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Enrolment Management Transformation Project

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Title: Enrolment Management Transformation Project


1
Enrolment Management Transformation Project
  • December 3rd 2008
  • Presentation at Laval University

2
About Concordia
  • 38,000 students
  • 4 faculties
  • Continuing Education
  • Graduate Studies
  • Urban Institute
  • Two campuses

3
  • Why Make Changes?
  • Initially
  • Address concerns raised about internal process
    efficiency
  • Insufficient meaningful enrolment data to support
    management of processes and informed decision
    making

4
  • Why Make Changes?
  • Initially
  • Improve responsiveness of services to students
  • Initially examined recruitment, admissions,
    communication awards and data
  • Limited internally focused perspective of EM

5
Why Make Changes (Continued)
  • Mid-way to ongoing
  • Articulate and act upon desirable enrolment
    profile in terms of quantity, quality,
    graduation rates and funding
  • Needed to broaden the focus on student success as
    a result of better and shared understanding of EM
    issues based on internal data. Also wanted to
    address issues of persistence/retention.

6
Four Orientations to EM(D.H. Kalsbeek DePaul
University 2003)
  • Administrative
  • Focus on process
  • Goal is efficiency
  • Looks internal
  • Student-Focused
  • Focus on person
  • Goal is engagement
  • Looks immediate
  • Academic
  • Focus on programs
  • Goals is enhancement
  • Looks long term
  • Market-Centered
  • Focus on position
  • Goal is elevation
  • Looks external

7
Student Enrolment Cycle
Enhance Image of the University
Develop/Sustain Potential Student Markets
Graduate Students
Student Success
Cultivate Applicants
Support Student Success and Persistence
Qualify Potential Students
Enrol Students
Admit Students
8
The Geometric Model of Student Persistence and
AchievementDr. Watson Scott Swail
- - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - -
Cognitive Factors
Social Factors
The Student Experience
Institutional Factors
- - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - -
9
Financial Issues Educational Legacy Attitude
Towards Learning Religious Background Maturity Soc
ial Coping Skills Communication Skills Attitude
Toward Others Cultural Values Expectations Goal
Commitment Family Influence Peer Influence Social
Lifestyle
Academic Rigor Quality of Learning Aptitude Conten
t Knowledge Critical Thinking Ability Technology
ability Study skills Learning skills Time
Mangement Academic-related extracurricular
activities
Cognitive Factors
Social Factors
The Student Experience
Institutional Factors
Financial Aid Student
Recruitment
Services Admissions
Academic Curriculum
Services
Instruction
The Geometric Model of Student Persistence and
AchievementDr. Watson Scott Swail
10
Making the Case for the Institutional Commitment
  • Because of the initial focus on internal process
    efficiency the Vice- President Services
    championed the need to address EM issues at the
    Presidents Executive Group
  • Conducted an enrolment management audit which
    identified strength-weaknesses and gaps with best
    practices. Audit conducted by Noel-Levitz.
  • Needed to better manage significant enrolment
    growth (30) realized from 1996 to 2002

11
Enrolment Management Transformation Project
Charter and Scope
  • Project Scope
  • To develop and implement a comprehensive,
    explicit and integrated institutional strategy to
    deal with enrolment management including detailed
    goals and objectives consistent with University
    wide and Faculty academic plans.
  • Proceed with SIS development such that
    appropriate and timely data and information can
    support enrolment planning and decision-making in
    a system driven by academic plans and priorities.

12
Enrolment Management Transformation Project
  • Project Scope (Continued)
  • Reorient and train staff in relevant units to
    understand, execute enrolment management
    strategies and related processes with a view to
    meet goals.
  • On approval from the Presidents Cabinet, effect
    changes necessary to support the implementation
    of an integrated institutional enrolment
    management framework.

13
Project Organizational Framework
Presidents Cabinet
Project Champion Vice-President, Services
Project Leader Associate VP, Instructional and
Information Technology (IITS)
Project Leader Associate VP, Enrolment and
Student Services
Project Team
Stakeholders
Clients
  • HR Department
  • Unions
  • Financial Services
  • Institutional Research
  • Recruiters
  • Feeder Schools
  • Financial Aid Awards
  • Enrolment Management Transformation Team
  • Chair Associate Vice President, Enrolment and
    Student Services
  • 4 Faculty Enrolment Managers
  • 1 Registrar
  • 1 Director, Communication and Services to
    Students
  • 1 Manager, Administrative Systems, IITS
  • Students
  • Faculties
  • Deans
  • Provost
  • Recruitment Office

14
Major Service Stakeholders in EM
Admission Services
Recruitment
Registrar
Government Reporting Statistics
Enrolment Analysis Process Control
Communication and Services to Students
Enrolment Services
Provost, Faculties and Academic Departments
Institutional Marketing
Student Institutional Success
Vice-President, Services
IITS
Academic Policies
Student Services
Student Accounts

Financial Aid Awards
Support Services
Counselling Development
Health Services
15
Role of Noel-Levitz in the Enrolment Management
Transformation Project
  • Conducted EM audit and help the University
    acknowledged the gaps between current and best
    practices and de-personalized findings
  • Helped introduce and promote EM conceptual
    framework. Yield rates and strategic
    interventions to improve institutional
    performance.
  • Helped maintain pace of development
  • Acted as consultant/advisor to Project Steering
    Committee and facilitated process and information
    sessions
  • Involvement spanned two years 2- 4 days per month

16
Key Challenges
  • Transform processes while in production
  • Balance strategic and operational perspectives
  • Change culture of Control to one of Service
  • Pursue institutional effectiveness and depart
    from unit/silo perspective
  • Embrace technology but use it with clear purpose
  • Introduce changes within a very short window of
    opportunity

17
Carrying-out the project
  • Sharing an understanding of the conceptual
    framework
  • Information sessions and workshops on EM
    concepts
  • Internal media coverage
  • Presentation Presidents Executive Group by
    Noel-Levitz
  • Assess stakeholder needs and conduct gap analysis
  • Focus on present and future needs

18
Carrying-out the project continued
  • Audit existing policies and practices
  • What and why?
  • What is the value added of doing it this way?
  • Business process analysis with input from
    stakeholders
  • Develop capacity to generate and disseminate EM
    data

19
Carrying-out the project continued
  • Data rich and information starved
  • Finding meaning, capacity to analyze data
  • Developing institutional capacity to link data
    sets
  • Focused on Raw FTE and not Weighted FTEs
    (Clarder)
  • Established an IT team for the EMTP
  • Developed and piloted process and systems.
    Roll-out when opportunity presented itself.
  • Project Team met every two weeks for 24 months

20
Carrying-out the project continued
  • Project leader gave regular updates to
    Presidents Executive Group
  • Project leader validated academic policy
    direction and changes with Provost and decanal
    team (Academic cabinet)
  • Provost addressed divergent perspectives among
    decanal team
  •  

21
Results/outputs
  • Academic plan (Moving Ahead), which was lead by
    the Provost, provided strategic direction (
    Quantity, mix of cycle, international enrolment
    University wide and faculty basis)
  • Establishment of functional University wide
    coordinating groups (Recruitment Planning,
    Admissions Coordination, Communications, Student
    Success). Linking other existing and emerging
    work groups.

22
Results/outputs continued
  • Institutional Planning contributed significantly
    to planning process with EM data and information
  • Web and Portal EM data reports on admissions
    yield rates through the funnel, FTEs, retention,
    graduation. Data available institutional wide to
    program level.

23
  • Recruitment
  • Re-aligned Recruitment Function enrolment goals
    with greater integration with the admissions
    process.
  • Introduced mechanism to capture pre-application
    enquiry information and follow-up communication
    and applicant cultivation using EZ-Recruit
    Software
  • Centralized international student recruitment
    planning and coordination in matrix delivery
    environment
  • Develop international recruitment partnerships
    with agencies in targeted markets
  • Introduced Call Centre to cultivate and qualify
    applicant interest. Shifting to
    faculty/department based selected calling.

24
  • Admissions
  • Developed communication plan throughout admission
    process (Segmented mass e-mails)
  • Transformed the admissions process with improved
    cycle time efficiency as well as improved
    capacity to monitor production activity.
    Separated data capturing and adjudication of
    files.
  • Automated processing of CEGEP admission
    applications. Non- Cegep applicants processed in
    holistic review. 

25
  • Admissions continued
  • Created SIMS as distributed access to information
    system and operating platform with integrated
    data and image management.
  • Developed communication plan directed at admitted
    students to increase awareness level of on campus
    services as a means of improving acceptance to
    registration yield rates.
  • Offer of Entrance Scholarship integrated in
    admission process.
  • Pilot use of peer led blogs for admitted
    international student .

26
  • Student Success
  • Introduced CSI test (pilot phase) to triage need
    and target deploy services to students. Testing
    student success/attrition predictive modeling
    tool with CRI-Facts.
  • Developed New Student Orientation Program with
    early outreach to admitted students
  • Use peer support intervention in new student
    mentor program
  • Introduced Supplemental Instruction Program in
    selected academic departments as a result of
    engaging department chairs in dialogue on means
    of enhancing student
  • Success. Student Orientation Program

27
  • Outcomes
  • Focus of service sector expanded from mostly
    operational to strategic.
  • Greater collaboration and integration of
    Enrolment Services and Student Services with the
    Faculties and their respective Student Affairs
    Offices.
  • Improved performance of admissions process
    (Graduate and Undergraduate)
  • Increased collaboration and integration of
    service planning and delivery within service
    sector
  • Greater appreciation of the value of
    non-admission levers as a means of influencing
    enrolments. Student success leads to
    institutional enrolment goals

28
  • Lessons Learned
  • Need to be committed for the long term
  • Need conceptual framework to frame interventions
  • Enact short term successes and build conditions
    favourable for changes in the organizational
    culture (2 to 4 years)
  • The more you know about current enrolments the
    more compelled you are to effect changes to
    address issues
  • Reporting of enrolment data has to be both
    strategic as well as local and actionable. How
    does it matter at the departmental level?
  • Need to find ways to engage new academic
    department chairs in EM paradigm

29
Presenter
Roger Côté Associate Vice-President, Enrolment
Student Services E-mail rcote_at_alcor.concordia.ca
http//www.concordia.ca
30
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