The Complete College Tennessee Act and the Outcomes-Based Funding Formula



Similar documents
BUILDING NEVADA S FUTURE: A Master Plan for Higher Education in Nevada

TBR SWOT Analysis Committee Report: 4th Revision Page 1 of 7

How To Improve The Reputation Of A Community College

Closing the Gap 2020: A Master Plan for Arkansas Higher Education Executive Summary

The Importance of Higher Education to Our Economy. Commissioner David Buhler Utah System of Higher Education March 20, 2014

The search for a Visionary and Inspirational leader. for PRESIDENT of Lorain County Community College

A Student Level Analysis of Financial Aid

DUAL CREDIT IN KENTUCKY. A significant body of research indicates that a high school diploma is not sufficient for

New Program Proposal Master in Engineering Systems Engineering Clemson University

POLICY ISSUES IN BRIEF

Proposed Applied Baccalaureate Selection Process and Criteria

Each year, millions of Californians pursue degrees and certificates or enroll in courses

Nevada System of Higher Education. Evaluation of the NSHE Funding Formula. May submitted by:

Measuring Quality in Graduate Education: A Balanced Scorecard Approach

Master of Accountancy. M.Acc. Degree

Louisiana Tech University FIVE-YEAR STRATEGIC PLAN. FY through FY

The Tennessee Board of Regents

Texas Education Agency Dual Credit Frequently Asked Questions

Credit for Prior Learning: Moving from Piecemeal Approach to a Systems Model

Each year, millions of Californians pursue degrees and certificates or enroll in courses

Louisiana Community and Technical College System. Strategic Plan

STRATEGIC PLAN

Keeping Tuition Affordable for Ohio Families

8.011 Authorization of New Academic Degree Programs and Other Curricular Offerings.

I. Introduction and Purpose

Connecticut Community College Transfer Students at the University of Connecticut

MINUTES TENNESSEE HIGHER EDUCATION COMMISSION November 19, 2009, 1:00 p.m. CDT

New Program Proposal Bachelor of Science Nursing (R.N. to B.S.N. Completion) Coastal Carolina University

a topic for a future issue brief, please Minnesota is heading into challenging territory. In the decades

Workforce Services. Virginia Community College System (VCCS)

KENTUCKY DEVELOPMENTAL EDUCATION INSTITUTE

American Association of Community Colleges Association of Community College Trustees

Chapter 1. Background: Evolving Priorities and Expectations of the Community College

State Funding for Higher Education and the University of Missouri. Key Points

APPLICATION FOR A MEMBER INSTITUTION SEEKING ACCREDITATION AT A HIGHER OR LOWER DEGREE LEVEL. Telephone: Address: Fax Number:

TITLE 135 PROCEDURAL RULE WEST VIRGINIA COUNCIL FOR COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE EDUCATION

Since the 1990s, accountability in higher education has

Georgia s HOPE Program

Co-located campuses: Collaboration and Duplication

Bert C. Bach PROFILE :

Community College Systems Across the 50 States

STRATEGIC PLAN

MOTLOW STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE SUBJECT: STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS, GRANTS, LOANS, AND FINANCIAL AID PROGRAMS

New Program Proposal Center for Workforce Development (CUCWD) Clemson University

Annual Report on the Virginia Plan for Higher Education. State Council of Higher Education for Virginia

Accelerated Graduate Degree Programs Proposal Template

GRADUATE PROGRAM REVIEW POLICY. Texas Southern University

State Grants and the Impact on Student Outcomes

CHAPTER TWO General Institutional Requirements

How Are Master s Programs Evolving in the US? Tim Mack, Dean Indiana University of Pennsylvania A Doctoral Research University

6. UNC Degree Program Establishments... Courtney Thornton

Transcription:

The Complete College Tennessee Act and the Outcomes-Based Funding Formula David L Wright and Russ Deaton THEC Southern Legislative Conference 66 th Annual Meeting Charleston, West Virginia July 31, 2012

Tennessee Public Higher Education Governance/Coordination Structure

Tennessee Higher Education prior to CCTA Master Plan; limited buy-in from institutions o Little link between funding and state goals Performance Funding program allocated 5.5% of budget on measures tied to Master Plan Enrollment-based funding formula o Hadn t been fully funded since mid 1990s Geography and demography drove institutional growth

Tennessee Higher Education Lottery scholarship prior to CCTA o o o o o o Implemented in 2004; based on Georgia HOPE Primarily served the traditional-aged college-going population Exceptions: Adult student grant; Technical skills grant Covers a decreasing percentage of tuition and fees Favored the universities and private institutions Weak funding of state need-based grant

Tennessee Higher Education Fiscal Realities Fewer state dollars for institutional operations o 20% cut over the last 5 years Enrollment growth Cost inflation Tuition spiral Exacerbated by recent recession

Tennessee Public Higher Education Operating Revenues Total Revenue per FTE - Universities Inflation Adjusted ARRA/MOE StFees StAppr $15,000 $13,500 $12,000 $10,500 $9,000 $7,500 $6,000 $4,500 $3,000 $1,500 $0 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12

CCTA Context NEEDED: A new vision for Tennessee higher education

CCTA Context Unprecedented fiscal circumstances Emphasis on policy alignment o Statewide policy audit (April 2009, NCHEMS) Opportunity for higher ed to function as an integral part of a state agenda.

CCTA Overview Public Agenda Outcomes-based Funding Formula Mission Differentiation Articulation & Transfer Remedial & Developmental Education Community College System Research www.tn.gov/thec

2010-2015 Public Agenda for Tennessee Higher Education Primary focus = increasing educational attainment Public agenda language was intentional Narrowly focused -- on CCTA implementation A Public Agenda annual Progress Report on the Complete College TN website will provide accountability for Agenda implementation

2010-2015 Public Agenda for Tennessee Higher Education The Big Goal Informed by THEC Student Flow Model Achieve the U.S. avg in ed attainment by 2025 Needed: o 26,000 additional cumulative degrees by 2015 o 210,000 by 2025 o o 4% annual increases in certificate and degree production; every year from now to 2025 Goal includes private non-profits and for-profits

2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 2021-22 2022-23 2023-24 2024-25 Annual Degree Production 80,000 70,000 60,000 Additional Cumulative Degrees Needed by 2015: 26,000 The Big Goal Required Annual Degree Production 50,000 40,000 Annual Degree Production (Current Projection) 30,000 20,000 Current Projection 2009-2015 Cumulative Degree Production: 281,000 10,000 - Current Projection 2009-2025 Cumulative Degree Production: 711,000

Mission Profiles Required by the CCTA Why important? Excellent institutions higher ed system meeting State needs Institutional Mission Differentiation Carnegie Classification Academic Degree Programs by level and field Undergraduate/graduate mix Sub-populations Research capacity Goal: avoid duplication of programs & services Core of outcomes funding formula Institutions constructed the profiles systems endorsed THEC approved

Mission and Student Success CCTA Productivity and Efficiency: Progress through system, institutional, and faculty leadership o Articulation and Transfer Fully transferrable General Education Core Universally transferrable 19-hour paths o Dual Admission agreements o Remedial/Developmental reform o Common Course Numbering

Outcomes Based Formula Primary features: Direct reflection of the productivity focus of the 2010-15 Public Agenda. Outcomes rather than enrollments. Unique weighting structure for each outcome for each campus. Weighted outcomes reflect institutional mission differentiation.

Performance Funding 30-year program; builds on indicators from existing cycles Quality Assurance focused Accountability instrument for Master Plan Serves as THEC statutorily-required State performance report for General Assembly Contributes to student success as the unifying goal of Public Agenda, outcomes based funding formula, and Performance Funding

Performance Funding 2010-15 Performance Funding Cycle Two Quality Assurance Standards Standard I Quality of Student Learning & Engagement 75% Institutional performance measured by achievement of student learning, program evaluation and satisfaction studies Standard II Quality of Student Access and Student Success 25% Institutional performance measured by achievement of credentials earned for selected student sub-populations

Tennessee s Outcomes-Based Funding Formula: An Analysis of the First Two Years 18

Tennessee Finance Policy Reform In January 2010, Tennessee passed the Complete College Tennessee Act. The legislation called for reforms in several areas: student transfer research collaboration funding formula policy 19

Funding Formula Policy TN retired its enrollment based model and built a funding formula that is entirely a function of outcomes. The TN design, utilizing outcomes and an institution-specific weighting structure, is unique in higher education finance policy. 20

TN Outcomes-Based Model This is not simply a reform to TN s longstanding Performance Funding program. The outcomes-based model completely replaces the enrollment-based model. There is no enrollment-based allocation in TN. 21

TN Funding Formula Evolution 22

TN Funding Formula Evolution 23

TN Outcomes-Based Model Rather than counting enrollments, the TN model simply counts outcomes such as degrees. There are no state-imposed targets or predetermined goals. The outcomes are weighted to reflect institutional mission. 24

TN Outcomes-Based Formula Universities Outcome Student Progression: 24 Credit Hours Student Progression: 48 Credit Hours Student Progression: 72 Credit Hours Bachelors Degrees Masters Degrees Doctoral/Law Degrees Research/Grant Funding Student Transfers Degrees per 100 FTE Graduation Rate 25

TN Outcomes-Based Formula Community Colleges Outcome Students Accumulating 12 hrs Students Accumulating 24 hrs Students Accumulating 36 hrs Dual Enrollment Associates Certificates Job Placements Remedial & Developmental Success Transfers Out with 12 hrs Workforce Training (Contact Hours) Awards per 100 FTE 26

TN Outcomes-Based Formula Weights Based on Institutional Mission APSU UTM TTU UTC MTSU ETSU TSU UM UTK Student Progression: 24 Credit Hours 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 2% 2% Student Progression: 48 Credit Hours 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 3% 3% Student Progression: 72 Credit Hours 7% 7% 7% 7% 7% 7% 7% 5% 5% Bachelors Degrees 30% 30% 25% 25% 25% 25% 25% 25% 15% Masters Degrees 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% 15% Doctoral/Law Degrees 0% 0% 5% 5% 5% 7.5% 7.5% 10% 10% Research/Grant Funding 10% 10% 10% 10% 10% 12.5% 12.5% 12.5% 15% Student Transfers 10% 10% 10% 10% 10% 5% 5% 5% 5% Degrees per 100 FTE 15% 15% 10% 10% 10% 10% 10% 10% 10% Graduation Rate 5% 5% 10% 10% 10% 10% 10% 12.5% 20% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% Bachelors degrees; little research/doctoral degrees Extensive doctoral degrees and emphasis on research

TN Outcomes-Based Model Outcomes model utilized for 2011-12 and 2012-13 state budget cycles. The outcomes model is not for the allocation of new state funding, but for all state funding ($750 million). The model works with flat, increasing or decreasing state appropriations. 28

TN Outcomes-Based Formula All state funding is back up for grabs every year. No institution is entitled to some minimal level of appropriations that is based on prior-year funding. State appropriations have to be earned anew each year. 29

TN Outcomes Formula 100% of state appropriations are subject to reallocation each year to reflect productivity changes. The TN model is engineered such that productivity changes generate state appropriations changes largely within a +/-2% range. 30

TN Outcomes-Based Formula 31

TN Outcomes-Based Formula 32

2.0% Cumulative Change in Appropriations Due to Formula 1.0% 0.0% -1.0% -2.0% -3.0% APSU ETSU MTSU TSU TTU UM UTC UTK UTM Total Funding -4.0% 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 33

Outcomes Based Model Advantages The outcomes model is linked directly to the educational attainment goals of TN s Public Agenda. The outcomes model establishes a framework for government to have an ongoing policy discussion with higher education. The model is adjustable to account for new outcomes or a different policy focus (changing the weights). 34

Outcomes Based Model Advantages The structure (outcomes & weights) of the outcomes-based model is the key innovation. The specific outcomes and weights that TN chose fit our state s context and current needs. Other states could adopt the general design and decide for themselves what outcomes are valuable and how they should be weighted to reflect institutional mission. 35

TN Outcomes Formula Extensive information, including the formula model, is available on the THEC homepage. www.tn.gov/thec 36

Contact Information David L Wright Chief Policy Officer David.L.Wright@tn.gov 615-509-6020 Russ Deaton Chief Fiscal Officer Russ.Deaton@tn.gov 615-532-3860 www.tn.gov/thec