SPRING 2001 ENROLLMENT UPDATE: WEEK 7
(Enrollments from 1/3/2000 and from 1/2/2001)
Enrollments by Status
|
FTE 2000
|
FTE 2001
|
Heads 2000
|
Heads 2001
|
| 3564 |
3640 |
4119 |
4180 |
| 770 |
801 |
859 |
891 |
| 806 |
801 |
924 |
910 |
| 792 |
840 |
905 |
939 |
| 1196 |
1197 |
1431 |
1440 |
| 18 |
21 |
22 |
28 |
| 150 |
164 |
200 |
229 |
| 23 |
37 |
49 |
75 |
| 38 |
47 |
93 |
108 |
| 17 |
17 |
53 |
50 |
| 3809 |
3927 |
4536 |
4670 |
Notes: Only students taking regular on-campus courses are counted.
Extension, remedial, study abroad, high school, and agency-funded enrollments are
excluded.
Comparison to targets:
- UW-Green Bay does not have specific FTE or headcount targets for spring semesters.
- Our Spring Gross Tuition target is $6,519,567. The
value of current registrations is $6,370,707. Last year, gross tuition
increased 4.5% between this point and the final. If a similar trend
happens this year, we will end Spring with $6,657,389 and a small surplus
from the Spring of about $135,000.
Comparison to last year's enrollments:
- FTE and headcount enrollments are as strong or stronger than last spring in all categories.
- Enrollments are primarily larger because we enrolled more
students in Fall 2000 than Fall 1999. Regular enrollments for fall
were up 2.0%. Current spring enrollments are up 3.1% over last spring.
- UW-Green Bay stopped accepting applications for new
transfers and new freshmen in regular on-campus programs on Friday, December 15.
We will continue to admit graduate students, undergraduate specials and
students in Extended Degree and Nusing Consortium program.
- At this time, 91.4% of the New Fall Freshmen who started in
2000 and 67.2% of the sophomore cohort have registered for Spring 2001.
These rates compare to 89.2% and 63.5% last year. Since our cohorts
tend to have about 1000 students, each 1% increase in a cohort's retention
rate corresponds, more or less, to 10 additional students.
- The Extended Degree Program has enrolled 199 students for
69 FTE, compared to 208 students and 69 FTE last spring.
Reports from prior weeks:
|