Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(1) Purpose: The Purpose of this rule is to
operationalize and distribute the Public University Support Fund (PUSF) via the
Student Success and Completion Model (SSCM) described therein. This rule is a
companion to 715-013-0040.
(2)
Definitions:
(a) "Annual Update" means the
annual refresh of data upon which this model is based. It shall be completed by
the end of October of any given year.
(b) "Bilingual Education Certificate", means
completion of a Teacher Standards and Practices Commission (TSPC)-approved Dual
Language Specialization, OR, the completion of a TSPC-approved English as a
Second Language (ESOL) endorsement program, AND, the demonstration of
proficiency in a second language by passing a language competency test
recognized by TSPC including either the National Evaluation Series (NES) or
American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL). Such
certificates are treated as a graduate certificate for the purposes of this
rule, as well as OAR 715-013-0040.
(c) "Classification of Instructional
Programs" or "CIP" code is a numerical identifier assigned by the National
Center for Education Statistics to an academic discipline to support tracking
and reporting data at the field-of-study level.
(d) "Cost Weighting" is a means by which the
value of any Student Credit Hour (SCH) or outcomes based allocation is adjusted
to account for the relative cost to an institution of providing a degree or
course. Cost weighting is the same at all institutions and is determined by CIP
and by the type of course, course or student level, degree level or degree
taught or awarded.
(e) "Data
Validation" is the process by which the HECC's Office of Research and Data
examines institution-submitted data to determine their accuracy and validity
within accepted standards.
(f)
"Dual Credit" course is that which awards secondary and postsecondary credit as
recognized by the HECC and determined by both the granting secondary
institution and granting public university.
(g) "Higher Education Coordinating
Commission" or "HECC" is the body established by ORS
350.050.
(h) "Inflation" is defined as the previous
full year CPI that includes the Portland metro area as published and defined by
the US Bureau of Labor Statistics and selected by the HECC.
(i) "Low Income Student" is defined as
resident undergraduate students who have received the Pell Grant at any point
during their time enrolled within a public university in Oregon.
(j) "Pell Grant" is a grant awarded by the
United States Department of Education to eligible students at American
institutions of higher education largely on the basis of financial
need.
(k) "Public university" or
"University" is any institution as defined in ORS
352.002.
(l) "Public University Support Fund" or
"PUSF" is the general fund appropriation to the HECC intended for distribution
by HECC to public universities as defined in ORS
352.002.
(m) "Resident" student is a student
classified as such by a public university's Residency Classification Officer,
reviewed by the Inter-institutional Residency Committee, or students granted
resident tuition under ORS
352.287 and all doctoral students for SSCM purposes.
(n) "Rural Students" are first time-freshmen
resident undergraduate students who are graduates of high schools designated by
the National Education Statistics Locale Codes as follows: "Rural; Distant",
"Rural; Fringe", "Rural; Remote", "Town; Distant", "Town; Fringe" or "Town:
Remote".
(o) "SCARF" is the Student
Centralized Administrative Reporting File and is comprised of student and
course information for each Oregon public university. The SCARF system is
maintained by the HECC's Office of Research and Data. All degree, course
levels, student types, including transfers, veterans and other relevant types,
and student credit hours are defined as they are within the SCARF.
(p) "Stop Gain" is designed to prevent an
institution from receiving an increase in allocation in excess of a
pre-determined threshold. If Stop-Gain is triggered, the excess allocation from
the triggering institution is distributed proportionally to all non-triggering
institutions. Only the amount necessary to bring all institutions within the
Stop-Gain threshold is re-distributed.
(q) "Stop Loss" can be either a negative or
positive percentage and is designed to prevent an institution from receiving a
decrease in allocation beyond a pre-determined threshold. If Stop-Loss is
triggered, all institutions that receive an allocation that exceeds the
stop-loss threshold contribute a proportional amount of allocation to those
institutions whose allocation fell below the Stop-Loss threshold. Only the
amount necessary to bring all institutions at or above the Stop-Loss threshold
is re-distributed.
(r) "Student
Success and Completion Model" or "SSCM" is a calculation-driven mechanism for
determining the proportion of PUSF allocated to each public
university.
(s) "Targeted Student
Populations" consist of undergraduate resident students that are part of any of
the following populations:
(1)
Underrepresented Racial/Ethnic Groups;
(2) Low Income Students;
(3) Rural students and
(4) Veterans. Students may be in as many of
these four groups as applicable in their case.
(t) "True-up" is the process by which
allocations created using estimated data are reconciled with finalized
allocations created using actual data.
(u) "Underrepresented Racial/Ethnic Group"
consists of resident undergraduate students identified in as American
Indian/Alaskan Native, Hispanic, Pacific Islander, Black, African American or
two or more races if one of those two or more races is one of those listed in
this definition.
(v) "Veterans" are
those resident undergraduate demarcated in the SCARF system as a veteran of the
U.S. Armed Forces as determined by the University in accordance with HECC
policy, practice and any relevant laws or administrative rules.
(3) The SSCM incorporates a public
university's degree and SCH completion information for the three most recently
completed fiscal years, or projections thereof, in determining allocation
amounts.
(a) An institution may submit new or
updated data for any past years but it will not affect allocations unless it is
submitted and validated prior to the annual update being completed for a
particular fiscal year. Such additional submissions shall take place within the
normal data update framework established by the HECC.
(b) HECC staff shall validate the accuracy of
all data before incorporating it into the model or into any ensuing
calculations. Validation of data shall take place via an approach developed at
the discretion of HECC staff. This includes initial data submissions as well as
supplemental data submissions that do not impact allocations to any institution
in a particular fiscal year.
(c)
Once the annual update for a particular fiscal year has been completed, that
year's allocations shall be considered as final. Any errors in data or
calculation will not be corrected or otherwise incorporated into the allocation
calculations of future fiscal years.
(4) The HECC shall have the discretion to
round any SSCM line-item or calculation, whether final or intermediate, to a
whole dollar, either up or down, in order to match distributions with available
funds.
(5) Allocation projections
will be completed before the fourth quarter of the prior fiscal year for the
subsequent fiscal year that begins July 1st of the same calendar year.
Projections may be updated by the true-up process as described elsewhere in
this rule.
(6) The Student Success
and Completion Model consists of three components, Mission Support Funding
Allocation, Activity-Based Allocation and Outcomes-Based Allocation.
(a) Mission Support Funding supports a public
university's activities relating to their varying missions and is paid prior to
any other funding.
(A) Mission Support funding
levels are set annually as the lesser of the following:
(i) The prior year's Mission Support
Allocation adjusted for inflation.
(ii) 16.6% of the total PUSF for a given
fiscal year.
(B) Mission
Support Funding shall consist of the following four components
(i) Base Funding - Which shall consist of a
set payment for each institution as well as an economy of scale allocation.
These are as described in section 2(a) of OAR 715-013-0040.
(ii) Regional Access - Provides an allocation
that contributes to the financial stability of public universities and ensures
geographic access to public higher education for Oregonians. Regional support
values are listed in Section 2(b) OAR 715-013-0040.
(iii) General Research Support- Provides an
allocation to support research activities conducted by the public universities.
Research support calculations shall be made on the basis of section 2(c) of OAR
715-013-0040.
(iv) Public Service
Support - Provides an allocation to support public university programming
consistent with the mission of public higher education as articulated in ORS
350.001.
This Section may support efforts consistent with, but not limited to public
services, cross-sector or cross-institutional programs, undergirding of
university operations support, specific academic programs or other efforts by
public universities. Public Service Support Calculations shall be made on the
basis of section 2(d) of OAR 715-013-0040.
(b) Activity-Based Allocation is determined
by the total, cost weighted, completed, resident SCH at a public university
consistent with the following methodology. Activity-based allocations shall be
40% of all funding after mission support funds are paid in a given year.
(A) The most recent 3-year average of
resident SCH produced by each public university will be used to determine the
Activity-Based Allocation. This shall include SCH data from the summer, fall,
winter and spring quarters for the three prior academic years.
(B) Relative cost weights, by academic
program and level will be utilized to differentiate allocations by completed
SCH. Relative values will be determined by the HECC for programs by
CIP-identified discipline and by level, including lower division undergraduate,
upper division undergraduate, Master's, and Doctoral levels. Relative cost
weights are listed in Table 1 of Section 3 OAR 715-013-0040.
(C) The combined value of completed SCH at a
public university, relative to total completed SCH at all public universities,
as adjusted by cost weighting will determine the proportional share of
Activity-Based Allocation allocated to each institution.
(c) Outcomes-Based Allocation is determined
by the total cost weighted degrees produced, student type and priority area
consistent with the following methodology. Outcomes-Based Allocations shall be
60% of all funding after mission support funds are paid in a given year.
(A) The most recent 3-year average of degrees
conferred by public universities to resident students will be used to determine
the Outcomes-Based Allocation. Degrees are categorized by level, including
Baccalaureate, Masters, Doctoral, Professional, and Graduate Certificates. The
HECC will determine the relative weighting of degree levels as listed in Table
2 of Section 4 in OAR 715-013-0040. For the purposes of this formula, each
student shall be limited to one degree per academic year. Should a student earn
more than one degree in a particular academic year, the degree with the highest
calculated value shall be included and all other degrees excluded.
(B) The HECC will set the relative value of
priority degrees which are of particular interest to the state of Oregon. This
includes an emphasis on those that lead to employment in underserved
high-demand and high-reward fields or those that fill a unique need. The HECC
will solicit input from applicable state agencies, public universities and
stakeholders to evaluate the expected labor force needs and identify what
priority degree types, if any, exist. This will be reexamined by the HECC no
less than once every five years. Degree areas of particular priority to the
state and their relative value are established in Table 4 of Section 6 of OAR
715-013-0040.
(C) The HECC will
adjust the relative value of degrees due to the cost of delivering these
degrees. These cost weighting factors of degrees are listed in Table 3 of
Section 5 of OAR 715-013-0040. Cost weights for masters, graduate, and doctoral
degrees may be reduced in order to maintain the same proportion of outcomes
funding for undergraduate education.
(D) The HECC may discount the value of
bachelors degrees awarded to transfer students as outlined in Section 8 of OAR
715-013-0040.
(E) The allocation
calculation counts a degree awarded with multiple majors to one student as a
single degree in the discipline with the greatest relative value as listed in
Table 4 of Section 6 of OAR 715-013-0040.
(F) Degrees awarded to resident students
receiving bachelors degrees who represented one or more targeted student
populations characteristics identified as having lower completion rates, lower
participation rates or other unique needs or qualifications may be prioritized
by the HECC. The HECC will solicit input from applicable state agencies, public
universities and stakeholders to identify what priority student populations, if
any, exist. These weights are listed in Table 5 of Section 7 OAR
715-013-0040.
(G) The combined
relative values of degree level, academic discipline, and targeted population
group representation determines the Outcomes-Based Allocation allocated to each
public university.
(7) The cumulative results of the Mission
Support allocation, Activity-Based allocation and Outcomes-Based allocation
shall be a university's allocation for the SSCM in a given year and may be
adjusted by the HECC via a stop loss or stop gain mechanism as defined in
section 9 of OAR 715-013-0040.
(8)
When projections are used to determine a public university's allocation, a
True-Up procedure shall be used to prorate future payments to match final
allocations. The True-Up procedure may alter the funding allocation of a public
university from that which was originally allocated by the HECC. A True-Up
procedure, if used, will be executed in the second quarter, or as soon as
practicable in every fiscal year.
(9) PUSF Distributions are made quarterly
with timing and amounts determined by agreement between the HECC and the Oregon
Department of Administrative Services.
(10) Pursuant to ORS
350.075(8)
and OAR 715-013-0005, the HECC delegates administrative authority to the
Executive Director, or their designee, to operationalize the Student Success
and Completion Model and the procedures outlined in this and any other relevant
Laws and Administrative Rules.
(11)
Weighting factors and data definitions within the SSCM will be examined by HECC
staff and stakeholders as appropriate. In no case shall this reexamination
occur less than every other year through 2020. Reexamination shall occur in the
even year of every third biennium thereafter.
(12) Legislative mandates or other special
packages or appropriations shall not be included in SSCM calculations if the
appropriation is made with specific direction on allocation or
administration.