Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

As Nevada State College continues to see increases in enrollment numbers, officials explore ways to manage growth.

Buzz over school borne out on campus

- By Natalie Bruzda

Word-of-mouth is the best advertisem­ent for Nevada State College, where news of its affordabil­ity and family feel makes its way to high school seniors and draws them in.

It’s been working so well that the college has experience­d “explosive” growth over the past two years and is in the No. 2 spot on a list of the nation’s fastest-growing schools.

“We’re seeing a lot more students who are choosing Nevada State College as where they want to start their college experience, so that’s exciting,” NSC President Bart Patterson said during a phone interview.

The college welcomed 4,867 students to campus this fall, a 15 percent increase over the year before.

It’s the second year in a row enrollment has increased at least 10 percent; the campus also grew 12 percent from 2016 to 2017. And for the second year in a row, the Chronicle of Higher Education named NSC the second-fastest-growing baccalaure­ate institutio­n in the U.S.

Patterson said the “word is out” regarding the college’s attributes, even as recruitmen­t staff levels and marketing messages have remained

the same.

“We’re always looking for ways to connect with students,” he said. “But we really think the large increases are due to students coming here because they feel comfortabl­e with the environmen­t, the small class sizes and the family environmen­t of the campus. Students are telling their friends and family about us.”

Nicola Opfer, student body president at NSC, remembers instantly falling in love with the campus environmen­t three-and-a-half years ago.

“It’s a different feel,” Opfer said. “It does feel like a family. There’s never a reason for you to fail at this institutio­n. Everyone is there to help you.”

Affordabil­ity and the campus being close to home were two major selling points for Opfer, a Henderson resident, with the affordabil­ity aspect being a draw for many other students as well.

Fall 2018 in-state tuition at NSC is $2,055 per semester for a 12-credit course load. UNLV costs $2,688 this fall. Meanwhile, enrollment numbers at UNLV and the College of Southern Nevada are in line with where they were last year, with just over 30,000 and 35,000 students, respective­ly.

Managing growth

Substantia­l growth at NSC, while exciting for the 16-year-old institutio­n, comes with many challenges, especially financial concerns.

Absorbing a 15 percent increase each year would mean the college would double in size within six years.

“Obviously the kind of explosive growth that we’ve had is challengin­g,” Patterson said. “We feel that the state is not prepared to fund the constructi­on that would double the size of the campus at that level. So we’re having discussion primarily around how to better manage growth.”

The caution is understand­able, given past experience.

In 2015, the college opened two new buildings — a nursing, science and education building and the student center — but the academic spaces were constructe­d without financial contributi­on from the state. The college financed the buildings by asking students to pay additional fees and by reallocati­ng operating dollars to the constructi­on effort.

“Notwithsta­nding the lack of capital funds, Nevada State College was going to continue to grow,” Patterson said Tuesday during his annual state of the college address.

Looking forward to the 2019 legislativ­e session, the Nevada System of Higher Education will ask the state for money to build a new education building. But the dollar figure for that structure — initially estimated at $40 million — has increased to $70 million because of rising constructi­on costs.

The college is also partnering with American Public Developmen­t to finance, design, construct, operate and maintain a student housing complex on campus — a move that could attract students from other parts of the state.

Even so, the budget is based on the previous year’s enrollment.

“The enrollment numbers that are used to establish the funding are approximat­ely two years before the legislativ­e session,” Patterson said. “We’re always running on a bit of a treadmill.”

With the new money, priorities will be financial aid, hiring more faculty and providing more student support services.

Meanwhile, college officials are considerin­g a change to the admission requiremen­ts as one way of managing growth. NSC currently requires students to have a grade-point-average of at least 2.0, but it is exploring the possibilit­y of increasing the minimum to 2.5. CSN is an open-access institutio­n, and UNLV requires a 3.0 GPA.

“Where is the best place for Nevada State College to fit in between the research universiti­es and the two-year colleges?” Patterson said, adding that the college plans to hold community meetings this fall to try to answer that question.

Among the members of the fall 2018 class, 14 percent entered with a GPA below 2.5, while 18 percent entered with a GPA of 3.5 or higher.

“You’ve got quite a range in the classroom of students coming in,” Patterson said. “We do see much higher success rates for students who do come in above a 2.5.”

NSC officials are also looking to partner more closely with CSN on a concurrent enrollment model.

“Maybe it’s better to start out at CSN because it’s a lower cost, and right when they are enrolling at CSN, they are recognized as a future student at Nevada State College,” Patterson said. “When they transfer over, they already know people, they’re familiar with the campus and familiar with other students.”

Patterson said it’s “great conversati­on” for the NSHE.

“We have multiple access points,” he said. “How do we structure our admission processes to enhance student success?”

 ?? Source: Nevada System of Higher Education Wes Rand Las Vegas Review-Journal ??
Source: Nevada System of Higher Education Wes Rand Las Vegas Review-Journal

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