Part B IPEDS 2022-23 through 2024-25_30

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Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 2022-23 through 2024-25

OMB: 1850-0582

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Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 2022-23 to 2024-25



Supporting Statement Part B




OMB No. 1850-0582 v. 30





Submitted by:

National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

Institute of Education Sciences

U.S. Department of Education




February 2022

SECTION B. Description of Statistical Methodology


B.1. Respondent Universe


In 2020-21, IPEDS collected data from 6,440 postsecondary institutions in the United States and the other jurisdictions that are eligible to participate in Title IV Federal financial aid programs. By law, all Title IV institutions are required to respond to IPEDS (Section 490 of the Higher Education Amendments of 1992 [P.L. 102-325]). IPEDS allows other (non-title IV) institutions to participate on a voluntary basis; approximately 300 non-title IV institutions elect to respond each year. Institution closures and mergers have led to a decrease in the number of institutions in the IPEDS universe over the past few years. Due to these fluctuations, combined with the addition of new institutions, NCES uses rounded estimates for the number of institutions in the respondent burden calculations for the upcoming years (estimated 6,100 Title IV institutions plus 300 non-title IV institutions for a total of 6,400 institutions estimated to submit IPEDS data during the 2022-23 through 2024-25 IPEDS data collections).


Table 1 provides the number of institutions that submitted data during the 2017-18 IPEDS data collection and the number of institutions estimated to submit data during the 2019-20 through 2021-22 IPEDS data collections, disaggregated by the type of institution (Title IV institutions are disaggregated by highest level of offering: 4-year award or above, 2-year award, less than 2-year award). Note that based on yet unpublished numbers from the 2018-19 data collection, NCES has decreased the estimates for the number of institutions that are expected to report to IPEDS in the 2019-20 through 2021-22 data collections.


Table 1. Actual 2020-21 and Estimated 2022-23 through 2024-25 Number of Institutions Submitting IPEDS Data

Institution Type

2020-21 Institution Counts*

Estimates Used in Burden Calculations for the 2019-20 to 2021-22 Collections

Total

6,400

6,400

Title IV institutions

6,063

6,100

4-year

2,724

2,750

2-year

1,623

1,650

Less than 2-yr

1,716

1,700

Non-Title IV institutions

337

300

* For Title IV institutions: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, IPEDS, Fall 2020 Institutional Characteristics component (provisional data).


Table 2 provides the number of experienced and new keyholders that submitted data for a given IPEDS component during the 2020-21 IPEDS data collection, disaggregated by the type of institution. These experienced vs. new keyholder designation is drawn directly from self-reported data in the data collection system, where users indicate whether they are submitting data for the first time when they register.


Table 2. 2021 Counts of Experienced and New Keyholders Submitting IPEDS Data, by Institution Type and IPEDS Component

Survey component

Total

4-year institutions

2-year institutions

Less than 2-year institutions


Experienced

New

Experienced

New

Experienced

New

Experienced

New

IC

4,791

1,597

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

C

4,630

1,543

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

E12

4,627

1,542

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

SFA

4,548

1,516

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

OM

2,771

923

2,016

505

1,150

287

0

0

GR

4,727

1,182

1,893

473

1,487

372

1,347

337

GR200

4,398

1,099

1,642

411

1,461

365

1,295

323

ADM

1,656

414

1,430

357

138

34

88

23

EF

5,474

1,368

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

F

5,474

1,368

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

HR

5,474

1,368

2,382

595

1,569

392

1,523

381

AL

3,239

810

2,099

525

1,139

285

0

0

* Note: These counts do not match any published numbers because they include the non-Title IV institutions that voluntarily submit data to IPEDS.


Table 3 provides the actual response rates, by survey component and the type of institution, for the 2017-18 IPEDS data collection. Because IPEDS is a mandated federal data collection, and institutions can be fined for non-response, all response rates approximate 100%.


Table 3. IPEDS 20-20-21 Title IV Institutions Response Rates, by Institution Type and IPEDS Component

Survey component

4-year institutions

2-year institutions

Less than 2-year institutions

IC

100.00%

100.00%

99.94%

C

99.96%

99.94%

99.88%

E12

99.93%

99.94%

99.82%

SFA

100.00%

99.94%

99.77%

OM

99.96%

99.92%

N/A

GR

99.96%

100.00%

99.81%

GR200

99.42%

99.84%

99.57%

ADM

100.00%

99.28%

100.00%

EF

99.96%

99.88%

99.82%

F

99.96%

99.87%

99.76%

HR

99.96%

99.88%

99.82%

AL

99.96%

99.92%

N/A



B.2. Statistical Methodology


No sampling is utilized for any of the IPEDS survey components. Because of the institutional compliance requirements outlined in Part A sections A.1 and A.2 of this submission, and per extensive discussions at the IPEDS Technical Review Panel meetings, with other areas of the Department of Education, including the Office for Civil Rights, the Office of Postsecondary Education, the office of Federal Student Aid, and the Office of Vocational and Adult Education, and with other Federal Agencies such as Census, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), IPEDS must collect data from the universe of Title IV institutions.


B.3. Methods to Maximize Response Rates


IPEDS response rates for institutions receiving federal financial aid are consistently 99.8% and higher. IPEDS targets the Title IV institutions (others may respond, but no follow-up is done) and the web-based survey system incorporates an automated e-mail module that automatically generates follow-up e-mail to “keyholders” (individuals appointed by the CEOs as responsible for IPEDS data submission). As shown in Table 19 of Part A section A.16 of this submission, frequent communications occur with the institutions over the course of the data collection to ensure compliance with this statutorily mandated collection. Follow-up e-mails are generated if an institution does not attempt to enter data or if, at two weeks and one week before closeout, the components are not locked. The CEOs of non-responding institutions are also contacted by standard mail and with follow up phone calls if, two weeks prior to closeout, the school has not entered any data. New institutions and institutions with new keyholders receive additional telephone and email prompts. This has proven to be very successful in past years. In addition, the names of institutions that do not respond to the IPEDS surveys, and a history of all regular contact with these institutions, is provided to the Federal Student Aid office for appropriate action.


B.4. Tests of Procedures and Methods


The data collection procedures and data items described in this submission have been tested in a number of ways. Most of the data elements requested have already been collected in previous IPEDS surveys and prior to that, similar data elements had been collected for over 20 years in the Higher Education General Information Survey (HEGIS), the predecessor to IPEDS.


However, data quality is an overriding concern that NCES must continue to assess and evaluate. One approach is to assess relevant data from different IPEDS components and from different survey years to evaluate the consistency and reliability of reported data. These interrelationships among surveys and over time were used to develop the automated tests used to edit each IPEDS data submission. Edit checks currently help to identify potential problems and provide opportunities to correct them early in the data collection. As the number of institutions that automate their responses to IPEDS increases, it becomes increasingly difficult to fully validate their responses. However, by implementing a web-based data collection effort that requires error resolution and correction prior to data submission, NCES has been gathering cleaner data in a timelier fashion. The web-based system still accommodates intermediate reporting units such as community college boards, state university systems offices, and corporate offices.


The web-based data collection method was tested in a successful pilot collection of Institutional Price and Student Financial Aid information in August 1999 and has been in full-scale implementation since the fall of 2000. Throughout the implementation of the web-based system, as a result of discussions with data providers and associations that use the data, NCES has revised the data collection items, definitions, and instructions based on the recommendations of IPEDS constituents, and following appropriate public comment periods.


B.5. Reviewing Individuals


Listed below are individuals who have reviewed, in whole or in part, the IPEDS surveys, and/or participated in Technical Review Panel meetings charged with revising and refining the surveys and data items collected.


Representatives from the National Center for Education Statistics

Aida Ali Akreyi, Survey Director1

Samuel Barbett, Mathematical Statistician1

Elise Christopher, Project Officer, High School Longitudinal Studies1

Carrie Clarady, OMB Liaison

Christopher Cody, Survey Director1

Moussa Ezzeddine, Statistician1

Mark Glander, Research Scientist

Tracy Hunt-White, Education Statistician1

Gigi Jones, Education Research Scientist1

Tara Lawley, Team Lead, IPEDS Operations1

Bao Le, Associate Education Research Scientist1

Marie Marcum, Program Director, Administrative Data Division: Elementary and Secondary Branch

Andrew Mary, Statistician1

Audrey Peek, Survey Director

Stacey Peterson, Statistician

McCall Pitcher, Survey Director


Richard Reeves, IPEDS Program Director1

Roman Ruiz, Survey Director

Ross Santy, Associate Commissioner, Administrative Data Division, NCES1

Jie Sun, SAS Programmer1

Kelly Worthington, Administrative Data Division: Elementary and Secondary Branch


Representatives from Associations, Postsecondary Institutions/Systems, and Other Federal Offices – TRP 22

Patrick Alles, Independent Colleges of Indiana2

Craig Bach, Kaplan University

Victor Borden, Indiana University

Keith Brown, North Carolina Community College System

Bryan Cook, American Council on Education

Jason Hill, American Institutes for Research

Christine Keller, MASULGC/University of Kansas, OIRP

Marnia Kennon, Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana

Sandra Kinney, Georgia Departmetn of Technical and Adult Education

Nancy Krogh, University of Idaho

Hans L’Orange, State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEE

Tod Massa, State Council of Higher Education for Virginia

Lesley McBain American Association of State Colleges and Universities

Soon Merz, Austin Community College

John Milam, HigherEd.org, Inc.

Patrick Perry, California Community Colleges Chancellors Office

Kent Phillippe, American Association of Community Colleges

LuWayne Phillips, Lorain County Community College

John Porter, State University of New York – SUNY System Administration

Matt Reed, The Institute for College Access and Success

Steve Robison, Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education

Jessica Shedd, National Associatoin of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO)

Michael Tamada, Occidental College

Judith Taylor, Jobs for the Future

Dawn Terkla, Tufts University

Judith Thompson, Florida Department of Education

Michelle Van Noy, Columbia University

Jamie Wescott, National Accrediting Commission of Cosmetology Arts & Sciences

Nathan Wilson, Illinois Commuity College Board


TRP 55

Eric Atchison, Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning

Dianne Barker, Technical College System of Georgia

Cory Clasemann, Ivy Tech Community College

Melissa Clinedinst, National Association for College Admission Counseling

Mary Ann Coughlin, Springfield College

Alicia Crouch, Kentucky Community and Technical College System

Rebecca Drennen, Berkeley College

Julie Edmunds, SERVE Center at University of North Carolina at Greensboro

John Fink, Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University

Doug Franklin, University of Illinois Springfield

Tanya Garcia, Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce

Luke Gentala, Liberty University

Thomas Harnisch, American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU)

Stephen Haworth, Adtalem Global Education

Braden Hosch, Stony Brook University

Darby Kaikkonen, Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges

Christine Keller, Association for Institutional Research

Wendy Kilgore, American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO)

Carolyn Mata, Georgia Independent College Association

Patrick Meldrim, Tennessee Independent Colleges and Universities Association (TICUA)

Elise Miller, Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU)

Kent Phillippe, American Association of Community Colleges

Jason Ramirez, National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities

Learty Shaw, Georgia Institute of Technology

Jason Taylor, University of Utah

David Troutman, University of Texas System

Jonathan Turk, American Council on Education (ACE)

Jennifer Zinth, Education Commission of the States


TRP 61

Maureen Amos, Northeastern Illinois University

Eric Atchison, Arkansas State University System

Eileen Brennan, Henry Ford College

Bryan Cook, The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities

Mary Ann Coughlin, Springfield College

Bill DeBaun, NCAN

Charlotte Etier, NASFAA

Meredith Fergus, Minnesota Office of Higher Education

Nancy Floyd, Minnesota State Colleges & Universities (MnSCU)

Donyell Francis, Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia

Brian Fu, U.S. Department of Education

Tanya Garcia, Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce

Luke Gentala, Liberty University

Emmanual Guillory, UNCF

Eric Hardy, U.S. Department of Education, FSA

Stephen Haworth, Adtalem Global Education

Nicholas Hillman, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Aaron Horn, MHEC

John Ingram, Community College of Allegheny County

Darby Kaikkonen, Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges

Christine Keller, Association for Institutional Research

Susan Lounsbury, Southern Regional Education Board (SREB)

Brent Madoo, U.S. Department of Education: Office of the Chief Data Officer

Patrick Perry, California Student Aid Commission

Kent Phillippe, American Association of Community Colleges

Sarah Pingel, Education Commission of the States

Jason Ramirez, National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities

Nerissa Rivera, Duke University

Mary Sommers, University of Nebraska Kearney

Jonathan Turk, American Council on Education (ACE)

Christina Whitfield, State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)


TRP 62

Eric Atchinson, Arkansas State University System

Peter Bahr, Center for the Study of Higher and Postsecondary Education

Vladimir Basis, Iowa Department of Education

Victor Borden, Indiana University

Eileen Brennan, Henry Ford College

John Clayton, Johnson County Community College

Rooney Columbus, University of Michigan

Bryan Cook, The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities

Mary Ann Coughlin, Springfield College

Alicia Crouch, Kentucky Community and Technical College System

Mark D’Amico, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Nancy Dugan, Eastern Iowa Community Colleges

Mason Erwin, Coffey Consulting

Nancy Floyd, Minnesota State Colleges and Universities

Tanya Garcia, Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce

Luke Gentala, Liberty University

Mary Goodhue Lynch, Massasoit Community College

Lou Guthrie, LED Fast Start – Louisiana Community and Technical College System

Stephen Haworth, Adtalem Global Education

Tamar Jacoby, Opportunity America

Darby Kaikkonen, Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges

Christine Keller, Association for Institutional Research

Susan Lounsbury, Southern Regional Education Board (SREB)

Martha Oburn, Houston Community College

Kent Phillippe, Amercian Association of Community Colleges

Stephanie Richter, Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana

Maria Scott Cormier, Columbia University, CCRC

Ashley Sieman, North Carolina Community College System

Zun Tang, Office of Institutional Research and Assessment

Michelle Van Noy, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey

Christina Whitfield, State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)


TRP 63

Brian An, University of Iowa

Eric Atchison, Arkansas State University System

Dianne Barker, Technical College System of Georgia

Vladimir Basis, Iowa Department of Education

Eileen Brennan, Henry Ford College

Cory Clasemann, Ivy Tech Community College

Bryan Cook, The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities

Mary Ann Coughlin, Springfield College

Alicia Crouch, Kentucky Community and Technical College System

Rebecca Drennen, Berkeley College

Nancy Dugan, Eastern Iowa Community Colleges

July Edmunds, SERVE Center at University of North Carolina at Greensboro

John Fink, Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University

Michael Flanigan, Virginia Commonwealth University

Nancy Floyd, Minnesota State Colleges and Universities

Luke Gentala, Liberty University

Kurt Gunnell, Western Governors University

Darby Kaikkonen, Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges

Christine Keller, Association for Institutional Research

Wendy Kilgore, American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admisions Officers (AACRAO)

Susan Lounsbury, Southern Regional Education Board (SREB)

Carolyn Mata, Oglethorpe University

Kent Phillippe, American Association of Community Colleges

Bill Schneider, NC Community College System

Troy (Learty) Shaw, Georgia Institute of Technology

Sean Simone, Rutgers University

Amanda Sterk, Florda SouthWestern State College

Jason Taylor, University of Utah

Christina Whitfield, State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)

Shaun Williams-Wyche, Midwestern Higher Education Compact


TRP 64

Eric Atchison, Arkansas State University System

Dianne Barker, National Alliance of Current Enrollment Partnerships (NACEP)

Eileen Brennan, Henry Ford College

Matthew Case, California State University, Office of the Chancellor

Melissa Clinedinst, National Association for College Admission Counseling

Bryan Cook, The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities

Mary Ann Coughlin, Springfield College

Alicia Crouch, Kentucky Community and Technical College System

Michael Flanigan, Virginia Commonwealth University

Nancy Floyd, Minnesota State Colleges and Universities

Kurt Gunnell, Western Governors University

Misty Haskamp, University of Missouri

Christine Keller, Association for Institutional Research

Wendy Kilgore, American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO)

Abby Miller, ASA Research

Joann Moore, ACT, Inc

Kent Phillippe, American Association of Community Colleges

Jason Pontius, Board of Regents State of Iowa

Jason Ramirez, National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities

Ashley Robinson-Spann, College Board

Christina Whitfield, State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)

Shaun Williams-Wyche, Midwestern Higher Education Compact



1 Individual attended multiple Technical Review Panels at different times and in differing capacities, as an NCES representative and as a representative for another organization.

2 Attended TRP 22

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