Improving Institutional Performance through IT-Enabled Innovation

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© 2005 William H. Graves

EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 40, no. 6 (November/December 2005): 78–99.

William H. Graves is Senior Vice President for Academic Strategy, SunGard Collegis Inc., and Professor Emeritus, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Comments on this article can be sent to the author at [email protected].

In its report Innovate America, the National Innovation Initiative (NII) calls for an “innovation infrastructure” as the foundation for the nation’s future productivity and competitiveness. The report notes: “Innovation generates the productivity that economists estimate has accounted for half of U.S. GDP growth over the past 50 years. . . . It’s not only about offering new products and services, but also improving them and making them more affordable.”1 Though the NII did not ignore nonprofit organizations and even targeted the nonprofit health-care industry, the report is curiously silent on any need for innovation and its byproduct, productivity, in higher education. In contrast, the National Commission on Accountability in Higher Education (NCAHE) called attention to its final report by proclaiming: “Improved accountability for better results is imperative, but how to improve accountability in higher education is not so obvious.”2

By creating a national “Commission on the Future of Higher Education,” Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings has signaled that improved accountability is indeed an imperative—but also an obligation not to be ducked as blithely as did the NCAHE (http://www.ed.gov/news/pressreleases/2005/09/09192005.html). I agree that improved accountability in higher education is imperative, and I definitely take issue with the second part of the NCAHE’s conclusion, for I believe that the way to improve accountability in nonprofit higher education is clear by now. The key, as indicated by the NII, involves productivity-increasing innovation, and recent systematic increases in productivity in the national/global economy have depended on using information technology to redesign production and service processes.3 Higher education also can use IT innovatively to redesign academic and administrative services for improved effectiveness and efficiency. Two proven innovation strategies are the common-course redesign strategy and the flex program and service redesign strategy. These strategies use IT innovatively to improve accountability—that is, to improve and account for institutional performance—whenever measurably improved academic results and reduced unit costs are simultaneous goals.4

Deployed on an initiative-by-initiative basis, mission-appropriate variations on the common-course redesign and the flex program and service redesign strategies can support a strategy of simultaneity for systematically improving strategic academic results while also reducing their unit costs—thereby holding the line on tuition increases. The strategy of simultaneity requires an institutional culture of innovation that (1) replaces unsubstantiated proxies for quality—proxies such as a low student/instructor ratio—with evidence of quality and (2) embraces the simultaneous pursuit of measurable improvements in academic results and efficiencies in their unit costs. Such a culture requires counterintuitive academic leadership. Only a few higher education leaders have individually called for innovation as a means for measurably improving institutional performance.

Larry R. Faulkner, the president of the University of Texas at Austin, is one of the few. In February 2005, at the 87th Annual Meeting of the American Council on Education, Faulkner urged nonprofit colleges and universities to move from a defensive to a proactive position in responding to the rush of outcome-oriented institutional performance expectations coming from employers and the public and, even more urgently, from the federal, state, and institutional policymakers who govern, regulate, or help fund higher education and its students. He noted: “At the typical flagship public institution in America, the academic cost of attendance (mandatory tuition and fees) is now in the range of $5,000 to $7,500, or about 11 to 17 percent of median family income. Those figures are up from 1 to 5 percent in the 1960’s. If the trends of the past fifteen to twenty years continue, the share would rise to something like 30 percent of median family income by 2020.” Connecting price to unit cost via this access-compromising trend, Faulkner added: “We must address costs. More specifically, we must mount serious, effective efforts to limit the rate of growth in the educational cost per student. It is in the range of 4.5 percent per year, a substantially inflationary figure, but more important, a figure significantly larger than the long-term growth rate of the economy.”5

Faulkner recognizes that “serious initiative” will be required to reduce unit costs and stabilize prices (tuition) in the interest of access, accountability, and competitiveness. Gone is the day when the sole indicator of institutional performance was a mission-reflecting combination of student aptitude, faculty credentials, library holdings, anecdotal evidence of an enriched socio-intellectual environment, modernized facilities for teaching and learning, and low student/faculty ratios. The new day requires strategies for identifying, prioritizing, and proactively meeting the critical performance expectations pressuring nonprofit higher education. Many institutions are now expected to be accountable for learning outcomes, existing programs versus needed programs, and per-student-FTE expenses while also providing affordable, convenient, and high-capacity access. These six expectations are arguably mission obligations—which, in some combination and through nuanced emphasis and applicability, can reflect differences in institutional context, mission, and governance. They are briefly described in Table 1, along with examples of performance indicators applicable to each obligation. The indicators, however, are neither inclusive nor universally relevant. They reflect policymakers’ convictions that nonprofit higher education is obliged to monitor, improve, and report performance on an ongoing basis as part of its evolving social compact with the public.

Table 1. Obligations and Indicators

Institutional Performance Obligation Attendant Performance Indicators

Learning Accountability:  Account quantitatively for the quality of learning outcomes, where possible through comparative benchmarking across time of

  • retention, persistence, and graduation rates (expected versus actual rates) among comparable institutions, and
  • broadly accepted independent learning assessments in the large-enrollment courses commonly taught at almost all comparable institutions
  • Participation in the Collegiate Learning Assessment, the National Survey of Student Engagement, or the Community College Survey of Student Engagement
  • Independent outcomes assessment of developmental courses, college-level basic skills courses—in math, Spanish, writing, etc.—and the five highest-enrollment introductory-level disciplinary and professional courses
  • Expected rate vs. actual rate for key indicators such as retention, persistence, and graduation
Program Accountability:  Account for any mission obligations to respond rapidly to economic development priorities and workforce/professional education priorities by redesigning or developing academic programs to address these priorities
  • Percentage of annual student FTE increase directly attributable to programs created or redesigned to meet identified economic development or workforce needs—for teachers, nurses, biotech workers, etc.
  • Percentage of annual increase in noncredit enrollments directly attributable to programs created or redesigned to meet identified economic development or workforce needs—for teachers, nurses, biotech workers, etc.
  • Percentage of all awarded degrees that are directly attributable to programs created or redesigned to meet identified economic development or workforce needs—for teachers, nurses, biotech workers, etc.
Expense Accountability:  Account for the direct expense of instruction and other key lines of service—IT services, registrarial services, financial services, and so on—using per-student FTE, per-enrollment, or other appropriate unit measures of direct expenses
  • Per-enrollment direct instructional expenses and average ratio of enrollments to instructional personnel for development courses, college-level basic skills courses—in math, Spanish, writing, etc.—and the five highest-enrollment introductory disciplinary and professional courses
  • Per-student-FTE central IT expense and  IT personnel (full-time and part-time) expense
  • Similar unit expenses metrics in other lines of service
  • Percentage of change in the annual ratio of student FTEs to administrative FTEs
Affordability of Access:  Maintain affordable access to academic programs (within mission responsibilities) by limiting the rate of any annual tuition and fee increases to the Consumer Price Index
  • Ratio of the annual rate of change in undergraduate tuition/fees to the annual Consumer Price Index
  • Ratio of per-FTE revenues from tuition/fees and subsidies/grants to per FTE direct operational expenses
Convenience of Access:  Provide flexible, integrated access to academic programs and comprehensive support services—flex programs and services—by combining online (asynchronous) self-service course and service options with as-wanted expert help via walk-in service centers and a 24x7x365 call center
  • Percentage of all degree programs that can be delivered asynchronously except for required clinical or lab work
  • Percentage of all noncredit programs that can be delivered asynchronously except for required clinical or lab work
  • Annual inventory of services accessible asynchronously via a Web portal
Capacity for Access:  Adjust institutional capacity after projecting demand for access to prerequisite and priority courses, academic programs, and other services that are critical to mission fulfillment
  • Percentage of qualified applicants refused admission or admitted with delay
  • Annual percentage change in total credit hours and in total noncredit enrollments
  • Total first-term enrollments (credit and noncredit)
  • Ratio of total first-term credit hours to total first-term instructional personnel FTEs and of total first-term noncredit enrollments to total first-term instructional personnel FTEs
  • Ratio of total annual enrollments to total seating capacity of the classroom plant

More than two hundred citations are offered as evidence that this evolving social compact calls for higher education to practice innovation, with productivity as one of its primary goals or byproducts.6 Each citation is cross-referenced to the six performance obligations in Table 1, as well as to a nationally observable, aggregate revenue/cost pressure (described in the following section).

The Leadership Catch-22

Higher education leaders who would like to embrace and improve institutional performance often report being trapped in a “catch-22” situation. They are being asked by policymakers to improve the academic aspects of institutional performance, a task they believe will require additional expenditures and, therefore, additional revenues. Yet the same policymakers are also asking them to hold the line on tuition increases and are reducing public funding for higher education relative to other tax-supported needs.

The catch-22 reaction is only heightened by a broader revenue/cost pressure:

  • Revenue pressure: (1) declining percentages of state allocations for higher education relative to state allocations for other needs, such as health care, public schools, and incarceration; (2) declining percentages of institutional revenues coming to institutions, directly or through their students, from state and federal subsidies and grant programs; (3) increasing tuition inelasticity resulting from competition from peer and for-profit institutions; and (4) increasing and, for many institutions, risky reliance on gifts, grants, and contracts (relative to public funding)
  • Cost pressure: (1) funding more and larger need-based grants from internal nonpublic resources; and (2) escalating (competitive) tuition discounting for less needy but highly qualified students

The catch-22 reaction is not surprising, for academic culture tends to conflate total expenses and total revenues as the budget while too seldom identifying and managing unit costs. This tendency obscures the high probability that policymakers expect higher education to innovate internally, both to improve the academic aspects of institutional performance and to reduce unit expenses, the latter in order to stabilize tuition and decrease the need for relative increases in tax-supported revenues. The prevailing academic culture instead perceives a catch-22 vise that is squeezing nonprofit higher education ever more tightly between the revenue/cost pressure on one side of the vise and, on the other, the pressure to meet institutional performance obligations. Many institutions are thus seeking additional per-student direct or indirect public funding while simultaneously capping enrollments (thus reducing the capacity for access) and/or raising tuition (thus eroding the affordability of access). Capping enrollments and raising tuition, however, can readily be perceived externally as a defensive or even arrogant response to the rising expectation for improved institutional performance—a response depicted graphically, in Figure 1, as a worst-case scenario. Moreover, capping enrollments and raising tuition do nothing to reduce unit costs and measurably improve academic quality: lower student/instructor ratios and higher tuition are not necessarily linked to measurable improvements in learning. Instead, such actions tend to freeze unit costs and manipulate enrollments and price to make total costs and revenues match—hardly a strategy for improving institutional performance. A more proactive strategy would start by differentiating expense accountability and the affordability of access—as is done in Table 1—in order to focus attention on price as a function of unit cost, a relationship often overlooked by nonprofit institutions that have never been threatened with closure through cost overruns.

Figure 1. A Defensive Response to Performance Pressures

Figure 1. A Defensive Response to Performance Pressures
Click image for larger view.

Improving academic measures of quality while simultaneously reducing unit costs has not been the norm for innovations in higher education over the years. Most institutions have used grants, both internal and external, to seed innovations responsive to some of the four nonfinancially stated performance obligations in Table 1. Faculty and program development grants, for example, have targeted the improvement of student learning and the timely, market-responsive development of new programs. As ubiquitous access to personal computers, Internet connections, and course management systems was evolving, institutions began to channel such faculty and program development investments into the development of online and hybrid courses, programs, and services. With a few important exceptions, these investments did not directly seek to reduce long-term unit costs and/or dampen spiraling tuition increases and, not surprisingly, did not do so, whether or not they used technology to enable innovation. As a result, these “innovations” did not increase productivity but instead either added to long-term operating expenditures or proved unsustainable after the loss of special funding.

As noted, there have been exceptions. For example, technology has been used to accommodate enrollment growth and improve learning while also reducing unit expenses via a strategy that increased not only total revenues but also the average academic outcome and “profitability” of each new enrollment.7 Six specific examples illustrate this and other proven strategies.8

High-Performance IT: Necessary but Not Sufficient

Well-managed and well-supported technology infrastructure has become a competitive necessity in the national economy, not as a competitive differentiator but as a tool to redesign service and production processes as the basis for competitive innovations that can improve quality, unit cost structures, market reach, and customer convenience and satisfaction. For example, today's banking services rely on a high-performance IT infrastructure and related technical and business support for customers. Banking services are based on a customer-centric and cost-effective flex services model that combines convenient, online self-service with alternative access options for securing expert help when customers need or want it. Automated teller machines are the most familiar form of self-service, but online (asynchronous) banking (from any Web connection) can provide convenient self-service by allowing customers to manage their accounts, set up automatic deposits and payments, apply for loans, and so on. Most banks also provide toll-free or online access to customer-service representatives during extended hours or even 24x7x365. And face-to-face help is available during business hours in convenient branch locations and the main office.

Bankers don't market “distance banking” or label customers as “traditional” or “nontraditional.” They realize that different customers have different needs and preferences for obtaining services. Banks also know that time-shifted online self-service can reduce costs while increasing customer satisfaction, which is why they frequently offer incentives for self-service. They outsource and merge or partner with each other to lower unit costs and enlarge the customer base to a level commensurate with the ever-growing competitive pressures on profit margins. An investment in high-performance IT doesn’t guarantee success, but it does give banks an opportunity to innovate cost-effectively in order to retain customers and compete more effectively for new customers. Some banks will succeed in this increasingly competitive environment; some will not. Success will depend, for example, on other technology applications that can cost-effectively help to track and manage the customer relationship and to gather evidence (“business intelligence”) about customers’ needs and the effectiveness and internal costs of services. Competitive outcomes will depend on how well redesign efforts and resulting service innovations are executed to offer new services, improve service quality, retain customers, and reach new markets—all while reducing unit service costs.

Just as in the banking industry, high-performance IT is necessary, but not sufficient, for planning and implementing cost-effective, competitively successful service innovations aimed at improving institutional performance in higher education. Technology has become not only ubiquitous in higher education but also a worrisome expense for many leaders precisely because it has largely remained a necessary expense in response to grass-roots demands for “digital-campus” services that only randomly or episodically coincide with innovations purposefully selected and supported to improve quality and access while also reducing unit costs.

Meanwhile, IT expenditures have moved beyond baseline technology infrastructure to encompass an information infrastructure in which institutional data have been unified and integrated across a number of different systems: the student information system, the financial system, the human resources system, the course management system, and a variety of systems representing various vertical lines of service at the institutional and departmental levels. The individually customizable, self-service portal is the visible metaphor for the emerging information infrastructure. But reliable self-service access to integrated data does not, in its own right, provide the knowledge required to plan and manage the future using available data about the past, present, and various institutional constituencies. Increasingly powerful analytical software tools will power a next-transition phase toward an analytics infrastructure, which will provide the technical and analytical foundation for selecting and investing in the kind of innovations that are designed to improve institutional performance in a way that reduces unit costs. The result will be an innovation infrastructure. In all four phases, the word infrastructure is used to connote not just the technical infrastructure but also the mission-appropriate governance, planning, and resource allocation models that support the identification and tracking of institutional performance priorities and the allocation of IT and other resources.

A surprising number of colleges and universities continue to struggle with the baseline technology infrastructure and the information infrastructure. Whether internally or externally staffed, operated, and managed, a high-performance baseline technology infrastructure supporting an information infrastructure is characterized by (1) high levels of user satisfaction and (2) competitive per-student-FTE (or per-student) IT expense at a predictable annual level to cover the following:

  • Ubiquitous access to the campus network and the Internet
  • Baseline network and server-based (back-office) systems, such as the administrative system, the course management system, security systems, back-up and disaster-recovery systems, and the campus network with its connection to the Internet
  • Hands-on technical support and training, as required, for centrally supported desktop, lab, and classroom technologies and for the applications of the above systems
  • Technical systems integration services to implement and manage an individually customizable self-service Web portal providing single-logon access to a unified set of application services based on the above systems—the basics of a reliable, accurate, and easily accessible information infrastructure
  • 24x7x365 monitoring for all the above systems
  • 24x7x365 technical help desk for all students and faculty/staff members
  • Assessment, planning, selection, conversion, and upgrade processes for all the above systems, managed within budget and to meet planned schedules

Figure 2 summarizes the technical and organizational infrastructure associated with the transformation from support for the baseline technology infrastructure to support for the kind of innovations enabled by collaborative, blended, adaptive planning and cultural models focused on improving institutional performance.

Figure 2. Technical and Organizational Infrastructures

Figure 2. Technical and Organizational Infrastructures
Click image for larger view.

Overcoming the Barriers

There are two necessary conditions for using technology to improve institutional performance. The first is the effectiveness of the central IT organization in support of planning, implementing, and managing a high-performance baseline technology infrastructure that has expanded, or is expanding, to support an information infrastructure. The second necessity is institutional leadership committed to supporting IT and to including the IT organization in an institutional transition toward an innovation infrastructure. This process must permit and require academic and administrative units to work together daily to (1) identify mission-critical performance obligations and related indicators for measuring improvement objectives, (2) assign academic and administrative “owners” to the selected performance objectives, and (3) fund and support service process redesign strategies and innovation projects designed to meet the selected objectives. Although most executive and IT leaders understand this second necessity to mean that the IT strategic plan must align with the institutional strategic plan, John Voloudakis argues that more is needed—specifically, a blended, adaptive planning model is needed to achieve focus and nimbleness on a continuous initiative-by-initiative basis.9

First, however, the president or chancellor must ensure that the IT organization itself is not a barrier to progress, exhibiting weaknesses such as the following:

  • Dysfunctional human resources: weak internal management, service mentality, and leadership; staff recruiting and retention difficulties
  • Lack of resources for IT and IT projects: inadequate IT infrastructure and support services and coverage (24x7x365); limited capacity and/or expertise for system planning, selection, conversion, and upgrade for key systems and for services/systems integration (Web, portal, and other projects)
  • Unpredictable or unsustainable IT costs
  • No economies of scale from outsourcing or from being part of a system, district, or consortium

If modest adjustments to current IT practices and the relationship of the IT organization to other units have proven futile, then more systemic changes to the current IT staff and organization, its per-student-FTE funding, and/or its practices should be pursued. According to a recent study by the EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research (ECAR): “As new needs arise, institutions should consider the broadest range of sourcing options, including collaboration with other institutions, ERP or other vendor software, outsourcing, and open source technologies. Both one-time and ongoing support costs and benefits should be considered. . . . IT organizations will not be able to achieve more flexible, stable funding by seeking additional budget dollars alone, and flexibility and agility will not come entirely from cost cuts. The CIO must lead efforts to rethink personnel strategies, sourcing strategies, process improvements, and project prioritization in order to ensure that the climate encourages IT innovation and provides maximum IT value to the institution.”10

Leadership barriers, on the other hand, are usually more cultural than tactical. The prevailing shared-governance culture of higher education can easily collide with the culture of evidence required to identify, track, and report performance obligations, especially as they relate to the outcomes and expenses of instruction and other academic services. Agreeing internally on mission-appropriate formulations of institutional performance standards and metrics can be difficult in the presence of the following leadership weaknesses:

  • The faculty and the executive leaders are not collaboratively aligned to meet performance obligations.
  • Leaders lack experience with or have resistance to the service redesign strategies that can improve academic and service performance—including IT service performance—while reducing unit costs.
  • The strategic plan or planning methodology lacks institutional performance indicators and goals to guide daily work, track progress, and revise goals/indicators based on evidence or changing priorities.
  • The CIO is excluded from the president’s cabinet.
  • There are dysfunctional relationships within a cabinet that includes the CIO.

Creative leadership is required to correct any such institutional weaknesses and to lead the process of establishing a culture of innovation.

Leadership Creativity

In higher education, the creative lead the creative. Higher education administrators, like their faculty colleagues, have usually demonstrated their creativity through scholarship and research in a disciplinary or professional academic specialization. They adapt naturally as leaders and managers to the tenure-based institutional management model designed to catalyze the creative, unfettered pursuit of knowledge development and dissemination and to protect it from external political and ideological forces. If traditional academic creativity is not to become its own worst enemy, however, higher education executives will have to lead and manage in ways that are sometimes counterintuitive in a culture based on shared governance and tenure-based academic freedom. Leaders will have to help faculty channel some of their creativity into solving today’s pressing institutional performance challenges. The question is: how creatively disruptive will higher education leaders have to be for technology to be applied innovatively to instruction, academic programs, and various support services to improve institutional performance?

Will higher education leaders have to dismantle tenure? No, but they should invoke academic freedom only to defend what it was intended to defend: the politically and ideologically unfettered pursuit of knowledge development and dissemination within the professor’s scholarly and instructional obligations to the institution and the discipline/profession. Academic freedom should not be invoked, for example, as a reason for rejecting opportunities to make instruction more effective (as measured by learning outcomes that can be publicly reported) and efficient (as measured by direct instructional expenses that can be reported). Nor should academic freedom be allowed to hinder an institution’s migration to more flexible program-delivery models that give students the same kind of options enjoyed by customers of other service organizations: (1) fewer requirements for real-time interactions in any medium (classroom, office, interactive video, Internet); (2) a portal-accessible array of customizable online self-service options for matriculating, registering, studying, interacting with teachers and other students, accessing records, paying bills, and so on; (3) 24x7x365, toll-free, first-line support services; and (4) in-depth expert academic and staff help provided as needed and as conveniently as possible during business hours by phone, through chat sessions, or in main- or branch-campus centers.

Will higher education leaders have to become technology experts and innovators? No, but they will have to ensure that technology is (a) well managed and cost-effectively supported by an internal or outsourced central technology unit and (b) innovatively applied, with expert help, to redesign academic and administrative programs and services to improve institutional performance.

Will higher education leaders have to turn their backs on general education and its tenure-protected goals of critical thinking, open discourse, reasoned debate, and learning to learn? No. The technology-enabled common-course redesign strategy is a proven method for using technology to improve and account for student learning outcomes while simultaneously reducing the direct costs of instruction in high-enrollment general education courses.

Will higher education leaders have to become relentless cost-cutters in response to unrelenting pressure on traditional public and private sources of revenue? No, but they will have to differentiate key unit costs—such as costs per credit, costs per graduate, and so on—from aggregate revenues, and they will have to learn to use technology to redesign services to improve quality, capacity, and flexibility while simultaneously driving down unit costs.

In its use of technology, higher education has creatively moved from supporting random acts of progress (serendipitous grass-roots successes) to supporting pockets of progress. The time is right to align executive and academic creativity to move toward systemic progress in improving institutional performance.

Innovation Strategies

Academic leaders dedicated to using technology to improve institutional performance first must identify their performance indicators, establish the tracking and improvement of these indicators as an institutional priority, and support and oversee the management of a high-performance IT organization that is collaborating daily with other units in support of an innovation infrastructure and culture. Then they must use their identified performance indicators to select and support redesign strategies and initiatives that can directly affect the indicators. This is the point at which the two process redesign strategies come into play: (1) the program and service flex redesign strategy and (2) the common-course redesign strategy.

The program and service flex redesign strategy redesigns academic and administrative services and programs to provide options for individual customization while eliminating or relaxing inflexibilities and inconveniences in their delivery. The goals align with the performance obligations for expense accountability, program accountability, convenience of access, and capacity for access, as follows:

  • Reduce requirements for real-time interactions between students and faculty/staff by providing (1) more instruction and other study and service opportunities delivered in online, time-shifted (asynchronous) self-service modality, with as much option for individual customization as possible; (2) less contact-hour instruction, regardless of whether faculty/students are in the same classroom or are interacting in real time online or in a televideo classroom; (3) fewer face-to-face or scheduled noninstructional service transactions; and (4) expert service interactions with faculty/staff when needed or wanted by the individual
  • Increase students' options for conducting service transactions, scheduling courses, studying, getting expert help, and completing a degree program
  • Increase enrollment capacities
  • Reduce the unit expense of services
  • Reduce dependency on the semester model

The flex redesign strategy applies to almost all noninstructional services and selectively to academic programs. The customizable, self-service portal captures the concept of flex services and promises to integrate administrative and academic services while increasing service access and flexibility. Many colleges and universities have implemented a campus portal, typically after migrating their administrative "back-office" systems—financial, human resources, and student information systems—to the latest technologies to create an information infrastructure. In the systems migration and integration process, some of these campuses redesigned key administrative service processes in order to avoid bolting the new system onto old service processes at additional, ongoing expense. When system migration and redesign are accomplished together, the benefits include the following:

  • Better integration of data and services between departments (e.g., the admissions and business offices)
  • Administrative staff reductions or increased administrative capacity to serve more students, either of which means reductions in unit expense
  • Improved satisfaction among students, alums, instructors, and staff members
  • Opportunities for evidence-supported academic decision-making via a next-phase analytics infrastructure (e.g., projected student performance profiles, admission yields, net revenues from tuition, per-credit expenses)

The academic focus of the flex redesign strategy is typically on redesigning entire degree and certificate programs or important course clusters for flex delivery to students who cannot (or prefer not to) participate in curricula that require a significant amount of real-time interaction. Target programs are often those in high demand or those that respond to economic development, professional, or workforce needs—the performance obligation for program accountability in markets demanding convenience of access. Such programs might include business, nursing, teacher training and certification, college-preparatory programs, and general education clusters.

To be successful, the institution must understand the delivery and pricing factors that will allow a selected program to compete in a targeted market, while also balancing these factors with any necessary requirements for real-time student/instructor interactions. Any effort to develop a flex academic program is likely to fail unless it carefully addresses a number of success factors:

  • Understanding the targeted student audience profile
  • Understanding the delivery modes preferred or required by the targeted students
  • Assessing the competition and tuition elasticity
  • Providing appropriate marketing and recruiting services
  • Applying instructional design practices that have proven effective for flex programs
  • Providing professional instructional design and course development support for faculty members and instructors
  • Providing all the instructional and administrative flex services required to support flex students and their instructors

The second redesign strategy, the common-course redesign strategy, is used to improve learning while also reducing direct instructional expenses for common courses, which account for a significant percentage of all enrollments. This innovation strategy therefore addresses the performance obligations of learning accountability and expense accountability and can also address the performance obligations for the capacity for access and the affordability of access.

If all of an institution’s courses are listed, starting with the highest-enrollment course (counting all course sections) and ending after cumulative enrollments account for 40–50 percent of total institutional enrollments, two striking discoveries will be revealed. First, only twenty to thirty courses will be on the list, despite rather expansive course catalogues of hundreds of courses. Second, almost all of the courses on the short list will be ones taught at almost all other institutions. These common courses include developmental and basic skills courses, required introductory courses from the general education program and a few high-demand degree programs, and high-demand general education electives.

The significance of common courses lies not only in their contribution to institutional expenses but also in their impact on retention and graduation rates. Their significance justifies using the redesign strategies pioneered by the Center for Academic Transformation—now the National Center for Academic Transformation (http://www.thencat.org/)—through its Program in Course Redesign. With funding from the Pew Charitable Trusts, the center awarded and supported grants to thirty institutions, as each redesigned one general education course. The results demonstrate that such courses can be redesigned to improve and account for student learning while simultaneously reducing per-enrollment direct instructional expenses “by about 40 percent on average, with a range of 20 percent to 84 percent,” according to Carol Twigg, director of the center.11

Three assumptions should be used to model the institutional expense-reduction potential of the common-course redesign strategy:

  • The common courses accounting for 40–50 percent of all enrollments are systematically redesigned over a period of years.
  • The average savings in direct instructional expenses is 40 percent (as reported above).
  • Direct instructional expenses account for at least 50 percent of all operating expenses—with the percentage adjusted according to the institution.

Taking the product of the three default percentages assumed above reveals that the common-course redesign strategy could save 8–10 percent of the overall institutional expense budget—while also measurably improving learning outcomes. Of course, instructional expenses necessarily vary across both disciplines/professions and level of study (undergraduate to graduate). Nevertheless, common courses often fall short in their outcomes, and the common-course redesign strategy is an opportunity to improve both the academic outcomes and the unit-cost structure in a way that significantly reduces institutional expenses.

How are these performance improvements accomplished? Although there is no one-size-fits-all model for common-course redesign, the National Center for Academic Transformation has aggregated various practices into five basic models.12 The common denominator is a collaborative effort by a faculty and administrative services team, for each course, to (1) ensure the academic quality and integrity of the effort, (2) plan the redesign, pilot a redesigned section or two, and then implement the successful redesign across all sections of the course, and (3) learn from the growing body of experience in course redesign when planning and piloting the redesign, for example by

  • focusing on the course, not its course sections,
  • emphasizing active and collaborative (social) learning and mastery feedback assessments,
  • assigning learningware and other digital materials for self-study, to supplement or replace traditional text materials,
  • customizing to students' unique needs, to the extent possible, with guided study and assistance from faculty members and instructional assistants,
  • documenting differences in course learning through before-and-after or in-parallel comparative assessments,
  • using common assessments—perhaps externally prepared, graded, and peer benchmarked—and other quality-assurance strategies, as appropriate, and
  • realigning faculty tasks without increasing faculty labor.

Faculty tasks are often realigned by applying strategies that, à posteriori, happen to increase the student/instructor ratio and thereby reduce per-enrollment direct instructional expenses. Such strategies include the following:

  • Offload course management functions to a course management system
  • Use testing software to deliver and grade practice quizzes and required exams
  • Institute team-teaching, in which instructors “divide and conquer” the syllabus instead of taking individual responsibility for the entire syllabus
  • Use lower-paid course assistants for functions that do not require faculty expertise or experience
  • Focus faculty expertise on motivational and integrative activities, on difficult subject matter, and on interactions with those students who require or desire faculty assistance

The common-course redesign and the flex program and service redesign strategies are not mutually exclusive. For example, enrollment capacity can be significantly increased by applying both strategies to the cluster of the twenty to thirty highest-enrollment courses to increase faculty capacity through course redesign and increase classroom capacity through flex redesign. Common-course redesign focuses on quality and costs, whereas flex program and service redesign focuses on flexibility/convenience and costs. Together, the two strategies—when applied to courses, programs, and other services—can improve quality (outcomes), increase capacity and delivery flexibility for the student, and reduce unit expenses, surely a holistic trinity of institutional performance obligations.

Conclusion

As a ubiquitous, commoditized asset and competitive necessity, IT is here to stay at every nonprofit college and university and should be expertly managed and collaboratively but determinedly applied to improve institutional performance. IT makes it possible, and selectively desirable, to turn the traditional higher education paradigm upside-down by bringing the resources of a college or university to the learner rather than bringing the learner to the campus or to its physical extensions. Determining when to apply such flex services and whether/when/how/to what degree to displace their traditional counterparts involves institution-by-institution decisions. Open and creative but disciplined leadership can establish a culture of innovation that values measurable, affordable performance improvements over unsubstantiated proxies for performance or unrealistically expensive plans to improve performance. Leaders would do well to follow the lead of students, who know that technology is a difference that can make a difference.

Indeed, a study from the EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research confirmed a common belief about “millennial” students (aka “digital natives”): they expect a ubiquitous IT environment, and they heavily use technology in their studies and everyday activities for reasons of convenience and immediacy (time savings). They attribute improved learning, however, only to the “good use of technology in the classroom,” and interestingly, few reported “good” uses in their classrooms—a compelling reason for adopting and adapting the common-course redesign strategy for measurably improving learning outcomes (even in courses that are not common courses). Students also notice that academic and administrative services too often retain the substance of the traditional process requirements after “bolting on” new technologies to effect service improvements.13 The result is an increased institutional expense structure seldom justified by the resulting lowest-common-denominator service improvements.

Rethinking the “technology bolt-on” process is the essence of using technology-enabled innovation to redesign a service process—that is, to change the service process in substantive ways to improve its quality, flexibility, and unit cost structure. The time is right for higher education to embrace the opportunities of the Internet revolution systematically by responding to performance obligations and their challenges with strategies that are counterintuitive to tradition-bound strategies. The two redesign strategies described in the previous section, when combined mission-appropriately and simultaneously over time, can lead—from both an internal and an external perspective—to the proverbial win-win. For example, applying the common-course redesign strategy to any course can measurably improve learning outcomes and, in the case of a common course, also simultaneously reduce per-enrollment direct instructional expenses (typically through à posteriori increases in the student/faculty ratio). Services and programs, including the general education program cluster of common courses, can also be redesigned for reasons of flexibility, convenience, and capacity to rely less on required synchronous interactions and more on online self-service and 24x7x365 online and call-in support complemented by interactions with the expert faculty/staff when assistance is required or desired during the normal working day. It is the ongoing simultaneous and purposefully determined application of these redesign strategies that can lead to the high-performance result depicted in Figure 3.

Figure 3. A Counterintuitive Response to Performance Pressures

Figure 3. A Counterintuitive Response to Performance Pressures
Click image for larger view.

Those colleges and universities that are willing to fund and manage IT in support of innovation are laying the innovation infrastructure and the cultural foundation for becoming high-performance institutions capable of commanding their own futures. Their leaders, both executive and academic, will

  • moderate the randomness of grass-roots, cost-ineffective innovation with the determined discipline to fund cost-effective innovation initiatives of verifiable institutional value,
  • source those initiatives to achieve stated strategic performance objectives with a sense of urgency,
  • monitor the results using quantitative institutional performance indicators, and
  • ensure that those indicators have been embraced externally by policy and oversight bodies and then report progress regularly to those oversight bodies and the society and constituencies they represent.

Leaders who act on this advice will join the “flatteners” described in the book The World Is Flat, by the New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman.14 Those who do not act will risk being “flattened” by the competitive forces already unleashed (by today’s networked technologies) on the challenges of achieving organizational and individual success. Friedman explains the role of technology in the innovative collaboration and sourcing models that are changing the responsibilities of governments, commercial and noncommercial organizations, and the individuals who lead and who work for these governments and organizations. Most educators who read Friedman’s book will understand the urgency of the original thesis of this article: technology is a necessary ingredient in systematically and measurably improving institutional performance in higher education, and the time is right for creative leadership in the interest of technology-enabled innovation focused and designed to improve the quality, flexibility, and expense structure of a “higher education.”

Notes

An earlier and longer version of this article is posted on the SunGard Collegis Web site: https://www.sungardcollegis.com/pages/203.asp. The author’s blog on institutional performance can be found at http://institutionalperformance.typepad.com.

1. Innovate America: Thriving in a World of Challenge and Change, final report of the National Innovation Initiative, Council on Competitiveness (December 15, 2004).

2. Accountability for Better Results: A National Imperative for Higher Education, final report from the National Commission on Accountability in Higher Education, State Higher Education Executive Officers (March 10, 2005), http://www.sheeo.org/account/accountability.pdf.

3. Vikas Bajaj, “Reprogrammed: Blazing Gain in Productivity Means Some Jobs Are No Longer Needed,” Dallas Morning News, October 10, 2004, p. 1D.

4. See William H. Graves: “Order the Change, and Change the Order,” Campus Technology, vol. 18, no. 3 (November 2004): 24–26, http://www.campus-technology.com/article.asp?id=10204, and “Strategies for Using Information Technology to Improve Institutional Performance: An Interview with William H. Graves,” Innovate, vol. 1, no. 2 (December 2004/January 2005), http://innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=21.

5. Larry R. Faulkner, “The Changing Relationship between Higher Education and the States,” 2005 Robert H. Atwell Distinguished Lecture, 87th Annual Meeting of the American Council on Education, February 13, 2005, http://www.utexas.edu/president/speeches/ace_021305.pdf.

6. See Appendix 1, below.

7. See the description of the Rio Salado project in Carol A. Twigg, “Improving Learning and Reducing Costs: New Models for Online Learning,” EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 38, no. 5 (September/October 2003): 35, http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ERM0352.pdf (for evidence that learning outcomes can be enhanced while increasing the instructor/student ratio, thereby potentially accommodating more students).

8. See Appendix 2, below.

9. John Voloudakis, “Hitting a Moving Target: IT Strategy in a Real-Time World,” EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 40, no. 2 (March/April 2005): 44–55, http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0522.pdf.

10. See Philip J. Goldstein and Judith Borreson Caruso, “Key Findings: Information Technology Funding in Higher Education,” EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research (ECAR) Study, 2004, vol. 7, http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ecar_so/ers/ERS0407/ekf0407.pdf, p. 7.

11. See the discussion of average cost savings in Twigg, “Improving Learning and Reducing Costs,” p. 30.

12. Ibid., pp. 30–38.

13. Robert B. Kvavik, Judith B. Caruso, and Glenda Morgan, “Students and Information Technology, 2004: Convenience, Connection, and Control,” EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research (ECAR) Study, 2004, vol. 5, key findings available at http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ecar_so/ers/ers0405/Ekf0405.pdf.

14. Thomas L. Friedman, The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005).


Appendix 1. Recent References to Performance Obligations and Revenue/Cost Pressure

To illustrate the relevance and timeliness of the six institutional performance obligations in Table 1, the matrix below cross-indexes the obligations (columns 1-6 under “Relevance”) to a list of references: Web sites, reports, books, papers, and news articles (the rows in the matrix). The references are also indexed for their direct relevance to the revenue/cost pressure facing many nonprofit colleges and universities (column 7 under “Relevance”). The intent is not to recommend an impossibly long reading list but to provide verifiable evidence, in addition to the article notes, that improving institutional performance is arguably higher education’s most pressing issue, one that cannot be responsively addressed without using technology to contain or reduce unit costs while measurably improving the targeted performance indicator(s).

1.Learning Accountability
2.Program Accountability
3.Expense Accountability
4.Affordability of Access
5.Convenience of Access
6.Capacity for Access
7.Revenue/Cost Pressure
RELEVANCE

National/State Reports and Web Resources

REFERENCE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Accountability for Better Results:  A National Imperative for Higher Education, final report from the National Commission on Accountability in Higher Education (March 2005), State Higher Education Executive Officers, http://www.sheeo.org/account/accountability.pdf x x x x      
Facing Up and Moving Forward:  Mobilizing a National Policy Capacity to Address Student Learning in Higher Education, Conference Report, Wingspread Conference Center, Business-Higher Education Forum (October 6-7, 2004) x            
A Matter of Degrees:  Improving Graduation Rates in Four-Year Colleges and Universities, Kevin Carey, Education Trust (May 2004), http://www2.edtrust.org/NR/rdonlyres/11B4283F-104E-4511-B0CA-1D3023231157/0/highered.pdf x            
National Postsecondary Education Cooperative. How Does Technology Affect Access in Postsecondary Education? What Do We Really Know? (NPEC 2004–831), prepared by Ronald A. Phipps for the National Postsecondary Education Cooperative Working Group on Access-Technology, Washington, D.C. (2004) x     x x x  
Measuring Up 2004: The National Report Card on Higher Education (Sept. 15, 2004), http://measuringup.highereducation.org/nationalpdfspresentations.cfm, National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, http://www.highereducation.org x x   x   x  
Losing Ground: A National Status Report on the Affordability of American Higher Education, http://www.highereducation.org/reports/losing_ground/ar.shtml, National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education (2004), http://www.highereducation.org       x     x
Student Engagement: Pathways to Student Success, National Survey of Student Engagement 2004 Annual Report, http://www.indiana.edu/~nsse/html/report-2004.shtml x            
Engagement by Design, Community College Survey of Student Engagement 2004 Annual Report, http://www.ccsse.org x            
Public Accountability for Student Learning in Higher Education, Business-Higher Education Forum (2004), http://www.bhef.com/publications/public.cfm x            
An Assessment Framework for the Community College, League for Innovation in the Community College (August 2004), http://www.league.org/publication/whitepapers/0804.html x x x   x    
Higher Education Survey on Leadership, Innovation, and Technology, 2004, Eric Bassett et al., Eduventures, http://www.eduventures.com x x x   x    
The National Forum on College-Level Learning, http://collegelevellearning.org x            
National Center for Academic Transformation, http://www.theNCAT.org x   x   x    
Alliance for Higher Education Competitiveness, http://www.a-hec.org x x x x x x x
EDUCAUSE Core Data Services:  2003 Summary Report, EDUCAUSE, http://www.educause.edu/apps/coredata/index.asp     x        
Information Technology Benchmarks:  A Practical Guide for College and University Presidents, David Smallen and Karen Leach, http://www.cic.org/publications/books_reports/index.asp     x        
Entering the Mainstream: The Quality and Extent of Online Education in the United States, 2003 and 2004, http://www.sloan-c.org/resources/survey.asp, Sloan Consortium, http://www.sloan-c.org/index.asp   x   x x x  
Sizing the Opportunity: The Quality and Extent of Online Education in the United States, 2002 and 2003, http://www.sloan-c.org/publications/books/survey.asp, Sloan Consortium, http://www.sloan-c.org/index.asp   x   x x x  
Building a Nation of Learners: The Need for Changes in Teaching and Learning to Meet Global Challenges (2003), Business-Higher Education Forum, http://www.bhef.com/publications/building.cfm x x     x x  

Books and Publications

REFERENCE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
“Academic Creativity: Its Own Worst Enemy?,” William H. Graves, Campus Technology, vol. 18, no. 10 (June 2005): 24-25, http://www.campus-technology.com/article.asp?id=11180 x x x x x x x
“Tools for Building an Outcomes-Based College Curriculum,” Ruth Stiehl and Les Lewchuk, Learning Abstracts, vol. 8, no. 2 (February 2005), http://www.league.org/publication/abstracts/learning/lelabs200502.html x            
“Assessing Assessment,” William H. Graves, Campus Technology, vol. 18, no. 5 (January 2005): 44-45, http://www.campus-technology.com/article.asp?id=10413 x   x x   x x
“Strategies for Using Information Technology to Improve Institutional Performance: An Interview with William H. Graves,” James Morrison, Innovate, vol. 1, no. 2 (December 2004/January 2005), http://innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=21 x x x x x x x
“Order the Change, and Change the Order,” William H. Graves, Campus Technology, vol.18, no. 3 (November 2004): 24-26, http://www.campus-technology.com/article.asp?id=10204 x x x x x x x
“Prestige, Power, and Wealth,” Clara M. Lovett, EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 39, no. 6 (November/December 2004), http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0468.pdf x x x x x x x
“What Happened to e-Learning and Why,” Rebecca Suasner, University Business, vol. 7, no. 11 (November 2004), http://www.universitybusiness.com/page.cfm?p=661 x   x   x    
The Quiet Crisis How Higher Education Is Failing America, Peter Smith, Anker Publishing (2004), https://secure.aidcvt.com/ank/ProdDetails.asp?ID=1882982703 x   x x     x
“Are We Tilting toward Federalization?,” Richard Ekman, From the President’s Desk, Council of Independent Colleges (fall 2004), http://www.cic.org/publications/independent/online/fall2004/pres_desk.html x   x x      
“Log on, Learn, Earn Credits: An Interview with Jon Larson,” Ubiquity, vol. 5, no. 26 (August 2004), http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/interviews/v5i26_larson.html x x x   x x  
“Higher Education Productivity,” William H. Graves, Collegis white paper (July 2004) x x x x x x x
Going Broke by Degree, Richard Vedder, American Enterprise Institute Press (June 2004), http://www.aei.org/publications/bookID.780,filter.all/book_detail.asp x x x x x x x
“A Policy Perspective: Will Online Learning Be a Key Solution in Maintaining America’s Global Competitiveness?,” Arthur J. Lendo, Oxford Roundtable (2004), http://www.a-hec.org/media/files/41392_proof_r1.pdf x x     x x  
“Online Strategies Accommodate the Demand for Education,” Thomas V. Huber, ACCT Trustee Quarterly (fall 2004), 44-45 x   x     x  
“Strategies for Measuring Technology Success: Some Things Trustees Should Keep in Mind—Financial, Operational and Strategic IT Accountability,” Thomas V. Huber, ACCT Trustee Quarterly (summer 2004)     x       x
“How to Align Technology Investment with Strategic Direction,” Thomas V. Huber, ACCT Trustee Quarterly (spring 2004)     x   x   x
“Academic Redesign: Accomplishing More with Less,” William H. Graves, Journal of Asynchronous Learning, vol. 8, no. 1 (February 2004), ed, Mark Milliron, http://www.sloan-c.org/publications/jaln/v8n1/v8n1_graves.asp x x x x x x x
“New Models for Online Learning,” Carol A. Twigg, EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 38, no. 5 (September/October 2003), http://www.educause.edu/ir/libra ry/pdf/erm0352.pdf x   x   x x  
“Academic e-Quality,” William H. Graves, Collegis white paper (September 2003) x x x x x x x
“A New Field of Dreams: The Collegiate Learning Assessment Project,” Roger Benjamin and Marc Chun, Peer Review (summer 2003), http://www.aacu.org/peerreview/pr-su03/pr-su03feature2.cfm x            
“New Educational Wealth as a Return on Investment in Technology,” William H. Graves, EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 37, no. 4 (July/August 2002): 38-48, http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0242.pdf x x x x x x x
“Technology and the Independent Institution’s Academic Bottom Line,” William H. Graves, Collegis white paper (June 2003) x x x x x x x
“Pressures for Fundamental Reform: Creating a Viable Academic Future,” A. Guskin and M. Marcy, chapter in A Field Guide to Academic Leadership, ed. Robert Diamond, Jossey-Bass (2002), http://www.pfhe.org/docs/Diamond_Book_Chapter x   x x x x x

Chronicle of Higher Education(requires account login)

REFERENCE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
“House Panel Weighs Whether Congress Should Encourage or Require Overhaul of Credit-Transfer Policies,” Silla Brush (5/6/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/05/2005050601n.htm x     x      
“At a Congressional Hearing, Federal Student Aid Gets the Blame for Rising Tuition,” Stephen Burd (4/20/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/04/2005042002n.htm     x x     x
“Community Colleges Seek Their Share,” Jamilah Evelyn (4/15/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i32/32a01901.htm     x x     x
“Texas Lawmakers Want to Regain Authority over Tuition That They Gave to Universities in 2003,” Karin Fischer (3/23/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/03/2005032303n.htm x   x x     x
“Colleges Face New Demands for Accountability, Conference Speakers Say,” Welch Suggs (3/21/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/03/2005032101n.htm x x          
“Higher Taxes and Higher Education,” Dick Armey and Max Pappas (3/18/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i28/28b01001.htm     x x     x
“Purchasing Power of Maximum Pell Grant Will Continue to Decline, Report Says,” Kelly Field (3/11/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/03/2005031102n.htm     x x     x
“Meeting Employers' Needs,” Karin Fischer (3/11/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i27/27a02101.htm   x       x  
“Enrollment of Students under 22 Is Rising at Community Colleges, Study Finds,” Jamilah Evelyn (3/11/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i27/27a03901.htm x     x x    
“Commission on College Accountability Calls for a Broader Approach, Using More Data on Students,” Karin Fischer (3/10/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/03/2005031005n.htm x x x x     x
“Community Colleges Should Rely More on Institutional Research, Conference Panelists Say,” Jamilah Evelyn (3/8/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/03/2005030805n.htm x            
“Arguing for a Federal Program? Bring Hard Data, Education Secretary Tells Community-College Leaders,” Jamilah Evelyn (2/17/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005021701n.htm x     x     x
“To Regain Public Trust, U. of Texas President Says, Colleges Must Take Steps on Costs,” Jeffrey Selingo (2/14/2005), http://chronicle.com/free/2005/02/2005021403n.htm     x x      
“Virginia Lawmakers Approve Plan to Give Public Colleges More Autonomy,” Sara Hebel (2/10/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005021004n.htm x x x x   x x
“Community Colleges Would See a Net Loss in Federal Funds under Bush's Budget, Advocates Say,” Jamilah Evelyn (2/10/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005021001n.htm             x
“Colleges' Spending on Technology Will Decline Again This Year, a Survey Suggests,” Vincent Kiernan (2/9/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005020903n.htm     x       x
“Bush Seeks Bigger Pell Grants and Elimination of Some Programs for Low-Income Students,” Stephen Burd (2/8/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005020801n.htm       x     x
“Ratings Agencies Predict Mixed Financial Outlook for Higher Education in 2005,” Erin Strout (2/7/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005020705n.htm     x       x
“Bush Budget Will Propose a Recall of Federal Funds from Perkins Loan Program,” Kelly Field (2/4/2005), http://chronicle.com/free/2005/02/2005020407n.htm       x     x
“More Students Plan to Work to Help Pay for College: Record Percentages of Freshmen Also Expect to Take on High Debt,” Elizabeth S. Farrell (2/4/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i22/22a00101.htm       x     x
“Republicans in U.S. House Introduce Bill to Renew Higher Education Act That Mirrors Last Year's,” Stephen Burd (2/3/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/02/2005020301n.htm     x x     x
“The Perils of Pursuing Prestige,” Clara M. Lovett (1/21/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i20/20b02001.htm x   x x     x
“New Database of Graduation Rates Could Help Colleges Learn from Better-Performing Peers,” Elizabeth S. Farrell (1/19/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/01/2005011904n.htm x            
“President Bush Is Expected to Call for Changes That Would Increase Pell Grant Awards and Eliminate Program's Deficit,” Stephen Burd (1/14/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/01/2005011401n.htm       x     x
“State Appropriations: Improving, but Tempered by Rising Costs,” Sara Hebel (1/7/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i18/18a01402.htm             x
“Federal Spending: The Good Times Have Stopped Rolling,” Stephen Burd (1/7/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i18/18a01401.htm             x
“Balance Sheets: Seeking Efficiency and Finding New Income,” Paul Fain (1/7/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i18/18a01102.htm     x       x
“Change in Federal Formula Means Thousands May Lose Student Aid,” Stephen Burd
(1/7/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i18/18a00101.htm
      x     x
“In December Surprise, Education Dept. to Issue Policy That Could Remove 90,000 Students from Aid Rolls,” Stephen Burd (12/22/2004), http://chronicle.com/free/2004/12/2004122201n.htm       x     x
“Community Colleges Struggle to Foster 'Engagement,' Survey Finds,” Jamilah Evelyn (12/3/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i15/15a03701.htm x   x   x    
“Proposed Change in How Federal Government Collects Student Data Raises Privacy Concerns,” Joseph Gidjunis (11/26/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i14/14a02201.htm x   x   x    
“A New Face for Education in a Second Bush Term,” Stephen Burd (11/26/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i14/14a01901.htm x   x x      
“Online-Education Survey Finds Boom in Enrollment and Broad Satisfaction with Courses,” Scott Carlson (11/15/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2004/11/2004111503n.htm x x     x x  
“Testing Service to Unveil an Assessment of Computer and Information Literacy,” Jeffrey R. Young (11/12/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i12/12a03301.htm x            
“Fewer Colleges Cut Information-Technology Budgets This Year, Survey Finds,” Dan Carnevale (10/20/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2004/10/2004102004n.htm     x       x
“Higher Education Isn't Meeting the Public's Needs,” Frank Newman et al. (10/15/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i08/08b00601.htm x x x x   x  
“To Use Graduation Rates to Measure Excellence, You Have to Do Your Homework,” Alexander Astin (10/22/2004), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i09/09b02001.htm x            
“How Can Colleges Prove They're Doing Their Jobs?,” Forum (9/3/2005), http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i02/02b00601.htm x            

Other Newspaper, Magazine, Periodical, and TV Reports

REFERENCE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
The Rising Costs of College,National Public Radio (5/23/2005), http://www.npr.org/takingissue/20050523_takingissue_college_costs.html       x     x
“UT System Wants to See Graduation Rates Improve,” Matthew Tresaugue, Houston Chronicle (5/11/2005), http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/metropolitan/3178363 x         x  
“Senate Votes to Take Back Tuition Control,” Jeffrey Gilbert, Houston Chronicle (5/4/2005), http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/metropolitan/3166879     x x     x
“High Nursing Shortage Means Higher Education,” Carrie Manders, WZZM 13 (5/3/2005), http://www.wzzm13.com/news/grmetro_article.aspx?storyid=39433   x          
“Survival of the Fittest,” John Merrow, New York Times (4/24/2005), http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/24/education/edlife/merrow24.html?pagewanted=8 x   x       x
“Florida Considers Degree Quotas,” Kimberly Miller, Palm Beach Pos, (4/22/2005), http://www.palmbeachpost.com/politics/content/news/epaper/2005/04/22/m1a_degree_0422.html   x          
“Pressure on College Prices,” Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Ed (4/20/2005), http://insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/20/access     x x     x
“Universities Preparing for Tuition Increases,” Bob Berggoetz, Indianapolis Star (4/12/2005), http://www2.indystar.com/articles/4/236197-1194-009.html       x     x
“Higher Tuition Could Cost Texas Universities,” Dallas News (4/11/2005), http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/041205dntextuition.1cab1ae52.html     x x     x
“Bill Would Freeze Cost of Higher Education,” Greg Bolt, Register-Guard (3/28/2005), http://www.registerguard.com/news/2005/03/28/b1.cr.tuitionfreeze.0328.html     x x     x
“System May Start Turning Students Away,” Adriana Barrera, Thomas Oliver, and Tyree Wieder, L. A. Daily News (3/27/2005), http://www.dailynews.com/Stories/0,1413,200~24781~2785136,00.html       x   x x
“Pursuit of Degrees Takes Hit:  Enrollment Crunch Pushes More Students to Delay or Leave State,” Adam Wilson, The Olympian (3/20/2005), http://www.theolympian.com/home/news/20050320/topstories/109752.shtml     x x   x x
“Regents Tackle U-System Credit Transfer Problems,” Allison Farrell, Billings Gazette (3/18/2005), http://www.billingsgazette.com/index.php?id=1&display=rednews/2005/03/18/build/state/
62-regents-usystem.inc
x       x    
“2-Year College Transfers Affirmed,” Ruth-Ellen Cohen, Bangor Daily News (3/17/2005), http://www.bangornews.com/news/templates/?a=110541 x       x    
“Signing SUNY's Check,” Ronald G. Ehrenberg, Newsday (3/14/2005), http://www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-opehr064166889mar06,0,5157748.story?coll=ny-viewpoints-headlines     x x     x
“A Nation's Colleges at Risk,” Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed (3/10/2005), http://insidehighered.com/insider/a_nation_s_colleges_at_risk x x x x   x  
“Universities Want Authority to Raise Tuition without Legislature,” Melinda Deslatte, nola.com (3/7/2005), http://www.nola.com/newsflash/louisiana/index.ssf?/base/news-14/
1110237754153820.xml&storylist=louisiana
      x     x
“Lawmakers Talk about College Remedial Courses: Reasons for Funding UNLV, UNR Programs Discussed,” Kirsten Searer, Las Vegas Sun (3/3/2005), http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/lv-ed/2005/mar/03/518385760.html x   x        
“Penn State President Lobbies Legislature for More Funding,” Tom Barnes, Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau (3/2/2005), http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05061/465048.stm       x     x
“UW President Calls on State to Ease Enrollment Crunch,” Heather Woodward, The Olympian (3/2/2005), http://www.theolympian.com/home/news/20050302/topstories/97862.shtml   x       x  
“UNH President Warns of Tuition Hike,” Bruno Matarazzo Jr., Foster’s Online (3/2/2005), http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050302/NEWS0802/50302110     x x     x
“Public College Costs Increase,” Leigh Montgomery, Christian Science Monitor (2/27/2005), http://blogs.csmonitor.com/liblog/2005/02/index.html#a0003682653 x   x x     x
“Mass. Colleges See Costs Rise, Aid Fall: Needy Students Getting Hit Hard, Officials Report,” Jenna Russell, Boston Globe (2/27/2005), http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/02/27/
mass_colleges_see_costs_rise_aid_fall
      x     x
“New Plan Eases College Transfers,” Joktan Kwiatkowski, The Lantern (2/23/2005), http://www.thelantern.com/news/2005/02/23/Campus/
New-Plan.Eases.College.Transfers-874049.shtml
x     x      
“The High Cost of College,” Nancy Mace, Waynesboro Record Herald (2/23/2005), http://www.therecordherald.com/articles/2005/02/23/local_news/news04.txt       x     x
“Officials Urge Accountability in Universities,”Traci Kawaguchi, Daily Californian (2/23/2005), http://www.dailycal.org/article.php?id=17735 x            
“Higher Education Advocates Needed as State Confronts Budget Shortfall,” Paul R. Shelly, Asbury Park Press (2/23/2005), http://www.app.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050223/OPINION/502230395/1030       x   x x
“Oklahoma's Brain Gain: A Comprehensive Drive to Increase the Percentage of State Residents with College Degrees,” Pamela Burdman, Crosstalk, vol. 13, no. 1 (winter 2005), http://www.highereducation.org/crosstalk/ct0105/news0105-oklahoma.shtml x   x x   x x
“Math Emporium: The Use of Technology Has Changed the Way Virginia Tech's Introductory Math Classes Are Taught,” Kay Mills, Crosstalk, vol. 13, no. 1 (winter 2005), http://www.highereducation.org/crosstalk/ct0105/news0105-virginia.shtml x   x     x  
“Speakout: State Right to Hold CU Accountable,” Rick O’Donnell, Rocky Mountain News (2/18/2005), http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/opinion/article/0,1299,DRMN_38_3556426,00.html x x x       x
“Plan Would Boost College Enrollment,” Crystal Harden, Cincinnati Post (2/17/2005), http://www.cincypost.com/2005/02/17/zim021705.html   x   x   x x
“Study: Community College Cuts Reduce Enrollment,” Sarah Evans, Statesman Journal (2/17/2005), http://159.54.226.83/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050217/STATE/502170343/1042       x   x x
“Credit Check,” Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed (2/16/2005), http://www.insidehighered.com/insider/credit_check x   x x     x
“Universities Say Money Needed to Avert Crisis,” Kelly Kearsley, Seattle Times (2/16/2005), http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002181656_highered16e.html       x   x x
“State's Universities Budget Discussed,” Jonathan Roos, Des Moines Register (2/16/2005), http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050216/
NEWS02/502160363/1001/NEWS
    x x     x
“Costs of Education Slope Sharply Upward,” Valerie Strauss, Washington Post (2/15/2005), http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24398-2005Feb14.html     x x     x
“Author: Student Loans Increasing Costs of College” (audio report), Renee Montagne and Richard Vedder, NPR Morning Edition (2/15/2005), http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4499641 x   x x     x
“Likins: Boost Tuition by 10%,” Anne Minard, Arizona Daily Star (2/15/2005), http://www.dailystar.com/dailystar/allheadlines/61436.php     x x     x
“Higher Learning Faces Fiscal Squeeze,” Tom Bell, Portland Press Herald (2/14/2005), http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/news/state/050214umaine.shtml       x     x
“Campuses Study to Make the Grade,” Matt Krupnick, Contra Costa Times (2/14/2005), http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/living/education/10895687.htm x            
“Making College Affordable,” Jeff Jacoby, Boston Globe (2/10/2005), http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/
articles/2005/02/10/making_college_affordable
    x x     x
“Universities Seek to Cut New Money-Performance Tie,” Kimberly Miller, Palm Beach Post (2/9/2005), http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/content/news/epaper/2005/02/09/s1a_faumoney_0209.html x           x
“Rhetoric and Reality,” Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Ed (2/9/2005), http://www.insidehighered.com/insider/rhetoric_and_reality             x
“Va. Assembly Backs New Autonomy for Colleges,” Rosalind S. Helderman and Susan Kinzie, Washington Post (2/9/2005), http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8313-2005Feb8.html x   x x   x x
“A Cutting Budget,” Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Ed (2/8/2005), http://www.insidehighered.com/insider/a_cutting_budget       x     x
“Colleges Look to Undergrads As Donors," Samira Jafari, Associated Press (2/7/2005), http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&ncid=519&e=10&u=/ap/20050207/ap_on_re_us/undergraduate_donors_2       x     x
“Higher Ed OKs New Transfer Rules,” Eugene Register Guard (2/6/2005), http://www.registerguard.com/news/2005/02/06/c6.or.collegetransfers.0206.html x     x   x  
“A Mixed Financial Outlook for Colleges,” Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Ed (2/4/2005), http://www.insidehighered.com/insider/a_mixed_financial_outlook_for_colleges             x
“Community Colleges Pay for Being Popular,” Jo Ciavaglia, PhillyBurbs.com (2/4/2005), http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6913473       x   x x
“Tuition Increase Proposed at U.Va,” Carlos Santos, Richmond Times-Dispatch (2/4/2005), http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RTD%2FMGArticle%2FRTD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031780632386&path=%21news&s=1045855934842       x     x
“Cap on University Spending Proposed,” Scott Dance, Diamondback, University of Maryland-College Park (2/3/2005), http://www.diamondbackonline.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/02/03/4201bc6c75fed     x x     x
“UC System Sees Record Number of Applicants,” Adrienne Lynett, Daily Bruin, UCLA (2/3/2005), http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/articles.asp?id=31822           x  
“UW President Details Ways to Cut $23.7 Million from Annual Costs,” Duluth News Tribune (2/2/2005), http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/10798447.htm     x x     x
“Is College Getting Out of Reach?,” Greg Toppo, USA Today (2/1/2005), http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2005-02-01-college-costs_x.htm       x     x
“Colleges Wrestle with Transferring Credits,” Lori Kurtzman, Cincinnati Enquirer (1/30/2005), http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050130/NEWS01/501300417/1056/news01 x     x      
“Pataki Proposes Bonus to Colleges Whose Students Finish on Time,” Karen W. Arenson, New York Times (1/26/2005), http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/26/nyregion/26graduate.html x   x x   x x
“In-State Tuition Going Up at Maryland's Public Universities,” WTOP News (1/26/2005), http://www.wtopnews.com/index.php?nid=25&sid=401389       x     x
“N.C. Colleges Work to Improve Low Retention Numbers,” Lanita Withers, Greensboro News and Record (1/24/2005), http://www.news-record.com/news/education/graduation_012405.htm x            
“Pawlenty Looks to Colorado Higher Education Funding Scheme,” Marisa Helms, Minnesota Public Radio (1/19/2005), http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/2005/01/19_helmsm_colmodel       x     x
“North Dakota Legislature: Universities Ask for an Increase,” Brenden Timpe, Grand Forks Herald (1/18/2005), http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/10669145.htm     x x     x
“Pataki Budget Calls for SUNY, CUNY Tuition Increases,” Michael Gormley, Newsday (1/18/2005), http://www.newsday.com/news/local/state/ny-bc-ny--statebudget-highe0118jan
18,0,1028116.story?coll=ny-region-apnewyork
      x     x
“101 Redefined,” Richard Panek, New York Times (1/16/2005), http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/16/education/edlife/EDTECH.html x   x x      
“La. Colleges Asked to Cut '05 Budgets,” Jessica Fender, The Advocate (1/13/2005), http://www.wbrz.com/stories/011305/new_colleges001.shtml       x     x
“Owens to Roll Out Stipends for College Students,” Dave Curtin, Denver Post (1/12/2005), http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2648101,00.html       x     x
“Students, Regents to Ask for More Aid,” Natasha Bhuyan, Arizona Daily Wildcat (1/12/2005), http://wildcat.arizona.edu/papers/98/75/01_5.html       x     x
“Round 2: College Courses vs. AP Tests,” Jay Mathews, Washington Post (1/11/2005), http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A449-2005Jan11.html x         x  
“University Decentralization Debate to Be Watched Closely,” Kevin Miller, Roanoke Times (1/10/2005), http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke%5C16664.html     x x     x
“The High Cost of Higher Education: Why Does a "Tuition-Free" Public University Cost So Much?,” Sam Whiting, San Francisco Chronicle (1/9/2005), http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/archive/2005/01/09/CMGOJAA45S1.DTL     x x     x
“Gov. Bush to Propose $103 Million Boost in Adult Ed,” Sarasota Herald Tribune (1/9/2005), http://www.heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050106/NEWS/50106011   x   x   x  
“Public Colleges Face Rising Demand, Reduced Support,” Erik Kelderman, Stateline.org (1/7/2005), http://www.stateline.org/stateline/?pa=story&sa=showStoryInfo&id=422891&columns=true     x x     x
“Higher-Ed Panel, Colleges Close In on Performance Pacts,” John Ensslin, Rocky Mountain News (1/7/2005), http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/education/article/
0,1299,DRMN_957_3451832,00.html
x   x x   x x
“SUNY Head Proposes $600 Tuition Hike,” Michael Gormley, Troy Record (1/7/2005), http://www.troyrecord.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=13701342&BRD=1170&
PAG=461&dept_id=7021&rfi=6
      x     x
“University System Credit Transfers Fail Audit,” Betsy Cohen, The Missoulian (1/7/2005), http://www.missoulian.com/articles/2005/01/05/news/mtregional/news06.txt x   x x x    
“Colleges Face Space Crunch,” Bonnie Eslinger, San Francisco Examiner (1/6/2005), http://www.sfexaminer.com/article/index.cfm/i/010605n_colleges       x   x x
“College: The Gift That Keeps on Billing,” Peter Svensson, Tacoma New Tribune (1/6/2005), http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/education/story/4409082p-4183390c.html       x     x
“Tuition Tied to Colleges' Costs,” Dave Curtin, Denver Post (1/5/2005), http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2635188,00.html x   x x   x x
“Feds Slash College Grants: Up to 75,000 Low-Income Students in Mich. Will See Cuts or Be Disqualified,” Doug Guthrie, Detroit News (1/6/2005), http://www.detnews.com/2005/schools/0501/06/A01-51955.htm       x     x
“Tuition Inflation Spurs Calls for Congressional Action,” Jackie Cohen, Investor’s Business Daily (1/5/2005), http://www.investors.com/breakingnews.asp?journalid=24849254&brk=1     x x   x x
“Community Colleges Fight to Meet Demand,” Madelaine Jerousek, Des Moines Register (1/4/2005), http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=
/20050104/NEWS02/501040368/1004
      x   x x
“Tuition Aid Takes Toll on Many Colleges,” Marcella Bombardieri, Boston Globe (1/2/2005), http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2005/01/02/
tuition_aid_takes_toll_on_many_colleges/
    x x     x
“Tuition Increases May Lead to More State Control,” Lexington Herald Leader (1/1/2005), http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/local/10544649.htm     x x     x
“Students' Tuition May Depend on Major,” Inger Sandal, Arizona Daily Star (12/31/2004), http://www.dailystar.com/dailystar/dailystar/54944.php     x x   x x
“Colleges Seeking Increase in Grant Funds,” Thomas Spencer, Birmingham News (12/22/2004), http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/news/110371068432710.xml       x   x x
“Locke: Big Plans for Higher Education,” David Ammons, Seattle Post Intelligencer (12/20/2004), http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/aplocal_story.asp?
category=6420&slug=WA%20College%20Budget
  x   x   x x
“Why Colleges Think They’re Better Than AP,” Jay Mathews, Washington Post (12/14/2004), http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A63182-2004Dec14.html x     x      
“Panel: State Should Provide ‘Universal Higher Education,’ ” Detroit Free Press (12/13/2004), http://www.freep.com/news/statewire/sw108596_20041213.htm       x     x
“SUNY Seeks More Aid, Freeze on Tuition in '05,” Stephen Watson et al., Buffalo News (12/11/2004), http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20041211/1035870.asp       x     x
“Blunt Vows to Control Rising Tuition,” Matt Franck, Saint Louis Post Dispatch (12/1/2004), http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/politics/story/2F301B1C3803AAD
E86256F5E001E711B?OpenDocument&Headline=Blunt+vows+to+control+rising+tuition
x   x x     x
“CU Revenue Idea Shocks Officials,” Lynn Bartels, Rocky Mountain News (12/1/2004), http://rockymountainnews.com/drmn/legislature/article/0,1299,DRMN_37_3365684,00.html x   x x     x
“Federal Plan to Keep Data on Students Worries Some,” Diana Jean Schemo, New York Times (11/29/2004), http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/29/education/29college.html?ex=1102740287&ei=1&en=0758f71f8d342c55 x   x   x    
“Bill Clears Way for Government to Cut Back College Loans,” Greg Winter, New York Times (11/21/2004), http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/21/education/21pell.html?oref=login&oref=login       x     x
“Number of Needy Students Drops at Top Universities,” Bill Schackner, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (11/21/2004), http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/04326/414682.stm       x     x
“Higher Education Commission Seeks $78M in Extra Funds,” Jackson Sun News (11/20/2004), http://miva.jacksonsun.com/miva/cgi-bin/miva?NEWS/news_storyV2.mv+link=200411206693422       x   x x
“Should Public Universities Behave Like Private Colleges?,” William C. Symonds, Business Week Online (11/15/2004), http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_46/b3908089.htm x     x   x x
“More Aid Proposed for Poor Students,” John C. Ensslin, Rocky Mountain News (11/9/2004), http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/education/article/0,1299,DRMN_957_3314935,00.html x   x x   x x
“State Approves Accountability System for Public Universities,” KWTX.com (11/12/2004), http://www.kwtx.com/home/headlines/1144231.html x   x x      
“Wealth of Knowledge,” Christopher Stollar, Washington Times (10/28/2004), http://washingtontimes.com/culture/20041027-094912-8343r.htm x     x     x
“Employees Develop Innovations around Budget Cuts,” Brian Garcia, Long Beach City College Viking (10/25/2004), http://vikingnews.lbcc.cc.ca.us/viewarticle.cfm?aid=139     x x   x x
“College Expenses Outpace Student Aid,” George Archibald, Washington Times (10/20/2004), http://washingtontimes.com/national/20041020-121512-6918r.htm     x x     x
“U-Md. System to Offer Major Savings Initiative,” Nurith C. Aizenman, washingtonpost.com (10/19/2004), http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A43800-2004Oct19.html     x x   x x
“SDSU Planning to Add 10,000 Students by 2025,” Lisa Patrillo, San Diego Union-Tribune Dispatch (10/12/2004), http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/education/20041012-9999-1m12sdsu.html       x   x x
“Higher-Ed Guidelines Unveiled,” Holly Yettick, Rocky Mountain News (10/7/2004), http://rockymountainnews.com/drmn/education/article/0,1299,DRMN_957_3236046,00.html x   x x   x x
“Panel Hopes to Spur Technology Transfer,” Jeremy W. Steele, Business Direct Weekly (10/7/2004), http://www.mlive.com/businessdirect/stories/index.ssf?/businessdirect/central/
stories/20041007transfer.html
x     x     x
“Crow Talks Turkey, but What's He Selling?,” Robert Robb, azcentral.com (9/26/2004), http://www.azcentral.com/php-bin/clicktrack/print.php?referer=http://www.azcentral.com/news/opinions/columns/articles/0926robb26.html x x x x x x x
“How to Measure What You Learned in College,” Jay Matthews, Washington Post (9/21/2004), http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A37990-2004Sep21?language=printer x            
“College Fight for Influence Gets a Little Nasty,” Jeffrey Birnbaum, Washington Post (9/20/2004), http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A34155-2004Sep19?language=printer x x x x x x x

Appendix 2. Examples of Improved Institutional Performance

Some institutions have seeded long-term institutional performance initiatives with successful service redesign projects. Benedictine University, for example, is a nonprofit, independent university facing a range of competitive pressures. It competes in the Chicago area with other institutions (including the for-profit University of Phoenix) to attract students interested in earning an MBA. Accordingly, Benedictine set a goal to increase its MBA enrollments and their profitability. Using technology to redesign courses and services, the university developed a more flexible version of the traditional MBA program. The resulting WebFlex M.B.A. features significantly reduced requirements for real-time student/instructor interaction, as well as a host of 24x7x365 support services for students. A second redesign of the program targets students who cannot or will not participate in real-time interactions; this version is fully online and has no synchronous requirements to preclude enrollments from outside the Chicago market. To fill gaps in its internal resources and to improve time-to-market, Benedictine outsources some support services, including help for faculty and staff members in redesigning courses, programs, and other services for flex markets. Employing the program and service flex redesign strategy, Benedictine is meeting evolving enrollment and profitability goals, and it now competes more effectively and efficiently in terms of quality, flexibility, and price.

Successful program and service flex redesign examples at public universities and state systems include UMassOnline, UBOnline (at the University of Baltimore), and the Tennessee Board of Regents' Online Degree Programs.

Taking a different path from that followed by Benedictine, a Fairfield University faculty team in biology has redesigned the two-semester General Biology course, one of the university’s largest courses with an annual enrollment of 260 students. The course was formerly taught in a multiple-section model requiring seven faculty FTEs with thirty-five to forty students per section. The redesigned course “consumes” only four faculty FTEs and condenses all sections into a single large-classroom format. Students work in teams of two and three around individual laptop computers, utilizing software modules that focus on inquiry-based instruction and independent investigations. Significant cost savings of 31 percent (from $506 per enrollment to $350) are being realized by reducing faculty time in three major areas: (1) materials development for lectures; (2) out-of-class course meetings; and (3) in-class lectures and labs.1 The consolidation of seven lecture sections into two in the redesigned course and the introduction of computer-based modules in the lecture and laboratory have contributed to the reduction in costs made possible by the common-course redesign strategy.

Using a more radical approach to common course redesign than Fairfield, Virginia Tech has developed and been recognized for its innovative Math Emporium. A faculty team from the Math Department successfully redesigned the core linear algebra course by eliminating traditional contact-hour activities in favor of as-needed help to support guided self-study and required problem-solving activities. All of this takes place in an emporium-like, computer-lab study space or online. The redesign ultimately improved the learning outcomes of the course while reducing its direct per-enrollment instructional expenses by 77 percent.2

The University of Hawaii is an example of a system that has started a system-wide course redesign project, which could yield even greater effectiveness and efficiency than might be achieved by each campus acting independently to redesign common courses.3

Ocean County College (OCC), near the New Jersey shore, is using both the common course redesign strategy and the program and service flex redesign strategy. OCC offers a traditional nursing program, and for a select group of people who already work in the healthcare field and are interested in becoming registered nurses (RNs), it also offers a flex version of the traditional RN program: the One Day per Week Nursing Program, requiring only one day per week of site-based learning and clinical experience. The flex program increases the capacity of OCC's existing classroom plant by reducing required contact-hour interactions, and it increases the faculty's capacity to work with more students by redesigning the common (required) courses in the nursing program. Students benefit because they can keep their healthcare jobs while enhancing their professional credentials and opportunities for advancement. OCC is also redesigning a high-enrollment introductory psychology course, as part of the Roadmap to Redesign (R2R) initiative, and common courses in developmental math and Western civilization (with support from contracted support resources). All three courses will have reduced contact hours and, in the long term, should lead to the advantages cited above: increased enrollment capacity, more flexible options for students, measurably improved learning outcomes, and reduced per-enrollment instructional expenses.

Mohave Community College, in Arizona, has improved the performance of its central IT services through outsourcing and has developed an information infrastructure that unifies and corrects formerly disparate and sometimes replicated data. Mohave has further developed an analytics infrastructure for accessing and analyzing that data to gain knowledge of institutional performance issues and inform decision-making. Mohave is also participating in the R2R initiative to redesign a large-enrollment course to reduce instructional costs while measurably improving learning outcomes.

Notes

1. See the cost savings table at http://www.thencat.org/PCR/R2Savings.html.

2. See the cost savings table at http://www.thencat.org/PCR/R1Savings.html.

3. “The University of Hawaii Launches Strategic Initiative,” Learning MarketSpace (July 2004), published online by the National Center for Academic Transformation, http://www.thencat.org/Newsletters/Jul04.htm#2.