Title: Undergraduate Recruitment Strategies at Penn State
1Undergraduate Recruitment Strategies at Penn
States School of Forest Resources
- Betty J. Harper
- bjh17_at_psu.edu
2Enrollment Trends in the School of Forest
Resources
3Enrollment Trends Nationwide
T. L. Sharik and K. Earley, Department of
Environment and Society, College of Natural
Resources, Utah State University, December 12,
2003.
4Anticipated Needs
- In 2000, the U.S. Forest Service anticipated
losing 30 of its workforce by 2005 - Greatest number of projected external hires
Forestry Techs, Foresters, Wildlife Biologists - Fastest growing occupations Botany, Fisheries
Biologist, Soils Scientist - Still striving to establish a diverse workforce
5- In 2002 permanent workforce hiring increased 8.6
- Almost half of all 2002 Forest Service hires were
in entry-level positions - Forest Service anticipates hiring over 7000
people over the next five years - SCEP will be a major entry-level pipeline
- US Fish Wildlife Service and National Park
Service are in similar situations
6Then and Now
- Five years ago the School of Forest Resources
(SFR) was comfortable waiting for students to
come to us - Today we are seeking to actively recruit a
diverse student body from a pool of candidates
increasingly drawn to careers in business,
healthcare, and law enforcement
7Strategy I The Undecided Student
- The most efficient recruitment strategy for the
SFR is to draw from students who have already
been accepted to Penn State - 6000 Division of Undergraduate Studies
(undecided) students - 2500 College of Business students not yet in a
major - 3600 College of Engineering students not yet in a
major - 34,000 students at PSU locations other than
University Park
8- Maintain contact with advisors in DUS, Business,
and Engineering and provide them with our program
materials as well as specialized materials
addressing the issues of students considering a
change of major - Mailings to students who did not get into their
first choice major
9Strategy 2 Tech Programs
- Forest Technology at Penn State Mont Alto and
Wildlife Technology at Penn State Dubois
Approximately 42 of their students enter the SFR
for a BS (about 20 students a year) - Forest Technology at Pennsylvania College of
Technology - Recruit directly from these programs through
campus visits
10Strategy 3 Summer Programs
- Conservation Leadership Schools
- Food and Agricultural Sciences Institute for
Minority Students - PA Governors School for the Agricultural
Sciences - Courses
- Mentors
- Institutes for teachers Forest resources
aquatic resources
11Strategy 4 Personal Contact
- Increased level of follow-up after initial
student contact - Program coordinator phones potential students
when offered admission - Family visits including contact with program
coordinator, staff member, and faculty person
12Strategy 5 - Peer-to-Peer Recruiting
- For students considering Penn State
- Ag Advocates escort them on their visits to
provide a student perspective - For students who have been offered admission to
our programs - Ag Advocates phone-a-thon
- Letters from student societies
- Phone calls from current students
13Strategy 6 - Scholarships
- The gamble of first-year scholarships
- Prior to 2003-04 SFR was routinely offering only
a few thousand dollars in scholarships to the
incoming class - In 2003-04 introduced four 20,000 scholarships
(over 4 yrs.) for first-year students - Personally contacted (phone) students being
considered for this scholarship early in
admission process in order for this to be part of
their decision-making process
14Strategy 7 - Marketing
- New brochures featuring more dynamic photography
and color - Focus on field work
- Focus on technology
- Feature a representative group of students
- Complete redesign of web page including a section
devoted to Prospective Students and their
families - New careers publications
15The Results?
- Too soon to tell, but in 2003-2004 our offers of
admission increased 47 - Almost 50 of students in the Wildlife Tech and
Forest Tech programs at Penn State are now
continuing their education in the SFR - Database developed to track students from point
of initial contact - 82 of information requests are referred from our
college recruiters - 15 from web page
- Of our current offers, this is the first time
weve made contact with most (84) of them