Rachel Edmondson Adult Learner Analyst Jaci Leonard, UIC Analyst
UIC Process Changes for 2016 STARR Reporting Year, submission window Data Element, Business Rule Data Quality MI School Data Postsecondary Reports
What is a UIC IHE Request for UIC will remain open year round Obtaining UICs Resolving UICs Linking UICs Name Changes
A unique 10-digit number assigned to each student (can have leading zero). Example: 3642519760 Enables CEPI to connect student mobility from pre-k to postsecondary
IHE Request for UIC will remain open year round The IHE Request for UIC Collection UIC Submission Window Open Date Close Date Bulk File Upload On-going On-going Student Search On-going On-going
State pays the cost. Save staff time & effort. Fast, simple process for districts, students, higher ed. Transcripts can be sent electronically or by mail to any destination worldwide. Students/alumni and schools can track status online. Save money on paper, ink, and postage. Stop worrying about collecting payments. Students expect transcripts to be online. CEPI E-TRANSCRIPT PAGE PARCHMENT EXCHANGE - TOOLKIT
Obtaining UICs
Obtaining UICs
Resolving UICs
Linking UICs
Linking UICs
Justification
Name Changes CEPI is conducting an analysis to determine how to streamline internal processes which will recognize student name-changes EX: Jane Smith, between K12 and College, got married. Jane Smith is now Jane Doe However, Jane Smith has a UIC UIC system will use an algorithm to determine and connect Jane Doe and Jane Smith as possible matches Both the IHE and CEPI administrator may still have to perform analysis to determine the individual is one-and-the-same
Presenter Contact Information: Jaci Leonard: LeonardJ3@Michigan.gov Help Desk CEPI@Michigan.gov CEPI IHE Website
Changes for 2016 STARR Reporting Year STARR Submission Window Data Element & Schema Business Rules STARR Application Data Quality
STARR Reporting Year July 1 through June 30 Exception for the 2016 STARR May 1, 2015 through June 30, 2016 STARR Submission Deadline August 15 to October 14
Session Name Added EarlySummer Generally occurs from May 1 and ending June 30 Added LateSummer Generally begins July 1 and ends in August, but should also include courses which begin after May 1 but end after June 30 for overlapping parts of term
2015-16 School Year Summer courses that START from May 1 and END by June 30 Session Name (Early Summer) Session Designator (2015-05) Report in the STARR 2016 Collection
2015-16 School Year Summer courses that START from July 1 and END in August Session Name (Late Summer) Session Designator (2015-07) Report in the STARR 2017 collection
2015-16 School Year Summer courses that END after July 1 but START before July 1 Session Name (Late Summer) Session Designator (2015-06) Report in the STARR 2017 collection
Residency Status Code Removed from Student Demographics Not looking for the geographic location of the student Moved to the Session level Looking for the residency for tuition purposes
High School Student Required Added Not High School Student Student Level Code Changed 22 from Community College Transfer Seeking Only to Seeking 4 Year Degree
IPEDS Code Remove from Submitting Entity Academic Year Designator Remove from Schema - Academic Session Removed Residency Status Code Business Rules
Program CIP Code
Program CIP Code
Degree CIP Code
Duplicate Courses
Duplicate Session no Primary Academic Level identified
Quality Review Process Once Quality Review has finished you will receive an email
Checks resulting in E-mail Entry Dates High School Student Session alignment Academic Award completeness Degree and Nondegree-Seeking students CTE Concentrator usage Compare total student count reported in IPEDS and previous STARR collections to current STARR
Internal Checks Remedial courses submitted Postsecondary Enrollment Type of FirstTime or TransferIn When reporting TransferIn is CourseAcademicGradeStatusCode TransferNoGrade Is Military Status being submitted
Post Data Quality Last chance to be able to correct any data Opportunity to correct anomalies Internal Checks You could be contacted by phone or directly from me via email Opportunity to correct anomalies
Current reports Enrollment Student Pathways New reports Progress Persistence Length of time it takes to complete a degree
Presenter Contact Information: Rachel Edmondson: Edmondsonr2@Michigan.gov Help Desk CEPI@Michigan.gov CEPI IHE Website
Presenter: Rachel Edmondson June 3, 2016
CEPI and its Postsecondary Data MI School Data Overview Postsecondary Reporting on MI School Data Student Pathways Aggregate Enhancing our Customer Experience
Student Transcript and Academic Record Repository (STARR) CEPI manages STARR, which currently collects data once a year from 46 Michigan colleges and universities: 43 publics 3 independents STARR launched in Summer 2011 to fulfill ARRA grant requirements Utilizes Michigan's Unique Identification Code (UIC) to uniquely identify students Enables CEPI to connect to other state databases like K-12's Michigan Student Data System (MSDS) Partners with E-Transcript to ensure that the UIC is on the high school transcript during sending and receiving Contains enrollment and award data, including demographic information, courses, grades, and GPAs
National Student Clearinghouse StudentTracker (NSC StudentTracker) CEPI works with the National Student Clearinghouse to obtain the NSC StudentTracker data twice a year for out-of-state colleges and universities along with other Michigan independents: CEPI submits students to NSC Once in late summer after STARR collection closes, submitting any high school graduates since 2007-2008, the most recent 8 high school senior classes who haven't graduated, and any student enrolled in a STARR-submitted school during the most recent enrollment year Once in late fall, submitting the past year's high school graduates NSC matches on students' names and birthdates Note: Matches must be exact. There might also be students with the same information, so there may be false positive matching. This is one reason why CEPI also factors in gender when assigning UICs. CEPI's goal is to have fall data for the previous spring's high school graduates published in early January. This data is preliminary as some of Michigan's colleges and universities submit too late NSC returns all matches to CEPI
Combining our Postsecondary Data Collections for Reporting Student Data Collect raw data in the STARR Submit students to NSC NSC returns matches ETL Extract Transform Load LDS Prepare for MI School Data MI School Data Reports posted for public consumption
CEPI and MI School Data
Both Point-In-Time and Trend Views Data Table Trend
Postsecondary Outcomes By High School College Enrollment 24 College Credits College Remedial Coursework College Progression By Graduating Class Student Pathways Aggregate College Undergraduate Enrollment College Transfer K12 Data File College Data File Student Pathways
College Progression by Graduating Class Launched in late summer 2015, College Progression by Graduating Class uses all postsecondary data to populate historical years First MI School Data aggregate report to track degree attainment and overall progress in postsecondary education
Student Pathways Aggregate for H.S.
Community College Degree-seeking students going down Age 24 and Under going up a little Nondegree-seeking going up Universities Degree-seeking students down a slight bit Age 24 and over
College Transfer patterns, demographics, and performance data for students who transferred into or out of a MI college or university Year to Year report reflecting students who attend a IHE in one session and another in the subsequent session Data from STARR and NSC
Individual-level data offering postsecondary enrollment, course, program, and award information Limited high school and student testing data Searchable by High School Graduation Year, High School Cohort Year, or UIC Explore answers to questions like: Did inviting College A to speak at our school influence more students to enroll in College A than previous graduation classes? What are my former high school graduates studying in college? How many of my former students are earning graduatelevel degrees and certificates?
To measure student success using higher education data collected in Michigan. Utilizing STARR and NSC StudentTracker, the postsecondary success rates show the number of students who enter a Michigan postsecondary institution to successful outcomes. Starting with the 2009-10 enrollment class, the report calculates metrics for Community Colleges for 2-6 years Public Universities for 4-8 years
Success Rate and Comprehensive Success Rate. Statewide by sector and individual IHE The success rate: represents a 2- or 4-year degree attainment. includes broader population of college enrollees than other nationally-known graduation rates. calculates student-level data the same way, enabling apples-to-apples comparisons across IHEs within a sector. The comprehensive success rate: includes the degree attainment and adds other paths to student success: transfers, certificate completion and non-traditional degree attainment (e.g., an associate s degree at a university) measures more of the possible paths to student success that aligns more to IHE mission/goal without limiting students solely to a 2- or 4-year degree attainment Uses different metrics for CCs and universities, attributing to each rate calculation the various successes a student can have within a sector. incorporates those other paths not typically included in other standard graduation-only rates.
Purpose? Showcase postsecondary student outcomes and provide public transparency showing the importance of the success of students in Michigan. What is it? Starts with the 2009-10 enrollment class and calculates success metrics from 2-6 years for CCs and 4-8 years for public universities. Report has two rates: success rate and comprehensive success rate. The success rate: represents a 2- or 4-year degree attainment and 2-year transfers to 4-year institutions. includes broader population of college enrollees than other nationally-known graduation rates. Calculates metrics enabling comparisons across IHEs within a sector. The comprehensive success rate: includes the success rates successes and adds certificate completion and non-traditional degree attainment (e.g., an associate s degree at a university). measures success that aligns more to IHE mission/goal without limiting students solely to a 2- or 4- year degree attainment. incorporates those other successes not typically included in other standard graduation-only rates.
CEPI strategically collaborated with a workgroup that included reps from the State Budget Office, the IHEs and higher education associations to define and design the calculation of the rates. What did the workgroup do? Participated in requirements gathering sessions Created the methodology (CEPI refined into documents) Created business rules (CEPI refined into documents) Created a glossary of terms (CEPI refined into documents) Reviewed mock-ups and prototype reports created by CEPI Validated and tested rate results using testing packages created by CEPI Sub-members of the workgroup (association leadership) provided guidance on communication release plan. What will the workgroup do? Reconvene after the report release to discuss preparation for next year s calculation
Comprehensive success rates are greater than success rate. because it also includes those other paths to student success (certificate completion, non-traditional degree attainment) When given additional years, a cohort of students attain significantly greater success. Comprehensive success rates and success rates at year 3 for CCs overall are significantly greater than compared to year 2. Comprehensive success rates and success rates at year 5 for universities overall are significantly greater than compared to year 4. Success rates are greater each year when only giving students 4 years at a university. Some IHE s rates (and therefore the statewide rates) may increase over time as focus on data quality of submitted data improves.
Early June: Informing the higher education committee and Governor s office of the upcoming plans to release publically. Early June: Sending statewide and individual IHE reports to all CCs and public universities for a 2 week preview window prior to public release. Late June: Release publically on www.mischooldata.org. July: Meeting with workgroup members and any additional members who come forward after the preview window to discuss potential methodology enhancements for 2016 report Early 2017: 2016 report release
What is included in the release communication materials? High-level methodology (information from the Report Overview and Re-Cap slide such as report purpose, enrollment years, 2 rates, differences between success rate and comprehensive rate) How our rates differ in methodology from other nationally-known rates Memos describing methodology and purpose at a high level Press release Who will receive materials? IHEs IHE associations Higher education committee and Governor s office Reporters P-20 Advisory Council Workgroup MI School Data keyholders
Working collaboratively with Workforce Development Agency 5 9
Workforce Development Agency Phase 1 WLDS matched workforce program participants with their education and wage information Reports on MI School Data Labor Market Information partners answered core research questions Phase 2 WLDS expand the participant population to all records with linkable education and wage information Enhance reporting and research results Provide long requested outcome data 6 0
Presenters Contact Information Rachel Edmondson Edmondsonr2@michigan.gov Jaci Leonard LeonardJ3@Michigan.gov Help Desk CEPI@michigan.gov CEPI IHE Website