Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

First-year student count up at ASU

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Arkansas State University said Wednesday its headcount enrollment for the 11th day of classes for the fall semester is 14,058 students, a slight decrease from a year ago.

But its first-year student count improved and retention from freshmen to sophomore years increased.

The enrollment data released Wednesday includes students signed up for classes on the main campus in Jonesboro and at Campus Queretaro, which is in Mexico.

ASU, a public university based primarily in the northeast part of the state, is usually second largest in enrollment among Arkansas’ colleges and universiti­es. The institutio­n is part of the Arkansas State University System. The New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathi­c Medicine is on the Jonesboro campus but is not included in enrollment numbers for ASU. The state of Arkansas does not fund Campus Queretaro.

The numbers of students at the nation’s colleges and universiti­es are affected by several factors, including institutio­ns with improved graduation rates, Census figures for students in a particular age group increasing or decreasing, and the general state of the economy.

Enrollment matters because student semester credit hours are part of the funding formula for state aid in Arkansas and the number of students provides revenue for colleges and universiti­es in the form of tuition and fees paid by students. Tuition and fees represent most schools’ largest source of revenue.

The data released Wednesday marks a small decline in the overall number of ASU students. Last year, for the 11th class day, ASU said it had 14,144 students.

ASU Chancellor Kelly Damphousse attributed the overall decline, in part, to larger graduation classes. The university handed out 4,746 degrees, a record high, in 2017-18.

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