Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

RATES FALL to 51 percent at private schools.

Data show graduation decline

- AZIZA MUSA

While the state’s public four-year universiti­es are seeing increases in graduation rates, its private universiti­es are experienci­ng downward trends.

This year, the state Department of Higher Education released for the first time graduation rates for the state’s 11 private and independen­t colleges and universiti­es.

The rates for the private universiti­es are still higher than the state’s public institutio­ns, at 51 percent of 3,279 first-time students in 2009 graduating six years later. The statewide average for public universiti­es was 40 percent.

As a comparison, for the 2005 class, 55.4 percent of 2,543 students entering a private college graduated six years later, the Higher Education Department said.

“We know there are difference­s between publics and privates,” said Higher Education Department Director Brett Powell. “There are difference­s in how they accept students. If you accept students with better credential­s, you are more likely to get them toward a degree.”

First-time students entering a private college or university usually have higher scores on the ACT college admissions exam, department data show.

Of the private and independen­t colleges, Crowley’s Ridge College in Paragould had the lowest sixyear graduation rate at 17.7 percent of the 62 students entering in 2009, department data show.

On the other end, Hendrix College in Conway had the highest rate at 70.9 percent of the 433 students entering for the first time in 2009.

But, the downward trends don’t necessaril­y reflect the college’s push to graduation, Powell said. It could include students who transfer to public universiti­es because of finances, he said.

More telling — both for private and public colleges and universiti­es — is the success rate, he added.

Of the 15,193 students entering a public university in 2009, 40 percent graduated from their home institutio­ns six years later, 6.2 percent graduated from another institutio­n, 5.9 percent are still enrolled in their home institutio­ns and 10.2 percent are enrolled in another institutio­n, according to department data.

In that same year, 37.8 percent dropped out — though that number could include transfers to colleges of universiti­es out of state, Powell said. In total, the group had a 62.2 percent success rate.

Of the 3,279 students entering a private college or university in 2009, 51 percent graduated from their home institutio­ns six years later, 4.6 percent graduated from another institutio­n, 1.9 percent were still enrolled in that private college or university, and 8.6 percent are enrolled in another institutio­n, department data show. That group has an overall success rate of 66 percent.

“This is I think the most important thing is the success rate of the campus,” Powell said. “We need to get people to degrees, obviously, but as long as they’re still making an attempt, there’s still a chance we can get them to a degree.”

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