The University of North Georgia, a regional multi-campus institution and premier senior military college, provides a culture of academic excellence in a student-focused environment that includes quality education, service, research and creativity. This is accomplished through broad access to comprehensive academic and co-curricular programs that develop students into leaders for a diverse and global society. The University of North Georgia is a University System of Georgia leadership institution and is The Military College of Georgia.
Undergraduates only |
Enrolled |
Percent of UNG |
Enrollment |
19,793 |
100.00% |
Full-Time |
13,183 |
66.60% |
Part-Time |
6,610 |
33.40% |
Male |
8,300 |
41.93% |
Female |
11,493 |
58.07% |
Adult Learner (age 25+) |
2,423 |
12.24% |
First Generation |
4,249 |
21.47% |
Low-Income (Pell) |
5,969 |
30.16% |
Black |
845 |
4.27% |
Hispanic |
2,884 |
14.57% |
Asian or Pacific Islander |
2 |
0.01% |
Native Hawaiian or Pac. Isla. |
20 |
0.10% |
Amer. Indian/Alask. Native |
35 |
0.18% |
Underserved Minorities |
4,638 |
23.43% |
FT Vet |
384 |
1.94% |
PT Vet |
89 |
0.45% |
Source: Census data Fall 2020 |
Enrollment trends: UNG continues to enroll approximately 20,000 students (including graduate students). Enrollment over the last two years has fluctuated slightly. Enrollment in undergraduate students from fall 2018 to fall 2019 was flat (-5 student decline, -.02%). Fall 2019 to Fall 2020, undergraduate is also flat (-17 student decline, -.09%). Graduate enrollment continues to grow; fall 2020 enrollment was up 8.7%.
The completion goals and strategies chosen for UNG reflect the breadth of its mission to provide broad educational access through multiple academic pathways, including program certificates, associate degrees, bachelor degrees, graduate education, and online courses. UNG also provides greater access to higher education through a strong dual enrollment program.
Institutional Peers |
USG State Universities |
UNG |
||
Benchmark—One Year Retention |
68.3% |
71.3% |
||
Benchmark—Associate 3-Year Graduation Rate (2016) |
11.2% |
11.6% |
||
Benchmark—Bachelors 4-Year Graduation Rate (2015) |
23.3% |
26.5% |
||
Aspirational Peers |
USG Comprehensive Universities |
UNG |
||
Benchmark—One Year Retention (Bachelors only) |
75.8% |
78.0% |
||
Benchmark—Bachelors 4-Year Graduation Rate (2015) |
22.2% |
26.5% |
||
Competitors |
Kennesaw State University |
Georgia Gwinnett College |
Georgia Southern |
UNG |
Benchmark—One Year Retention (Bachelors only) |
80.0% |
65.1% |
77.7% |
78.0% |
Benchmark—Bachelors 4-Year Graduation Rate (2015) |
16.9% |
4.0% |
29.9% |
26.5% |
*all data is based on Fall 2018 cohort; Source: USG Qlik, CCG Retention Comparison dashboard & CCG Graduation Comparison.
Student Characteristics |
Cohort n |
Associate 3-Year (Fall 2017) |
Cohort n |
Baccalaureate 4-Year (Fall 2016) |
Cohort n |
Baccalaureate 6-Year (Fall 2014) |
||
Overall Degree |
2469 (225) |
9.1% |
1724 (556) |
32.3% |
1521 (773) |
50.8% |
||
Race (Underserved Minority)+ |
714 (69) |
9.7% |
241 (52) |
21.6% |
170 (77) |
45.3% |
||
Male |
1150 (81) |
7.0% |
744 (207) |
27.8% |
685 (296) |
43.2% |
||
Female |
1319 (144) |
10.9% |
980 (349) |
35.6% |
836 (477) |
57.1% |
||
Full-Time |
2182 (213) |
9.8% |
1678 (554) |
33.0% |
1465 (765) |
52.2% |
||
Part-Time |
287 (12) |
4.2% |
46 (2) |
4.4% |
56 (8) |
14.3% |
||
Veteran Full-Time |
10 (1) |
10.0% |
43 (18) |
41.9% |
42 (23) |
54.8% |
||
Veteran Part-Time |
6 (0) |
0.0% |
0 (0) |
0.0% |
0 (0) |
0.0% |
||
Pell |
1052 (101) |
9.6% |
499 (115) |
23.1% |
462 (211) |
45.7% |
||
Adult Learner |
39 (6) |
15.4% |
40 (2) |
5.0% |
387 (188) |
48.6% |
||
First-Generation |
661 (78) |
11.8% |
344 (94) |
27.3% |
300 (143) |
47.7% |
*Figures may differ slightly from official USG123 data due to discrepancies within the records of a few students. +Asian-American students not included.
Academic Year 2019 – 2020 |
Count |
AVG credit hours |
Fall 2019 |
1,013 |
|
Associates |
310 |
86.5 |
Baccalaureate |
681 |
133.3 |
Certificates |
22 |
144.1 |
Spring 2020 |
1,503 |
|
Associates |
348 |
83.1 |
Baccalaureate |
1,136 |
135.1 |
Certificates |
19 |
151.2 |
Summer 2020 |
487 |
|
Associates |
168 |
83.1 |
Baccalaureate |
318 |
131.6 |
Certificates |
1 |
131.0 |
TOTAL |
3,003 |
UNG students’ enrolling in online courses as a strategy to degree progression and graduation continues to increase. Due to the pandemic, enrollment in online courses increased exponentially for fall 2020, a trend that will likely continue.
Academic Year |
# |
% |
2015 - 2016 |
1,549 |
54.5% |
2016 - 2017 |
1,862 |
62.8% |
2017 - 2018 |
2,306 |
69.6% |
2018 - 2019 |
2,464 |
76.0% |
2019 – 2020 |
2,721 |
83.9% |
Source: Banner database script
Enrollment and Retention: through its strategic planning efforts in AY 2019-2020, UNG set goals for enrollment and retention. While enrolled headcount is important to the institution, the Strategic Enrollment Management plan focuses on credit hour production. The percentage of students enrolled in 15 or more credit hours has remained flat, while institution headcount has increased over the last five years. Overall credit hour production is down approximately .2 credit hours for fall 2020. The Strategic Enrollment Management target is to achieve a 2% increase in credit hours.
Fifteen to Finish: UNG has participated in fifteen to finish program since the inception of Complete College Georgia. At first glance, it appears little progress has been made in increasing the percentage of students taking 15 or more hours in a term. Certainly, recent data shows a dip from the highpoint of fall 2018; however, growth in enrollment masks what is clear upon further investigation of the data. While fall FTF enrollment (see Table 6) increased by approximately 33% since 2012, the count of students enrolled in 15 or more hours each fall has increased by 370 students over that same period, an increase of 55.5%. By comparison, the number of students enrolled in 12-14 credit hours has increased by 32%. Enrollment growth has challenged institutional capacity to offer enough course sections, which could contribute to the drop in students taking 15+ hours a term (Table 7).
Table 6: First Time Freshmen Enrollment by Credit Hours (comparison of Fall cohorts only)
Term |
# Fall FTF enrolled in less than 12 hours |
# Fall FTF enrolled in 12-14 hours |
# Fall FTF enrolled in 15 or more hours |
Total Fall FTF enrolled |
Fall 2012 |
343 |
2,117 |
667 |
3,127 |
Fall 2013 |
498 |
2,259 |
540 |
3,297 |
Fall 2014 |
357 |
2,045 |
859 |
3,261 |
Fall 2015 |
340 |
2,470 |
1,052 |
3,862 |
Fall 2016 |
295 |
2,576 |
1,088 |
3,959 |
Fall 2017 |
328 |
2,520 |
1,116 |
3,964 |
Fall 2018 |
303 |
2,846 |
1,315 |
4,464 |
Fall 2019 |
321 |
2799 |
1037 |
4157 |
Source: USG Data-May 2020
Fall 2019 |
Fall 2020 |
% Change |
|
Students taking 15 |
2,213 |
2,113 |
-4.5% |
Students taking > 15 |
2,089 |
2122 |
+1.6% |
Total # full-time students (12 or more) |
13,364 |
13,082 |
-2.1% |
% of full-time students taking 15 or more credits |
32.2% |
32.1% |
-.2% |
Source: UNG Census data Fall 2020
UNG supplemented messaging around academic progress and Fifteen to Finish through a “What’s Your 30” campaign. Messaging emphasizes that 30 or more earned credits in an academic year is needed for timely completion of a degree. UNG tracks the number and percentage of students completing 30 or more credits in an academic year (see Table 8). Since 2012, UNG has doubled (approximately) the number of FTF earning more than 30 credits a year, while the number of undergraduates earning 30 or more hours a year (Table 9) has increased by 57.5%.
Academic year |
# fall FTF earned less than 24 credits |
# fall FTF earned 24-29 credits |
# fall FTF earned 30 or more credits |
Total fall FTF enrolled in both fall and spring terms |
2011-2012 |
1,199 |
860 |
442 |
2,501 |
2012-2013 |
1,158 |
1,070 |
457 |
2,685 |
2013-2014 |
1,217 |
1,160 |
474 |
2,851 |
2014-2015 |
1,096 |
1,125 |
644 |
2,865 |
2015-2016 |
1,316 |
1,384 |
680 |
3,380 |
2016-2017 |
1,328 |
1,410 |
786 |
3,524 |
2017-2018 |
1,322 |
1,346 |
766 |
3,434 |
2018-2019 |
1380 |
1567 |
992 |
3939 |
Academic year |
# degree-seeking undergraduates earned less than 24 credits |
# degree-seeking undergraduates earned 24-29 credits |
# degree-seeking undergraduates earned 30 or more credits |
Total degree-seeking undergraduates enrolled in both fall and spring terms |
2011-2012 |
5,171 |
3,299 |
2,292 |
10,762 |
2012-2013 |
5,405 |
3,561 |
2,316 |
11,282 |
2013-2014 |
5,569 |
3,681 |
2,581 |
11,831 |
2014-2015 |
5,358 |
4,054 |
2,921 |
12,333 |
2015-2016 |
5,732 |
4,361 |
3,030 |
13,123 |
2016-2017 |
5,954 |
4,553 |
3,333 |
13,840 |
2017-2018 |
5,963 |
4,513 |
3,429 |
13,905 |
2018-2019 |
5,893 |
4,848 |
3,610 |
14,351 |
Dual Enrollment: access to higher education provided through Dual Enrollment remains an institutional priority. UNG exceeded its enrollment target for fall 2020, growing by 10.4%. The overall percentage matriculating to UNG declined in 2020, though headcount continues to increase.
Term |
Headcount of Dual Enrolled Students |
Credits Attempted |
Credits Earned |
% of All UNG Students |
Fall 2016 |
865 |
* |
6,341 |
4.7% |
Fall 2017 |
964 |
7,692 |
7,389 |
5.1% |
Fall 2018 |
1,241 |
9,542 |
9,472 |
6.3% |
Fall 2019 |
1,418 |
10,392 |
10389 |
7.5% |
Fall 2020 |
1560 |
10362 |
* |
7.9% |
2016 |
2017 |
2018 |
2019 |
2020 |
|
# students participating in Dual Enrollment |
865 |
964 |
1,241 |
1,418 |
1,560 |
% of participating Seniors who matriculate to UNG after high school |
37% |
30% |
33% |
32% |
30% |
Summer Enrollment: UNG strategically increased its summer enrollment each year since 2014. In summer 2020, enrollment grew by 10.23%. Overall, UNG’s summer enrollment has increased 31.82% since 2014. Academic departments focused on offering courses that have been bottlenecks as well as offering a mix of lower and upper-division courses that help students stay on track in their respective programs.
Reducing Excess Credit Hours at Graduation: as part of its CCG program and, indirectly, the Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP), UNG has sought to reduce the number of students graduating with excess credit hours. As Table 12 illustrates, UNG has made progress on this goal for both associate and baccalaureate students, though early 2020 data shows a reversal of this trend for associate degree students.
Fiscal Year |
Average credit hours earned at graduation for Associate's Degree recipients |
Average credit hours earned at graduation for Bachelor's Degree recipients |
2012 |
84.8 |
138.07 |
2013 |
84.79 |
138.12 |
2014 |
85.74 |
137.79 |
2015 |
87.08 |
138.21 |
2016 |
82.17 |
137.02 |
2017 |
81.45 |
135.97 |
2018 |
80.56 |
135.44 |
2019 |
77.87 |
134.78 |
2020 |
83.1 |
133.35 |
UNG continues to offer students credit by exam as a mechanism to build momentum and graduate on time. The number and count of credits earned in 2020 declined; this is likely due to the impact of the pandemic on students’ access to exams, especially AP and IB, as well as reduced capacity at on campus testing centers.
2019 |
2020 |
|
Number of distinct students |
1259 |
1017 |
Number of exams |
2383 |
2005 |
Credit hours from exams |
3412 |
2669 |
Source: Banner database script
The maturing of the co-requisite instructional model is improving student outcomes. While the number of students enrolled in co-requisite English and Math declined, the overall success rate improved nearly 6%.
|
AY 2020 (Fall 2019 - Summer 2020) |
AY 2019 (Fall 2018 - Summer 2019) |
||||
Attempts |
Grade A-C |
Success |
Attempts |
Grade A-C |
Success |
|
Success rates in co-requisite MATH and ENGL courses (ENGL 0999, MATH 0997, 0998, 0999) |
1,097 |
772 |
64.9% |
1,263 |
745 |
59.0% |
Source: Banner database script
In this section, elements are products of UNG’s Momentum Approach plan developed by a team of professionals working in Academic Advising, Academic Affairs (including the provost, vice provost, and college deans), Student Affairs, Enrollment Management, Orientation and Transition Programs, Career Services, and Faculty.
Transition Plan: during the 2019-2020 academic year UNG implemented a transition plan designed to aid students’ educational decision-making using the inform, discern, and affirm process described in the USG Momentum Approach. Orientation and advising processes involved in the student transition experience included Growth Mindset and career exploration components. Preliminary analysis of the data from the USG “Getting to Know Your Students” survey suggests differences in students’ mindsets comparing the fall 2018 and fall 2019 cohorts. While not conclusive after one year, the results are promising and will be reevaluated after analysis of the fall 2020 Mindset data. UNG will continue to analyze this data and make recommendations to the provost based on the results. UNG’s professional development day was successful in helping faculty and staff learn more about how to integrate best practices such as growth mindset into their daily work. UNG held its 2nd Annual LEADS day convocation in August 2020 with a program geared to the immediacy of the pandemic. Sessions, for example, included best practices in online engagement and the impact of the pandemic on diversity.
Gateways to Completion: during Academic Year 2019-2020 faculty piloted gateway courses developed during phase 1 of the G2C process led by the John N. Gardner institute. The interventions employed in pilot courses during the fall 2019 term showed promise for students, in particular first generation students. While the data from the first semester of the pilot program did not show a significant change in the overall rates of DFWI grades in English 1101, History 2111, Math 1111, and Psychology 1101, first generation students in pilot sections were more successful than peers in non-pilot sections in both English and Math.
Faculty continued piloting courses in Spring 2020; however, the sudden shift to remote instruction in the middle of the term definitely affected the DFWI rates in those courses. Overall, DFWI rates declined, but given the circumstances, course committees were not confident in making decisions based on the data. Thus, faculty are continuing to pilot new pedagogies in gateway courses in fall 2020, with a goal of scaling courses in 2021.
Strategic Enrollment Management Plan: UNG developed a strategic plan for Enrollment Management, which includes the creation of a Student Success Task Force (members are listed in Section 4 below). The Task Force is the heir of the Persistence Committee, and charged with increasing annual year-over-year retention, persistence and graduation rates of all undergraduate students.
The use of data is critical to the work of the task force. To that end, a Data Task Force was created to provide data for informed decision making and consistency in the use of enrollment-related data and definitions.
Strategy or activity |
Career Connections for first year students |
Summary of Activities |
Created the Career Explorers League and the Career Construction Zone in the LMS. The Career Explorers League was specifically designed to help students develop a purposeful path using Focus 2 and other activities and resources. The design included values assessment and a place for participating users to indicate their top 5 values. |
Outcomes/Measures of progress |
Over 600 students visited the Career Explorers League as of June 2020. Between those participating in the League and those participating in the "Find Your Why" in-person workshops, 168 students have identified and prioritized their top 5 values. Note, there is no incentive beyond personal desire to complete the values assessment or include their prioritized values within the Career Explorers League. In the Career Construction Zone, there are 281 students and instructors enrolled. It will take more time to assess progress for this activity. |
Lessons Learned and Plans for the Future |
There is a need to promote the courses to both professors and students and request IT and DETI import the new group of first-year students into the Career Explorers League. |
Changes because of COVID-19 |
The primary impact the pandemic had on this strategy was moving orientations and career services to virtual settings. As a result, opportunities for direct interaction between incoming students and advisors, faculty, and career specialists was significantly reduced. |
Strategy or activity |
Mandatory Advising (QEP) |
Summary of Activities |
As part of the QEP, UNG Professional Advisors and Master Faculty Advisors have developed a set of advising tools, including planning guides and program maps. Those are now available for all undergraduate programs and focus areas. UNG is in its final year of the QEP, but the structures put in place through the plan will continue on for students. Use of Academic Advising services by students continues to grow; in AY 2019-2020 (June 2019-May 2020) academic advisors (excluding business advisors) checked-in students for 21,973 appointments. |
Outcomes/Measures of progress |
Tracking students in focus areas and academic majors; advising center traffic; web traffic on advising tools pages; assessment of student learning related to educational planning; analysis of credits earned/attempted, and credits at graduation. |
Lessons Learned and Plans for the Future |
Successful implementation of a program can have consequences. Advising is seen as a service with infinite capacity to take on more responsibilities associated with student success efforts. Protecting the core mission of advising has been challenging; thus, coordination of institutional priorities is critical to the holistic approach informing student success efforts, including the Momentum Approach. As noted earlier in this report, institutional efforts to create a consistent advising culture are paying dividends with students graduating with fewer excess credit hours; additionally, the number of students on academic warning, in need of an academic success plan, or undeclared after 40 credit hours has been reduced substantially. |
Changes because of COVID-19 |
The major adjustment related to the pandemic was shifting to virtual processes. Immediately after the move to remote operations student meetings with advisors dipped, but by May 2020 they returned to near “normal” levels. Thus far, students seem to be adjusting well to the greater flexibility to meet with academic advisors. |
Strategy or activity |
Purposeful, Clear Pathways |
Summary of Activities |
To promote purposeful choice, UNG continued development of tools to help students discern clear pathways. Among the activities completed are academic planning guides (year-by-year sequence maps) and plans of study published online for all programs in a single location. |
Outcomes/Measures of progress |
The Office of Institutional Research is providing data to assist in identifying capacity issues as well as providing student success metrics focused on academic excellence in the form of department-level “Health Checks”. Data on rates of growth by major, campus, degree level, and type of course (Core curriculum offerings by department, by semester) will inform solutions to capacity challenges. Additional measures include regular updates on enrollment by program, persistence rates analyzed by a newly created Student Success Task Force, and review of students’ progress towards completion of the plan of study. |
Lessons Learned and Plans for the Future |
Development of reliable data systems takes time and requires consistent definitions and training for steady application of data in decision making. |
Changes because of COVID-19 |
The primary impact the pandemic had on these strategies was to slow or, in some cases, even pause the work. Thus, the timeline for completion of some projects had to be adjusted. Tools for using institutional data will be finished in AY 2020-2021. |
Strategy or activity |
Promoting Academic Mindset |
Summary of Activities |
Mindset content has been integrated into UNG’s professional development event, LEADS day, Orientation and Transition Programs, and Maximize Your Major sessions at orientations. Additionally, the Center for Teaching, Learning, & Leadership continues to support faculty with a range of events and opportunities integrating Mindset activities into instruction. Finally, faculty piloting Gateways to Completion courses integrated mindset strategies into their courses. |
Outcomes/Measures of progress |
Both the LEADS day committee and OTP staff assess program effectiveness through survey instruments. 78 faculty and staff participated in Mindset training during LEADS day. The “Getting to Know Our Students” USG survey is an important instrument in analyzing students’ mindsets as is the Learning Gains survey administered to students in Gateway courses each fall. The institution also expects a positive change in the rates of DFWI grades for gateway courses. |
Lessons Learned and Plans for the Future |
Comparisons of Mindset survey data (2018-2019) suggests integration of mindset work into new student programming has made a difference, but causation cannot be proven; the fall 2019 cohort appears to have a different mindset about their academic preparedness for college than the 2018 cohort. Likewise G2C data suggests that first generation students in particular benefited from the integration of inclusive pedagogies and emphasis on mindset in piloted sections. The institution is continuing to pursue these strategies. |
Changes because of COVID-19 |
Like most other components, shifting to virtual operations slowed progress in all these areas. The 2020 LEADS Day conference program was changed to respond to more immediate needs related to the pandemic. Gateways to Completion faculty will pilot courses in fall 2020, analyze the data in spring 2021, and then prepare for scaling course models for fall 2021. |
Most of the strategies employed have been effective, though not always as intended. Certainly, LEADS Day exceeded expectations and the integration of Growth Mindset into orientation and advising are making a difference for students, though the evidence is indirect. The peer mentoring program has not developed as expected, though the changes to that program are promising entering the fall term. Mandatory advising under the QEP has positively affected student learning and there is abundant data supporting that conclusion. Closely connected to advising is the development of advising tools (clear pathways), which took longer than anticipated to complete. Covid-19 challenged the timing of nearly all of these strategies, pausing some and forcing sudden alterations to others. Moving to virtual orientations was a logistical challenge, certainly, as was capturing elements such as the Maximize Your Major sessions for all programs to be included in an orientation course. The turnaround time for some components was aggressive. How effective the modified delivery was remains an open question. Beyond these efforts, it is worth noting that UNG was able to respond more quickly to the pandemic and circumstances it created than many may have thought possible. Redirecting human resources to create temporary structures, systems, and processes was possible all while supporting students. Some of the processes created as temporary measures lived on as institutional student success pilots, especially the early alert process and withdrawal intervention program.
Priority Work |
Career Explorer and Career Construction Zone courses |
Description of Activities |
a. Career Explorer: support 1st and 2nd year student development of purposeful pathways. |
Activity status and plans for 2020 |
Career Services created the content for Career Explorers League and uploaded over 7,000 students into the League. The League was promoted through all English 1101 and 1102 courses so first-year students would know this resource was available to them. Several professors agreed to promote the Career Construction Zone course and some agreed to be added as an "instructor" to see content and encourage student use. After COVID 19, Career Services added a voiceover PowerPoint Career Exploration workshop posted on our Career Services website. |
Lessons Learned |
Over 600 students visited the Career Explorers League as of June 2020. Between those participating in the League and those participating in the "Find Your Why" in-person workshops, 168 students have identified and prioritized their top 5 values. Note, there is no incentive beyond personal desire to complete the values assessment or include their prioritized values within the Career Explorers League. In the Career Construction Zone, there are 281 students and instructors enrolled. |
Priority Work |
Mindset integration |
Description of Activities |
|
Activity status and plans for 2020 |
|
Lessons Learned |
|
Priority Work |
Financial Literacy |
Description of Activities |
1. Student Money Management Center is offering a Financial Fitness Series—A four-part series covering the basics of personal finance. |
Activity status and plans for 2020 |
|
Lessons Learned |
As these were new efforts included in the Momentum Approach plan, some have not been developed, while other elements are being offered for the first time in the fall term. Thus, no data exists for analysis of these elements yet. |
Name |
Title |
|
Dr. Eugene Van Sickle |
Assistant VP of Strategic Student Success Initiatives |
|
Ms. Michelle Eaton |
Director, Enrollment Management Student Success |
|
Dr. Carol Adams |
Associate Vice President and Dean of University College |
|
Ms. Terri Carroll |
Executive Director, Academic Advising |
|
Dr. Chris Barnes |
Associate Dean Academic Administration |
|
Dr. Gary Adcox |
Director of Campus Success and Strategic Initiatives, Oconee |
|
Col. Joe Matthews |
Commandant of Cadets |
|
Mr. Jason Pruitt |
Executive Director, Cumming Campus |
|
Dr. Cyndee Perdue-Moore |
Executive Director, Oconee Campus |
|
Ms. Sandy Ott |
Director, Blue Ridge |
|
Dr. Kristie Kiser |
Student Success Coordinator |
|
Ms. Merci Rivera |
Online Student Success Coordinator |
|
Dr. Alyson Paul |
Associate VP Student Affairs/Dean of Students |
|
Dr. John Delaney |
Associate Vice President Student Affairs/ Dean of Students |
|
Ms. Jennifer Herring |
Limited Term Special Assistant to the VP - Gainesville Campus |
|
Dr. Janet Marling |
Executive Director, NISTS and Associate Professor, College of Education |
|
Mr. Steven Stubbs |
Registrar |
|
Ms. Jill Rayner |
Director, Financial Aid |
|
Mr. Jared Goodall |
Bursar |
|
Dr. Pablo Mendoza |
Director of Diversity and Inclusion |
|
Ms. Christy Orr |
Asst. Director, Nighthawk Engagement and Student Transitions |
|
Dr. Keith Antonia |
Associate Vice President for Military Programs |
|
Dr. Rosaria Meek |
Assistant Professor, Spanish |
|
Ms. Linda Rowland |
Director, Institutional Research |
|
|
|
|
Ex-Officio Leadership |
||
Dr. James F. Conneely |
Vice President of Student Affairs and Enrollment Management |
|
Dr. Chaudron Gille |
Provost & Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs |