects improve CUNY’s technology and build information systems that facilitate the work of individual Colleges, as well as the sharing of data throughout the integrated University.  Since 2004, CUNY has received over $163 million for technology initiatives that have funded connectivity to the campuses, classroom and laboratory upgrades to provide current delivery of instruction, and year one of CUNYfirst, which has already launched an upgrade to CUNY’s General Ledger.

 

  • Are ongoing and require the next phase of funding to bring them to completion: Since 2004, construction is well underway on the Brooklyn College New West Quad building, the City College School of Architecture renovation and Roosevelt House at Hunter College.  Construction has begun on the 620,000 GSF building for John Jay and the infrastructure work for the new University-wide ASRC at City College.

 

  • Provide greater utilization of campus space and academic program delivery: Many small renovations and classroom upgrades have provided additional classrooms and faculty offices for colleges, including renovations at LaGuardia and Kingsborough community colleges.  In 2007, the Macaulay Honors College building opened.  The new North Instruction Building at Bronx Community College, which will go into construction in the fall of 2008, will provide classrooms and a new library that will allow the College to backfill existing spaces with more appropriate functions.

 

  • Meet energy conservation/performance objectives: Building systems controls, boilers, and chillers have been replaced and new central plants are planned for Lehman College and New York City College of Technology.

 

  • Encourage economic growth for New York City: In 2004, a newly renovated dental clinic opened at Hostos Community College to educate dental hygienists.  In September 2006, the Graduate School of Journalism opened.  It was designed to prepare students for the convergence of print, broadcast, and interactive journalism.

 

  • Seek development of public/private partnerships to maximize the value of the CUNY’s underdeveloped assets: CUNY continues to explore public/private partnership opportunities.  Two RFPs are in progress: the Hunter College Brookdale Campus Development and the Student Housing Project.

 

CUNY is updating and revising the colleges’ facility master plans to address academic and student-related priorities more efficiently and to request the capital projects needed to advance the colleges’ missions.  Facility master plans, developed in consultation with the college communities, are revised in conformance with the Trustees’ space standards, ensuring efficient use of existing and planned space.

 

The Capital Budget Request proposed exciting projects for the campuses, many of which support the “Decade of Science.”  In design are the University-wide ASRC and a new science facility at City College; an addition to Remsen Hall at Queens College, currently in construction; and the first phase of a new science building at Lehman College, which will begin construction in the fall.

 

In the fall of 2007, each college conducted a “state-of-good-repair” survey for buildings over 5,000 square feet, detailing what must be done to bring each building up to a state of good repair; a consultant analyzed the information and attached a dollar amount to the maintenance and upgrades needed.  This effort led to a $2 billion request included the 2008-2013 five-year Capital Budget Request under Critical Maintenance, for which the senior colleges received $284 million for the first year of funding.

 

Proprietary Colleges

 

              APC and its member institutions continue to advocate strongly for enhanced TAP, and enhanced federal; student aid programs.  It also reports that it continues to advocate for adequate funding for SED’s regulatory role in higher education.

 

Next Steps

 

  • The New York State Commission on Higher Education’s Final Report says:

 

  • Funding for SUNY and CUNY should be reformulated under the New York State Compact for Public Higher Education, involving government, institutions, alumni and friends, and students in a long-term partnership to ensure predictable future funding for both systems in support of academic excellence.  The State should provide support for 100% of mandatory costs (for example, labor contracts, fringe benefits and energy) and 20% of the costs of financing the state-approved master plan investment program.  The universities would fund the balance of investment plans through a combination of private philanthropy as a permanent source of revenue; reshaping base budgets to achieve greater efficiencies and redeploying existing resources to meet new master plan priorities; enrollment growth and a series of modest tuition increases, averaging 2.5% to 4%, with additional tuition revenue used for funding investments.  Modest increases in tuition charges will not result in additional expenses for the thousands of students who receive full Tuition Assistance Program awards.
  • SUNY and CUNY should be permitted to charge differential tuition rates by program and by campus, with implementation to occur in stages over three years.  Initially, differential tuition rates could be set for nonresident students by program and by campus, and for resident and non resident graduate students by program and by campus with differential tuition eventually authorized for all students by program and by campus.
  • The State should provide funding for the required state and county funding obligation of 66.7% of each community college’s budget up front, and bill the county for its mandated share.  Local sponsors should be held accountable for their operational and capital budget obligations, and a county’s persistent failure to reimburse the State at the 26.7% level or to match the State’s capital appropriation should result in a proportional loss of seats on the community college’s board of trustees.  These seats would then be filled through gubernatorial appointment.  In addition, the current funding model for SUNY community colleges should be revised to reward excellence and success by retaining per-FTE funding at a slightly lowered amount, and providing community colleges with additional funding for desired services and outcomes.
  • Community colleges should be authorized to spend remaining state capital appropriations when the sponsoring count or counties has failed for two consecutive years to match the State’s appropriations of capital for infrastructure projects.
  • The critical infrastructure maintenance backlog should be eliminated over the next 10 years to bring facilities into “good” repair.  Ongoing needs should be calculated using a life cycle model based on the current replacement value (CRV).

 

In relation to the recommendation concerning critical infrastructure repair, the 2008-09 enacted budget includes $834 million for critical maintenance at SUNY and CUNY as the first year of a five year $4.17 billion plan.

 

  • CUNY and SUNY should act in four specific areas: assuring measurable energy efficiencies at campuses, specifying green design requirements, increasing use of renewable energy, and funding of research and development programs that focus on alternative, renewable and sustainable energy.
  • CUNY’s and SUNY’s capital plans should be altered to allow for multiple funding streams.  Facilities renewal and adaptation, deferred maintenance and new basic educational facilities would continue to be completely funded through state-supported debt.  There should also be cost-reduction improvements implementing greening or energy conservation/sustainability projects, where the improvements reduce energy consumption and related expenditures.  Some revenue-generating projects, such as residence halls, dining facilities, hospitals and student retail commons, can be fully self-supporting, and special educational and student support facilities such as recreational centers, student unions, specialized technology-intensive instructional infrastructure may align with campus fundraising efforts.  For new research facilities, the appropriate ratio of state to non-state support could be determined by examining national standards for annual research expenditures.  Finally, capital funding for new economic development capital projects could come from dedicated state economic development resources in coordination with state economic and workforce development strategies.
  • State funding should be provided to match donations made to CUNY and SUNY for capital projects to assist campuses in raising funds, and the match program that currently exists for New York’s private colleges should be completed.  CUNY and SUNY should be afforded flexibility in allocating and setting differential matching rates to reflect varying campus mission, ability to raise private funds, as well as a range of project types.