Fact Finder 2022-2023

Page 1

Tables above include full- and part-time students.

total 100 due to rounding.

1Includes M.D., J.D., and other graduate students.

Tenured/tenure-trackfacultywithdoctorateor

individualswithpart-time employeeswhoteachpart-time.

1As of November 1, 2022

2Part-timefacultyismeasuredbythenumberofindividualswithpart-time instructionalactivities,including60non-facultyemployeeswhoteachpart-time.

Percentages
Enrollment by Gender | Fall 2022 New First-Year Undergraduate Gender # % # % Male 1,159 49 5,798 Female 1,212 51 6,706 TOTAL 2,371 12,504 NewUndergraduate New First-Year New Transfer 3,530 Enrollment School New First-Year New Transfer Total 66 15 718 319 1,037 772 36 124 69 96 27 143 16 120 4 185 91 Rosenstiel School 146 11 Cont. Studies, Special, and Joint 1 TOTAL 2,371 597
credit hours increased to one credit hour. Human 9,172 7,026 1,657 10,088 3,041 0 13,129 0 0 19,315 19,315 School of Medicine 2,736 8,278 14,765 25,779 andHealth 7,762 3,549 0 11,311 Rosenstiel School 5,091 3,214 0 8,305 Studies/Grad. School/JointPrograms 2,341 244 TOTAL 187,378 43,214 Faculty and Employees | Fall 2022 Classification FacultyArchitecture Arts and Sciences Miami Herbert Business Communication Education and Human Development Engineering 78 15 Frost Music 91 39 130 Law 88 85 173 Miller School of Medicine 1,576 81 1,657 Nursing and Health Studies 44 95 139 Rosenstiel School 86 9 95 Richter Library and Other 54 21 75 TOTAL FACULTY 2,788 600 3,388 Faculty Characteristics | Fall 2022
terminal degree 99% Full-timefaculty 82% Student-facultyratio 13:1 Faculty 2,788 600 3,388 Administrative/Professional 6,485 69 6,554 Research 923 41 964 Staff(hourlynon-exempt) 7,062 193 7,255 TOTAL FACULTY AND EMPLOYEES 17,258 903 18,161
Totalcredithoursbyteachingschool.Researchcoursestakenforzero
538 196 129 84 93 130 173 1,657 139 95 21 75 600 3,388 2022 or 99% 82% 13:1 600 3,388 69 6,554 41 964 193 7,255 903 18,161

HISTORY

Founded 1925; classes began October 1926

OFFICERS

Julio Frenk, president; Joseph Echevarria, chief executive officer for the University of Miami and UHealth; Jeffrey L. Duerk, executive vice president for academic affairs and provost; Jacqueline A. Travisano, executive vice president for business and finance and chief operating officer; Rudy Fernandez, executive vice president for external affairs and strategic initiatives and chief of staff to the president.

CAMPUSES AND FACILITIES

Coral Gables Campus: The Coral Gables Campus, with its two colleges and eight schools, is located on a 240-acre tract in the City of Coral Gables.

Medical Campus: The Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine Campus consists of 70 acres within the 153-acre University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Medical Center complex. The medical campus, undergoing a major capital expansion, includes the University of Miami Health System (UHealth), which comprises nationally ranked institutions including Bascom Palmer Eye Institute (No. 1), Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center (No. 48), Neurology/Neurosurgery (No. 25), and UHealth Tower (No. 8 in Florida)—all operating within the University of Miami Hospital and Clinics. Affiliated hospitals include Jackson Memorial Hospital, Holtz Children’s Hospital, the Miami Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and multiple partner hospitals that form the Miller School’s Regional Medical Campus. About three dozen UHealth outpatient clinics are located in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Collier counties. The Lennar Foundation Medical Center is a 206,000-square-foot multispecialty ambulatory care facility on the Coral Gables campus. Miller School faculty conduct more than 1,500 research projects, with $153 million awarded in NIH grants for the current cycle. UHealth has more than 1,800

providers who serve patients across more than 100 specialties and subspecialties, with outcomes that are among the best in the nation.

Marine Campus: The Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science Campus is located on an 18-acre waterfront campus on Virginia Key in Biscayne Bay.

Richmond Facility: The Richmond Facility, established in 2001, is a 76-acre site that houses research facilities for the Rosenstiel School’s Center for Southeastern Tropical Advanced Remote Sensing (CSTARS) and the Richmond Satellite Operations Center.

ACCREDITATION

The University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) and 23 other professional agencies.

PROGRAMS

The University offers 141 bachelor’s, 139 master’s, and 67 doctoral (62 research/scholarship and 5 professional practice) programs.

DEGREES AWARDED

In 2021-22, the University awarded 2,896 bachelor’s, 1,852 master’s, 157 Ph.D., 64 other doctoral, 384 J.D., 192 M.D., and 103 other professional practice degrees, and 177 certificates.

CLASS SIZE

Fifty percent of classes for undergraduates have 18 or fewer students; 75% have 30 or fewer students.

50% 18 or fewer students 75% 30 or fewer students

HONORS PROGRAM/HONOR SOCIETIES

More than 900 undergraduates participate in the Foote Fellows Honors Program. The University has approximately 40 academic honor societies, including Phi Beta Kappa.

DUAL-DEGREE PROGRAMS

The University offers a variety of dual-degree programs, allowing students to earn both undergraduate and graduate degrees in an accelerated time frame. Dual degrees are offered by the College of Arts and Sciences; College of Engineering; Miami Hebert Business School; Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science; School of Law; and Miller School of Medicine.

NEW FIRST-YEAR STUDENT STANDINGS

Out of those reporting a high school rank, 43% graduated in top 5% and 62% graduated in top 10%. Mean ACT composite was 31, and mean SAT combined was 13951

2,896 BACHELOR’S 1,852 MASTER’S PH.D. 157 TOP 5% 43% 62%

TOP 10% graduated in the top 5% graduated in the top 10%

1Mean based on official SAT component scores reported to external entities (incl. IPEDS, CDS, U.S. News, etc.)

STUDY ABROAD

Students can apply their financial aid and scholarship to semester programs, including University of Miami on location in Prague, Czech Republic; Paris, France; Rome, Italy; Galapagos Islands, Ecuador; Cape Town, South Africa; Barcelona and Seville, Spain; Shanghai, China; and a multilocation program in Latin America, as well as exchange-partner programs in more than 35 countries. Faculty-led study abroad programs take place during intersession, spring break, and summer.

SPORTS

The University has competed in intercollegiate athletics since 1926 and is now a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Hurricanes field 18 teams across men’s and women’s athletics and have won 21 team national championships and 84 individual national titles over their illustrious history. University of Miami student-athletes posted a graduation success rate of 91% in NCAA latest report, compared with the national average of 88%.

Men: Baseball (1982, 1985, 1999, 2001 national champions); Basketball; Cross Country; Football (1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 2001 national champions); Diving; Tennis; Indoor Track and Field; Outdoor Track and Field.

Women: Basketball; Cross Country; Golf (1970, 1972, 1977, 1978, 1984 national champions); Rowing; Soccer; Swimming and Diving (1975, 1976 national champions); Tennis; Indoor Track and Field; Outdoor Track and Field; Volleyball.

RESIDENT STUDENTS

There are 4,568 students who live on campus, including 92% of first-time degree-seeking students (those who have no prior college experience) and 37% of all degree-seeking undergraduates. Housing facilities include five residential colleges, Lakeside Village, and University Village apartments.

MEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS

91%

INDIVIDUAL NATIONAL TITLES TEAM NATIONAL TITLES ATHLETICS GRADUATION SUCCESS RATE

Students living on campus 4,568 92% of new first-year students 37% of all degree-seeking undergraduates
WOMEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS

ALUMNI

Alumni live in all 50 states and 174 countries. There are 106,433 alumni residing in Florida, including more than 55,692 in MiamiDade County. There are more than 224,967 alumni in the University’s history.

All 50 states

106,433 alumni reside in Florida

174 countries

LIBRARIES

The University of Miami Libraries include the Otto G. Richter Library and libraries in the architecture, business, law, medical, music, and marine schools, providing access to more than 4 million volumes; 169,386 current serials titles; 168,722 electronic journals; 1,597,573 electronic books; over 4 million microforms; and 210,828 audio, film, video, and cartographic materials. The libraries’ digital collections feature 1,532,916 images and document pages. The Scholarly Repository managed by the libraries hosts 18,066 theses, dissertations, article preprints, and datasets.

COMPUTING CENTER

The University of Miami maintains data centers in several locations and has adopted a hybrid strategy that offers both cloud options and dedicated supercomputers. The Institute for Data Science and Computing (IDSC) has two supercomputers, including Triton, one of the top academic supercomputers in the U.S. Triton represents a quantum leap in the University’s computing infrastructure and is designed to address the everexpanding needs of data-driven research. IDSC supports hardware infrastructure and design/implementation solutions. More than 60 computer labs are located throughout our campuses. The University is an equity member of Florida LambdaRail, providing 100Gbps connectivity throughout the state and to Internet2. Secured and guest wireless networks on all campuses complement the extensive wired network.

RESEARCH

Research and sponsored program expenditures totaled $413 million (FY22). The University ranked No. 67 of all universities in federally financed higher education R&D expenditures (FY21), according to the National Science Foundation Higher Education Research and Development Survey.

BUDGET

The FY 2023 Budget is $4.7 billion, with $3.7 billion projected for the Medical Campus. At the end of FY22, the endowment for the University was $1.34 billion.

$4.7b BUDGET $1.34b ENDOWMENT

DEVELOPMENT

In FY22, contributions reached $207.6 million total private cash, gifts, and grants.

Faculty and Employees | Fall 20221

Enrollment by School | Fall 2022

Undergraduate

Faculty Characteristics | Fall 2022

1As of November 1, 2022

2Part-time faculty is measured by the number of individuals with part-time instructional activities, including 60 non-faculty employees who teach part-time.

Full-Time Equivalent | Fall 2022

1Includes M.D., J.D., and other graduate students.

2Excludes IEP and auditing students.

Classification Full-Time Part-Time2 Total Faculty Architecture 34 45 79 Arts and Sciences 445 93 538 Miami Herbert Business 163 33 196 Communication 81 48 129 Education and Human Development 48 36 84 Engineering 78 15 93 Frost Music 91 39 130 Law 88 85 173 Miller School of Medicine 1,576 81 1,657 Nursing and Health Studies 44 95 139 Rosenstiel School 86 9 95 Richter Library and Other 54 21 75 TOTAL FACULTY 2,788 600 3,388
Tenured/tenure-track faculty with doctorate or terminal degree 99% Full-time faculty 82% Student-faculty ratio 13:1 Faculty 2,788 600 3,388 Administrative/Professional 6,485 69 6,554 Research 923 41 964 Staff (hourly non-exempt) 7,062 193 7,255 TOTAL FACULTY AND EMPLOYEES 17,258 903 18,161
School (Year Founded) Degree N-Deg Grad1 Total2 Architecture (’83) 445 0 120 565 Arts and Sciences (’26) 3,913 0 590 4,503 Miami Herbert Business (’29) 3,175 0 1,001 4,176 Communication (’85) 1,099 0 138 1,237 Education and Human Development (’26) 565 0 532 1,097 Engineering (’47) 783 0 241 1,024 Frost Music (’26) 484 15 384 883 Law (’28) 0 0 1,358 1,358 Miller School of Medicine (’52) Graduate 0 0 808 808 Clinical 0 0 843 843 Nursing and Health Studies (’68) 1,095 0 347 1,442 Rosenstiel School (’69) 530 0 527 1,057 Cont. Studies, Special, and Joint 124 276 9 409 TOTAL 12,213 291 6,898 19,402 Full-Time 11,840 164 6,137 18,141 Part-Time 373 127 761 1,261
Undergraduate Degree N-Deg Grad1 Total2 FTE 12,039.6 194.9 6,591.6 18,826.1

New Student Enrollment | Fall 2022

Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity | Fall 2022

Enrollment by Gender | Fall 2022

Tables above include full- and part-time students. Percentages may not total 100 due to rounding.

1Includes M.D., J.D., and other graduate students.

Enrollment by Geographic Origin | Fall 2022

Tables above include full- and part-time students. Percentages may not total 100 due to rounding.

1Includes M.D., J.D., and other graduate students.

2Students come from 50 states and D.C., 3 territories, and 124 other countries.

New First-Year Undergraduate Graduate1 Gender # % # % # % Male 1,159 49 5,798 46 3,003 44 Female 1,212 51 6,706 54 3,895 56 TOTAL 2,371 12,504 6,898
Undergraduate Applied Admitted Enrolled New First-Year 49,167 9,311 2,371 New Transfer 3,530 1,477 597 Enrollment School New First-Year New Transfer Total Architecture 66 15 81 Arts and Sciences 718 319 1,037 Miami Herbert Business 772 36 808 Communication 124 69 193 Education and Human Development 96 27 123 Engineering 143 16 159 Frost Music 120 4 124 Nursing and Health Studies 185 91 276 Rosenstiel School 146 11 157 Cont. Studies, Special, and Joint 1 9 10 TOTAL 2,371 597 2,968
New First-Year Undergraduate Graduate1 Race/Ethnicity # % # % # % White 1,295 55 6,021 48 2,501 36 Hispanic or Latino 463 20 3,266 26 2,088 30 Asian/Pacific Islander 179 7 955 8 893 13 Black 232 10 1,171 9 667 10 American Indian 4 0 16 0 7 0 Two or more races 139 6 523 4 201 3 Unknown 59 2 552 4 541 8 TOTAL 2,371 12,504 6,898
New First-Year Undergraduate Graduate1 Origin2 # % # % # % Miami-Dade 220 9 2,312 18 2,264 33 Broward 91 4 574 5 541 8 Other Florida 245 10 1,380 11 845 12 Other U.S. and Territories 1,623 68 7,052 56 2,076 30 International 192 8 1,186 9 1,172 17 TOTAL 2,371 12,504 6,898

Credit Hours Taught | Fall 2022

1Total credit hours by teaching school. Research courses taken for zero credit hours increased to one credit hour.

Annual Student Costs | 2022-23

1Total for both semesters.

2Total cost estimated using the 2022-23 double occupancy room rate for Eaton/Mahoney/Pearson, as reported to IPEDS.

3Travel expenses may vary by region; computer costs no longer included.

4In millions; revised awards may change some amounts slightly; includes summer awards; total may differ due to rounding.

Teaching School Undergrad. Grad. Prof. Total1 Architecture 5,854 1,596 0 7,450 Arts and Sciences 80,587 4,151 0 84,738 Miami Herbert Business 42,326 12,709 0 55,035 Communication 14,395 1,144 0 15,539 Education and Human Development 9,172 3,631 0 12,803 Engineering 7,026 1,657 0 8,683 Frost Music 10,088 3,041 0 13,129 Law 0 0 19,315 19,315 Miller School of Medicine 2,736 8,278 14,765 25,779 Nursing and Health Studies 7,762 3,549 0 11,311 Rosenstiel School 5,091 3,214 0 8,305 Cont. Studies/Grad. School/Joint Programs 2,341 244 0 2,585 TOTAL 187,378 43,214 34,080 264,672
Tuition and Other Expenses Undergraduate Tuition and Fees Full-Time (12-20 credit hours)1 $55,440 Required Fees1 $1,754 1-11 Hours (per credit hour) $2,310 Over 20 Hours (per credit hour) $2,310 Graduate Tuition (per credit hour) $2,310 Law Tuition (day program) $58,300 Medical Tuition (M.D. program – FL residents, first-year) $50,123 Medical Tuition (M.D. program – non-residents) $50,123 Room (residential college, double occupancy)2 $9,460 Board (19-meal plan) $7,450 Travel, Books, and Personal Expenses3 $4,916 Financial Aid Awarded | 2021-224 Source University Scholarships and Grants $203.7 Tuition Remission and Athletic Scholarships $61.6 Department/Endowment/Donor Grants, Loans, and Work $117.8 Federal Grants and College Work Study $23.3 Federal Loans $196.6 State Grants, Loans, and Work $22.9 Outside and Other Programs $48.8 TOTAL $674.7

Financial Highlights | 2021-221

1For the fiscal year ending May 31, 2022, in millions.

2Includes the effect of accumulated depreciation and amortization of $2,330.6 million.

Financial Highlights | 2021-22

3Net assets released from restrictions of $13.5 million.

4Unrestricted gifts and trusts of $60 million included in sources of funds for operations.

5Gross square footage of owned buildings is reported as of May 31, 2022. Leased space contributes an additional 220 facilities (including storage leases) and 947,423 square feet (not including licenses).

What We Own Cash and Investments $3,134.5 Receivables $708.9 Contributions (Pledges) and Trusts Receivable $238.7 Intangible Assets, Property, and Equipment2 $2,222.8 Other Assets $277.7 TOTAL ASSETS $6,582.6 What We Owe For Services and Other Operating Expenses $989.7 Bonds and Notes Payable $1,785.4 Other Commitments $72.4 TOTAL LIABILITIES $2,847.5 Balances
We Owe) Operations, Funds for Plant Expansion, and Student Loans $1,074.6 Cumulative Postretirement Benefits ($142.5) Invested in Plant Facilities $906.1 Contributions (Pledges) and Trusts $540.7 Endowment, Life Income, Annuity, and Other Funds $1,356.2 TOTAL NET ASSETS $3,735.1 University-Owned Facilities Campus Buildings Sq. Footage5 Coral Gables Campus 149 7,472,302 Medical Campus 35 4,875,513 Marine Campus 18 414,529 Richmond Facility 8 11,014 Off Campus 2 21,822 TOTAL 212 12,795,180
(What We Own Less What
Sources of Funds for Operations Tuition and Fees, Net $650.4 Grants and Contracts $538.2 Patient Care $2,943.4 State Appropriation—Miller School of Medicine $16.7 Gifts, Investment Return, Auxiliaries, and Other Sources3 $553.4 TOTAL SOURCES OF FUNDS $4,702.1 Gifts and Trusts Unrestricted4 $61.0 Temporarily Restricted $88.5 Permanently Restricted $43.7 TOTAL GIFTS AND TRUSTS $193.2
CAN’T FIND THE RIGHT FACT? University of Miami Office of Institutional Research and Strategic Analytics 305-284-FACT umdata@miami.edu miami.edu/facts (Published 4/2023)

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