The Wichitan 100318

Page 1

Oct. 3, 2018 | Midwestern State University | thewichitan.com | Your Campus. Your News. | Vol. 83 No. 5

PHOTO BY FRANCISCO MARTINEZ | THE WICHITAN

The only out of country prospective student, Pietro Lazzarotto, from Italy gets shy when pointed out from the crowd for being the only foreign prospective student at Mustangs Rally in D.L. Ligon Coliseum on Saturday, March 24

SHIPLEY REPORTS RECORD HIGH KRISTIN SILVA REPORTER

freshman enrollment

According to an email from University President Suzanne Shipley sent at 11:20 a.m. Sept. 27, fall 2018 enrollment increased. “I am pleased to report our fall 2018 enrollment increase as follows. • While our headcount increased only slightly from 6,080 to 6,102, our semester credit hours increased by 1.2 percent. • Our new first-time freshmen enrollment is particularly promising, increasing by 6 percent with a record number of 873 new freshmen enrolled. • New first-time transfer enrollment also increased substantially by 5 percent with over 550 new transfers enrolled. • Our residential facilities are nearing capacity with a 7 percent increase in students living on campus. • We are welcoming growing numbers of international students with new enrollment increasing by 3.5 percent.

• These students are helping us offset losses of over 1,400 students successfully completing degrees in the last academic year, another total to celebrate. “Thank you to everyone who contributed efforts to achieve this impressive progress in growth and degree completion. It is truly a collective effort to enroll and graduate students, and your work is very much appreciated.” Frederic Dietz, vice president of enrollment management, said the goals for this semester’s enrollment were met. “Overall we are pleased,” Dietz said. “We are encouraged by the increase in credit hours that students are taking and the large freshman enrollment increase is always encouraging too. We had a big graduating class this spring so we were trying to replace all the students that graduated and this year we had more students enroll than graduated.” Dietz said they are on track with their future enrollment goals.

“One of our targets was to increase freshman and transfer numbers,” Dietz said. “It feels good getting the student enrollment number above 6,100 and increasing both by a good percentage. One of the [long-term] targets is to grow student population to 8,000 by 2025. That gives us seven years to complete this goal and [where we are now] is good momentum.” According to Dietz, the enrollment numbers include both the Wichita Falls campus as well as the Flower Mound campus. “The numbers include both campuses,” Dietz said. “Our target for Flower Mound was to have 182 students taking classes through that campus and we met that goal. Meeting those target numbers is encouraging.” With the increasing enrollment of students, residence housing is filling up. “We are much closer to full capacity in the residence halls,” Dietz said. “There is a 7 percent increase in housing because of the increase in student enrollment.”

While Julie Gaynor, director of marketing and public information, said part of the metrics of has worked with marketing is with admissions, she believes the work both departments have made to become a more residential campus which has enticed today’s prospective students, making our school more attractive to them. Gaynor also stated the school had growth in mind when constructing new resident halls. “One thing that we did when we constructed new residence halls, we built for growth,” Gaynor said. “We knew we wouldn’t be at capacity on those and we didn’t want to be at capacity on those – we wanted to build for growth. And that’s what you’re seeing now, you’re seeing us grow and that’s really important.” Additional reporting by Chloe Phillips

Jordan Stavely, marketing junior | “They could add more degree options along with classes to give students more of a variety to choose from compared to other universities.” Corey Gentle, marketing sophomore | “We need a better food plan. Nobody eats in the cafeteria, and the new swipe plan limitations are too strict for people who live on campus.” Rebecca Goodman, kinesiology sophomore | “I would have a booth set up at the high schools and even foster homes. Foster homes because many foster kids do not have an idea about college, so they might be able to go up and ask questions.” Blandine Kanyambo, nursing junior |”[Have] more activities to make students want to come here. It’s all about what they are taking away when they come to visit our school.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The Wichitan 100318 by The Wichitan - Issuu