This is the third in a series of three blog posts examining the 2013 IPEDS Fall Enrollment survey and its counts of distance education enrollments.  The first blog focused on the 2013 survey statistics and the second compared the growth between 2012 and 2013.  The survey also asked if institutions enrolled students from other states or other countries. We examine those statistics in this blog post, especially in relation to state authorization regulations.

Russ Poulin

With the addition of Fall 2013 IPEDS Distance Education (DE) data, for the first time we have year-to-year enrollment data to compare.  In theory, this should allow us to see whether institutions are improving their IPEDS reporting for the location of students. However, a WCET and e-Literate study published in September 2014, revealed numerous challenges with IPEDS DE reporting (using different definitions, not reporting some students) and cautioned putting much stock in year-to-year comparisons with the first few years of IPEDS data since data reliability issues remain.

ExDELocationEnrollmentThe IPEDS DE survey requests information about the location of the student only for those students who are “exclusively in DE courses”. This is a relatively small proportion of the total population of online students, representing 13% of all enrollments in both 2012 (see last year’s blog post) and 2013.  All of our analysis on the geographic location of the students is limited to this population of students enrolled “exclusively in DE courses”.

Table 1: Fall 2013 Out-of-State Distance Education Enrollments by Sub-sector

      Students Enrolled Exclusively in Distance Education Courses
Sector # IHEs in Sector Number of
enrollments exclusively in DE courses
% of Total enrollment % enrolled in same state as IHE % enrolled not in same state as IHE % enrolled located outside U.S. % enrolled in U.S., state unknown % enrolled student location unknown/ not reported
Public, 4-year or above 691 620,386 8% 75% 21% 1% 1% 2%
Private, Non-Profit, 4-year and above 1,587 519,588 13% 40% 56% 2% 0% 2%
Private, For-Profit, 4-year and above 761 837,795 62% 13% 78% 2% 1% 6%
Public, 2-year 934 661,494 10% 91% 5% 0% 3% 1%
Private, non-profit, 2-year 88 802 2% 50% 50% 0% 0% 0%
Private, for-profit, 2-year 663 19,138 6% 30% 70% 0% 0% 0%
Totals 4,724 2,659,203 13% 52% 42% 2% 1% 3%

homevoutofstate

 Public Students Primarily Attend Distance Education Institutions in Their Home State

For-profit Students Primarily Attend Distance Education Institutions in Other States

As we would predict, a large proportion of students enrolled “exclusively DE courses” are served by public institutions in their state of residence, 75% for 4-year and 91% for 2-year public schools. These numbers are consistent with last year’s data. We see a decline in in-state enrollment in the Private, Non-Profit 2-year IHEs from 61% in-state in 2012 to just 50% in-state in 2013. Private For-Profit 4-year IHEs report a consistent 13% of online enrollments as in-state, while their 2-year counterparts report a small increase from 26% in 2012 to 30% in 2013.

About One in Five Public Four-year Students are Located in Other States

Public institutions report that about 20% of their fully online students are from another state for 4-year IHEs and about 5% are fully online for 2-year schools. This data appears to be consistent between Fall 2012 and Fall 2013 reporting. Private Non-Profit 4-year OneinFiveinOtherStatesinstitutions reported 54% of their fully online students were in another state in 2012 and 56% in 2013, again this appears to be consistent data.  There was growth in the reported number of fully online enrollments between 2012 (576,615) and 2013 (620,386). So while the proportion of enrollments reported as “not in the same state as the IHE” remained relatively constant (20% in 2012 and 21% in 2013) there were approximately 15,000 more out-of-state enrollments reported in 2013.

For Profit Institutions are Enrolling a Smaller Percentage of Out-of-State Students

We see some variation in reporting in the For-Profit sector. Private, For-Profit 4-year institutions reported that 84% of their “exclusively DE” enrollments were from another state in Fall 2012 and that has dropped to 78% in Fall 2013. In the same timeframe, Private, For-Profit 2-year IHEs reported a small decline from 73% in Fall 2012 to 70% in Fall 2013. These decreases are consistent with the overall decline in student enrollment in the Private, For-Profit sector reported for the period.

GlobalstudentsColleges are Serving Very Few International Students via Distance Education

The proportion of institutions reporting that they serve students who are outside the U.S. remains small, no more than 2% in any sector. This reporting does not appear to have changed significantly between Fall 2012 and Fall 2013. Based on Fall 2013 data, international students who are served exclusively online number about 26,600. The institutions who serve these students need to have clear policies, procedures, and services in place for these students. Institutions also need to be aware of any laws of the students’ country of residence and need to comply with those laws.

Public Colleges Improving in Reporting the Student’s Location

Overall, we do not see improvement in the proportion of online students for whom their location is reported as “in US, state unknown” or “unknown/not reported”. In both 2012 and 2013, the total in that category remains about 4% of all “exclusively DE” enrollments.

We see improvement in the Public sector reporting of the location of students, as those in the “unknown” categories fell from 4% in 2012 to 2% in 2013. There is a concerning increase in the proportion of reporting “unknown/not reported” by Private, For-Profit 4-year schools. The Fall 2012 data showed just 1% “in US, state unknown” and 1% “unknown/not reported”, while 2013 data 1% for “in US, state unknown” but 6% for “unknown/not reported”.  While this is a large gain, it is largely attributed to a reporting anomaly in a single institution.

It should be noted that the reporting methodology inconsistencies of even one large IHE can affect the percentage results since the numbers are relatively small. For example, in Fall 2013 a large for-profit institution reported almost 50,704 out of 52,131 exclusively online enrollments as “unknown/not reported.” This single campus accounts for 59% of the “unknowns” reported for the sector. Curiously, the same campus reported only 298 students as “unknown/not reported” last year, and another 500 as “in US, state unknown.” As long as IHEs are not consistent with their reporting methodology from year to year, the data on student location remains unreliable. This is unfortunate, since there is much attention on state authorization and compliance. We need good data to understand the magnitude of the state authorization challenge.

Institutions That Don’t Know Student Location Tend to Remain Uninformed

UninformedAmong the concerns with IPEDS DE data reporting includes the fact that some institutions simply do not report the geographic location of their students. Rather, they report the entire population of “exclusively DE” enrollments as “location of student unknown/not reported.” The Fall 2013 data reveals that some institutions continue to report their entire population of “exclusively DE” enrollments as location of student is “unknown/not reported,” others report a large proportion of their online enrollments this way. The IHEs reporting this way are a combination of For-Profits and Publics.

An analysis of the IHEs reporting the largest numbers of enrollments as “unknown/not reported” in Fall 2013 shows that some of these schools used the same reporting methodology in Fall 2012, but some actually seemed to have a had a better handle on where their students were in 2012 than they did in 2013. This, again, points out the importance of using accurate and consistent methodology from year-to-year within an IHE as well as the need to improve the methodology of the schools that continue to not report where their online students are physically located.

Bottom line:  If an institution does not know where its students are located, it cannot possibly be in compliance with state authorization regulations.

The Number of Institutions Serving Students Outside Their State and Outside the U.S. is Growing

GrowingoutsidestateInstitutions in each sector reported the number of distance education students they enrolled either outside their state or outside the US. According to the data (see Table 2), 47% of the IHEs reporting (2,249 of 4,724) indicate that they have students outside their state. This represents an increase of 100 institutions reporting students outside their state borders from last year. In addition, 21% of institutions (1,008 of 4,724) indicate that they have students located outside the U.S, as compared to 940 institutions reporting having students from outside the U.S. exclusively in DE courses in Fall 2012. These survey questions are not mutually exclusive, many IHEs have both out-of-state and out-of-country students.

With nearly one-quarter of all institutions responding to the IPEDS survey reporting that they enrolled students exclusively at a distance outside the U.S., it is curious why this those students represents only 2% of the reported distance education enrollments. This is certainly possible as many institutions probably enroll only a handful of students in other countries, but it would be interesting to examine if this might be another source for reporting anomalies.

Table 2: Number of Institutions reporting students outside their state and outside the U.S.

Sector # of Institutions with at least one student reported as Exclusively DE and OUTSIDE their State # of Institutions with at least one student reported as Exclusively DE and OUTSIDE the US
Public, 4-year or above 519 312
Private, Non-Profit, 4-year and above 742 365
Private, For-Profit, 4-year and above 249 82
Public, 2-year 674 244
Private, non-profit, 2-year 8 0
Private, for-profit, 2-year 57 5
Total 2,249 1,008

 

More Institutions are Subject to State Authorization Regulations in Other States

Regulations in many states require that institutions who enroll students in their state are required to seek state authorization, request an exemption, or perform some other act authorizing the institution to operate in the state. Based on the number of institutions reporting students outside their state and/or outside the US, there are a great number of institutions that should be seeking state authorization in the states where they serve students. Institutions that do not know where their students are located simply cannot be in compliance with state authorization regulations. Since the IPEDS DE survey does not ask about the specific states in which their students resided, it is impossible to determine from the IPEDS data how many institutions may be out of compliance.

As seen in our survey of institutions regarding their progress on obtaining authorizations, only 25% of responding institutions possess all the approvals that they need.  Since that survey, the Department of Defense has required all institutions offering Tuition Assistance for military personnel to have obtained the authorizations in each state.  The Department of Education has said that they plan to bring back their own federal requirements for students collecting Title IV funds in other states.  The State Authorization Reciprocity Agreement will require reporting of student enrollments at a distance in each SARA state.  Given all these pressures, institutions should be incentivized to provide clearer data on the locations of students in future years.

The analysis of the reported location of students in relation to the institution that serves them continues to show that some institutions are not reporting geographic location data. Either they are not collecting the data at the time of enrollment or they do not have mechanisms to accurately report student location. These institutions need to know the location of their students to ensure that they are in compliance with the state regulations in each state that is home to their students.

This concludes the current series examining Fall 2013 Distance Education IPEDS data. WCET will continue to monitor the data as it is released. We are hopeful that as institutions all adopt the IPEDS definition of distance education and as they gain the systems and experience to pull and report accurate student data, the industry will soon have a true benchmark.

 

Terri StrautTerri Taylor Straut
Ascension Consulting

 

 

 

 

Russ PoulinRuss Poulin
Director, Policy and Analysis
WCET

 

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