WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY HISTORY 1899 Legislation was signed which created the Western Illinois State Normal School. 1900 Macomb was chosen as the site for the Western Illinois State Normal School. Cornerstone for Sherman Hall was laid on December 21, 1900. 1902 The school opened its doors to students. Approximately 525 students were enrolled in 14 grades during the first year. 1903 Western Illinois State Normal School had its first graduating class, consisting of two students. 1906 Six Filipinos were registered as students, marking the beginning of international students on campus. 1911 Extension program began. This made Western the first state institution in Illinois to offer classes by extension. 1913 Western received full accreditation as a teachers college by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. 1917 A four-year collegiate program was initiated. 1918 The first baccalaureate degree was granted. 1921 Western Illinois University Normal School became Western Illinois State Teachers College. There was an enrollment of 518 post-high school students. 1944 The graduate program was established. 1946 The first master’s degree was awarded. 1947 Western Illinois State Teachers College became Western Illinois State College. Enrollment was 1,345. 1957 Name was changed to Western Illinois University. Enrollment was 2,605. 1969 Western Illinois University became a charter member of the Quad Cities Graduate Study Center Consortium. 1973 Total enrollment at Western Illinois University reached an all-time high of 15,469. 1988 Western Illinois University’s Rock Island Regional Undergraduate Center (RIRUC) opened on the campus of Black Hawk College in Moline with an enrollment of 59 students. 1995 Western Illinois University purchased and began renovation on the IBM building in Moline. The Rock Island Regional Undergraduate Center (RIRUC) name was changed to the Western Illinois University Regional Center (WIU-RC). 1997 Western Illinois University began offering classes at its newly renovated Regional Center in Moline. 1999- Western Illinois University celebrated the centennial of its charter with ceremonies which included opening 2000 of time capsules from the cornerstone of Sherman Hall. The centennial celebration concluded with a ceremonial luncheon and placing items into and sealing the Sherman Hall time capsule. WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY ACCREDITATION UNIVERSITY ACCREDITATION NEXT DATE OF ACCREDITATION North Central Association 2010-11 National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education 2003 ATHLETICS ACCREDITATION NCAA-Division I PROGRAM ACCREDITATION Arts & Sciences Chemistry Social Work Business & Technology Accountancy Business Adm. (M.B.A.) Economics Finance Human Resource Mgt. Information Management Management Marketing Education & Human Services Counseling (M.S.Ed.) Family & Consumer Sciences (Dietetics Option) Physical Education (Athletic Training Option) Recreation, Park & Tourism Administration Fine Arts & Communication Communication Sciences & Disorders (M.S.) (Audiology & SpeechLanguage Options) Music (B.A.)(M.A.) 2004-05 ACCREDITING BODY American Chemical Society Council on Social Work Ed. 2005 2008 AACSB International--The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business 2009 Council for Accreditation of Counseling & Related Ed. Prog. American Dietetic Association 2008 Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs National Recreation & Park Association-American Assoc. for Leisure & Recreation 2002 2004-05 2003 American Speech-LanguageHearing Association 2009 National Association of Schools of Music 2005 UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS AND DEGREES AVAILABLE B.S. COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES African American Studies* Biology Chemistry Clinical Laboratory Science Economics English French Geography Geology History Journalism Mathematics Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Social Work Sociology Spanish Women's Studies COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy Agriculture Computer Science Economics Finance Graphic Communication Human Resource Management Information Management Management Manufacturing Engineering Technology Marketing COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Bilingual/Bicultural Education Community Health Elementary Education Family and Consumer Sciences Health Services Management Instructional Tech. and Telecommunications Law Enforcement and Justice Administration Physical Education Recreation, Park, and Tourism Administration Special Education B.A. B.B. B.S.Ed. B.F.A. Bachelor of Social Work X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS AND DEGREES AVAILABLE B.S. COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION Art Broadcasting Communication Communication Sciences and Disorders Music Musical Theatre* Theatre OTHER Board of Trustees Degree Program Individual Studies TOTAL DEGREES OFFERED BY DEGREE Health Services Administration Instructional Technology Distance Learning Graphics Application Multimedia Technology Integration in Education Training Development Language Literacy Marriage and Family Counseling Police Executive Certification* *Program with 18 credit hours B.S.Ed. B.F.A. Bachelor of Social Work X X X X X X X X 21 18 POST-BACCALAUREATE CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS AVAILABLE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Elementary Education Early Childhood Mathematics Science Social Studies B.B. X X X *Approved 10-1-2002 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES Community Development* Zoo and Aquarium Studies B.A. 7 3 2 1 GRADUATE PROGRAMS AND DEGREES AVAILABLE M.S. COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES Biology Chemistry English Geography Gerontology (Enrollment suspended FY03-05) History Mathematics Physics Political Science Psychology School Psychology Sociology COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy Business Administration Computer Science Economics Manufacturing Engineering Systems TOTAL DEGREES OFFERED BY DEGREE Ed.S. M.S.Ed. S.S.P. M.F.A. Master of M.B.A. Accountancy M.A.T. X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES College Student Personnel X Educational Administration and Supervision Educational and Interdisciplinary Studies Elementary Education Health Education X Instructional Tech. and Telecommunications X Law Enforcement and Justice Administration Physical Education X Reading Recreation, Park, and Tourism Administration X Secondary Education COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION Communication Sciences and Disorders Music Communication Theatre M.A. X X X X X X X X X X X 13 10 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 WIU-QC PROGRAMS AND DEGREES AVAILABLE B.S. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy Information Management Management Manufacturing Engineering Technology Marketing COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Elementary Education Law Enforcement and Justice Administration Recreation, Park and Tourism Administration Special Education B.B. B.S.Ed. X X X X X X X X X OTHER Board of Trustees Degree Program TOTAL DEGREES OFFERED BY DEGREE B.A. X 3 1 4 2 Ed.S. M.S.Ed. QUAD CITIES GRADUATE CENTER PROGRAMS AND DEGREES AVAILABLE M.S. COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES Biology English Gerontology (Enrollment suspended FY03-05) M.A. TOTAL DEGREES OFFERED BY DEGREE Master of M.A.T. Accountancy X X X COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy Business Administration COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Counseling Educational Administration and Supervision Educational and Interdisciplinary Studies Elementary Education Health Education Instructional Technology and Telecommunications Law Enforcement and Justice Administration Physical Education Reading Secondary Education Special Education M.B.A. X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 3 1 6 1 1 1 DEFINITIONS OF TERMS USED ENROLLMENTS Border County Students are students who reside in the Iowa counties of Des Moines, Lee, Louisa, Muscatine, or Scott or the Missouri counties of Clark, Lewis, or Marion. Headcount students is used to refer to the count of individual students enrolled for one or more credit courses during the time period illustrated. This count is taken on the 10th day of class. Fiscal Year Enrollments include the summer and fall semesters of one year and the spring semester of the following year (FY2000 includes Summer and Fall 1999 semesters and Spring 2000 semester). Full-Time students are undergraduates enrolled for 12 or more credit hours per semester and graduate students enrolled for 9 or more credit hours per semester. This definition is a classification of individual students and is based on federal guidelines. FTE students is an abbreviation for full-time equivalent students. To calculate full-time equivalent students, undergraduate credits are divided by 15, and graduate credits are divided by 12. SCH is an abbreviation for student credit hour. A student will typically earn 3 hours in a course scheduled for 3 hours a week. FACULTY Faculty Staff Year is derived by taking the number of months an employee is employed times percent appointment and divide by 12. (9 months x 100 percent = 9, 9/12 = .75 staff year) Full-Time Employee is an employee who has a 100 percent appointment. Income Fund - Income generated from tuition and fees. Part-Time Employee is an employee who has less than a 100 percent appointment. 2002 ENROLLMENT HIGHLIGHTS On-campus headcount enrollment increased from 10,606 in 2001 to 10,951 in 2002, up 3.3 percent (Table 1). Total enrollment increased from 13,206 in 2001 to 13,461 in 2002 (up 1.9 percent). Table 2 gives the distribution of students by class level, full-/part-time and location. Full-time enrollment increased from 10,059 in Fall 2001 to 10,533 in Fall 2002. Table 3 gives the distribution of students by sex and location of enrollment for Fall Terms 1998-2002. Figures 1a and 1b show enrollment by location for Fall 1998, 2000 and 2002. Enrollment by location and student residency are shown in Table 4. Figure 2 shows total headcount enrollment by class level for Fall 1992 and Fall 2002. Freshmen showed the greatest change in class size as a percent of the total enrollment, increasing from 20.1 percent in 1992 to 22.0 percent in 2002. Seniors showed an increase from 24.1 percent in 1992 to 25.2 percent in 2002. Sophomores showed a decrease as a proportion of the enrollment from 15.1 percent in 1992 to 14.5 percent in 2002, while Junior enrollment decreased from 21.4 percent in 1992 to 20.4 percent in 2002. Total graduate enrollment represented 19.2 percent of the total enrollment in 1992 compared to 18.0 percent in 2002. Figure 3 shows Fall 2002 WIU extension course registrations by county. Fall headcount enrollments for all Illinois public universities increased 4.4 percent from 1997 to 2002 (Table 5). From 2001 to 2002 the overall enrollment for Illinois public universities increased 2.6 percent. Western's headcount enrollment increased 10.3 percent from 1997 to 2002. From 2001 to 2002 the overall enrollment for Western increased 1.9 percent. Table 6 gives the distribution of students by class level, race and sex. Males comprised 47.8 percent of the Fall 2002 total headcount enrollment while females accounted for 52.2 percent. However, the on-campus male/female breakdown is 50.3 percent males and 49.7 percent females (Table 3). The percent of total minority enrollment (Table 7A) totaled 10.5 percent in Fall 2002. Hispanic enrollment increased 13.5 percent, while Asian-American enrollment increased by 12.1 percent. Black enrollment increased 2.2 percent, while Native American enrollment increased 6.1 percent. International student enrollment decreased by 24 students, or 6.8 percent. The percent of on-campus minority enrollment (Table 7B) totaled 10.9 percent in Fall 2002. On-campus Hispanic enrollment increased 16.1 percent, while International enrollment decreased 5.8 percent. Fall 2002 ethnic enrollment by location is shown in Table 7C. Table 8 shows Fall 2001 undergraduate enrollment by race and sex for the 12 Illinois public universities. Table 9 shows that WIU awarded 2,164 (7.0 percent) of the 30,896 total degrees awarded in FY2001 by the 12 Illinois public universities. TABLE 1. HEADCOUNT ENROLLMENT BY CLASS LEVEL AND LOCATION, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 ON-CAMPUS Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 2,765 1,646 4,411 2,010 2,389 4,399 8,810 1,212 10,022 2.0 2,665 1,791 4,456 2,119 2,447 4,566 9,022 1,268 10,290 2.7 2,784 1,800 4,584 2,248 2,438 4,686 9,270 1,208 10,478 1.8 2,732 1,926 4,658 2,183 2,560 4,743 9,401 1,205 10,606 1.2 2,936 1,907 4,843 2,334 2,573 4,907 9,750 1,201 10,951 3.3 QUAD CITIES Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 9 27 36 239 369 608 644 772 1,416 18.1 7 23 30 266 409 675 705 765 1,470 3.8 4 19 23 217 455 672 695 799 1,494 1.6 17 19 36 248 427 675 711 759 1,470 (1.6) 1 16 17 233 440 673 690 771 1,461 (0.6) EXTENSION Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 54 30 84 247 407 654 738 434 1,172 (0.5) 26 19 45 255 407 662 707 467 1,174 0.2 37 26 63 210 414 624 687 430 1,117 (4.9) 28 28 56 192 395 587 643 487 1,130 1.2 19 23 42 175 376 551 593 456 1,049 (7.2) TOTAL ENROLLMENT Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 2,828 1,703 4,531 2,496 3,165 5,661 10,192 2,418 12,610 3.4 2,698 1,833 4,531 2,640 3,263 5,903 10,434 2,500 12,934 2.6 2,825 1,845 4,670 2,675 3,307 5,982 10,652 2,437 13,089 1.2 2,777 1,973 4,750 2,623 3,382 6,005 10,755 2,451 13,206 0.9 2,956 1,946 4,902 2,742 3,389 6,131 11,033 2,428 13,461 1.9 TABLE 2. FULL-TIME/PART-TIME ENROLLMENT BY CLASS LEVEL AND LOCATION, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 1998 FT ON-CAMPUS Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 2,669 1,593 4,262 1,929 2,197 4,126 8,388 678 9,066 3.3 QUAD CITIES Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 2 3 5 73 150 223 228 53 281 44.8 EXTENSION Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE TOTAL ENROLLMENT Freshmen Sophomores LOWER DIVISION Juniors Seniors UPPER DIVISION TOTAL UNDERGRAD Graduates TOTAL PCT CHANGE 1999 PT 96 53 149 81 192 273 422 534 956 (8.4) FT 2000 PT FT 2,602 1,750 4,352 2,052 2,241 4,293 8,645 696 9,341 3.0 63 41 104 67 206 273 377 572 949 (0.7) 2,707 1,754 4,461 2,164 2,215 4,379 8,840 693 9,533 2.1 7 24 31 166 219 385 416 719 1,135 12.9 2 3 5 97 182 279 284 54 338 20.3 5 20 25 169 227 396 421 711 1,132 (0.3) 0 8 8 65 191 256 264 53 317 (6.2) 1 0 1 3 5 8 9 9 18 28.6 53 30 83 244 402 646 729 425 1,154 (0.9) 0 1 1 3 7 10 11 10 21 16.7 26 18 44 252 400 652 696 457 1,153 (0.1) 2,672 1,596 4,268 2,005 2,352 4,357 8,625 740 9,365 4.2 156 107 263 491 813 1,304 1,567 1,678 3,245 1.0 2,604 1,754 4,358 2,152 2,430 4,582 8,940 760 9,700 3.6 94 79 173 488 833 1,321 1,494 1,740 3,234 (0.3) 2001 PT 77 46 123 84 223 307 430 515 945 (0.4) FT 2002 PT FT PT 2,668 1,886 4,554 2,095 2,364 4,459 9,013 695 9,708 1.8 64 40 104 88 196 284 388 510 898 (5.0) 2,862 1,864 4,726 2,256 2,394 4,650 9,376 767 10,143 4.5 74 43 117 78 179 257 374 434 808 (10.0) 4 11 15 152 264 416 431 746 1,177 4.0 6 4 10 84 181 265 275 51 326 2.8 11 15 26 164 246 410 436 708 1,144 (2.8) 1 4 5 97 193 290 295 63 358 9.8 0 12 12 136 247 383 395 708 1,103 (3.6) 0 2 2 5 0 5 7 8 15 (28.6) 37 24 61 209 410 619 680 422 1,102 (4.4) 0 2 2 4 6 10 12 13 25 66.7 28 26 54 188 389 577 631 474 1,105 0.3 0 1 1 1 10 11 12 20 32 28.0 19 22 41 174 366 540 581 436 1,017 (8.0) 2,707 1,764 4,471 2,234 2,406 4,640 9,111 754 9,865 1.7 118 81 199 445 897 1,342 1,541 1,683 3,224 (0.3) 2,674 1,892 4,566 2,183 2,551 4,734 9,300 759 10,059 2.0 2,863 1,869 4,732 2,354 2,597 4,951 9,683 850 10,533 4.7 93 77 170 388 792 1,180 1,350 1,578 2,928 (7.0) 103 81 184 440 831 1,271 1,455 1,692 3,147 (2.4) TABLE 3. ENROLLMENT BY SEX AND LOCATION, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 1998 M ON-CAMPUS Undergraduate Graduate TOTAL PCT CHANGE QUAD CITIES Undergraduate Graduate TOTAL PCT CHANGE EXTENSION Undergraduate Graduate TOTAL PCT CHANGE TOTAL ENROLLMENT Undergraduate Graduate TOTAL PCT CHANGE 1999 F M 4,367 506 4,873 1.5 4,443 706 5,149 2.6 231 192 423 20.9 413 580 993 17.0 223 193 416 (1.7) 378 138 516 (9.8) 360 296 656 8.3 371 151 522 1.2 5,216 1,582 6,798 5.0 5,055 892 5,947 2.3 4,976 836 5,812 1.5 4,461 548 5,009 2.8 2000 F M 2001 F 4,561 720 5,281 2.6 4,635 490 5,125 2.3 4,635 718 5,353 1.4 482 572 1,054 6.1 220 204 424 1.9 695 799 1,494 41.7 336 316 652 (0.6) 5,379 1,608 6,987 2.8 341 161 502 (3.8) 5,196 855 6,051 1.7 346 269 615 (5.7) 5,676 1,786 7,462 6.8 M 4,781 522 5,303 3.5 2002 F M F 4,620 683 5,303 (0.9) 4,977 529 5,506 3.8 200 218 418 (1.4) 511 541 1,052 (29.6) 206 229 435 4.1 484 542 1,026 (2.5) 329 173 502 0.0 314 314 628 2.1 315 179 494 (1.6) 278 277 555 (11.6) 5,310 913 6,223 2.8 5,445 1,538 6,983 (6.4) 5,498 937 6,435 3.4 4,773 672 5,445 2.7 5,535 1,491 7,026 0.6 TABLE 4. ENROLLMENT BY LOCATION AND STUDENT RESIDENCY, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 1998 ON-CAMPUS In-state* 9,221 Out-of state* 438 Foreign 363 TOTAL 10,022 PCT CHANGE 2.0 QUAD CITIES In-state* 1,054 Out-of state* 359 Foreign 3 TOTAL 1,416 PCT CHANGE 18.1 EXTENSION In-state* 806 Out-of state* 364 Foreign 2 TOTAL 1,172 PCT CHANGE (0.5) TOTAL In-state* 11,081 Out-of state* 1,161 Foreign 368 TOTAL 12,610 PCT CHANGE 3.4 *Based on residency code at 10th day of semester. 1999 2000 2001 2002 9,444 456 390 10,290 2.7 9,604 488 386 10,478 1.8 9,787 441 378 10,606 1.2 10,151 444 356 10,951 3.3 1,073 393 4 1,470 3.8 1,071 418 5 1,494 1.6 1,054 406 10 1,470 (1.6) 1,067 386 8 1,461 (0.6) 812 356 6 1,174 0.2 794 321 2 1,117 (4.9) 795 331 4 1,130 1.2 765 280 4 1,049 (7.2) 11,329 1,205 400 12,934 2.6 11,469 1,227 393 13,089 1.2 11,636 1,178 392 13,206 0.9 11,983 1,110 368 13,461 1.9 Figure 1a. Total University Enrollment and Total On-Campus Enrollment Fall 1998, 2000 and 2002 14 13,461 13,089 13 12,610 12 10,951 Thousands 11 10,478 10,022 10 9 8 7 Total Enrolled Total Enrolled On-Campus 1998 2000 2002 Figure 1b. Total Extension and Quad Cities Enrollment Fall 1998, 2000 and 2002 1750 1750 1,494 1500 1,416 1250 1,461 1500 1250 1,172 1,117 1,049 1000 1000 750 750 500 500 250 250 0 0 Extension Quad Cities 1998 2000 2002 Figure 2. Total Headcount Enrollment by Class Level, Fall 1992 and 2002 1992 Sophomores 15.1% Freshmen 20.1% Juniors 21.4% Graduates 19.2% Seniors 24.1% 2002 Sophomores 14.5% Freshmen 22.0% Juniors 20.4% Graduates 18.0% Seniors 25.2% TABLE 5. FALL HEADCOUNT ENROLLMENTS IN ILLINOIS PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES 1997 TO 2002 Institution Percent Change 1997-02 Percent Change 2001-02 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002* Public Universities Chicago State University Eastern Illinois University Governors State University Illinois State University Northeastern Ill. University Northern Illinois University Western Illinois University TOTAL 8,722 11,777 6,117 20,331 10,224 22,082 12,200 91,453 8,416 11,735 6,240 20,394 10,545 22,473 12,610 92,413 7,580 11,226 6,150 20,470 10,937 22,843 12,934 92,140 6,914 10,637 6,150 20,755 10,941 23,248 13,089 91,734 7,079 10,531 5,860 21,240 10,999 23,783 13,206 92,698 7,158 11,163 5,897 21,183 11,409 24,948 13,461 95,219 (17.93) (5.21) (3.60) 4.19 11.59 12.98 10.34 4.12 1.12 6.00 0.63 (0.27) 3.73 4.90 1.93 2.72 Southern Illinois University SIU - Carbondale SIU - Edwardsville TOTAL SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY 21,908 11,207 33,115 22,251 11,520 33,771 22,323 11,877 34,200 22,552 12,193 34,745 21,598 12,442 34,040 21,873 12,708 34,581 (0.16) 13.39 4.43 1.27 2.14 1.59 University of Illinois U of I - Chicago U of I - Springfield U of I - Urbana/Champaign TOTAL UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 24,921 4,463 38,070 67,454 24,862 4,334 38,307 67,503 24,610 4,079 38,851 67,540 25,011 3,942 38,464 67,417 24,955 4,288 39,291 68,534 26,138 4,451 39,999 70,588 4.88 (0.27) 5.07 4.65 4.74 3.80 1.80 3.00 192,022 193,687 193,880 193,896 195,272 200,388 4.36 2.62 TOTAL PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES 1997-2002 Source: 2002 IBHE Data Book *Preliminary TABLE 6. DISTRIBUTION OF TOTAL STUDENTS BY CLASS LEVEL, RACE AND SEX, FALL 2002 Race/Sex Freshmen Sophomores Juniors Seniors Unclassified* 1,306 1,154 2,460 842 789 1,631 1,142 1,165 2,307 1,339 1,576 2,915 2 3 5 BLACK Male Female TOTAL BLACK 95 144 239 66 79 145 80 77 157 80 99 179 HISPANIC Male Female TOTAL HISPANIC 60 41 101 36 23 59 47 45 92 16 12 28 18 11 29 6 0 6 INTERNATIONAL Male Female TOTAL INTERNATIONAL OTHER Male Female TOTAL OTHER Total Undergraduates # Total All Levels # % Graduate % 4,631 4,687 9,318 42.0 42.5 84.5 699 1,232 1,931 5,330 5,919 11,249 39.6 44.0 83.6 0 0 0 321 399 720 2.9 3.6 6.5 34 39 73 355 438 793 2.6 3.3 5.9 55 57 112 0 0 0 198 166 364 1.8 1.5 3.3 16 23 39 214 189 403 1.6 1.4 3.0 16 8 24 17 20 37 2 0 2 69 51 120 0.6 0.5 1.1 7 12 19 76 63 139 0.6 0.5 1.0 1 3 4 2 5 7 5 3 8 0 0 0 14 11 25 0.1 0.1 0.2 5 1 6 19 12 31 0.1 0.1 0.2 28 28 56 18 20 38 29 17 46 12 22 34 0 0 0 87 87 174 0.8 0.8 1.6 112 82 194 199 169 368 1.5 1.3 2.7 35 23 58 23 17 40 65 44 109 55 49 104 0 1 1 178 134 312 1.6 1.2 2.8 64 102 166 242 236 478 1.8 1.8 3.6 1,546 1,402 2,948 1,004 942 1,946 1,381 1,361 2,742 1,563 1,826 3,389 4 4 8 5,498 5,535 11,033 49.8 50.2 100.0 937 1,491 2,428 6,435 7,026 13,461 47.8 52.2 100.0 WHITE Male Female TOTAL WHITE ASIAN AMERICAN Male Female TOTAL ASIAN AMERICAN NATIVE AMERICAN Male Female TOTAL NATIVE AMERICAN Total Males Total Females Grand Total *High School Students TABLE 7A. TOTAL ETHNIC ENROLLMENT DATA, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 Year White Black Hispanic Asian American 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 10,481 10,760 10,944 11,047 11,249 787 771 769 776 793 308 332 349 355 403 152 133 111 124 139 35 31 35 29 31 83.6 5.9 3.0 1.0 0.2 % of Total 2002 Native American International Other* TOTAL Percent Minority** 368 400 393 392 368 479 507 488 483 478 12,610 12,934 13,089 13,206 13,461 10.6 10.2 10.0 10.1 10.5 2.7 3.6 100.0 10.5 Other* TOTAL Percent Minority** NOTE: Includes Macomb campus, Quad Cities, & Extension TABLE 7B. TOTAL ON-CAMPUS ETHNIC ENROLLMENT DATA, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 Year White Black Hispanic Asian American 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 8,268 8,508 8,709 8,839 9,115 681 667 658 674 693 242 250 279 280 325 132 121 100 114 122 25 25 22 19 22 363 390 386 378 356 311 329 324 302 318 10,022 10,290 10,478 10,606 10,951 11.1 10.7 10.4 10.5 10.9 83.2 6.3 3.0 1.1 0.2 3.3 2.9 100.0 10.9 Native American International Other* TOTAL Percent Minority** % of Total 2002 Native American International TABLE 7C. ETHNIC ENROLLMENT DATA BY LOCATION, FALL 2002 Location On-Campus Extension Quad Cities White Black Hispanic Asian American 9,115 693 325 122 22 356 318 10,951 10.9 881 54 19 6 6 4 79 1,049 8.8 1,253 46 59 11 3 8 81 1,461 8.6 *Includes students who marked "other" and those who failed to complete an ethnic data card. **Percent of student body who completed an ethnic data card (excludes Other) and identified themselves as belonging to one of the four minority groups listed. TABLE 8. UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT IN ILLINOIS PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES BY RACE AND SEX, FALL 2001 Institution Black Non-Hispanic M F Amer. Indian/ Alaskan Native M F White Non-Hispanic M F Asian or Pacific Islander M F Hispanic M F Non-Resident Alien M F No Indication M F Total M F Chicago State University Eastern Illinois University Governors State University Illinois State University Northeastern Ill. University Northern Illinois University 1,156 274 217 419 361 804 3,417 355 684 730 753 1,404 2 10 6 22 10 23 5 13 4 31 11 37 78 3,327 586 6,847 1,431 5,887 96 4,603 1,104 9,545 2,227 6,420 5 35 27 124 519 597 15 34 18 162 578 536 70 91 41 212 726 466 219 102 88 236 1,617 526 2 51 4 68 86 128 0 32 4 76 63 95 25 100 69 0 0 269 50 88 128 0 0 276 1,338 3,888 950 7,692 3,133 8,174 3,802 5,227 2,030 10,780 5,249 9,294 Western Illinois University SIU - Carbondale SIU - Edwardsville U of I - Chicago U of I - Springfield U of I - Urbana/Champaign 325 1,026 351 418 60 755 375 1,199 813 1,096 127 1,178 11 24 15 18 3 32 9 21 21 25 1 22 4,489 6,412 3,607 3,350 723 10,260 4,621 4,820 4,551 3,686 1,290 9,208 57 162 71 1,788 13 2,076 53 80 65 1,943 22 1,614 161 292 54 1,163 15 870 153 201 85 1,532 18 767 88 354 88 146 20 491 99 258 78 149 8 384 179 1,026 0 271 0 520 135 620 0 302 0 487 5,310 9,296 4,186 7,154 834 15,004 5,445 7,199 5,613 8,733 1,466 13,660 TOTAL PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES 6,166 12,131 176 200 46,997 52,171 5,474 5,120 4,161 5,544 1,526 1,246 2,459 2,086 66,959 78,498 TABLE 9. BACCALAUREATE DEGREES CONFERRED IN ILLINOIS PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES BY RACE AND SEX, 2000-2001 Institution Chicago State University Black Non-Hispanic M F 168 537 Amer. Indian/ Alaskan Native M F 0 0 White Non-Hispanic M F 23 15 Asian or Pacific Islander M F 3 8 Hispanic M 10 F 19 Non-Resident Alien M F 0 0 No Indication M 3 F 1 Eastern Illinois University Governors State University Illinois State University Northeastern Ill. University Northern Illinois University Western Illinois University 32 46 63 162 1 2 3 1 733 172 1,233 353 6 8 10 14 37 14 30 32 9 0 18 1 0 18 0 25 87 28 81 52 163 76 144 64 6 1 4 3 5 2 3 2 1,512 203 1,151 886 2,106 417 1,524 975 27 66 104 14 26 79 105 7 34 57 70 40 50 138 108 26 11 4 21 16 14 8 16 13 0 0 42 32 SIU - Carbondale SIU - Edwardsville U of I - Chicago U of I - Springfield U of I - Urbana/Champaign 326 38 62 9 134 287 109 194 33 241 12 2 4 1 7 8 5 3 0 8 2,003 569 723 203 2,402 1,311 958 887 326 2,095 48 9 336 7 427 31 16 342 6 380 94 11 162 2 135 45 13 276 4 158 89 15 33 5 41 60 11 42 1 63 1,063 2,073 43 40 10,580 12,200 1,055 1,024 666 899 244 247 TOTAL PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES Source: 2001 IBHE Data Book Total M 207 F 580 0 0 43 34 818 260 1,677 359 1,473 1,043 1,357 588 2,364 720 1,943 1,121 197 0 47 0 84 98 0 63 0 75 2,769 644 1,367 227 3,230 1,840 1,112 1,807 370 3,020 423 339 14,074 16,822 ORIGIN OF STUDENTS In 2002 WIU enrolled a total of 725 students from Iowa (Figure 6), with 252 enrolled from the Iowa border counties of Des Moines, Lee, Louisa, Muscatine and Scott. Missouri students totaled 54, with 17 enrolled from the Missouri border counties of Clark, Lewis and Marion. The total number of Iowa-Missouri border county students (Figure 4) increased by one student (less than one percent) from Fall 2001 to Fall 2002. The distribution of on-campus Illinois students by home county (Table 11 and Figure 5) shows Cook County sent 1,865 students to WIU in Fall 2002, the largest number of students from any county. McDonough County sent 1,202 students. Other counties in the top ten include Adams, DuPage, Fulton, Hancock, Kane, Lake, Peoria, and Will. The total number of out-of-state students (Figure 6) was 1,079. The on-campus international student population (Table 12) totaled 356, down 5.8 percent from Fall 2001, with international students accounting for 3.3 percent of total on-campus headcount enrollment. Students from Japan totaled 86, followed by Korea (48), Myanmar (33), People’s Republic of China (22), India (21) and Germany (14). Figure 4. On-Campus Iowa and Missouri Border County Enrollments Fall Terms 1998-2002 300 245 260 273 250 252 20 24 23 18 17 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 200 100 0 Iowa Missouri TABLE 10. ON-CAMPUS IOWA AND MISSOURI BORDER COUNTY ENROLLMENTS, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 78 53 75 67 273 75 39 74 62 250 83 33 81 55 252 4 9 8 3 24 7 7 7 2 23 4 2 8 4 18 3 8 6 0 17 284 296 268 269 IOWA (Counties include: Des Moines, Lee, Louisa, Muscatine, and Scott) Continuing Undergraduates* 48 60 New Freshmen** 45 46 New Transfers** 83 90 Total Graduates 69 64 TOTAL 245 260 MISSOURI (Counties include: Clark, Lewis, and Marion) Continuing Undergraduates* 1 New Freshmen** 10 New Transfers** 6 Total Graduates 3 TOTAL 20 TOTAL IOWA & MISSOURI 265 *Students who were enrolled previously and continue to show one of the above listed counties as their county of origin. **Fall matrics only. TABLE 11. UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE ON-CAMPUS DISTRIBUTION OF ILLINOIS STUDENTS BY HOME COUNTY, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 County 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Adams Alexander Bond Boone Brown Bureau Calhoun Carroll Cass Champaign Christian Clark Clay Clinton Coles Cook Crawford Cumberland DeKalb DeWitt Douglas DuPage Edgar Edwards Effingham Fayette Ford Franklin Fulton Gallatin Greene Grundy Hamilton Hancock Hardin Henderson Henry Iroquois Jackson Jasper 276 29 35 56 5 38 67 33 16 4 11 5 1,860 1 1 57 11 7 506 4 10 1 2 4 323 16 26 287 72 191 16 4 4 293 1 23 32 57 4 41 63 37 21 3 12 8 1,845 1 58 14 7 578 4 2 7 1 6 4 322 21 36 303 2 84 174 18 5 2 327 1 2 17 31 44 9 39 66 42 24 4 11 7 1,828 1 1 57 11 8 589 4 1 5 1 5 1 320 1 27 33 305 1 101 154 20 8 2 331 1 4 19 32 48 8 46 73 51 23 3 14 10 1,875 2 65 10 4 619 3 2 3 9 5 2 287 27 33 316 1 115 138 17 7 3 388 1 2 25 34 47 9 42 69 56 27 1 2 19 11 1,865 4 80 10 1 678 4 1 7 7 7 1 315 28 34 321 129 132 22 4 3 TABLE 11. (Continued) County 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Jefferson Jersey JoDaviess Johnson Kane Kankakee Kendall Knox Lake LaSalle Lawrence Lee Livingston Logan McDonough McHenry McLean Macon Macoupin Madison Marion Marshall Mason Massac Menard Mercer Monroe Montgomery Morgan Moultrie Ogle Peoria Perry Piatt Pike Pope Pulaski Putnam Randolph Richland 2 36 39 1 219 45 36 236 309 54 50 47 26 1,400 240 60 62 31 101 4 19 66 23 82 11 37 88 1 68 248 2 6 58 3 5 1 4 34 45 2 240 43 49 228 336 39 47 52 37 1,318 276 56 54 34 103 3 16 74 1 28 83 16 35 89 1 72 264 5 3 45 3 4 1 5 27 42 2 257 40 45 243 379 53 55 53 38 1,237 282 56 64 39 111 4 22 77 31 92 16 30 80 3 62 263 4 3 46 2 3 1 6 23 48 4 271 36 52 238 425 56 1 57 43 43 1,236 263 54 65 38 125 5 23 66 31 98 12 30 97 5 65 274 4 3 45 3 4 3 5 15 52 3 332 35 73 260 468 71 1 67 36 49 1,202 283 51 63 51 113 5 23 63 25 79 10 22 89 5 80 286 3 4 59 6 5 5 TABLE 11. (Continued) County Rock Island St. Clair Saline Sangamon Schuyler Scott Shelby Stark Stephenson Tazewell Union Vermilion Wabash Warren Washington Wayne White Whiteside Will Williamson Winnebago Woodford TOTALS %Inc (Dec) over Prev Yr Total as % of on-campus HDCT enrollment 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 293 62 2 128 88 11 7 22 53 132 3 14 1 158 3 1 4 104 227 173 39 304 55 1 149 82 17 8 21 51 145 4 13 168 1 6 93 268 1 194 34 326 67 3 182 90 17 7 20 63 138 4 13 4 163 1 9 99 294 3 196 30 289 60 2 194 95 20 6 14 65 157 4 16 3 167 2 7 93 294 3 206 32 279 45 2 196 91 21 3 18 92 158 3 16 4 170 4 2 10 112 311 3 202 24 9,219 9,444 9,604 9,787 10,151 2.7 2.4 1.7 1.9 3.7 92.0 91.8 91.7 92.3 92.7 NOTE: Top ten 2002 counties are highlighted. Students from 95 Illinois counties Jo Daviess 52 Figure 5. On-Campus Illinois Students by Home County, Fall 2002 Boone Stephenson 25 McHenry 92 Winnebago 283 202 Carroll 42 Ogle 80 Whiteside 112 Rock Island 279 Mercer 79 Warren 170 Stark 18 Knox 260 Peoria 286 Henderson 129 Hancock McDonough 1202 321 Lee 67 Bureau 47 Henry 132 Fulton 315 Mason 63 De Kalb 80 Putnam 6 Marshall 23 La Salle 71 Kane 332 Du Page 678 Cook 1865 Kendall 73 Will 311 Grundy 34 Kankakee 35 Livingston 36 Woodford 24 McLean 51 Tazewell 158 Lake 468 Iroquois 22 Ford 7 Vermilion De Witt 16 Champaign 10 56 Menard Piatt Adams Cass Brown 25 4 388 69 Macon 34 Douglas 63 Morgan Sangamon 1 Edgar Scott 89 196 Pike Moultrie 4 21 Coles 59 5 Christian 11 27 Greene Macoupin Shelby Clark 28 3 Cumberland 51 Montgomery 1 0 Calhoun 22 Jersey Effingham 9 Jasper Crawford 15 7 Fayette 4 3 7 Bond Madison 2 Clay Lawrence 113 2 Richland 1 Marion Clinton 5 5 19 Saint Clair Wayne Edwards 45 Washington Wabash 2 1 Jefferson 4 4 Monroe 5 10 Perry Hamilton White Randolph 3 0 Franklin 10 5 1 Schuyler 91 Logan 49 Jackson 4 Union 3 Alexander 1 Williamson 3 SalineGallatin 2 0 Johnson Pope 3 0 Pulaski 0 Massac 0 Hardin 0 0 1 to 50 51 to 275 276 to 1866 Figure 6. Origin of All Out-of-State Students, Fall 2002 Washington 6 Montana 2 North Dakota 4 Oregon 0 Idaho 1 Wyoming 0 California 25 Utah 2 Arizona 6 Vermont 0 Michigan 11 Iowa 725 Illinois Colorado 9 Kansas 9 Oklahoma 4 New Mexico 5 Missouri 54 Kentucky 6 Tennessee 7 Arkansas 1 Mississippi 7 Texas 49 Ohio 8 Indiana 11 Alabama 3 Pennsylvania 7 Maryland 4 West Virginia Virginia 2 8 North Carolina 9 South Carolina 1 Georgia 3 Louisiana 2 Florida 21 Hawaii 0 New Jersey 6 Delaware Alaska 0 Maine 1 New Hampshire 1 New York Massachusetts 1 8 Connecticut 1 Rhode Island 0 Wisconsin 31 South Dakota 0 Nebraska 6 Nevada 1 Minnesota 11 0 District of Columbia 0 TABLE 12. ORIGIN OF ON-CAMPUS INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 Country Albania Armenia Austria Bahamas Bangladesh Belarus Bolivia Botswana Brazil Bulgaria Cambodia Canada China, People's Rep of China, Republic of (Taiwan) Colombia Costa Rica Cyprus Dominican Republic Ecuador Estonia Ethiopia Finland Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Haiti Honduras Hong Kong India Indonesia Iran Israel Italy Ivory Coast Japan Kazakhstan Kenya Korea Kuwait Lithuania Malaysia Mexico 1998 1 2 2 5 1 1 16 11 2 1 2 1 1 11 2 12 12 3 1 91 9 73 22 4 1999 3 4 13 33 10 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 12 2 1 21 8 3 1 87 8 72 2 15 5 2000 2 1 7 1 13 34 9 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 2 1 1 24 10 1 82 1 5 64 1 12 11 2001 1 4 1 1 5 1 2 9 25 9 4 1 1 12 1 1 1 1 15 4 2 1 1 82 1 6 61 1 10 15 2002 1 2 1 1 1 8 2 1 6 22 10 1 1 1 14 1 2 1 21 1 1 1 1 86 1 7 48 1 5 8 Country Mongolia Morocco Mozambique Myanmar (formerly Burma) Nepal Netherlands Nicaragua Nigeria Norway Oman Pakistan Panama Philippines Poland Romania Russia Saudi Arabia Scotland Senegal South Africa Spain Sudan Swaziland Sweden Thailand Trinidad and Tobago Turkey Turkmenistan United Arab Emirates United Kingdom USSR Uzbekistan Venezuela Yemen Yugoslavia Zaire Zambia TOTALS 1998 1 2 11 1 2 6 1 1 12 1 2 1 1 4 10 4 5 1 1 - 1999 1 1 12 2 2 1 7 1 2 2 1 19 1 1 1 6 10 2 1 5 1 1 1 1 2000 1 13 3 1 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 22 1 1 5 6 1 2 8 1 1 - 2001 1 1 23 4 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 20 1 3 1 5 6 1 4 1 8 1 1 - 2002 1 1 33 11 2 1 1 12 1 1 2 2 10 1 1 1 1 3 5 3 1 3 1 1 - 353 390 386 378 356 10.5 (1.0) (2.1) (5.8) 3.7 3.6 3.3 %Inc (Dec) over Prev Yr (12.8) Total as % of on-campus HDCT enroll. 3.6 NOTE: Top ten 2002 countries are highlighted. 3.7 FRESHMEN PROFILE Selected characteristics of first-time freshmen for Fall 2002 are shown in Table 13. The first-time freshmen population is comprised of 51.1 percent males and 48.9 percent females, compared to Fall 2001 first-time freshmen enrollment of 50.1 percent males and 49.9 percent females. Of the 1,939 first-time freshmen 1,781 (91.8 percent) graduated from Illinois high schools. Over 60 percent of the 2002 new freshmen graduated in the top 50 percent of their high school class. The total number of new freshmen from the Iowa border counties decreased from 39 students in 2001 to 33 in 2002. The number of new freshmen from Missouri border counties increased from 2 students in 2001 to 8 students in 2002. Macomb Senior High School sent the largest number of new freshmen, 40, to WIU. Of the 1,939 first-time freshmen, 1,505, or 77.6 percent, received financial aid. The average financial aid package totaled $5,516. The number of Fall 2002 first-time freshmen majors (Table 14) shows that programs with the largest number of majors include law enforcement & justice administration (290), elementary education (117), computer science (76), psychology (74), and biology (71). Table 15 and Figure 7 show the 4-, 5- and 6-year graduation rates for all first-time, full-time freshmen from 1994 through 1998. Tables 15A and 15B show the same graduation information for freshmen admitted under regular admission standards as well as freshmen admitted under special admission standards. Table 16 shows the average number of years to graduate by program and college for students entering as new freshmen. Table 17 shows the distribution of all first-time freshmen ACT composite scores. The average ACT decreased slightly from 21.7 in 2001 to 21.6 in 2002. The ACT composite scores for freshmen admitted under regular admission standards.decreased from 22.7 in Fall 2001 to 22.4 in Fall 2002 (Table 17 and Figure 8). The distribution of on-campus Illinois first-time freshmen by home county (Table 18, Figure 9) shows Cook County as the leading source of first-time freshmen with 417 students, up 5.3 percent from 2001. Students from DuPage County increased by 52, from 131 in Fall 2001 to 183 in Fall 2002. Other counties in the top 10 include Lake, Adams, Kane, McDonough, McHenry, Peoria, Will, and Winnebago. TABLE 13. FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN CLASS PROFILE, FALL 2002 DISTRIBUTION BY RACE AND SEX Race HIGH SCHOOL BACKGROUND Male Female Total Percent* White Black Hispanic Asian American Native American International Other 855 48 41 15 4 7 20 799 90 30 7 0 7 16 1,654 138 71 22 4 14 36 86.9 7.3 3.7 1.2 0.2 0.7 1.9 Total 990 949 1,939 100.0 Percent *Excludes Other 51.1 48.9 HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR CLASS RANK Class Rank Upper 10% 20% 25% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 75% 80% 90% 100% 1,781 Out-of-State High School 88 GED Equivalency or Unknown High School 51 Foreign Secondary Schools 19 Total 1,939 DISTRIBUTION BY RESIDENCY Number Percent* 116 336 480 602 882 1,171 1,427 1,622 1,693 1,755 1,811 1,939 6.0 17.3 24.8 31.0 45.5 60.4 73.6 83.7 87.3 90.5 93.4 100.0 AVERAGE PERCENTILE *Excludes 132 students with no high school rank. Illinois Residents Out-of-state Residents Foreign Residents 1,862 63 14 Total New Freshmen 1,939 Iowa Border County Students Missouri Border County Students 33 8 Total Iowa Students Total Missouri Students 36 12 57.5 HIGH SCHOOLS SENDING THE GREATEST NUMBER OF FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN TO WIU Macomb Senior High School William Fremond High School St. Charles High School Quincy Senior High School HD Jacobs High School Lake Park West High School Naperville North High School Illinois High School Graduates FINANCIAL AID 40 34 33 32 19 19 18 Total New Freshmen 1,939 Served by all financial programs 1,505 Received scholarships, grants, fellowships, tuition and waivers, or traineeships 1,210 Received loans 1,143 Employed by institution AVERAGE AID PACKAGE: NOTE: Students may receive aid from one or more of the three categories listed above. 145 $5,516 TABLE 14. MAJORS OF FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN, FALL TERMS 1999-2002* FALL 1999 ENR PCT FALL 2000 ENR PCT FALL 2001 ENR PCT FALL 2002 ENR PCT COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Biology Chemistry Clinical Laboratory Science Economics English French Geography Geology History Journalism Mathematics Philosophy Physics Political Science Pre-Architecture Pre-Chemical Engineering Pre-Dentistry Pre-Engineering Pre-Medical Pre-Nursing Pre-Optometry Pre-Pharmacy Pre-Physical Therapy Pre-Social Work Psychology Sociology Spanish TOTAL ARTS & SCIENCES 47 6 2 0 29 1 8 2 26 15 14 1 4 26 7 1 4 15 23 5 1 3 19 13 84 6 4 366 2.75 0.35 0.12 0.00 1.70 0.06 0.47 0.12 1.52 0.88 0.82 0.06 0.23 1.52 0.41 0.06 0.23 0.88 1.35 0.29 0.06 0.18 1.11 0.76 4.92 0.35 0.23 21.44 52 6 1 0 21 2 4 3 19 22 19 1 2 36 8 0 1 16 35 14 4 7 13 15 66 2 1 370 2.90 0.53 0.20 0.00 0.93 0.20 0.20 0.27 0.86 0.73 1.33 0.00 0.27 1.12 0.66 0.00 0.06 0.89 1.95 0.78 0.22 0.39 0.72 0.84 3.68 0.11 0.06 20.62 56 8 2 0 20 1 3 3 24 28 14 1 2 33 5 1 4 22 33 11 1 6 13 9 83 7 4 394 3.28 0.47 0.12 0.00 1.17 0.06 0.18 0.18 1.40 1.64 0.82 0.06 0.12 1.93 0.29 0.06 0.23 1.29 1.93 0.64 0.06 0.35 0.76 0.53 4.86 0.41 0.23 23.05 71 7 4 0 21 1 7 2 40 15 19 5 2 43 7 3 5 14 27 8 1 18 10 21 74 6 7 438 3.66 0.36 0.21 0.00 1.08 0.05 0.36 0.10 2.06 0.77 0.98 0.26 0.10 2.22 0.36 0.15 0.26 0.72 1.39 0.41 0.05 0.93 0.52 1.08 3.82 0.31 0.36 22.59 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Agriculture Sci Computer Science Graphic Communication Industrial Ed Industrial Tech Information Management Mfg Engineering Tech Pre-Ag Engineering Pre-Forestry Pre-Vet Medicine Pre-Accountancy Pre-Economics Pre-Finance Pre-Human Resource Mgt Pre-Information Management Pre-Management 29 119 -1 20 0 0 1 1 7 56 4 12 4 11 60 1.70 6.97 -0.06 1.17 0.00 0.00 0.06 0.06 0.41 3.28 0.23 0.70 0.23 0.64 3.51 31 113 -0 0 0 22 2 1 7 49 4 16 4 11 51 1.73 6.30 -0.00 0.00 0.00 1.23 0.11 0.06 0.39 2.73 0.22 0.89 0.22 0.61 2.84 27 69 -0 0 0 27 0 0 15 46 4 17 5 8 30 1.58 4.04 -0.00 0.00 0.00 1.58 0.00 0.00 0.88 2.69 0.23 0.99 0.29 0.47 1.76 27 76 5 0 0 0 21 1 0 8 28 3 19 3 4 51 1.39 3.92 0.26 0.00 0.00 0.00 1.08 0.05 0.00 0.41 1.44 0.15 0.98 0.15 0.21 2.63 TABLE 14. (Continued) Pre-Marketing Pre-Business Undecided TOTAL PRE-BUSINESS TOTAL BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY FALL 1999 ENR PCT 38 2.23 20 1.17 205 12.01 383 22.44 FALL 2000 ENR PCT 46 2.56 26 1.45 207 11.54 383 21.35 FALL 2001 ENR PCT 48 2.81 21 1.23 179 10.47 317 18.55 FALL 2002 ENR PCT 56 2.89 27 1.39 191 9.85 329 16.97 COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Bilingual/Bicultural Ed Community Health Elementary Education (and Pre-El Ed) Family & Consumer Science Health Services Management Instr Tech & Telecommunications Law Enforcement & Justice Adm (& Pre-Law Enf) Physical Education Recreation, Parks and Tourism Administration Special Education TOTAL EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES 9 0 128 14 0 5 182 36 12 33 419 0.53 0.00 7.50 0.82 0.00 0.29 10.66 2.11 0.70 1.93 24.55 5 3 92 31 1 4 246 28 12 27 449 0.28 0.17 5.13 1.73 0.06 0.22 13.71 1.56 0.67 1.51 25.03 5 0 91 28 0 7 227 53 12 27 450 0.29 0.00 5.32 1.64 0.00 0.41 13.28 3.10 0.70 1.58 26.33 3 3 117 34 0 11 290 41 12 32 543 0.15 0.15 6.03 1.75 0.00 0.57 14.96 2.11 0.62 1.65 28.00 COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION Art Broadcasting Communication Comm Science & Disorders Music Theatre TOTAL FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION 19 0 78 6 49 12 164 1.11 0.00 4.57 0.35 2.87 0.70 9.61 19 24 36 8 56 10 153 1.06 1.34 2.01 0.45 3.12 0.56 8.53 21 32 30 7 39 13 142 1.23 1.87 1.76 0.41 2.28 0.76 8.31 22 38 27 6 51 9 153 1.13 1.96 1.39 0.31 2.63 0.46 7.89 OTHER Board of Trustees General Orientation Individual Studies Unclassified TOTAL OTHER 1 372 1 1 375 0.06 21.79 0.06 0.06 21.97 4 434 0 1 439 0.22 24.19 0.00 0.06 24.47 4 401 0 1 406 0.23 23.46 0.00 0.06 23.76 1 475 0 0 476 0.05 24.50 0.00 0.00 24.55 1,707 100.00 1,794 100.00 1,709 100.00 GRAND TOTAL - NEW FRESHMEN *Includes Extension & WIU-QC students 1,939 100.00 TABLE 15. GRADUATION RATES OF WIU FIRST-TIME, FULL-TIME FRESHMEN 4, 5 AND 6 YEAR RATES TOTAL FIRST-TIME FULL-TIME FRESHMEN Proportion of WIU First-Time Freshmen Graduating From WIU Within: Year 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 N 1,439 1,538 1,483 1,602 1,749 4 Years 22.4 25.3 29.0 28.0 28.5 5 Years 42.0 45.0 47.3 51.2 6 Years 46.6 49.1 50.7 TABLE 15A. GRADUATION RATES OF WIU FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN, REGULAR ADMITS 4, 5, AND 6 YEAR RATES ADMITTED UNDER REGULAR ADMISSION STANDARDS Proportion of WIU First-Time Freshmen Graduating From WIU Within: Year 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 N 1,018 1,142 1,118 1,196 1,327 4 Years 25.4 28.8 32.0 31.4 30.7 5 Years 46.6 47.9 50.1 52.9 6 Years 50.8 51.2 53.5 TABLE 15B. GRADUATION RATES OF WIU FIRST-TIME FULL-TIME FRESHMEN, SPECIAL ADMITS 4, 5, AND 6 YEAR RATES ADMITTED UNDER SPECIAL ADMISSION STANDARDS Proportion of WIU First-Time Freshmen Graduating From WIU Within: Year 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 N 421 396 365 406 422 4 Years 15.0 15.2 19.6 18 21.6 5 Years 31.0 36.9 38.7 46.1 NOTE: Students graduating within n years includes all students who graduated by the summer term of the nth year. NOTE: The cohort selection is based on IPEDS GRS procedures. 6 Years 36.4 42.9 42.0 Figure 7. Graduation Rates of WIU First-Time Full-Time Freshmen Four-, Five-, and Six-Year Rates 60 51.2 50 42.0 45.0 47.3 46.6 49.1 50.7 40 30 25.3 29.0 28.0 28.5 22.4 20 10 0 Four-Year Rate Year Entered Five-Year Rate 1994 1995 1996 Six-Year Rate 1997 1998 TABLE 16. AVERAGE NUMBER OF YEARS TO GRADUATE BY PROGRAM AND COLLEGE FOR STUDENTS ENTERING AS NEW FRESHMEN* College/Program COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Biology Chemistry Economics English French Geography Geology History Journalism Mathematics Medical Technology (Clinical Lab. Sciences) Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Social Work Sociology Spanish Women's Studies COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy Agriculture Computer Science Economics Finance Human Resource Management Industrial Technology Information Management Management Manufacturing Engineering Marketing COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Bilingual/Bicultural Community Health Elementary Education Family & Consumer Sciences Health Services Management Instructional Technology & Telecommunications Law Enforcement & Justice Administration Physical Education Recreation, Park & Tourism Administration Special Education FINE ARTS & COMMUNICATION Art (B.A.) Art (B.F.A.) Communication Communication Sciences & Disorders Music Theatre OTHER Individual Studies Board of Trustees **TOTAL UNIVERSITY *Represents graduates from Fall 1997 to Summer 2002 **Excludes Board of Trustees program Average years to graduate 4.8 4.8 4.3 5.0 5.1 4.5 4.6 5.2 5.0 4.8 5.0 4.0 5.4 5.7 4.4 4.4 4.8 4.9 4.3 4.0 4.5 4.9 4.0 4.5 4.1 4.4 4.3 5.0 4.4 4.5 4.4 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.1 4.7 4.8 4.5 4.4 4.3 4.7 4.8 4.5 4.6 4.8 5.0 4.4 4.0 5.3 4.7 4.6 5.1 8.5 4.6 TABLE 17. DISTRIBUTION OF ALL FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN BY ENHANCED ACT COMPOSITE STANDARD SCORES, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 Standard Score 1998 Total % of Total 1999 Total % of Total 2000 Total % of Total 2001 Total % of Total 2002 Total % of Total 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 & Below 1 3 9 22 28 36 62 54 100 127 186 202 175 195 161 174 83 95 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.5 1.2 1.6 2.0 3.5 3.0 5.6 7.2 10.5 11.4 9.9 11.0 9.1 9.8 4.7 5.4 3 11 12 23 30 53 69 101 111 156 190 180 171 189 157 69 90 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.6 0.7 1.3 1.8 3.1 4.0 5.9 6.5 9.1 11.1 10.5 10.0 11.1 9.2 4.0 5.3 3 1 5 7 11 28 39 50 76 107 127 146 174 202 187 184 169 92 97 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.3 0.4 0.6 1.6 2.2 2.8 4.2 6.0 7.1 8.1 9.7 11.3 10.4 10.3 9.4 5.1 5.4 1 5 9 18 28 31 51 77 115 122 146 198 187 185 181 140 85 66 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.3 0.5 1.1 1.6 1.8 3.0 4.5 6.7 7.1 8.5 11.6 10.9 10.8 10.6 8.2 5.0 3.9 2 5 4 7 16 20 27 71 78 109 150 188 243 212 205 165 202 99 60 0.0 0.1 0.3 0.2 0.4 0.8 1.0 1.4 3.7 4.0 5.6 7.7 9.7 12.5 10.9 10.6 8.5 10.4 5.1 3.1 SUBTOTAL 1,713 96.6 1,615 94.6 1,705 95.0 1,645 96.3 1,863 96.1 60 3.4 92 5.4 89 5.0 64 3.7 76 3.9 1,773 100.0 1,707 100.0 1,794 100.0 1,709 100.0 1,939 100.0 OAS Admits 429 24.2 401 23.5 420 23.4 416 24.3 367 18.9 Mean ScoreRegular Admits 22.6 -- 22.5 -- 22.5 -- 22.7 -- 22.4 -- 21.5 -- 21.5 -- 21.4 -- 21.7 -- 21.6 -- -- 21.5 -- 21.3 -- 21.6 -- Not Available -- No Official Score TOTAL Mean Score-All WIU First-Time Freshmen Nat'l Avg.-Enrolled 21.4 Students* OAS - Office of Academic Services. *Master's level institutions Figure 8. First-Time Freshmen Mean ACT Scores Fall Terms 1998-2002 23 22.7 22.6 22.5 22.5 22.5 22.4 22 21.7 21.6 21.5 21.5 21.5 21.4 21 20.5 20 1998 1999 2000 All Admits Regular Admits 2001 2002 TABLE 18. ON-CAMPUS DISTRIBUTION OF ILLINOIS FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN BY HOME COUNTY, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 County Adams Alexander Bond Boone Brown Bureau Calhoun Carroll Cass Champaign Christian Clark Clay Clinton Coles Cook Crawford Cumberland DeKalb DeWitt Douglas DuPage Edgar Edwards Effingham Fayette Ford Franklin Fulton Gallatin Greene Grundy Hamilton Hancock Hardin Henderson Henry Iroquois Jackson Jasper Jefferson Jersey JoDaviess Johnson Kane 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 40 3 7 4 2 5 7 6 4 2 500 1 14 4 2 122 1 2 1 25 1 6 27 6 29 4 2 5 12 37 37 1 1 4 8 6 10 3 2 3 396 13 4 2 158 1 1 1 27 9 11 39 1 10 19 5 3 13 1 55 61 2 1 4 1 5 3 8 9 7 2 2 396 12 4 137 1 2 50 1 4 6 14 1 13 21 11 1 5 1 396 1 18 1 131 1 4 15 4 8 29 11 15 6 1 1 5 7 3 50 59 1 8 2 8 7 9 12 7 4 3 417 24 2 183 1 1 1 31 4 9 37 9 19 8 1 6 108 - 30 1 7 7 41 - 6 13 5 2 - 1 2 10 - 61 TABLE 18. (Continued) County Kankakee Kendall Knox Lake LaSalle Lawrence Lee Livingston Logan McDonough McHenry McLean Macon Macoupin Madison Marion Marshall Mason Massac Menard Mercer Monroe Montgomery Morgan Moultrie Ogle Peoria Perry Piatt Pike Pope Pulaski Putnam Randolph Richland Rock Island St. Clair Saline Sangamon Schuyler Scott Shelby Stark Stephenson Tazewell Union Vermilion 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 11 6 16 99 8 6 13 8 107 57 18 9 7 28 1 1 3 5 17 3 19 22 19 31 3 6 1 34 11 1 20 13 5 1 3 11 22 1 2 8 9 16 86 5 8 12 3 100 68 8 13 10 21 3 10 1 3 11 1 4 14 19 49 1 1 8 42 6 34 9 5 1 2 12 35 1 7 7 25 92 9 16 6 6 114 62 16 15 10 25 1 6 11 6 18 4 6 11 2 14 40 1 7 1 38 20 45 14 4 2 17 22 3 4 12 18 75 13 11 5 14 110 61 11 8 9 27 2 3 8 3 15 7 19 13 42 1 10 3 30 12 44 16 5 1 8 23 2 7 24 19 114 18 12 7 15 81 60 13 12 15 23 2 8 4 11 3 3 22 1 25 54 1 1 13 2 25 6 37 4 2 4 20 29 1 2 TABLE 18. (Continued) County Wabash Warren Washington Wayne White Whiteside Will Williamson Winnebago Woodford TOTALS %Inc (Dec) over Prev Yr Total as % of on-campus HDCT enrollment 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 18 23 63 33 5 21 10 53 33 - 1 16 15 67 30 6 15 1 15 61 43 5 22 1 3 30 68 1 51 4 1,671 1,600 1,681 1,620 1,861 7.6 16.7 NOTE: Top ten 2002 counties are highlighted. Students from 74 Illinois counties. (4.2) 15.5 5.1 16.0 (3.6) 14.9 15.3 17.0 Figure 9. On-Campus Illinois First-Time Freshmen by Home County Fall 2002 Jo Daviess 6 Stephenson Boone 20 Winnebago 8 McHenry 51 60 Carroll 7 Ogle 25 Whiteside 30 Mercer 11 Hancock 37 McDonough 81 Schuyler 4 Adams 59 Brown 2 Pike 13 Calhoun 0 Lee 12 Bureau 8 Henry 19 Warren 22 Kane 108 Cook Du Page 417 183 Kendall 24 Rock Island 25 Henderson 9 De Kalb 24 Lake 114 Knox 19 Stark 4 Peoria 54 Fulton 31 Mason 8 Cass 9 La Salle 18 Putnam 2 Marshall 2 Woodford 4 Logan 15 Menard 4 Grundy 9 Kankakee 7 Livingston 7 McLean 13 Tazewell 29 Will 68 De Witt 2 Iroquois 8 Ford 0 Champaign 12 Piatt 1 Vermilion 2 Macon 12 Douglas Sangamon Edgar Morgan 0 37 Moultrie Scott 1 22 Christian 1 Coles 2 7 3 Shelby Macoupin 0 Clark Greene 15 Cumberland 0 Montgomery 4 0 3 Jersey Effingham Jasper Crawford 0 1 Fayette 0 0 1 Bond Madison 1 Clay 23 Richland Lawrence 0 Marion 0 Clinton 0 0 4 Saint Clair Wayne Edwards Wabash Washington 6 0 0 0 Jefferson Monroe 1 0 3 Hamilton Perry 0 White Randolph 1 Franklin 3 0 0 Jackson 1 Union 1 Alexander 0 Saline Williamson 0 1 Johnson 0 Pope 0 Pulaski Massac 0 0 Gallatin 0 Hardin 0 0 1 to 7 7 to 75 76 to 418 TRANSFER AND GRADUATE PROFILES Selected characteristics of Fall 2002 transfer students are shown in Table 19. Programs with the largest number of transfer majors include law enforcement and justice administration (207), elementary education (148), and the Board of Trustees Bachelor of Arts (90). The majors with the highest transfer enrollment by location include law enforcement and justice administration on-campus (186), elementary education in the Quad Cities (35) and the Board of Trustees Bachelor of Arts at extension locations (56). Of the 1,427 transfers, 1,214 are enrolled on-campus, 153 are enrolled in the Quad Cities and 60 are enrolled at extension locations. Forty-eight percent of the total transfer students transferred to WIU at the junior level. Black Hawk College-Quad Cities sent 142 transfer students to WIU, while Spoon River College sent 96, and Carl Sandburg College sent 86. Transfer student enrollment for on- and off-campus (Table 20) increased from 1,375 in 2001 to 1,427 in 2002. Transfer students from other states increased 18.1 percent from Fall 2001 to Fall 2002. A profile of 2002 graduate students is shown in Table 21. Graduate enrollment totaled 2,428 in Fall 2002, up from 2,451 in Fall 2001. Almost 65 percent of these graduate students were enrolled part-time (less than 9 hours). New graduate student enrollment totaled 657 for Fall 2002 (down 3.5 percent). A total of 268 new graduate students indicated that WIU was their previous school, while 143 indicated their previous school was an ?other” Illinois school and 172 indicated their previous school was out-of-state. The majority of international students are enrolled in the College of Business and Technology (84 students, or 43.3 percent of all international graduate students). Graduate and teaching assistants totaled 471 in Fall 2002. This is up from 458 in Fall 2001. The average age of a WIU graduate student is 33.0, down from 33.9 in Fall 2001. Approximately 28 percent of the total female graduate students are age 40 or over compared to 20 percent of the total male graduate students in the same age category. TABLE 19. NEW TRANSFER PROFILE, FALL 2002 TOP TEN MAJORS OF TRANSFER STUDENTS MOST POPULAR TRANSFER MAJOR BY LOCATION LEJA/Pre-LEJA 207 On-Campus: LEJA/Pre-LEJA 186 Elementary Education/Pre-El Ed 148 Quad Cities: Elementary Education/Pre El Ed 35 Extension: Board of Trustees 56 Board of Trustees 90 Physical Education 66 Psychology 65 Agriculture 61 Computer Science 44 Pre-Business Accountancy/Accountancy 40 Communication 33 On-Campus 1,214 History 32 Quad Cities: 153 TRANSFERS BY LOCATION Extension TOTAL TRANSFERS 60 1,427 DISTRIBUTION BY RACE, CLASS AND SEX Freshmen M Sophomore F M Junior F M Senior F 296 F 49 M 48 F 591 TOTAL White 124 91 145 149 Black 12 14 19 12 19 8 1 3 51 37 88 7 2 9 5 14 14 5 2 35 23 58 Hispanic 273 M Total 584 1,175 Asian Amer. 0 1 8 1 3 1 1 3 12 6 18 Amer. Ind. 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 2 4 Foreign 1 0 2 4 7 3 2 0 12 7 19 Other 4 4 6 6 25 17 3 0 38 27 65 149 112 189 178 342 340 61 56 741 686 1,427 TOTAL GRAND TOTAL 261 367 TOP TEN TRANSFER COLLEGES Black Hawk College-Quad Cities 682 117 1,427 TRANSFERS BY FULL-TIME/PART-TIME 142 Full-Time 1,242 Spoon River College 96 Part-Time 185 Carl Sandburg College 86 John Wood Comm College 72 Illinois Central College 54 College of DuPage 50 Southeastern CC (Burlington) 49 College of Lake County 36 Black Hawk College East 34 Scott Community College 34 TOTAL TRANSFERS 1,427 TABLE 20. SUMMARY OF TRANSFER STUDENT ORIGIN, FALL TERMS 1998-2002* Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Origin Off-campus Transfers On-campus Transfers Jr/Community Colleges in IL Senior Colleges in IL Colleges in Other States TOTAL ON-CAMPUS GRAND TOTAL Off-campus Transfers On-campus Transfers Jr/Community Colleges in IL Senior Colleges in IL Colleges in Other States TOTAL ON-CAMPUS GRAND TOTAL Off-campus Transfers On-campus Transfers Jr/Community Colleges in IL Senior Colleges in IL Colleges in Other States TOTAL ON-CAMPUS GRAND TOTAL Off-campus Transfers On-campus Transfers Jr/Community Colleges in IL Senior Colleges in IL Colleges in Other States TOTAL ON-CAMPUS GRAND TOTAL Off-campus Transfers On-campus Transfers Jr/Community Colleges in IL Senior Colleges in IL Colleges in Other States TOTAL ON-CAMPUS GRAND TOTAL FR 8 SO 26 JR 206 SR 94 TOTAL 334 139 23 37 199 207 200 38 71 309 335 367 30 114 511 717 28 19 15 62 156 734 110 237 1,081 1,415 4 21 200 96 321 157 24 36 217 221 229 40 52 321 342 391 28 113 532 732 28 13 28 69 165 805 105 229 1,139 1,460 9 21 140 79 249 148 35 43 226 235 229 32 64 325 346 407 25 121 553 693 19 10 14 43 122 803 102 242 1,147 1,396 18 23 159 66 266 150 35 41 226 244 239 47 73 359 382 345 28 101 474 633 24 9 17 50 116 758 119 232 1,109 1,375 5 17 141 50 213 170 39 47 256 261 233 40 77 350 367 390 25 126 541 682 26 17 24 67 117 819 121 274 1,214 1,427 *Includes transfer students with matriculation dates of June and August % DIFF PREV YEAR (1.1) 2.7 5.4 3.2 0.7 (4.4) (3.3) (1.5) 9.5 3.8 TABLE 21. GRADUATE PROFILE, FALL 2002 TOTAL GRADUATE STUDENT ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGE Total On-Campus Off-Campus Graduates Arts and Sciences Business and Technology Education and Human Services Fine Arts and Communication Other* 287 214 397 109 194 TOTAL 1,201 *Includes unclassified, advanced graduates and WESL. #Full-Time = 9 or more credit hours. Teaching Assistants Arts & Sciences Business & Technology Fine Arts & Communication Total Teaching Assistants GRAND TOTAL Part-Time In-State International New Graduate Students 33 38 760 0 396 320 252 1,157 109 590 205 168 292 101 84 115 84 865 8 506 235 146 832 85 438 45 22 279 20 132 40 84 46 4 20 117 71 238 46 185 1,227 2,428 850 1,578 1,736 498 194 657 GRADUATE ASSISTANTS BY COLLEGE/AREA Arts and Sciences Business and Technology Education and Human Services Fine Arts and Communication Provost Libraries VP Adm. Services VP Adv. & Pub. Services VP Student Services Extended & Continuing Ed University Housing & Dining Union Campus Recreation Restricted Funds Total Graduate Assistants Full-Time# Out-ofState 99 39 59 41 46 3 1 20 27 2 20 9 11 74 451 9 8 3 20 471 NEW GRADUATE STUDENTS, BY COLLEGE/PREVIOUS SCHOOL Other U.S. WIU IL Non-IL International Arts & Sciences Business & Technology Education & Human Serv Fine Arts & Comm Other 49 32 91 23 73 24 6 60 7 46 28 6 71 16 51 16 27 16 0 15 TOTAL Total New Grad Students 268 657 143 172 74 AGE OF TOTAL GRADUATE STUDENTS Full-Time M F Part-Time M F 18-21 22-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-49 50-64 65+ Unknown 14 179 107 59 23 17 7 1 0 17 227 114 31 17 27 10 0 0 0 36 126 112 97 118 39 2 0 4 101 240 186 134 248 133 2 0 TOTAL 407 443 530 1,048 AVERAGE AGE: 33.0 MAJORS AND DEGREES Total headcount enrollment by degree program, race, sex and student level for Fall 2002 is shown in Table 22. The number of undergraduate majors (Table 23) increased from Fall 2001 to Fall 2002 in the College of Arts & Sciences (6.5%), the College of Education & Human Services (4.3%), and the College of Business and Technology (0.5%). The College of Fine Arts and Communication majors decreased by 0.7 percent. Programs with the largest number of majors include Law Enforcement and Justice Administration (1,318), Board of Trustees Bachelor of Arts (725), Elementary Education (454), Psychology (433), and Computer Science (362). Table 24 shows the number of undergraduates with second majors. The second majors with highest enrollment include Spanish (32), Psychology (24), Sociology (21), Law Enforcement and Justice Administration (11), and Political Science (13). The number of graduate majors (Table 25) decreased overall by 0.9 percent. Programs with the highest number of majors include Elementary Education (164), Law Enforcement and Justice Administration (147), Counseling and Guidance (122), Business Administration (121), Instructional Technology and Telecommunications (104), and Reading Specialist (104). Degrees conferred between July 1, 2001 and June 30, 2002 by degree program, race and sex are shown in Table 26. Undergraduate degrees conferred totaled 2,285 and graduate and advanced degrees conferred totaled 646. The total number of degrees conferred in FY2002 (Table 27) increased by 3.3 percent from FY2001. Bachelor degrees conferred increased from 2,164 to 2,285, or 5.6 percent, while the master's degree level decreased from 659 to 626, or 5.0 percent. Specialist degrees conferred increased from 14 in FY2001 to 20 in FY2002. TABLE 22. TOTAL HEADCOUNT ENROLLMENT BY DEGREE PROGRAM, RACE, SEX AND STUDENT LEVEL, FALL 2002 Non-resid. Black Alien Degree Program Undeclared/Unclassified Undergraduates Non-Hisp. Men Women Men Women Amer. Indian/ Asian/ Alaskan Native Pac. Islander Men Women White Hispanic Men Women Non-Hisp. Men Women Unknown Men Women Total Men Women Men Women 15 17 42 30 2 -- 13 2 26 10 530 438 19 11 647 508 B.S. in Agriculture 4 -- 1 -- 2 -- -- 1 3 -- 215 63 2 2 227 66 B.A. in Women's Studies -- -- 1 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 7 -- -- 2 9 B.A. in Communication -- 2 10 12 -- -- 1 3 6 6 137 187 3 4 157 214 B.A. in Journalism 2 3 4 11 -- -- -- 1 4 1 35 53 2 1 47 70 B.A. in Broadcasting -- 2 20 10 -- -- 4 -- 4 6 72 54 4 2 104 74 18 4 21 12 2 -- 6 3 9 -- 248 26 12 1 316 46 B.S.Ed. in Bilingual/Bicultural Education B.S. in Computer Science -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- -- 1 6 1 10 -- 1 2 18 B.S. in Instructional Technology and Telecommunications -- -- 12 11 -- 1 2 -- 2 1 56 20 4 -- 76 33 B.S.Ed. in Special Education -- -- 2 4 -- -- -- 1 1 4 29 164 -- 4 32 177 B.S.Ed. in Elementary Education -- 1 3 16 -- -- 1 5 5 23 73 721 4 14 86 780 B.S. in Community Health -- -- -- 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- 4 25 -- -- 4 27 B.S. in Physical Education 2 2 16 3 2 1 1 -- 8 4 228 126 6 2 263 138 B.S. in Industrial Technology -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 2 3 1 -- 3 3 B.S. in Manufacturing Engineering Technology -- 1 9 1 -- -- 1 -- 5 -- 189 11 10 -- 214 13 B.A. in French -- -- -- 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 3 1 1 1 6 B.A. in Spanish -- -- 1 2 -- -- -- -- 4 5 5 19 -- 2 10 28 B.S. in Family and Consumer Sciences 2 4 5 16 -- -- 1 2 2 5 31 159 2 3 43 189 B.A. in English 1 1 7 11 -- -- 2 -- 4 3 53 128 6 2 73 145 Board of Trustees Bachelor of Arts -- -- 20 26 2 3 4 1 11 10 292 311 19 26 348 377 B.A. and B.S. in Individual Studies 2 3 4 -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- 26 42 2 -- 35 45 B.S. in Biology 1 3 8 30 1 -- 3 5 6 7 122 213 10 10 151 268 B.S. in Mathematics 3 -- 2 3 -- -- 1 -- 5 -- 65 42 -- 1 76 46 B.S. in Recreation Park and Tourism Administration 2 1 3 1 -- 1 2 2 1 4 131 137 3 3 142 149 B.A. in Philosophy 1 -- 2 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- 12 3 -- -- 15 4 B.S. in Chemistry 1 1 3 11 -- -- -- -- -- -- 20 27 2 2 26 41 B.S. in Geology -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- 11 5 1 -- 13 5 B.S. in Physics 1 -- 1 1 1 -- -- -- -- -- 16 -- -- -- 19 1 B.S. in Psychology -- 5 9 32 -- -- 3 3 7 6 88 274 5 6 112 326 B.S. in Law Enforcement and Justice Administration 1 2 44 26 1 2 8 2 40 18 852 297 19 6 965 353 Bachelor of Social Work -- 2 2 16 -- -- -- -- 2 5 7 105 -- 3 11 131 B.A. in Economics 1 -- 1 1 -- -- -- -- 1 -- 22 3 -- -- 25 4 B.S. in Geography -- 1 -- 1 -- -- -- -- 2 -- 21 10 2 -- 25 12 B.A. in History -- -- 4 6 -- -- 3 1 3 1 154 56 4 2 168 66 B.A. in Political Science 1 1 9 12 1 1 1 1 5 5 3 76 49 5 98 69 TABLE 22. (Continued) Non-resid. Black Alien Degree Program Non-Hisp. Men Women Men Women Amer. Indian/ Asian/ Alaskan Native Pac. Islander Men Women White Hispanic Men Women Non-Hisp. Men Women Unknown Men Women Total Men Women Men Women B.A. in Sociology 1 3 5 13 -- -- -- -- 1 3 25 59 3 2 35 80 B.S. in Graphic Communication -- 1 1 2 -- -- 2 0 2 2 31 44 -- -- 36 49 B.A. in Theatre -- 1 2 2 -- -- -- 1 1 2 16 24 2 -- 21 30 B.A. in Art 3 3 5 6 -- 1 -- 2 1 3 37 74 5 2 51 91 Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art 1 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 11 11 -- 1 12 14 B.A. in Music -- 8 4 1 -- -- 1 -- 3 6 85 94 2 3 95 112 B.S. in Communication Sciences and Disorders -- -- 1 1 -- -- -- -- -- 3 -- 55 -- -- 1 59 B.S. in Health Services Management -- -- 1 3 -- -- -- -- -- -- 6 16 -- -- 7 19 B.S. in Clinical Laboratory Science B.B. in Management -- 1 -- 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- 2 12 -- -- 2 15 12 6 10 17 -- -- 1 5 9 5 200 116 8 1 240 150 B.B. in Accountancy 4 2 8 11 -- -- 1 3 7 3 78 158 -- 6 98 183 B.B. in Economics -- -- 1 2 -- -- -- 1 1 -- 21 7 -- -- 23 10 B.B. in Finance 1 -- 6 3 -- -- 1 1 2 1 76 43 3 1 89 49 B.B. in Human Resource Management 1 2 -- 4 -- -- -- -- -- -- 5 29 -- -- 6 35 B.B. in Information Management 1 1 4 6 -- -- 3 3 1 1 79 34 4 1 92 46 B.B. in Marketing 5 2 7 13 -- 1 2 2 2 8 135 120 3 6 154 152 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 87 87 321 399 14 11 69 51 198 166 4,631 4,687 178 134 5,498 5,535 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 8 12 5 8 3 -- -- 2 9 5 186 300 19 33 230 360 TOTAL BACHELORS AND UNCLASSIFIED/ UNDECLARED UNDERGRADUATES Undeclared/Unclassified Graduates M.A. in Public Communication and Broadcasting -- 1 2 -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- 4 19 -- 2 7 22 27 9 -- -- -- -- 2 -- -- -- 14 4 3 -- 46 13 M.S.Ed. in Educational Administration and Supervision -- -- 1 -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- 52 38 4 3 58 41 M.S. in Instructional Technology and Telecommunications 3 3 4 2 -- -- -- 1 1 2 24 43 11 10 43 61 M.S.Ed. in Educational and Interdisciplinary Studies 1 5 -- 2 -- -- -- 1 -- 5 19 46 1 7 21 66 M.S.Ed. in Special Education -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 4 40 1 2 5 42 M.S.Ed. in Counselor Education -- 1 2 3 1 -- 1 -- -- 2 12 92 3 5 19 103 M.S. in College Student Personnel -- 1 2 -- -- -- 1 2 -- 3 9 23 -- -- 12 29 M.S.Ed. in Elementary Education -- -- 1 1 -- -- -- -- -- 2 19 137 -- 4 20 144 M.S. in Computer Science M.A.T. (Secondary Education) -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 7 15 -- -- 7 15 M.S. in Health Education and Promotion 9 10 -- 4 -- -- -- -- -- 1 10 31 1 2 20 48 M.S. in Physical Education 2 2 2 2 1 -- -- -- 1 1 41 32 3 2 50 39 TABLE 22. (Continued) Non-resid. Black Alien Degree Program Non-Hisp. Men Women Men Women Amer. Indian/ Asian/ Alaskan Native Pac. Islander Men Women White Hispanic Men Women Non-Hisp. Men Women Unknown Men Women Total Men Women Men Women M.S.Ed. in Reading -- -- -- 4 -- -- -- 1 -- -- 2 88 -- 9 2 M.S. in Manufacturing Engineering Systems 4 3 1 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- 15 1 -- -- 20 102 5 M.A. in English -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 13 24 1 3 14 28 M.S. in Biology 3 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 13 30 -- 2 16 34 M.S. in Mathematics 6 -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- -- 4 3 -- -- 10 4 M.A. in Gerontology -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 4 -- -- 1 4 M.S. in Recreation Park and Tourism Administration 3 5 -- -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- 2 13 -- 4 6 22 4 M.S. in Chemistry 9 4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- 10 M.S. in Physics 5 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 1 -- -- 6 2 M.S. in Psychology 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 5 26 -- 3 7 29 M.A. in Law Enforcement and Justice Administration 1 -- 4 2 -- -- 1 -- 1 1 82 44 10 1 99 48 M.A. in Economics 6 7 2 -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- 12 3 -- -- 21 10 M.A. in Geography 2 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 10 7 -- 1 12 9 M.A. in History -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 25 10 -- -- 25 10 M.A. in Political Science 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 8 5 1 -- 10 5 M.A. in Sociology 1 3 4 3 -- 1 -- 2 -- -- 10 21 1 1 16 31 M.F.A. in Theatre -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- 13 9 2 2 16 11 M.A. in Music -- 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 8 4 -- 1 8 7 M.S. in Communication Sciences and Disorders -- 1 -- 3 -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 33 -- -- 1 37 Master of Business Administration Master of Accountancy TOTAL MASTERS AND UNCLASSIFIED/ UNDECLARED GRADUATES 18 6 1 1 -- -- -- -- 1 -- 48 41 2 3 70 51 1 3 -- 1 -- -- -- 1 -- -- 5 5 -- -- 6 10 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 112 82 31 37 5 1 7 11 16 23 680 1,192 63 100 914 1,446 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Specialist in School Psychology -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 5 16 1 1 6 17 Post-Bacc. Cert. in Police Executive -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- 1 -- Ed.S. in Educational Administration & Supervision -- -- 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 9 9 -- 1 10 10 Post-Bacc. Cert in Instructional Technology & Telecommun. -- -- 1 -- -- -- -- 1 -- -- 2 7 -- -- 3 8 Post-Pacc. Cert in Marriage & Family Counseling -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 2 -- -- -- 3 Post-Bacc. Cert in Zoo/Aquarium Studies -- -- 1 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- 2 6 -- -- 3 7 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 3 2 -- -- -- 1 -- -- 19 40 1 2 23 45 TOTAL GRADUATE AND ADVANCED CERTIFICATES 112 82 34 39 5 1 7 12 16 23 699 1,232 64 102 937 1,491 TOTAL HEADCOUNT ENROLLMENT 199 169 355 438 19 12 76 63 214 189 5,330 5,919 242 236 6,435 7,026 TOTAL ADVANCED CERTIFICATES NOTE: ENROLLMENTS INCLUDE ON-CAMPUS, OFF-CAMPUS, HOME-STUDY, AND COST RECOVERY HEADCOUNTS TABLE 23. NUMBER OF UNDERGRADUATE MAJORS BY CURRICULUM, FALL TERMS 1998-2002* Major M COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Biology Biology Ed Chemistry Chemistry Ed Clinical Laboratory Economics English English Ed French French Ed Geography Geography Ed Geology History History Ed Journalism Mathematics Mathematics Ed Philosophy Physics Physics Ed Political Science Political Science Ed Pre-Architecture Pre-Chemical Eng Pre-Dentistry Pre-Engineering Pre-Medical Pre-Nursing Pre-Optometry Pre-Pharmacy Pre-Physical Therapy Pre-Social Work Psychology Psychology Ed 84 16 12 3 3 7 32 41 1 3 25 6 15 65 83 41 6 20 4 14 6 80 5 9 1 6 38 15 1 5 3 15 80 9 Fall 1998 F Total 154 24 13 1 8 2 47 72 6 7 10 1 9 27 44 45 12 29 2 1 56 4 4 2 5 8 32 18 3 10 22 76 260 14 238 40 25 4 11 9 79 113 7 10 35 7 24 92 127 86 18 49 6 14 7 136 9 13 3 11 46 47 19 3 15 25 91 340 23 M 88 14 12 4 2 16 33 39 2 26 3 12 48 92 39 11 18 3 18 4 62 6 11 2 7 29 22 1 6 11 7 86 14 Fall 1999 F Total 156 24 17 16 7 54 68 6 5 18 3 10 25 39 56 9 28 3 1 57 4 2 1 5 8 23 15 2 6 20 84 307 19 244 38 29 4 18 23 87 107 6 7 44 6 22 73 131 95 20 46 6 18 5 119 10 13 3 12 37 45 15 3 12 31 91 393 33 M 102 19 8 5 1 25 39 34 1 22 3 8 47 87 43 9 19 12 12 3 65 5 13 6 41 24 2 7 8 5 91 9 Fall 2000 F Total 143 24 13 1 17 5 67 75 5 2 15 3 13 23 33 63 8 26 2 60 3 3 4 6 31 26 6 11 20 68 291 21 245 43 21 6 18 30 106 109 5 3 37 6 21 70 120 106 17 45 14 12 3 125 8 16 10 47 55 26 8 18 28 73 382 30 M 94 12 15 4 4 25 40 34 1 20 1 10 48 88 43 8 11 13 14 2 80 6 9 2 6 45 19 1 1 9 9 3 98 6 Fall 2001 F Total 171 18 11 2 10 4 76 71 4 1 10 2 10 16 36 66 10 23 4 1 66 6 3 3 8 39 19 4 12 12 59 324 9 265 30 26 6 14 29 116 105 4 2 30 3 20 64 124 109 18 34 17 15 2 146 12 12 2 9 53 58 20 5 21 21 62 422 15 M 111 8 13 2 2 25 38 35 1 23 2 13 69 99 47 12 18 15 17 2 93 5 9 3 4 37 17 2 2 8 7 5 110 2 Fall 2002 F Total 188 13 16 15 4 64 81 3 3 9 3 5 21 45 70 9 30 4 1 67 2 2 2 5 5 26 18 23 18 89 323 3 299 21 29 2 17 29 102 116 4 3 32 5 18 90 144 117 21 48 19 18 2 160 7 11 5 9 42 43 20 2 31 25 94 433 5 TABLE 23. (Continued) Major M Fall 1998 F Total M Fall 1999 F Total M Fall 2000 F Total M Fall 2001 F Total M Fall 2002 F Total COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES (Continued) Social Work 5 Sociology 34 Spanish 3 Spanish Ed 8 Women's Studies TOTAL ARTS & SCIENCES 804 55 59 12 12 1,166 60 93 15 20 1,970 4 42 8 7 809 49 69 10 10 1,236 53 111 18 17 2,045 4 52 7 7 845 46 67 13 11 1,225 50 119 20 18 2,070 4 41 6 6 838 42 81 18 10 1,261 46 122 24 16 2,099 6 35 7 3 2 909 42 80 17 11 9 1,326 48 115 24 14 11 2,235 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy 28 Pre-Accountancy 83 Agriculture Sci 184 Ag Sci Ed 14 Computer Science 281 Economics 2 Pre-Economics 8 Finance 35 Pre-Finance 43 Graphic Communication Human Resource Mgt 2 Pre-Human Resource Mgt 7 Industrial Technology 112 Information Management 16 Pre-Info Management 34 Management (Gen. Bus.) 47 Pre-Management 158 Mfg Engineering Tech 139 Marketing 22 Pre-Marketing 82 Pre-Ag Engineering Pre-Forestry 2 Pre-Vet Medicine 4 Transport & Phys Dist Pre-Trans & Phys Dist PRE-BUSINESS UNDECIDED 27 TOTAL PRE-BUSINESS 415 TOTAL BUSINESS AND TECH 1,330 47 113 70 6 76 1 3 19 31 3 23 22 8 30 34 97 14 22 56 21 30 353 726 75 196 254 20 357 3 11 54 74 5 30 134 24 64 81 255 153 44 138 2 25 57 768 2,056 25 85 185 21 338 1 17 33 52 2 7 87 30 40 38 172 155 16 80 1 1 5 41 453 1,432 49 131 63 8 95 3 7 27 24 7 16 21 17 30 32 98 17 29 78 15 30 384 797 74 216 248 29 433 4 24 60 76 9 23 108 47 70 70 270 172 45 158 1 1 20 71 837 2,229 20 87 208 19 361 1 15 23 53 2 5 42 22 68 38 162 194 25 86 2 3 4 44 476 1,484 47 141 66 5 90 3 6 23 29 6 20 14 21 40 25 100 27 24 69 1 14 1 39 406 811 67 228 274 24 451 4 21 46 82 8 25 56 43 108 63 262 221 49 155 3 3 18 1 83 882 2,295 35 65 209 15 312 7 18 34 64 3 8 18 33 70 43 133 246 29 115 1 1 4 50 473 1,513 56 106 51 6 55 4 4 27 27 7 16 7 26 43 36 85 46 29 88 18 39 369 776 91 171 260 21 367 11 22 61 91 10 24 25 59 113 79 218 292 58 203 1 1 22 89 842 2,289 26 72 211 12 316 10 13 31 58 36 1 5 3 32 60 50 126 214 31 123 1 3 64 457 1,498 59 124 43 8 46 4 6 26 23 49 7 28 3 20 26 32 87 13 45 107 0 15 31 401 802 85 196 254 20 362 14 19 57 81 85 8 33 6 52 86 82 213 227 76 230 1 0 18 95 858 2,300 TABLE 23. (Continued) Major M Fall 1998 F Total COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Bilingual/Bicult Ed 1 28 Community Health 15 29 Community Health Ed 1 3 Elementary Ed 105 804 Pre-Elementary Ed Family & Consumer Sciences 38 160 Family & Consumer Sci Ed 3 Health Services Management Instruc Tech & Telecomm 23 16 Law Enf & Just Adm (& Pre-LEJA) 815 312 Physical Education 97 98 Physical Education Teacher Ed 126 59 Recreation, Park & Tour Adm 119 121 Special Education 29 182 TOTAL EDUC AND HUMAN SERV 1,369 1,815 COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION Art 47 Art (BFA) 7 Art Ed 9 Broadcasting Communication 246 Comm Sci & Disorders 2 Music 43 Music Ed 60 Theatre 24 TOTAL FINE ARTS AND COMM 438 M Fall 1999 F Total M Fall 2000 F Total M Fall 2001 F Total M Fall 2002 F Total 29 44 4 909 198 3 39 1,127 195 185 240 211 3,184 3 10 1 119 35 31 792 94 130 122 36 1,373 35 36 3 813 111 3 24 350 97 55 116 216 1,859 38 46 4 932 146 3 55 1,142 191 185 238 252 3,232 6 15 89 29 33 3 42 836 95 128 119 42 1,437 30 27 1 598 185 129 1 4 20 342 88 61 131 227 1,844 36 42 1 687 214 162 1 7 62 1,178 183 189 250 269 3,281 4 11 69 22 45 4 70 886 119 133 121 31 1,515 33 19 1 513 259 158 14 26 306 81 59 154 221 1,844 37 30 1 582 281 203 18 96 1,192 200 192 275 252 3,359 2 4 47 39 43 7 76 965 122 141 142 32 1,620 18 27 407 373 189 19 33 353 83 55 149 177 1,883 20 31 0 454 412 232 26 109 1,318 205 196 291 209 3,503 48 12 25 225 43 55 40 24 472 95 19 34 471 45 98 100 48 910 41 8 8 253 3 52 46 32 443 53 7 26 258 43 55 43 36 521 94 15 34 511 46 107 89 68 964 30 7 4 32 218 1 43 41 32 408 52 11 25 17 256 57 67 36 36 557 82 18 29 49 474 58 110 77 68 965 39 7 5 73 192 2 44 45 27 434 68 11 33 45 250 55 66 39 41 608 107 18 38 118 442 57 110 84 68 1,042 46 12 5 104 157 1 43 52 21 441 58 14 33 74 214 59 70 42 30 594 104 26 38 178 371 60 113 94 51 1,035 OTHER Board of Trustees General Orientation Individual Studies WESL Unclassified** TOTAL OTHER 388 418 51 15 163 1,035 416 392 36 20 173 1,037 804 810 87 35 336 2,072 376 414 44 9 155 998 440 367 28 13 118 966 816 781 72 22 273 1,964 357 456 43 14 152 1,022 408 409 38 25 139 1,019 765 865 81 39 291 2,041 359 465 33 13 140 1,010 409 368 38 17 124 956 768 833 71 30 264 1,966 348 501 35 14 132 1,030 377 409 45 14 85 930 725 910 80 28 217 1,960 GRAND TOTAL - UNDERGRAD 4,976 5,216 10,192 5,055 5,379 10,434 5,196 5,456 10,652 5,310 5,445 10,755 5,498 5,535 11,033 *Includes Extension & WIU-QC students **Includes Unclassified, Transitional and High School Students NOTE: Top five 2002 majors are highlighted. TABLE 24. UNDERGRADUATES WITH SECOND MAJORS, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 Second Majors Accountancy Agriculture Art Biology Chemistry Communication Communication Science & Disorders Community Health Computer Science Economics English Family & Consumer Sciences Finance French Geography Geology Graphic Communication History Human Resource Management Industrial Technology Information Management Instructional Technology & Telecommunications Journalism Law Enforcement & Justice Adm (& Pre LEJA) Management Manufacturing Engineering Technology Marketing Mathematics Music Philosophy Physical Education Physics Political Science Pre-Accountancy Pre-Business Undecided Pre-Chemistry Pre-Economics Pre-Elementary Education Pre-Engineering Pre-Finance Pre-Human Resource Management Pre-Information Management Pre-Management Pre-Marketing Pre-Marketing Probation Pre-Medicine Psychology Recreation, Park & Tourism Administration Social Work Sociology Spanish Special Education Theatre Women's Studies TOTALS Top five majors highlighted. 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2 3 2 11 1 1 9 6 6 8 1 4 1 1 1 2 2 6 1 1 5 1 3 6 1 1 1 19 5 20 25 6 - 3 1 3 12 2 9 2 6 2 6 5 2 1 1 5 10 1 3 2 2 2 11 2 1 1 1 1 26 4 16 37 2 - 3 1 2 11 1 7 2 9 1 6 5 3 2 4 14 1 1 5 1 2 1 12 1 1 1 1 38 6 19 35 2 2 - 2 4 4 1 9 12 4 7 4 7 2 6 2 2 1 4 10 1 1 2 4 3 1 1 1 13 3 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 29 2 22 32 2 - 1 2 8 5 3 5 3 3 8 2 8 1 2 4 4 11 5 1 4 5 1 3 1 9 2 1 1 1 2 1 24 1 1 21 32 6 4 162 182 200 207 196 TABLE 25. NUMBER OF GRADUATE MAJORS BY CURRICULUM, FALL TERMS 1998-2002* Major COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Biology Chemistry English Geography Gerontology History Mathematics Physics Political Science Psychology School Psychology Sociology TOTAL ARTS & SCIENCES M Fall 1998 F Total M Fall 1999 F Total M Fall 2000 F Total M Fall 2001 F Total M Fall 2002 F Total 17 5 12 18 4 30 5 6 11 4 1 10 123 32 3 33 10 9 9 9 3 1 16 17 24 166 49 8 45 28 13 39 14 9 12 20 18 34 289 23 9 10 11 2 31 1 9 13 5 1 6 121 33 3 31 7 5 10 9 1 6 16 15 27 163 56 12 41 18 7 41 10 10 19 21 16 33 284 16 9 10 12 2 23 9 9 12 8 3 4 117 34 4 28 3 6 13 8 3 7 23 13 17 159 50 13 38 15 8 36 17 12 19 31 16 21 276 16 9 11 8 2 17 7 6 14 8 5 8 111 29 3 31 4 5 10 5 2 5 25 13 25 157 45 12 42 12 7 27 12 8 19 33 18 33 268 16 10 14 12 1 25 10 6 10 7 6 16 133 34 4 28 9 4 10 4 2 5 29 17 31 177 50 14 42 21 5 35 14 8 15 36 23 47 310 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Accountancy 2 Business Administration 54 Computer Science 45 Economics (M.A.) 23 Manufacturing Engineering Systems 20 TOTAL BUSINESS AND TECH 144 8 25 17 7 7 64 10 79 62 30 27 208 3 70 52 22 25 172 6 31 24 9 5 75 9 101 76 31 30 247 7 55 53 13 19 147 10 35 24 10 3 82 17 90 77 23 22 229 7 69 46 20 23 165 10 49 16 11 7 93 17 118 62 31 30 258 6 70 46 21 20 163 10 51 13 10 5 89 16 121 59 31 25 252 COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES College Student Personnel 15 27 Counseling & Guidance 14 90 Educational Admin 69 69 Ed Admin--6th Year 24 18 Elementary Education 13 219 Health Education & Promotion 9 39 42 104 138 42 232 48 14 14 58 23 14 14 33 96 64 20 192 43 47 110 122 43 206 57 11 21 54 18 14 12 35 121 58 17 166 51 46 142 112 35 180 63 16 20 58 11 20 18 29 124 42 13 124 45 45 144 100 24 144 63 12 19 58 10 20 20 29 103 41 10 144 48 41 122 99 20 164 68 TABLE 25. (Continued) Major Instruc Tech & Telecomm Interdisciplinary Studies Law Enforcement & Just Adm M.A.T. (Seconday Education) Physical Education Reading Rec, Park & Tourism Adm Special Education TOTAL EDUC AND HUMAN SERV M Fall 1998 F Total 28 18 54 52 2 14 4 316 M Fall 1999 F Total 44 42 27 34 90 17 68 784 72 60 81 86 92 31 72 1,100 16 17 58 58 2 11 4 303 32 53 22 24 93 24 74 770 41 10 12 16 79 43 15 23 31 112 2 5 9 11 27 42 9 17 14 82 56 94 150 71 - - - - - COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION Communication Comm Sci & Disorder 2 Music 5 Pub Comm & Broadcasting 11 Theatre--MFA 15 TOTAL FINE ARTS AND COMM 33 48 70 80 82 95 35 78 1,073 M Fall 2000 F Total 11 12 77 5 61 2 10 9 317 30 53 33 6 31 104 23 78 806 9 1 5 14 34 8 44 14 26 25 109 14 29 10 66 124 195 66 120 - - - - - - - - 41 65 110 11 92 106 33 87 1,123 Fall 2001 F Total M Fall 2002 F Total 39 13 78 7 49 4 9 6 348 51 67 38 9 35 91 22 61 751 90 80 116 16 84 95 31 67 1,099 43 21 99 7 50 2 6 5 372 61 66 48 15 39 102 22 42 770 104 87 147 22 89 104 28 47 1,142 7 2 8 12 33 7 7 1 8 22 37 7 16 32 11 77 29 38 15 27 109 17 34 13 65 19 35 15 30 99 186 79 161 240 93 134 227 - - - - - 3 7 10 - - - - - - - 3 3 - 23 35 13 - 24 95 M - OTHER Advanced Graduate Post-Baccalaureate Certificate-Biology Post-Baccalaureate Certificate-Counseling Post-Baccalaureate Certificate-Police Executive Cert. Post-Baccalaureate Certificate-Instructional Tech & Telecomm. Unclassified** TOTAL OTHER - - - - - - 1 1 2 3 1 4 1 - 1 164 220 395 489 559 709 198 269 394 518 592 787 2 176 245 5 343 469 7 519 714 3 170 255 6 304 472 9 474 727 3 137 237 8 226 378 11 363 615 GRAND TOTAL - GRAD 836 1,582 2,418 892 1,608 2,500 855 1,582 2,437 913 1,538 2,451 937 1,491 2,428 *Includes On-Campus, Extension & WIU-QC Majors **Includes WESL, Second Bachelor's, Post-Baccalaurate Certificates, Unclassified NOTE: Top 6 majors are highlighted. TABLE 26. DEGREES CONFERRED BETWEEN JULY 1, 2001 AND JUNE 30, 2002 BY DEGREE PROGRAM, RACE, AND SEX Non-resid. Black Alien Degree Program Non-Hisp. Men Women Men Women Amer. Indian/ Asian/ Alaskan Native Pac. Islander Men Women White Hispanic Men Women Non-Hisp. Men Women Unknown Men Women Total Men Women Men Women B.S. in Agriculture B.A. in Women's Studies B.A. in Communication ---- --1 --7 --3 ---- ---- ---- ---- --1 --1 67 -57 15 1 66 2 -2 --3 69 0 67 15 1 74 B.A. in Journalism B.A. in Broadcasting B.S. in Computer Science --5 1 -2 1 --- 1 -1 ---- ---- --2 --1 ---- ---- 2 7 39 8 4 6 --2 1 --- 3 7 48 11 4 10 B.S.Ed. in Bilingual/Bicultural Education B.S. in Instructional Technology and Telecommunications B.S.Ed. in Special Education ---- ---- -2 -- 1 -2 ---- ---- -1 -- 1 --- --1 4 -1 -10 6 3 6 56 --1 --3 0 13 8 9 6 62 B.S.Ed. in Elementary Education B.S. in Community Health B.S. in Physical Education ---- ---- --3 3 2 1 --1 ---- 1 --- ---- 1 -2 5 --- 21 5 35 166 7 41 --1 4 --- 23 5 42 178 9 42 B.S. in Industrial Technology B.S. in Manufacturing Engineering Technology B.A. in French ---- 1 2 -- 1 2 -- -2 -- ---- ---- ---- ---- 1 --- ---- 12 34 -- 7 2 1 -3 -- ---- 14 39 0 8 6 1 B.A. in Spanish B.S. in Family and Consumer Sciences B.A. in English ---- -1 -- -1 1 -2 3 ---- ---- ---- -1 -- 4 --- 3 --- 6 8 12 3 33 26 ---- 3 -4 10 9 13 9 37 33 Board of Trustees Bachelor of Arts B.A. and B.S. in Individual Studies B.S. in Biology B.S. in Mathematics --1 -- -1 2 -- 5 2 1 -- 9 1 3 -- ----- 1 ---- 1 ---- ---1 1 ---- 4 ---- 103 25 15 4 101 16 44 6 3 1 1 -- 7 ---- 113 28 18 4 122 18 49 7 B.S. in Recreation Park and Tourism Administration B.A. in Philosophy B.S. in Chemistry 1 --- 1 -1 ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- -1 -- 3 --- 32 1 2 45 2 3 1 --- ---- 34 2 2 49 2 4 B.S. in Geology B.S. in Physics B.S. in Psychology ---- --1 ---- --4 ---- ---- ---- ---- --2 --4 1 5 20 2 -63 ---- --2 1 5 22 2 0 74 B.S. in Law Enforcement and Justice Administration Bachelor of Social Work B.A. in Economics ---- --1 6 --- 6 2 1 ---- 1 --- 1 --- 1 1 -- 8 --- 6 --- 160 2 9 95 22 1 11 --- 2 --- 186 2 9 111 25 3 B.S. in Geography B.A. in History B.A. in Political Science ---- ---- -1 1 1 -1 ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 4 31 11 3 7 8 -1 -- 1 -1 4 33 12 5 7 10 TABLE 26. (Continued) Non-resid. Black Alien Degree Program Non-Hisp. Men Women Men Women Amer. Indian/ Asian/ Alaskan Native Pac. Islander Men Women White Hispanic Men Women Non-Hisp. Men Women Unknown Men Women Total Men Women Men Women B.A. in Sociology B.A. in Theatre B.A. in Art -1 -- ---- 3 --- 4 1 1 ---- ---- ---- ---- 1 -1 ---- 10 6 7 24 7 17 1 --- 1 -1 15 7 8 29 8 19 Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art B.A. in Music B.S. in Communication Sciences and Disorders ---- 1 2 -- -1 -- --2 ---- ---- ---- ---- -1 -- ---- 2 8 -- 6 12 15 ---- -1 1 2 10 0 7 15 18 B.S. in Health Services Management B.S. in Clinical Laboratory Science B.B. in Management --1 --1 --3 --2 ---- ---- ---- ---- --1 -1 -- --38 2 2 30 --1 ---- 0 0 44 2 3 33 B.B. in Accountancy B.B. in Economics B.B. in Finance 1 -1 3 -1 ---- 1 -1 ---- ---- --1 ---- --1 --1 19 5 23 19 2 20 --2 2 --- 20 5 28 25 2 23 B.B. in Human Resource Management B.B. in Information Management B.B. in Marketing -2 -- -2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ---- ---- -1 1 ---- ---- ---- 2 24 29 7 18 18 -2 -- --1 3 30 31 8 21 21 TOTAL BACHELORS DEGREES CONFERRED 13 26 44 64 1 2 9 6 27 33 919 1,068 35 38 1,048 1,237 M.A. in Communication M.S. in Computer Science M.S.Ed. in Educational Administration and Supervision M.S. in Instructional Technology and Telecommunications -14 -1 -3 -1 ----- --1 1 ----- ----- ----- ----- --1 -- --1 -- 2 1 32 8 3 1 29 16 -1 2 -- 1 -1 1 2 16 35 9 4 4 32 19 M.S.Ed. in Educational and Interdisciplinary Studies M.S.Ed. in Special Education M.S.Ed. in Counseling -1 -- 3 --- ---- 1 1 2 ---- 1 --- 1 --- ---- ---- 1 --- 3 1 4 20 29 19 ---- 3 2 -- 4 2 4 29 32 21 M.S. in College Student Personnel M.S.Ed. in Elementary Education M.A.T. (Secondary Education) ---- 3 --- 1 --- 1 1 -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- -1 -- 6 1 3 11 41 5 ---- -7 -- 7 1 3 15 50 5 M.S. in Health Education M.S. in Manufacturing Engineering M.S. in Physical Education 1 2 5 3 1 -- 1 -1 ---- --1 ---- 1 --- ---- --1 1 --- -3 31 7 1 7 -1 -- 1 -1 3 6 39 12 2 8 M.S.Ed. in Reading M.A. in English M.S. in Biology ---- ---- --1 -1 -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 1 3 4 30 6 5 ---- 3 1 -- 1 3 5 33 8 5 M.S. in Mathematics 2 1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 3 -- -- 3 4 TABLE 26. (Continued) Non-resid. Alien Degree Program M.A. in Gerontology Black Non-Hisp. Men Women --- Amer. Indian/ Alaskan Native Men Women --- Men Women --- Asian/ Pac. Islander White Non-Hisp. Hispanic Men Women --- Men Women --- Unknown Men Women 2 1 Total Men Women --- Men Women 2 1 M.S. in Recreation Park and Tourism Administration M.S. in Chemistry M.S. in Physics 2 3 7 2 -1 ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 1 1 -- ---- ---- 3 1 -- 3 --- 1 --- ---- 6 4 7 6 1 1 M.S. in Psychology M.A. in Law Enforcement and Justice Administration M.A. in Economics --4 --3 ---- -1 -- ---- ---- ---- ---- -2 -- ---- 3 13 1 6 4 2 --1 ---- 3 15 6 6 5 5 M.A. in Geography M.A. in History M.A. in Political Science ---- ---- --2 ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 3 6 1 1 4 2 1 --- ---- 4 6 3 1 4 2 M.A. in Sociology M.F.A. in Theatre M.A. in Music ---- --1 -1 -- 1 --- ---- ---- ---- ---- -1 -- ---- -1 2 9 5 3 -1 -- 1 --- 0 4 2 11 5 4 M.S. in Communication Sciences and Disorders Master of Business Administration Master of Accountancy -15 -- -6 1 ---- -1 -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 1 10 -- 14 19 3 -3 -- -1 -- 1 28 0 14 27 4 TOTAL GRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED 57 29 7 12 1 1 2 2 5 4 151 309 11 23 234 380 Ed.S. in Educational Administration and Supervision Specialist in School Psychology Post-Baccaulaureat Certificate in Community Development Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Police Exective Cert. ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- --1 -- ---1 ----- 7 1 2 7 7 2 --- 1 --1 2 ---- 8 1 2 9 9 2 1 -- TOTAL ADVANCED DEGREES CONFERRED -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 1 1 -- 17 9 2 2 20 12 TOTAL GRADUATE AND ADVANCED DEGREES CONFERRED 57 29 7 12 1 1 2 3 6 4 168 318 13 25 254 392 TOTAL 70 55 51 76 2 3 11 9 33 37 1,087 1,386 48 63 1,302 1,629 Source: IPEDS Table Z TABLE 27. NUMBER OF DEGREES CONFERRED BY MAJOR, FISCAL YEARS 1998-2002* 1998 1999 2000 Ed.S. & Major 2001 Ed.S. & 2002 Ed.S. & Ed.S. & Ed.S. & B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Biology 54 11 - 55 18 - 50 9 - 64 12 - 67 10 - Chemistry 4 9 - 5 2 - 6 3 - 5 2 - 6 5 - Clinical Laboratory Science 3 - - 2 - - 1 - - - - - 3 - - Economics 9 21 - 4 16 - 9 15 - 9 18 - 12 11 - English 32 17 - 42 14 - 41 21 - 38 14 - 46 11 - French 2 - - 4 - - 5 - - 3 - - 1 - - 15 4 - 6 8 - 8 3 - 9 5 - 9 5 - Geology 5 - - 5 - - 4 - - 3 - - 3 - - Gerontology - 7 - - 8 - - 3 - - 2 - - 3 - History 48 6 - 51 16 - 41 8 - 44 10 - 40 10 - Journalism 14 - - 16 - - 26 - - 26 - - 14 - - Mathematics 21 7 - 12 5 - 18 3 - 11 2 - 11 7 - Philosophy 1 - - 3 - - 2 - - 2 - - 4 - - Physics 2 6 - 7 5 - 10 3 - 6 4 - 5 8 - Political Science 33 9 - 39 4 - 29 4 - 24 4 - 22 5 - Psychology 84 12 10 69 9 6 88 5 7 89 5 5 96 9 3 Geography Social Work 34 - - 45 - - 40 - - 46 - - 27 - - Sociology 33 8 - 39 10 - 33 13 - 47 4 - 44 11 - Spanish 10 - - 15 - - 7 - - 8 - - 19 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 - - 404 117 10 419 115 6 418 90 7 434 82 5 430 95 3 Accountancy 44 2 - 50 4 - 53 4 - 47 6 - 45 4 - Agricultural Sciences 62 - - 79 - - 79 - - 88 - - 84 - - Computer Science 39 15 - 25 19 - 65 30 - 51 40 - 58 20 - 1 - - 2 - 7 - - Finance 47 - - 48 - - 45 - - 47 - - 51 - - Human Resource Mgmt 11 - - 5 - - 11 - - 5 - - 11 - - Industrial Education 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Industrial Technology 38 7 - 46 - - 36 - - 40 - - 22 - - Women's Studies TOTAL ARTS & SCIENCES COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY Economics - 1 - - 6 - TABLE 27. (Continued) 1998 1999 2000 Ed.S. & Major B** Ed.S. & M# S.S.P.@ B** 2001 Ed.S. & M# S.S.P.@ B** 2002 Ed.S. & M# S.S.P.@ B** Ed.S. & M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ Information Management 24 - - 15 - - 32 - - 36 - - 51 - - Management 43 56 - 63 38 - 73 49 - 59 50 - 77 55 - Mfg Engineering Technology 10 - - 17 4 - 33 14 - 37 7 - 45 8 - Marketing 42 - - 34 - - 49 - - 55 - - 52 - - Trans & Physical Distribution 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - TOTAL BUSINESS AND TECH 365 80 - 384 65 - 477 97 - 471 103 - 503 87 - COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Bilingual/Bicultural 4 - - 4 - - 6 - - 4 - - 9 - - College Student Pers - 22 - - 22 - - 20 - - 24 - - 22 - 19 11 - 15 8 - 18 9 - 21 14 - 14 15 - Counselor Education - 36 - - 24 - - 36 - - 41 - - 25 - Educational Admin - 40 17 - 50 23 - 60 15 - 60 9 - 67 17 Community Health Educ & Interdisciplinary Studies - 26 - - 24 - - 21 - - 25 - - 33 - 161 55 - 189 81 - 200 86 - 201 66 - 201 51 - Family & Consumer Sciences 51 - - 65 - - 61 - - 33 - - 46 - - Health Services Management - - - - - - - - - - - - 2 - - Instr Tech & Telecomm 1 14 - 5 29 - 14 24 - 15 41 - 19 28 - 284 10 - 289 19 - 263 13 - 282 11 - 297 20 - 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 69 44 - 78 49 - 70 31 - 81 39 - 84 47 - 28 - - 25 - - 24 - - 24 - - 34 - 85 18 - 81 16 - 55 20 - 63 26 - 83 12 - - - - - - - - - - - 3 - - 8 - 30 22 - 38 5 - 59 30 - 60 32 - 70 34 - 708 326 17 764 352 23 746 374 15 760 406 9 825 396 17 25 - - 21 - - 22 - - 14 - - 27 - - 6 - - 9 - - 10 - - 6 - - 9 - - 124 - - 150 3 - 163 9 - 139 12 - 141 6 - Comm Sci & Disorders 20 21 - 12 19 - 9 20 - 10 24 - 18 15 - Music 26 11 - 29 9 - 37 7 - 18 8 - 25 6 - Public Comm & Broadcasting - 8 - - - - - - - 2 - - 11 - - Theatre 9 4 - 1 13 - 6 6 - 12 11 - 15 9 - 210 44 - 222 44 - 247 42 - 201 55 - 246 36 - Elementary Education Law Enforcement & Just Adm Photo/Media Physical Education Reading Recreation, Park & Tour Adm Secondary Education Special Education TOTAL EDUC AND HUMAN SERV COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND COMMUNICATION Art Art (BFA) Communication TOTAL FINE ARTS AND COMM TABLE 27. (Continued) 1998 1999 2000 Ed.S. & Major Ed.S. & 2001 Ed.S. & 2002 Ed.S. & Ed.S. & B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ B** M# S.S.P.@ Post-Baccal. Certif. in Community Development - - - - - - - 4 - - 10 - - 3 - Post-Baccal. Certif. in Police Executive Cert. - - - - - - - - - - 3 - - 9 - Board of Trustees 285 - - 255 - - 265 - - 266 - - 235 - - Individual Studies 33 - - 50 - - 40 - - 32 - - 46 - - 318 - - 305 - - 305 4 0 298 13 0 281 12 0 2,005 567 27 2,094 576 29 2,193 607 22 2,164 659 14 2,285 626 20 -2.7 -0.9 8.0 4.4 1.6 7.4 4.7 5.4 -24.1 -1.3 8.6 -36.4 5.6 -5.0 42.9 OTHER TOTAL OTHER TOTAL % Inc/(Dec) Over Previous Year *Includes Extension and WIU-QC Majors **Bachelor's Degrees #Master's Degrees @Education Specialist Degree and Specialist in School Psychology OTHER CHARACTERISTICS The total number of completed applications increased by 11.4 percent (from 13,649 to 15,209) from Fall 2001 to Fall 2002 (Table 28). The number of accepted applications increased by 16.1 percent from Fall 2001 to Fall 2002. The number of firsttime students enrolling increased by 6.8 percent (from 3,765 to 4,023) from Fall 2001 to Fall 2002. Of the 15,209 completed applications, 66.8 percent (or 10,156) were accepted. From the 10,156 accepted applications, 39.6 percent (or 4,023) enrolled. The ages of WIU students by student level and sex are shown in Table 29. Students age 25 and over accounted for 10.5 percent of full-time students and 83.5 percent of part-time students. The average age for all WIU undergraduate students is 22.5, while the average age for graduate students is 33.0. Tables 30 and 31 show age breakdowns for on-campus and all off-campus students. Housing occupancy in residence halls (Table 32 and Figure 10) increased from 4,810 in 2001 to 4,948 in 2002. Total living off-campus increased from 5,460 in 2001 to 5,688 in 2002. Table 33 shows total student credit hours produced by fiscal year and level. Figure 11 shows student credit hours produced by each of the four colleges in FY2002. The tuition and fee guarantee began for all undergraduate students entering the University in Fall 1999. In-state undergraduate annual tuition increased from $2,982 in 2001-02 to $3,465 in 2002-03. This tuition will remain in effect for students entering Fall 2002 for four years, as long as the student maintains continuous enrollment (Table 34 and Figure 12). WIU tuition increased 9 of the last 10 years. Tuition did not change from 1992-93 to 1993-94. Students experienced the largest increase in fees from 199697 to 1997-98 (up 19.1%). This increase was partially due to the cost of the new student recreation center. Alumni survey results of the 1997 baccalaureate degree recipients are shown in Table 35. Two surveys were conducted of these graduates--the first one year after graduation and the second five years after graduation. TABLE 28. APPLICATIONS, ACCEPTANCES, AND ENROLLMENTS OF DEGREE-SEEKING FIRST-TIME FRESHMEN, UNDERGRADUATE TRANSFER, AND GRADUATE STUDENTS BY SEX, FALL TERMS 1999-2002 First-Time Freshmen Male Female Total Undergraduate Transfers Male Female Total Graduate Students TOTAL Male Female Total STUDENTS FALL 1999 TERM* # Completed Applications # Accepted Applications # Enrolling Fall 1999 % Students Accepted % Students Accepted That Enrolled 3,675 2,428 851 66.1 35.0 4,854 3,239 867 66.7 26.8 8,529 5,667 1,718 66.4 30.3 1,754 1,201 718 68.5 59.8 1,861 1,275 742 68.5 58.2 3,615 2,476 1,460 68.5 59.0 757 575 274 76.0 47.7 976 765 422 78.4 55.2 1,733 1,340 696 77.3 51.9 13,877 9,483 3,874 68.3 40.9 FALL 2000 TERM* # Completed Applications # Accepted Applications # Enrolling Fall 2000 % Students Accepted % Students Accepted That Enrolled 3,850 2,505 880 65.1 35.1 4,709 3,069 920 65.2 30.0 8,559 5,574 1,800 65.1 32.3 1,740 1,181 716 67.9 60.6 1,923 1,262 680 65.6 53.9 3,663 2,443 1,396 66.7 57.1 739 566 264 76.6 46.6 1,100 882 440 80.2 49.9 1,839 1,448 704 78.7 48.6 14,061 9,465 3,900 67.3 41.2 FALL 2001 TERM* # Completed Applications # Accepted Applications # Enrolling Fall 2001 % Students Accepted % Students Accepted That Enrolled 3,709 2,192 856 59.1 39.1 4,403 2,757 853 62.6 30.9 8,112 4,949 1,709 61.0 34.5 1,808 1,174 700 64.9 59.6 1,905 1,224 675 64.3 55.1 3,713 2,398 1,375 64.6 57.3 777 561 280 72.2 49.9 1,047 839 401 80.1 47.8 1,824 1,400 681 76.8 48.6 13,649 8,747 3,765 64.1 43.0 FALL 2002 TERM # Completed Applications # Accepted Applications # Enrolling Fall 2002 % Students Accepted % Students Accepted That Enrolled 4,337 2,752 990 63.5 36.0 5,345 3,454 949 64.6 27.5 9,682 6,206 1,939 64.1 31.2 1,821 1,221 741 67.1 60.7 2,025 1,337 686 66.0 51.3 3,846 2,558 1,427 66.5 55.8 706 561 270 79.5 48.1 975 831 387 85.2 46.6 1,681 1,392 657 82.8 47.2 15,209 10,156 4,023 66.8 39.6 *Includes enrolled high school students. TABLE 29. AGE OF WIU STUDENTS BY STUDENT LEVEL AND SEX, FALL 2002 Undergraduate Students Graduate Students Total All Students M F M F M F FULL-TIME STUDENTS Under 18 18-19 20-21 22-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-49 50-64 65 and Over Age Unknown TOTAL FULL-TIME STUDENTS 38 1,585 1,860 1,057 259 48 30 20 4 0 0 4,901 56 1,746 1,890 762 160 53 47 54 14 0 0 4,782 0 0 14 179 107 59 23 17 7 1 0 407 0 0 17 227 114 31 17 27 10 0 0 443 38 1,585 1,874 1,236 366 107 53 37 11 1 0 5,308 56 1,746 1,907 989 274 84 64 81 24 0 0 5,225 PART-TIME STUDENTS Under 18 18-19 20-21 22-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-49 50-64 65 and Over Age Unknown TOTAL PART-TIME STUDENTS 5 21 35 93 94 95 71 136 45 2 0 597 2 19 51 117 103 89 96 189 85 1 1 753 0 0 0 36 126 112 97 118 39 2 0 530 0 0 4 101 240 186 134 248 133 2 0 1,048 5 21 35 129 220 207 168 254 84 4 0 1,127 2 19 55 218 343 275 230 437 218 3 1 1,801 5,498 5,535 937 1,491 6,435 7,026 TOTAL ALL STUDENTS *Includes On-Campus, Off-Campus, Home-Study, and Cost Recovery Headcounts. AVERAGE AGE, FALL 2002 On-Campus Undergraduates On-Campus Graduates All New Freshmen Quad Cities On-Campus 21.0 29.5 18.2 33.6 21.9 STUDENTS 25 YEARS OLD AND OLDER, FALL 2002* # % Full-Time 1,102 10.5 Part-Time 2,443 83.5 Total 3,545 26.3 Total Undergraduates Total Graduates Total University Extension New Transfers Undergraduates Graduates 22.5 33.0 24.4 37.7 22.7 # 1,695 1,850 % 15.4 76.2 TABLE 30. ON-CAMPUS STUDENTS BY AGE AND SEX, FALL TERMS 1998-2002* UNDERGRADS & GRADUATES Age 16-21 22-24 25-39 40 & above Fall Term 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Male 3,024 3,084 3,271 3,360 3,525 1,064 1,140 1,126 1,214 1,278 679 671 628 627 606 105 112 100 102 97 Female 3,413 3,536 3,635 3,620 3,691 858 908 869 893 1,005 612 585 613 534 535 265 251 236 255 213 Total 6,437 6,620 6,906 6,980 7,216 1,922 2,048 1,995 2,107 2,283 1,291 1,256 1,241 1,161 1,141 370 363 336 357 310 Fall Term 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Male 40 37 35 34 23 84 97 88 82 95 482 487 493 477 517 325 315 308 322 294 Female 92 99 115 93 91 174 171 181 214 204 722 761 765 714 735 644 666 617 654 551 Total 132 136 150 127 114 258 268 269 296 299 1,204 1,248 1,258 1,191 1,252 969 981 925 976 845 *Excludes unknown age TABLE 31. OFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS BY AGE AND SEX, FALL TERMS 1998-2002* UNDERGRADS & GRADUATES Age 16-21 22-24 25-39 40 & above *Excludes unknown age Figure 10: On-Campus Housing Occupancy Fall T e rms 1998-2002 5,688 5,800 5,600 5,473 5,460 5,392 5,400 5,283 5,202 5,200 5,146 5,086 5,000 4,820 4,800 4,817 4,600 4,400 4,200 1998 1999 2000 On-Campus 2001 2002 Off-Campus TABLE 32. ON-CAMPUS HOUSING, FALL TERMS 1998-2002 ON-CAMPUS STUDENTS Residence Single University Hall Room Married* No. No. No. Year Residence Hall Capacity 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 4,630 4,743 4,743 4,755 4,960 4,484 4,481 4,615 4,810 4,948 2,168 2,020 2,082 2,007 1,989 336 336 336 336 315 4,820 4,817 5,086 5,146 5,263 5,202 5,473 5,392 5,460 5,688 10,022 10,290 10,478 10,606 10,951 4.31 2.87 -0.90 -6.25 2.27 4.18 3.25 % Inc (Dec) Over Prev Year *Number of units available. Total Living On-Campus Total Living Off-Campus Total Students Figure 11. Total Student Credit Hours By College Fiscal Year 2002 140 132,223 120 101,324 Thousands 100 80 67,765 60 40 32,875 20 0 Arts & Sciences Business & Technology Educ & Human Services Fine Arts & Comm TABLE 33. TOTAL STUDENT CREDIT HOURS, TOTAL UNIVERSITY FOR FISCAL YEARS 1998-2002 Fiscal Year 1988 1999 2000 2001 2002 Lower Upper Grad I Total University 111,762 119,916 120,952 123,435 124,684 152,924 157,587 163,242 167,154 169,461 36,762 36,464 36,992 36,882 40,042 301,448 313,967 321,186 327,471 334,187 Thousands Thousands 12. Tuition andFees Fees for for Full-Time Students FigureFigure 12. Tuition and Full-Time Students In1987-88 through 1999-2000 1990-91 through 2002-03 state UG Outofstate UG 9 7 8 6 7 5 6 54 43 32 2 1999-00 2000-01 1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000 1 1990-91 1992-93 1991-92 1994-95 1993-94 1996-97 1995-96 1998-99 1997-98 In-State UG 2000-01 1999-00 2002-03 2001-02 Out-of-State UG TABLE 34. WIU ANNUAL TUITION AND FEES FOR FULL-TIME STUDENTS, 1990-91 THROUGH 2002-03 In-state Undergraduate Tuition In-state Graduate Fees 1990-91 1,584 537.00 1991-92 1,668 573.00 1992-93** 1,848 606.00 1993-94** 1,848 700.00 1994-95** 1,902 705.00 1995-96** 1,968 734.00 1996-97** 2,040 770.30 1997-98** 2,119 917.60 1998-99** 2,184 1,001.04 1999-00** 2,730 1,105.90 2000-01** 2,812 1,159.70 2001-02** 2,982 1,224.50 2002-03** 3,465 1,381.00 **Same tuition rate for lower and upper division. Out-of-state Undergraduate Out-of-state Graduate Tuition Fees Tuition Fees Tuition Fees 1,680 1,764 1,944 1,944 2,004 2,076 2,148 2,232 2,304 2,970 3,060 3,245 3,818 537.00 573.00 606.00 700.00 705.00 734.00 770.30 917.60 1,001.04 1,105.90 1,159.70 1,224.50 1,033.00 4,752 5,004 5,544 5,544 5,706 5,904 6,120 6,358 6,552 5,940 5,625 5,964 6,930 537.00 573.00 606.00 700.00 705.00 734.00 770.30 917.60 1,001.04 1,105.90 1,159.70 1,224.50 1,381.00 5,040 5,292 5,832 5,832 6,012 6,228 6,444 6,696 6,912 5,940 6,120 6,489 7,635 537.00 573.00 606.00 700.00 705.00 734.00 770.30 917.60 1,001.04 1,105.90 1,159.70 1,224.50 1,033.00 TABLE 35. SURVEY OF 1997 BACCALAUREATE DEGREE RECIPIENTS One Year Out* (1998) Percent Five Years Out** (2002) Percent Attitude Toward the University Strongly Positive Positive Somewhat Positive Somewhat Negative Negative Strongly Negative 28.7 50.0 16.6 3.1 0.8 0.8 28.7 55.1 14.2 1.4 0.3 0.3 Attitude Toward Bachelor's Degree Major Strongly Positive Positive Somewhat Positive Somewhat Negative Negative Strongly Negative 33.1 42.9 16.0 6.1 1.4 0.5 28.4 43.8 20.2 5.1 2.0 0.6 Job Related to Bachelor's Degree Major Closely Related Related Unrelated 44.6 29.5 26.0 47.4 29.7 22.9 Employed Yes, Full-Time Yes, Part-Time No, but Am Seeking Employment No, but Am Not Seeking Employment 78.4 12.5 4.8 4.3 89.8 5.9 2.0 2.3 Satisfaction with Current Job Very Satisfied Satisfied Somewhat Satisfied Somewhat Dissatisfied Dissatisfied Very Dissatisfied 35.4 35.7 19.2 5.3 3.5 0.8 40.2 37.8 15.8 4.1 1.2 0.9 Enrolled in College/University Since Earning Bachelor's Degree Full-Time Part-Time No 14.1 10.7 75.2 ---- --- 20.0 80.0 11.1 35.3 19.7 34.0 8.2 27.8 24.7 39.2 Survey Question Earned an Additional Degree Yes No Affected by Undergraduate Debt Serious Financial Problem Moderate Financial Problem Minor Financial Problem Not a Financial Problem *Census **50% Sample PERSONNEL AND SALARY DATA The distribution of employees by race and sex is shown in Table 36. Males constituted 47.2 percent of total employees including graduate assistants and females 52.8 percent. Employees by full-/part-time, sex and negotiating status are shown in Table 37. Faculty comprised 34.9 percent of all employees, not including graduate assistants; civil service, 45.2 percent; administrators, 12.8 percent; and professionals, 7.1 percent. Over 37 percent of full-time faculty were in the 50-59 age group in Fall 2002 (Table 38 and Figure 13). This compares to 35.1 percent in Fall 1999. The greatest proportion of civil service employees was in the 50-59 age group (42.4%). The average age of all WIU employees in Fall 2002 was 43.8, compared to 45.9 in Fall 1993. In FY2003, employees received average percentage salary increases (including promotions) ranging from 1.3 percent in the "faculty” category to 0.1 percent in the “civil service” category (Table 39). Table 40 gives the distribution of employees by job category, full-/part-time and sex for Fall 1998 and 2002. The overall increase of full-time employees in the seven groups was 6.2 percent. The average faculty salary (Table 41) increased from $54,384 in FY2002 to $54,501 in FY2003. The largest percentage increase occurred at the instructor level (up 1.3% between FY2002 and FY2003). Table 42 compares the FY2002 average salary of full-time faculty in Illinois public universities by sex and rank. Western's average FY2002 salary was $56,000. The total number of standard rank faculty increased from 686 in Fall 2001 (Table 44) to 689 in Fall 2002 (Table 43). In Fall 2002, 62.3 percent of faculty had terminal degrees, 45.9 percent were tenured and 26.6 percent were tenure track. TABLE 36. EMPLOYEES BY RACE AND SEX, FALL 2002* Professors Associate Professors Lecturers Total Faculty Graduate Assistants@ WHITE Male Female TOTAL WHITE 143 45 188 75 45 120 78 56 134 63 76 139 1 12 13 360 234 594 128 202 330 337 520 857 107 114 221 41 80 121 973 1,150 2,123 BLACK Male Female TOTAL BLACK 4 1 5 3 2 5 3 5 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 8 18 6 6 12 20 7 27 5 8 13 5 1 6 46 30 76 HISPANIC Male Female TOTAL HISPANIC 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 5 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 5 9 4 6 10 0 3 3 1 6 7 1 1 2 10 21 31 12 2 14 3 3 6 7 4 11 2 2 4 1 1 2 25 12 37 3 3 6 1 3 4 1 2 3 2 2 4 32 22 54 NATIVE AMERICAN Male Female TOTAL NATIVE AMERICAN 0 0 0 2 1 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 4 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 6 OTHER Male Female TOTAL OTHER 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 3 3 3 6 0 0 0 5 4 9 14 16 30 1 0 1 3 2 5 2 3 5 25 25 50 INTERNATIONAL** Male Female TOTAL INTERNATIONAL 0 0 0 2 1 3 10 4 14 1 0 1 0 0 0 13 5 18 47 35 82 0 0 0 3 0 3 1 1 2 64 41 105 360 120 52 533 132 88 893 252 140 **Includes non-resident employees only. 1,154 1,291 2,445 Race/Sex ASIAN AMERICAN Male Female TOTAL ASIAN AMERICAN Total Males Total Females Grand Total *Department chairs included with faculty. Assistant Professors Instructors 159 86 49 53 208 139 @Based on BGU Code. 102 70 2 419 203 74 81 13 270 268 176 151 15 689 471 #Includes executive assistants and faculty assistants. Civil Service@ Administrators@ Professionals# Total Employees TABLE 37. WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY FACULTY AND STAFF, OCTOBER 2002 FT Male PT Total FT CIVIL SERVICE Negotiating Prevailing Wage Non-Negotiating TOTAL CIVIL SERVICE 180 39 139 358 0 0 2 2 180 39 141 360 247 0 261 508 FACULTY Regular Negotiating* Temporary Negotiating* Non-Negotiating Faculty Department Chairpersons TOTAL FACULTY 307 32 12 28 379 0 2 38 0 40 307 34 50 28 419 ADMINISTRATORS Negotiating Non-Negotiating TOTAL ADMINISTRATORS 13 107 120 0 0 0 PROFESSIONALS# Negotiating Non-Negotiating Temporary Negotiating TOTAL PROFESSIONALS 11 38 1 50 SUBTOTAL GRADUATE ASSISTANTS GRAND TOTAL Female PT Total TOTAL 15 0 10 25 262 0 271 533 442 39 412 893 884 166 48 13 7 234 1 4 31 0 36 167 52 44 7 270 474 86 94 35 689 641 13 107 120 49 81 130 1 1 2 50 82 132 63 189 252 251 0 2 0 2 11 40 1 52 9 66 1 76 1 11 0 12 10 77 1 88 21 117 2 140 135 907 44 951 948 75 1,023 1,974 1,911 135 68 203 188 80 268 471 -- 1,042 112 1,154 1,136 155 1,291 2,445 *Total full- and part-time faculty in bargaining unit: 560 #Now includes what was previously faculty without standard rank. FTE Figure 13. Percent of All Full-Time Employees by Age Group, October 1999 and 2002 45 40 38.3 34.9 35 33.2 Percent 30 28.5 25 20 18.2 17.5 15 9.8 10 6.1 7.6 5.8 5 0 Under 30 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+ Age Group 1999 2002 TABLE 38. PERCENT OF ALL FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES BY AGE GROUP, OCTOBER 2002* N UNDER 30 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+ 2002 Avg. Age 1999 Avg. Age 1990 Avg. Age Civil Service 864 4.9 14.0 30.3 42.4 8.4 47.8 46.8 43.5 Faculty 611 2.3 18.5 28.2 37.2 13.9 48.5 47.3 46.4 Administration 248 14.5 23.0 22.2 32.3 8.1 43.8 44.5 43.0 99 14.1 28.3 30.3 26.3 1.0 41.8 47.1 46.8 Professional AVERAGE EMPLOYEE AGE, FALL 2002: 47.2 AVERAGE EMPLOYEE AGE, FALL 1999: 46.7 AVERAGE EMPLOYEE AGE, FALL 1990: 44.6 *Excludes unknown age TABLE 39. PERCENTAGE SALARY INCREASE BY EMPLOYEE CATEGORY INCLUDING PROMOTIONS, FISCAL YEARS 1991-2003@ YEAR FY1991 FY1992 FY1993 FY1994 FY1995 FY1996 FY1997 FY1998 FY1999 FY2000 FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 Senior Administrators# 2.4 2.1 3.0 4.6 3.0 6.9 3.9 3.2 4.4 5.6 6.9 16.3 0.8 #President, Vice Presidents, Deans Other Administrators/ Professional 2.4 3.2 2.9 3.8 3.9 5.5 4.8 4.5 5.4 6.2 6.9 11.9 0.5 Civil Service Faculty 3.6 5.1 3.1 8.5 4.3 4.4 3.8 3.7 4.5 5.7 6.9 11.3 1.3 @Based on annualized monthly salary. 2.1 2.8 3.0 3.1 3.9 4.5 4.4 3.3 4.0 6.1 6.4 10.6 0.1 TABLE 40. DISTRIBUTION OF FULL- & PART-TIME EMPLOYEES BY JOB CATEGORY*, FALL 1998 & 2002 1998 JOB CATEGORY M Full-Time F Total 2002 M Part-Time F Total M Full-Time F Total M Part-Time F Total 2002 TOTAL Faculty Executive/Administrative Professional Non-Faculty Secretarial/Clerical Technical/Paraprofessional Skilled Craft Service/Maintenance 396 96 89 20 60 81 146 214 102 113 275 87 2 65 610 198 202 295 147 83 211 32 0 6 0 2 0 0 30 6 8 19 2 0 1 62 6 14 19 4 0 1 379 120 94 16 70 75 153 234 130 161 275 82 1 65 613 250 255 291 152 76 218 40 0 2 0 2 0 0 36 2 14 20 2 0 1 76 2 16 20 4 0 1 689 252 271 311 156 76 219 TOTAL 888 858 1,746 40 66 106 907 948 1,855 44 75 119 1,974 *EEO6 Categories TABLE 41. AVERAGE SALARIES FOR FULL-TIME, 9-MONTH FACULTY, FISCAL YEARS 1999-2003 N FY1999 Mean N FY2000 Mean N FY2001 Mean N FY2002 Mean N FY2003 Mean Professor Associate Assistant Instructor Lecturer 213 120 161 65 8 58,137 47,738 39,614 29,280 28,834 202 119 164 68 9 60,879 49,704 40,494 29,318 28,958 190 122 180 75 10 64,848 51,983 42,694 31,143 29,716 183 123 192 80 12 71,936 56,192 46,522 33,525 33,017 177 132 173 84 6 71,968 55,389 46,691 33,961 32,445 Total University 567 46,955 562 48,234 577 50,227 590 54,501 572 54,501 Source: AAUP Annual Salary Survey (9 month) TABLE 42. AVERAGE SALARY OF FULL-TIME FACULTY IN ILLINOIS PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES BY SEX AND RANK, FY2002* Professors Institution M F Total M Associate Assistant Professors Professors F Total M F Instructors Total M F All Ranks Total M F Total Chicago State University $71.6 $70.1 $71.1 $60.8 $57.9 $59.3 $52.4 $51.1 $51.6 NA NA NA $63.7 $57.1 $60.5 Eastern Illinois University 69.0 66.9 68.3 59.0 53.5 57.1 43.8 42.5 43.3 28.0 31.2 30.0 55.8 48.5 52.8 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA 60.2 51.3 55.8 Illinois State University 72.7 71.1 72.4 58.5 52.2 56.3 50.6 47.2 48.7 NA NA NA 58.9 46.7 53.8 Northeastern Ill. University 75.2 68.9 72.4 59.1 56.0 57.9 50.0 47.9 49.1 28.5 29.3 28.9 55.1 50.0 52.7 Northern Illinois University 81.3 72.7 79.4 61.5 57.7 60.0 51.0 49.9 50.4 39.7 39.1 39.3 64.3 52.9 59.6 Western Illinois University 73.7 70.3 72.8 58.5 54.7 57.1 48.0 44.5 46.5 33.3 32.7 32.9 59.7 49.7 56.0 Governors State University Southern Illinois University 80.2 70.4 78.4 63.7 57.5 61.5 47.7 47.3 47.5 32.6 30.2 30.8 60.9 46.7 55.4 SIU - Carbondale 82.9 72.4 81.1 63.5 58.7 61.9 47.6 47.1 47.4 30.8 29.9 30.1 60.6 45.3 54.5 SIU - Edwardsville 75.0 67.5 73.4 64.4 55.1 60.7 48.1 47.7 47.9 37.2 32.3 34.4 61.8 50.9 57.8 University of Illinois 98.3 87.6 96.7 68.6 65.0 67.4 59.6 52.8 56.6 33.7 36.4 35.6 79.8 61.0 73.8 U of I - Chicago 95.7 90.5 94.8 68.7 65.9 67.7 61.1 55.2 58.0 38.4 38.8 38.7 78.6 62.5 72.6 U of I - Springfield 72.3 67.5 71.5 58.7 55.9 57.7 49.7 44.0 46.8 NA NA 43.8 60.0 50.8 56.4 100.3 86.8 98.5 69.8 65.6 68.4 59.6 52.1 56.6 29.9 30.1 30.0 81.6 60.9 75.8 $87.3 $76.2 $85.1 $64.3 $59.7 $62.6 $52.9 $49.5 $51.4 $32.9 $32.8 $32.9 $68.6 $53.1 $62.8 U of I - Urbana/Champaign AVERAGE SALARY *Twelve-month salaries are converted to a nine-month equivalent using a factor of 9/11. NOTE: Only All Rank data are shown for institutions which do not use traditional faculty ranks. Salary data are displayed as NA when there are fewer than three individuals in a given category. Source: 2002 IBHE Data Book TABLE 43. SELECTED FACULTY CHARACTERISTICS, FALL 2002 Rank Professor Associate Assistant Instructor Lecturer SUBTOTAL Librarian Counselors Graduate Assistants*** TOTAL FT Male PT Total FT Female PT Total Total FT PT Total Faculty Avg. Yrs. at WIU** Terminal Degrees # % Tenured Tenure Track # % # % 156 85 100 36 2 3 1 2 34 0 159 86 102 70 2 49 52 73 55 5 0 1 1 26 8 49 53 74 81 13 205 137 173 91 7 3 2 3 60 8 208 139 176 151 15 21.0 10.5 4.0 5.9 9.9 204 118 89 17 1 98.1 84.9 50.6 11.3 6.7 202 98 16 0 0 97.1 70.5 9.1 0.0 0.0 2 36 145 0 0 1.0 25.9 82.4 0.0 0.0 379 40 419 234 36 270 613 76 689 12.4 429 62.3 316 45.9 183 26.6 10 3 135 0 0 68 10 3 203 6 5 188 0 1 80 6 6 268 16 8 323 0 1 148 16 9 471 12.2 14.1 - 15 2 0 93.8 22.2 0.0 10 2 0 62.5 22.2 0.0 4 0 0 25.0 0.0 0.0 527 108 635 433 117 550 960 225 1,185 5.9 446 37.6 328 27.7 187 15.8 Total FT PT Total Faculty Excludes Executive Assistants and Faculty Assistants **For those new in 2002, years at WIU were counted as 0.5. TABLE 44. SELECTED FACULTY CHARACTERISTICS, FALL 2001 Rank Professor Associate Assistant Instructor Lecturer SUBTOTAL Librarian Counselors Graduate Assistants*** TOTAL FT Male PT Total FT Female PT Total Avg. Yrs. at WIU** Terminal Degrees # % Tenured Tenure Track # % # % 159 85 112 29 4 5 1 0 29 0 164 86 112 58 4 49 46 80 48 7 3 1 0 20 8 52 47 80 68 15 208 131 192 77 11 8 2 0 49 8 216 133 192 126 19 21.4 11.3 3.8 5.9 8.7 211 111 96 11 2 97.7 83.5 50.0 8.7 10.5 207 105 14 0 0 95.8 78.9 7.3 0.0 0.0 2 24 161 0 0 0.9 18.0 83.9 0.0 0.0 389 35 424 230 32 262 619 67 686 12.4 431 62.8 326 47.5 187 27.3 10 3 129 0 0 71 10 3 200 7 5 174 0 1 85 7 6 259 17 8 303 0 1 156 17 9 459 11.6 13.1 - 16 2 0 94.1 22.2 0.0 11 2 0 64.7 22.2 0.0 4 0 0 23.5 0.0 0.0 531 106 637 416 118 534 947 224 1,171 7.3 449 38.3 339 28.9 191 16.3 Excludes Executive Assistants and Faculty Assistants **For those new in 2001, years at WIU were counted as 0.5. FACULTY ACTIVITY, COST COMPARISONS AND WIU APPROPRIATIONS Faculty loads (Table 45 and Figure 14) show the student credit hours (SCH) per faculty staff year (SY) for total and by student level for FY1992-FY2002. Table 46 shows the total number of faculty staff years by college for the last five fiscal years. The table further divides the staff years between instruction, public service and organized research. The distribution of faculty activity in Figure 15 shows the number of staff years assigned to public service and organized research for FY1998FY2002. Western Illinois University cost comparisons based on the Illinois Board of Higher Education Discipline Cost Study are shown in Table 47 and Figure 16. The comparative cost analysis indicates for fiscal year 2001 Western was, for the seventh year in a row, overfunded (2.3 percent). FY2002 information is not available at this time. The FY1994-FY2003 state appropriations for WIU are shown in Table 48 and Figure 17. Income fund as a percent of the total appropriation has increased to an alltime high, approximately 36 percent. Table 49 shows the FY1998-FY2003 state higher education appropriations for all Illinois public universities. The percent change in state higher education appropriations was 22.4 percent from FY1998 to FY2003. From FY2002 to FY2003, appropriations decreased 1.5 percent. TABLE 45. STAFF YEAR FACULTY LOADS, FISCAL YEARS 1992-2002 FY YEAR SCH LOWER 1992 134,146 1993 119,367 1994 113,541 1995 105,836 1996 106,368 1997 107,866 1998 109,493 1999 119,360 2000 120,637 2001 123,073 2002 124,144 UPPER 1992 172,085 1993 174,722 1994 172,950 1995 165,490 1996 155,388 1997 150,742 1998 152,167 1999 157,165 2000 162,927 2001 166,630 2002 169,052 GRADUATE 1992 38,756 1993 37,753 1994 37,122 1995 35,546 1996 37,648 1997 36,279 1998 36,829 1999 36,284 2000 36,821 2001 36,455 2002 39,658 TOTAL 1992 344,987 1993 331,842 1994 323,613 1995 306,872 1996 299,404 1997 294,887 1998 298,489 1999 312,809 2000 320,385 2001 326,158 2002 332,854 Source: IBHE Faculty Load Study SY DIRECT SCH PER SY DIR TOTAL SY SCH PER SY TOT INDEX 1992-2002 101.92 92.28 92.22 92.95 96.48 96.14 100.81 104.97 104.38 107.08 106.23 1,316.19 1,293.53 1,231.20 1,138.63 1,102.49 1,121.97 1,086.13 1,137.09 1,155.75 1,149.36 1,168.63 162.66 139.70 135.14 143.63 155.19 157.73 160.32 165.73 167.19 173.09 175.91 824.70 854.45 840.17 736.87 685.40 683.86 682.97 720.21 721.56 711.03 705.72 100.00 103.61 101.88 89.35 83.11 82.92 82.81 87.33 87.49 86.22 85.57 173.27 179.75 185.40 195.35 194.57 183.84 192.24 187.94 192.08 196.82 194.99 993.16 972.03 932.85 847.15 798.62 819.96 791.55 836.25 848.22 846.61 866.98 247.89 246.24 251.64 276.18 278.33 265.95 268.72 264.00 271.71 279.91 283.41 694.20 709.56 687.29 599.21 558.29 566.81 566.27 595.32 599.64 595.30 596.49 100.00 102.21 99.00 86.32 80.42 81.65 81.57 85.76 86.38 85.75 85.93 67.50 64.54 66.39 77.38 78.22 75.23 75.58 71.37 68.80 69.16 69.60 574.16 584.96 559.15 459.37 481.31 482.24 487.28 508.39 535.19 527.11 569.80 87.20 81.21 81.18 95.75 99.88 96.04 97.29 91.85 88.51 89.49 92.60 444.45 464.88 457.28 371.24 376.93 377.75 378.55 395.04 416.01 407.36 428.27 100.00 104.60 102.89 83.53 84.81 84.99 85.17 88.88 93.60 91.66 96.36 342.69 336.57 344.01 365.68 369.27 355.21 368.63 364.28 365.26 373.06 370.82 1,006.70 985.95 940.71 839.18 810.80 830.18 809.73 858.70 877.14 874.28 897.62 497.75 467.15 467.96 515.56 533.40 519.72 526.33 521.58 527.41 542.49 551.92 693.09 710.35 691.54 595.22 561.31 567.40 567.11 599.73 607.47 601.22 603.08 100.00 102.49 99.78 85.88 80.99 81.86 81.82 86.53 87.65 86.75 87.01 Figure 14. Staff Year Faculty Loads Fiscal Years 1992-2002 800 710.35 700 693.09 691.54 600 599.73 595.22 561.31 567.40 607.47 601.22 603.08 567.11 Credit Hours 500 400 300 200 100 0 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 SCH Per Staff Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 TABLE 46. FACULTY STAFF YEARS ALLOCATED TO INSTRUCTION, ORGANIZED RESEARCH AND PUBLIC SERVICE* BY COLLEGE FOR FISCAL YEARS 1998-2002 College/Fiscal Year Instruction Organized Research Public Service Arts & Sciences 1998 211.50 0.27 2.06 1999 211.18 0.43 1.31 2000 209.24 0.34 1.17 2001 215.79 0.67 1.60 2002 211.54 1.20 1.35 Business & Technology 1998 100.41 0.43 1.18 1999 102.29 0.27 1.41 2000 102.93 0.44 1.09 2001 105.91 0.90 0.32 2002 107.61 0.8 0.23 Education & Human Services 1998 143.51 0.72 14.18 1999 137.48 1.14 16.96 2000 139.26 0.01 15.93 2001 143.17 0.01 15.76 2002 151.73 0.44 14.50 Fine Arts & Communication 1998 70.91 0.04 11.65 1999 70.63 0.00 10.09 2000 75.98 0.00 6.17 2001 77.62 0.00 5.79 2002 81.04 0.01 5.20 Total University 1998 526.33 1.46 29.07 1999 521.58 1.84 29.77 2000 527.41 0.79 24.36 2001 542.49 1.58 23.47 2002 551.92 2.45 21.28 *Includes Grad. Assistants. A full-time graduate assistant for 12 months is equal to .25 SY's. Source: IBHE Faculty Load Study Total 213.83 212.92 210.75 218.06 214.09 102.02 103.97 104.46 107.13 108.64 158.41 155.58 155.20 158.94 166.67 82.60 80.72 82.15 83.41 86.25 556.86 553.19 552.56 567.54 575.65 Figure 15. Faculty Staff Years Total University Organized Research and Public Service Fiscal Years 1998-2002 Faculty Staff Years 35 29.77 29.07 30 24.36 25 23.47 21.28 20 15 10 5 1.46 1.84 0 1998 1999 0.79 2000 Organized Research 1.58 2.45 2001 Public Service 2002 18. WIU Cost Comparisons--Weighted Average, FigureFigure 16. WIU Cost Comparisons--Weighted Average, PercentOver/(Under), Over/(Under),Fiscal FiscalYears Years1991-2001 1988-1998 Percent 10 1 0.8 Percent Percent 5 0.6 0 0.4 -5 0.2 -10 0 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 Total Less Physical Plant 1998 1999 Total Less Physical Plant TABLE 47. WIU COST COMPARISONS PERCENT OVER/(UNDER), FISCAL YEARS 1991-2001 Fiscal Year Dollars* 1991 (2,678.9) 1992 (1,595.5) 1993 (476.4) 1994 (158.7) 1995 1,506.6 1996 1,665.6 1997 3,378.8 1998 3,363.3 1999 375.7 2000 853.3 2001 1,421.6 *In thousands at the total less physical plant level with IBHE Fixed Cost Adjustments Source: IBHE Comparative Cost Study Percent Over/Under (6.2) (3.7) (1.1) (0.3) 3.2 3.4 6.9 5.4 0.7 1.5 2.3 2000 2001 Figure 17. Percent Change in Total Appropriation And Income as a Percent of Total 40 35.87 35 32.94 30 30.12 31.13 4.60 4.45 29.39 29.55 29.46 4.48 4.48 29.50 31.09 32.24 25 20 15 10 5 8.04 2.10 6.05 6.49 1.89 0.44 0 FY94 FY95 FY96 FY97 FY98 FY99 % Change-Total Appropriation FY00 FY01 FY02 FY03 Income Fund % of Total TABLE 48. WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY APPROPRIATION HISTORY, FISCAL YEARS 1994-2003 Total Appropriation % Change FY94 64,003,700 2.10 FY95 66,947,300 4.60 FY96 69,923,200 4.45 FY97 71,247,200 1.89 FY98 74,438,800 4.48 General Funds % Change 42,918,800 4.91 46,785,100 9.01 48,154,700 2.93 50,305,500 4.47 52,442,700 4.25 Income Fund % Change 21,084,900 (3.18) 20,162,200 (4.38) 21,768,500 7.97 20,941,700 (3.80) 21,996,100 5.03 Income Fund % of Total 32.94 30.12 31.13 29.39 29.55 Total Appropriation % Change FY99 77,776,000 4.48 FY00 82,483,700 6.05 FY01 89,114,800 8.04 FY02* 94,898,700 6.49 FY03 95,319,000 0.44 General Funds % Change 54,859,500 4.61 58,151,900 6.00 61,407,400 5.60 64,306,700 4.72 61,126,000 (4.95) Income Fund % Change 22,916,500 4.18 24,331,800 6.18 27,707,400 13.87 30,592,000 10.41 34,193,000 11.77 29.46 29.50 31.09 32.24 35.87 Income Fund % of Total Note: Total appropriations exclude retirement. *Required lapse of $741,100 caused revision of the Total Appropriation. TABLE 49. STATE HIGHER EDUCATION OPERATING APPROPRIATIONS, FISCAL YEARS 1998-2003# Institution Percent Change 1998-03 Percent Change 2002-03 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 $535,165.5 47,820.1 64,215.3 31,390.1 122,120.2 51,265.2 143,915.8 74,438.8 $565,267.3 50,340.5 68,667.5 33,049.1 129,448.3 55,621.4 150,364.5 77,776.0 $592,644.5 51,539.0 72,943.1 35,549.2 134,261.1 58,285.8 157,582.6 82,483.7 $625,992.3 53,884.5 77,033.2 37,471.2 139,879.3 61,117.4 167,491.9 89,114.8 $668,072.2 56,986.6 81,992.6 39,465.5 147,230.8 66,022.9 180,734.0 95,639.8 $654,897.5 55,424.3 81,507.8 38,225.2 144,885.8 65,814.4 175,371.1 93,668.9 22.4 15.9 26.9 21.8 18.6 28.4 21.9 25.8 Southern Illinois University SIU - Carbondale SIU - Edwardsville University Administration 281,292.4 199,931.3 79,583.2 1,777.9 294,725.0 208,921.3 83,943.9 1,859.8 305,074.9 214,228.7 88,929.8 1,916.4 324,009.3 226,866.5 95,010.1 2,132.7 344,908.7 239,492.1 103,063.6 2,353.0 335,020.2 19.1 (100.0) (100.0) (100.0) (2.9) (100.0) (100.0) (100.0) University of Illinois U of I - Chicago U of I - Springfield+ U of I - Urbana/Champaign University Administration 865,714.2 383,801.5 25,368.0 413,014.6 43,530.1 904,227.3 400,733.0 26,843.8 429,038.9 47,611.6 955,194.6 416,989.7 28,024.3 454,023.7 56,156.9 1,002,215.4 436,236.5 28,629.6 481,548.6 55,800.7 1,076,276.0 460,757.8 31,671.8 518,522.8 65,323.6 1,068,380.7 23.4 (100.0) (100.0) (100.0) (100.0) (0.7) (100.0) (100.0) (100.0) (100.0) $1,682,172.1 $1,764,219.6 $1,852,914.0 $1,952,217.0 $2,089,256.9 $2,058,298.4 Public Universities Chicago State University Eastern Illinois University Governors State University Illinois State University Northeastern Ill. University Northern Illinois University Western Illinois University TOTAL PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES #Excludes retirement. 22.4 (2.0) (2.7) (0.6) (3.1) (1.6) (0.3) (3.0) (2.1) (1.5)