At its meeting Sept. 10, the ŷڱƵ Board of Regents heard an update on enrollment numbers, named a chair to lead the search for a new system president, approved changes to tuition classification for American Indian students and more.
Fall enrollment estimates
September enrollment projections for ŷڱƵ Boulder remain largely in line with June estimates, thanks in part to an expected second-year retention rate of at least 87.5% for fall 2020 first-year students.
Chad Marturano, acting chief financial officer for the ŷڱƵ system, presented enrollment updates for all four campuses to the regents. Official enrollment counts for the fall census will be updated later this month, and the board will be notified in October as to whether necessary revenue thresholds have been met to award base-building merit pay increases for faculty and university staff on Jan. 1.
ŷڱƵ Boulder’s September estimated overall enrollment for the new academic year is 35,788, down only slightly from the June estimate of 35,819. The numbers vary for resident and nonresident students. The latest projection for in-state students is down 1,007 students from the June estimate, but was offset by a 976 student increase in projected nonresident enrollment. The biggest driver of the nonresident increase is continuing students.
The expected 87.5% retention rate for second-fall students ties an all-time high for the Boulder campus, and is thanks in part to increased efforts over the summer focused on re-enrollment of continuing undergraduate students.
ŷڱƵ Boulder’s overall enrollment projection would mark a 2.3% increase from the 2020-21 academic year. Transfer student enrollment for the fall is projected at 1,540 students, up 9.1% from fall 2020 and marking the third-largest transfer cohort in the past 15 years. Graduate student enrollment is now projected at 6,350 students, 19 students higher than budget. Some of those gains are offset by a first-year student cohort now projected at 6,794 students, an increase of 438 students from fall 2020 but 236 students lower than budget.
The campus presentation acknowledged that the smaller first-year cohorts from fall 2020 and fall 2021 will have long-term impacts on enrollment totals and tuition revenues. The Boulder campus will continue to focus on improving retention and graduation, helping to offset the long-term impact of smaller incoming classes. ŷڱƵ Boulder will also increase recruitment and outreach efforts for ŷڱƵ high school graduates, and continue to monitor COVID-19 and economic impacts on student enrollment.
ŷڱƵ Boulder’s updated enrollment figures were in line with other campuses. ŷڱƵ Anschutz projected enrollment is projected to be up 2% from last fall, and is ahead of June projections by 1.5%. At ŷڱƵ Denver, enrollment is projected to be down 1.6% from last fall but is beating June projections by 1%. And at UCCS, enrollment is projected to be down 2.5% from last year but is ahead of June estimates by 0.3%.
Appointment of presidential search committee chair
The Board of Regents elected Regent Lesley Smith (D-at large), a retired ŷڱƵ Boulder researcher, as chair of the search committee that will drive the selection of the next ŷڱƵ system president, following the resignation of President Mark Kennedy earlier this year.
The board will consider an appointment for vice chair when they next meet.
Smith’s appointment followed board approval of changes to Regent Policy 3.C regarding searches for administrators and guidelines for the appointment of chief officers of the university.
Changes to the include:
- An amendment to clarify that the presidential search committee will strive to select and recommend a diverse pool of candidates with a variety of backgrounds, expertise and perspectives to represent the interests of the university.
- An amendment to clarify that the Board of Regents may appoint as many regents to the presidential search committee as the board deems prudent.
- An amendment to add one additional student to the presidential search committee and that one student member shall be an undergraduate student and one shall be a graduate student.
- An amendment to add an additional staff member to the presidential search committee for a total of two.
- An amendment to add one member of the ŷڱƵ Foundation Board of Directors to the presidential search committee.
- An amendment requiring that the custodian of records of a presidential search committee provide de-identified demographic data for candidates interviewed by the search committee in response to a request under the ŷڱƵ Open Records Act.
Updates on research efforts
With “Discovery and Impact” as one of the four major pillars of the ŷڱƵ system’s , leaders from all four campuses provided updates to the regents on campus research initiatives on Friday.
ŷڱƵ Boulder Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation Terri Fiez highlighted aerospace, environmental sustainability, quantum science and health, wellness and biological sciences as key areas of research for the campus, calling out in particular the $25 million National Science Foundation award announced last year to establish a new quantum science and engineering research center.
Fiez noted that the campus has received $149 million in NASA funding this year and $111 million in NSF funding. She also noted ŷڱƵ Boulder’s strength in raising research funding for national security initiatives, an area she highlighted as one of significant potential growth over the next five years along with climate science, another one of ŷڱƵ Boulder’s key strength areas.
Both Fiez and ŷڱƵ Anschutz Vice Chancellor for Research Thomas Flaig praised the early success of the ר Nexus initiative, which aims to expand research collaborations between the Anschutz and Boulder campuses and recently announced a third round of grants.
In-state tuition classification for American Indians
The regents approved a resolution that all ŷڱƵ campuses will create policies to grant in-state tuition status to American Indian students who are registered with federally recognized tribes with historic ties to ŷڱƵ. The move ratified the ŷڱƵ General Assembly’s passage of SB 21-029 during the 2021 legislative session, which required governing boards to pass such policies.
ŷڱƵ Boulder has already begun implementing the residency exception for the 2021-22 academic year.
ŷڱƵ is identified as the ancestral home places of at least 48 American Indian tribes.
Intercampus Student Forum updates
Intercampus Student Forum (ICSF) Chair Chris Hilton, an undergraduate student at ŷڱƵ Denver, provided a report-out, highlighting student government leadership priorities for each of the four campuses for the upcoming academic year. The ICSF resumed its monthly meetings with a virtual meeting in August, and will continue to meet through the academic year.
The ICSF noted a pair of shared focuses across the system, including a need for transparency and direct student involvement in the search committee for selection of the next ŷڱƵ president, as well as a concentrated focus by all campuses on diversity and equity issues at all levels.
Priorities noted for the ŷڱƵ Boulder student leaders for the new academic year included mental health awareness and support, improving representation of all student communities, community engagement (on campus and in surrounding neighborhoods), and increasing functionality and leadership of ŷڱƵ Student Government.
Funding from foreign nationals, governments
The regents approved three resolutions related to university funding from foreign nationals and foreign governments. The first was a resolution that ŷڱƵ will ensure that relationships with foreign or national governments are conducted appropriately and in accordance with the requirements of federal law, including the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, the Higher Education Act of 1965 and the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act.
The second was a resolution that each ŷڱƵ campus shall annually provide to the regents’ Audit Committee a report summarizing all gifts, contracts or grants with a foreign government or nongovernmental foreign source with a value of at least $100,000, as well as a specific disclosure of any transaction with a foreign country subject to restrictions through the Office of Foreign Assets Control.
The third resolution stated that no ŷڱƵ campus will permit affiliation with any entity related to the Confucius Institutes unless such affiliation has been expressly permitted under the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act, given cautions by federal law enforcement agencies that the Confucius Institutes may be a vehicle for state-sponsored espionage and warnings by the American Association of University Professors and the National Association of Scholars that the practices of the Confucius Institutes represent a threat to norms of academic freedom.
Other regents news
- The board approved updated contracts for and Both contracts now run through June 30, 2026.
ŷڱƵ system Treasurer Tony Vu gave the quarterly treasurer’s report, highlighting that the system’s investment pool grew from $2.3 billion on June 30, 2020 to $2.9 billion on June 30 of this year thanks to strong market returns.