This Year and Beyond Quality of Life Private Source Revenue Improve Research Develop Core of and Intellectual Nationally Recognized Property Programs Productivity Master Plan Honors Campaign Program Investment/ Reinvestment Gateway Plan Athletics Campaign New Program Development Major Campaign Stem Cell Research Facility Recruit High Achieving Students from Diverse Backgrounds New Program Development 2005: Why did you decide not to attend NJIT? Overall (n = 139) NJIT's location doesn't appeal to me 62% I wanted to attend a more prestigious school The school I will be attending offered me more financial aid I wanted to be farther away from home 32% 24% 19% NJIT doesn't offer the program I want 17% I wanted a larger school 16% I wanted to be closer to home I wanted a smaller school NJIT was too expensive 0% 10% 6% 4% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% NJIT Campus Gateway Plan NJIT Campus Gateway Plan •Plan based on Newark’s designation as an area in need of rehabilitation •NOT requesting area in need of redevelopment status •Developer CANNOT request implementation of eminent domain •NJIT WILL NOT exercise eminent domain •Commitment to historic preservation •NO CAMPUS EXPANSION as part of the proposed project NJIT Campus Gateway Plan Objectives • Grow the Greek community to levels above 1990 on a normalized basis • Ensure viability of the Greek community 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Theta Chi Kappa Xi Kappa 1990 2006 30 18 Tau Delta Phi Sigma Pi Alpha Sigma Phi Pi Kappa Phi 1990 • Members/Greek org 1995 2000 Current Enhance the physical/social/recreational environment of the Greek community •Develop a “college town” neighborhood with amenities for students, faculty, staff, community •Ensure a development effort that enhances NJIT and the community Greek Village/MLK Redevelopment Project Organization City of Newark NJIT Board of Trustees Master Developer/Planner Stakeholder’s Group Greek reps Greek Community NJIT reps James St. Assoc reps NJIT Community James St. Assoc/ community Master Developer/Planner St. Michael’s reps Catholic HHS Newark Housing Auth Master Plan without Baxter Terrace Redevelopment University Ideals ‘New Jersey’s Science & Technology University’ Areas of Emphasis Focus on Technology Diverse Population Intimate Community Multi-disciplinary Education Cutting-edge Research Innovative Technology Entrepreneurial Environment Engaged Community Vibrant Campus Life Professional Growth Cutting edge research and innovation Learning Environment Student centered Multi-disciplinary education Leader in delivery of technological education Vibrant Campus Life Exciting urban campus Diverse student population Continued transition to a 24/7 residential campus Engagement Local and global community Professional practice & industry alliances Planning Principles • Develop facilities and resources to support NJIT’s mission and future long-term growth • Support the social, academic and cultural life on campus by way of permeating technological awareness and shaping of a “life of the mind” • Establish significant, meaningful spaces to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration and professional development • Create inviting approaches, distinct gateways and strong pedestrian connections to adjacent institutions, downtown and surrounding neighborhoods Existing Plan 2007 Lock Street Lock Street MartinLuther LutherKing KingBoulevard Boulevard Martin Central Avenue Central Avenue New St. St. New Summit SummitSt. St. Warren Warren Street Street Raymond Blvd. Raymond Blvd. Colden Colden Proposed Plan Athletics / Recreation Facility Potential Academic Tower New Student Housing Gateway Plan mixed use Greek Village New Tiernan gateway Academic Space Expansions New Central Green Library, CAB and service core expansion York Center and parking garage expansion Central High School Gateway Plan hotel / conference center FY2008 Revenue Operating Budget Revenue = $265,527 ($000's) of Educational FY94-FY07 Comparison of Percent Base Appropriation andCosts Tuition & Fee Income per FTE FY94-FY07 (000' s) $23,000 70% $21,000 Restricted Programs, $64,600 24% 65% Tuition and Fees, $95,038 36% $19,000 $17,000 60% $15,000 55% $13,000 50% $11,000 $9,000 45% $7,000 FY94 FY96 $ Per FY98 FY00 FY02 Base Appropriation Full-Time Equivalent Student FY04 FY 07 FY 06 FY 05 FY 04 FY 03 FY 02 FY 01 FY 00 FY 99 FY 98 FY 97 30% State Appropriations, $71,097 27% FY 96 35% FY 95 Other Revenue Sources, $34,792 13% FY 94 40% $5,000 FY06 Actual Tuition & Fee Income Per Full-Time Equivalent Student Percentage Student Percentage Tuition, Fee State & Base State Appropriation Per Full-Time Equivalent Student State appropriations per student have not (will not) change; very best case is they stay flat; pressure on state budget is to Ð higher ed appropriations About 60% of the revenue to deliver the educational program comes from tuition and fees. Pressure is to Ð tuition increases; ∴ additional revenue comes from additional enrollment "Peer" Enrollments Institution Name Drexel University University of Missouri-Rolla Georgia Institute of Technology Stevens Institute of Technology Carnegie Mellon Illinois Institute of Technology Florida Institute of Technology NYIT Cooper Union University of Alabama in Huntsville University of Delaware University of Maryland-Baltimore Virginia Tech Clemson University New Jersey Institute of Technology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Fall 00 13128 4626 14805 4121 8514 6003 4248 9307 906 6563 19072 5337 27869 17465 8820 8022 Fall 05 18466 5600 17135 4690 10017 6472 4745 10203 1008 7084 20982 5526 27979 17165 8058 6514 Fall 06 19845 5858 17935 4829 9841 6795 4741 10212 990 7091 20380 5498 28470 17309 8209 7433 % Chng % Chng % Chng 00 to 05 05 to 06 00 to 06 40.7% 7.5% 51.2% 21.1% 4.6% 26.6% 15.7% 4.7% 21.1% 13.8% 3.0% 17.2% 17.7% -1.8% 15.6% 7.8% 5.0% 13.2% 11.7% -0.1% 11.6% 9.6% 0.1% 9.7% 11.3% -1.8% 9.3% 7.9% 0.1% 8.0% 10.0% -2.9% 6.9% 3.5% -0.5% 3.0% 0.4% 1.8% 2.2% -1.7% 0.8% -0.9% -8.6% 1.9% -6.9% -18.8% 14.1% -7.3% Program Changes from 2000 to 2006 Institution Name Drexel University University of Missouri-Rolla Georgia Institute of Technology Stevens Institute of Technology Carnegie Mellon Illinois Institute of Technology Florida Institute of Technology NYIT Cooper Union University of Alabama in Huntsville University of Delaware University of Maryland-Baltimore Virginia Tech Clemson University New Jersey Institute of Technology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Added Removed 21 1 15 0 7 2 12 0 51 2 22 6 17 3 10 8 0 0 3 0 8 0 6 1 9 3 12 1 3 0 13 0 Competitor Programmatic Strategies • Expand into sub-disciplines: subdividing • Extend program range into non-technical areas: broadening • Measured development toward new, “traditional” degrees In addition Invigorate/reinvigorate programs NJ 2007 College-Bound Seniors Intended Majors Intended Major Interest Business Management 17% Health Professions 16% Education 11% Visual and Performing Arts 9% Engineering 7% Biological and Biomedical Sciences 5% Total 65% Program Development NCE Healthcare Systems Management (EMS) Energy and Power Systems (MS) Pharmaceutical Processing and Manufacturing (MS) Pharmaceutical Management (MS) Pharmaceutical Materials Science and Engineering (MS) NJSOA Digital Design (BS) Interior Design (BS) Art (BFA) Graphic Design (BA/BS) Landscape Architecture (BS) Bioelectronics (MS) CCS Computing and Business (BS) SOM Health Systems Management (BS) Financial Engineering (BS) Computing and Business (MS) Business Informatics (BS) Financial Engineering (MS) International Business (BS) International Business (MS) New Media Business Development (BS) New Media Business Development (MS) Management Information Systems (MS) Enterprise Development (BS) Enterprise Development (MS) CSLA Computational Sciences (BS) Biophysics (BS) Biochemistry (BS) Pharmaceutical Chemistry (MS) Biostatistics (MS) Law, Technology and Culture (BA) NJ 2007 College-Bound Seniors Intended Major Program Development FY08-FY10 NJSOA NCE CCS CSLA SOM Total Business Management 0 0 3 0 9 12 Health Professions 0 1 0 0 1 2 Education 0 0 0 0 0 0 Visual and Performing Arts 5 0 0 0 0 5 Engineering 0 1 0 0 0 1 Biological and Biomedical Sciences 0 4 0 4 0 8 Sub Total 5 6 3 4 10 28 Curriculum Broadening 0 0 0 2 0 2 Total 5 6 3 6 10 30 Faculty Hires FY08 & FY09 6 7 2 9 2 26 Conclusions “Business” is different than 15 years ago We need to behave as a tuition driven institution Need to be competitive •Environmentally (campus physical plant/college neighborhood/student life) •Programmatically This Year and Beyond Quality of Life Private Source Revenue Improve Research Develop Core of and Intellectual Nationally Recognized Property Programs Productivity Master Plan Honors Campaign Program Investment/ Reinvestment Gateway Plan Athletics Campaign New Program Development Major Campaign Stem Cell Research Facility Recruit High Achieving Students from Diverse Backgrounds New Program Development