Title: NCHEMS Lumina Project on InterState Student Mobility
1NCHEMS Lumina Project on Inter-State Student
Mobility
- Peter Ewell
- SHEEO/NCES Network Conference
- March 31, 2004
2Origins and Background Lumina Interest
- No Comprehensive Source of National Data on
Retention and Program Completion Beyond
Institutional Unit of Analysis - Federal Studies Indicate that Over 55 of
Students Attend Multiple Institutions in the
Course of Earning a Baccalaureate Degree - More than 30 of Multiple Attenders Cross State
Lines - State Unit-Record Databases a Potential Way to
Generate Better Information About Retention and
Program Completion
3Resulting State Unit-Record Database Inventory
Following the Mobile Student
- Looked at 46 Databases in 39 States
- Contents Cover 73 of Nations Headcount
Enrollment - Growing Number of Independent Colleges
Participate - Data Structures and Definitions Compatible for
Core Data Elements
4Key Data Elements in Common
- Demographic (Gender, Ethnicity, DOB, Geographic
Origin) - Academic Activity Levels (Full-time/Part-time,
SCH Enrolled, etc.) - Program of Study
- Degree/Program Completion by Field
5Other Data Elements (Less in Common)
- High School Records
- End of Term Data (e.g. Credits Completed,
Grades) - Prior College and Transfer Credit
- Transcript-Level Detail
6Some Specific Features Across States
- Multiple Databases in Some States
- Growing Experience with Linking Data to Other
State Databases (K-12, UI-Wage, DMV, etc.), but
Little Experience in Linking with Other States - Virtually all use SSN as Key Link
- Despite Compatible Data Contents, Differing
Designs and Reporting Cycles - Many Systems Getting Old and Hard to Maintain
7Challenges in Using Linked SURs
- Privacy Issues (FERPA and Other
RegulationsIncluding IRBs) - The Thorny Problem of Student Identifiers (SSN,
Encryption, Directory Matching) - Technical Issues and Considerations (Size,
Database Environment, Cost, Personnel
Availability and Training)
8Resulting Recommendations
- Considerable Potential for Linking SURs to Yield
Additional Information About Student Progress - Supplement not Supplant Other Efforts
- Develop Common Definitions and Reporting
Standards - Develop New Approach to Student Identifiers
- Begin Efforts with Voluntary State Consortia
9Current NCHEMS/Lumina Feasibility Study on
Exchanging Data Among States
- Goal Examine Utility to State and Institutions
of Linking Student Record Information Across
State Lines - Convene Expert Panels on Policy and Technical
Issues - Limited Demonstrations in Several States
Interested in Participating - Develop Protocols and Documentation to Assist in
Future Data Exchange Efforts
10(No Transcript)
11Key Elements of the Concept
- Multiple SURs Maintained Independently
- Secure Data-Matching Environment
- Set of Core Data Elements with Common Definitions
and Data Structures - Standard Input Protocol
- Output Report (or File) Containing Matched Data
12Other Recommended Features
- Modular Design (e.g. Basic and Enhanced Sets of
Data Elements) - Matching Capabilities to Link with Multiple
External Records (e.g. High School, UI, etc.) - Web-Enabled Data Exchange, Where Possible
- Outsource to Limited Number of Service Providers
- Common Guidelines to Address Security and Privacy
Issues (Toolkit)
13Advice from Policy Leaders
- Principal Applications Should Address the
Educational Pipeline and Workforce Development,
not Student Progression per se - Other Key Questions Include Return on Investment
for State Financial Aid, Effects of Tuition
Policy, and Program Competitiveness - Adopt a Decentralized Need-Based Approach, not
a National Database - Involve Institutions from the Outset for Buy-In
14Addressing the Privacy Issue
- The Problem Is Less FERPA than the Perception of
FERPA - Resulting Situation Ambiguity Means the Easiest
Answer is No - Getting Beyond this Requires Following Protocols
of Best Practice States (e.g. FL, TX, MO, OK) - Will Also Seek Clear Common Rulings and
Interpretations from USDOE, Labor, etc.
15Objectives of Cross-State Demonstrations
- Assess Added Informational Value Gained through
Exchange - Uncover any Additional Definitional/Data
Structure Issues - Demonstrate Compatibility with FERPA, etc.
- Develop Best Practice Approaches to Reporting
16Key Features of the Proposed Exchange Between
Kentucky and Ohio
- Matches Will Take Place Within Secure Web-Enabled
Database at Ohio Board of Regents - Outputs Will be Information About Student
Attendance/Completion at Institutions in Other
State by Program - Will Experiment with Different Types of Student
Identifiers and Directory Matching - Data Destroyed After No Longer Needed
17Data Elements Involved
- Institutional and Student Identifiers
- Number of Credits Enrolled For or
Full-Time/Part-Time Status - Current Program of Study (CIP)
- Degree Earned (Annual Extract)
- Degree Field (CIP)
18Expected Benefits
- Enhanced Information on Transfer for Institutions
for GRS-Type Reporting and Analysis - State Policy Information on Out-of-State Transfer
Activity by Program - Greater Detail than Provided by National
Clearinghouse Data (and Less Costly)
19Future Directions
- Develop Additional Multi-State Experiments and
Continue to Develop Model Protocols and
Documentation - Seek Limited Number of Service Providers to
Support Matching for Multiple States - Seek Ways to Address Deteriorating SUR
Infrastructure in Many States - A Possible Vision Permanent Resource Center for
State Policy on Student Progression