Minutes for CID Meeting October 24, 2018. Cherry 2018 3:30-4:45 pm
1. Presentations for chairs related to enrollment
2. The President encourages the chairs to review the various initiatives to see how we might help effect the goals. Note that this is the introduction, more work is coming. Active engagement in student recruiting is imperative. Lamar needs your best people there!
3. In addition, the presenters have noted that chairs can additionally contribute by:
- Help identify graduate contacts and ambassadors.
- Be ready for UAC to come meet with you about how to improve relationships between departments and that unit.
- Getting recruitment materials from Enrollment Management for outreach and returning with potential student contact information for them to follow-up on.
- Having faculty actively
- Letting Craig know who in your department advises upper level transfer students.
4. Dr. Evans also opened up discussion on any topic.
5. Robust discussion went past 4:30
6. Thank you to Debbie and Natalie for the cookies. Thank you to Deidra, Craig, Katrina and the President for spending so much time with us.
Attendees:
College of Arts and Sciences: Jeremy Alm
College of Business: Larry Allen, Kakoli Bandyopadhyay
College of Ed and Human Dev.: Dan Chilek, Debra
College of Engineering: T.C. Ho, Liv Haselbach, Hsing-Wei Chu
College of Fine Arts/Comm.: Donna Meeks, Natalie Tindall,
Executive Committee 2018/2019
Liv Haselbach Natalie Tindall Jeremy Alm Larry Allen Dan Chilek
Future CID Meetings and Tentative Topics 2018/2019
November 28, 2018
3:30-4:30
Trying to get in
Craig Ness-Finances, Pamela Comer-McNair
January 23, 2019
3:30-4:30
TBD
Faculty Evaluations Recap Plus
February 27, 2019
3:30-4:30
TBD
Greg Marsh: Institutional Research. How Lamar calculates pass rates, etc. (confirmed)
March 27, 2019
3:30-4:30
TBD
Staff compensation, classification, temp. pools.
HR representative will attend.
April 24, 2019
3:30-4:30
TBD
Evening and Saturday Classes: Collection of pros and cons from
*This makes it easier for upper administration to stop in.
Respectively submitted by Liv Haselbach with help from Natalie Tindall Oct. 29, 2018.
CC: CID members
Guests and
Additional notes from October 24, 2018 CID meeting based on the powerpoint presentations.
-The strategic enrollment management goal is to break down silos to assist students through the admissions and graduation process. Now working with Ruffalo Noel Levitz with strategic enrollment planning; have three committees: Admissions, Diversity and 91制片厂, Faculty Student Success. SWOT analyses developed in June. Key performance indicators — review and add. Working toward developing high-level strategies that align tactical day-to-day enrollment and student success operations within University mission and goals (TSUS 2020 targets and THECB 60x30TX initiatives)
-Fall 2018 headcount final headcount: up 1% (stopped the decline in the enrollment of students)
Working with Ruffalo Noel Levitz to fill the top of the funnel/inquiry management- student search expanded (
-The yield is 50 percent of students who come to visit campus!
-Transfer enrollment down 11 percent in Fall 2018. General decline in enrollment at 2-year public institutions. Special Admit program — Lamar Link at LIT; 2+2 and reverse transfer programs; readmits will now have a central process; will have a transfer advocate in the UAC (assist with outreach, coordinate advising for students with >60 hours — critical to have someone navigate that)
Contact Deidra Mayer regarding 2+2 program plans. Brenda Nichols wants to develop 2+2 programs for online students.
- Graduate recruitment; want to get the brand out there, elevate the brand recognition, increase international alumni base, student-centered processes (workflow efficiency) for domestic students: working to build domestic recruitment and marketing and communication strategies (e.g., GRE); recruit from within (special fast track programs with scholarships, class shadow days, lunch and learn with faculty);
- Restructuring: new UAC director focus on student-centered approach — working within enrollment management division to bridge gaps (
-Student Success Collaborative:
- Stronger identification with chosen major, results in fewer major changes.
- Student success teams — 9-10 staff departments are working to