Advertisement

Nonresidents catching up with Coloradans at Fort Lewis College

|
Monday, Jan. 18, 2016 5:18 AM
Fort Lewis College students learn about the FLC tuition waiver during a meeting in 2010 at the Native American Center on campus. The college is approaching a point where out-of-state students will outnumber Colorado students, a change driven in part by the increasing number of Native American students attending because of the waiver.
Morris
McBrayer
Owen

In preparation for Fort Lewis College’s upcoming strategic planning, philosophy professor Justin McBrayer decided to take a look at the school’s student body over time, and what he found surprised him: If the trends continue, out-of-state students will soon outnumber Colorado residents, perhaps as soon as fall 2016.

“I think we need to talk about what this means for the future of our school,” he told members of the Faculty Senate this week. “What will this four-year public Colorado college look like if this continues?”

Generally, when FLC releases its student make up, it gives numbers for resident and nonresident students, but excludes the Native American tuition-waiver students and New Mexico students attending under a reciprocal agreement with Colorado that allows them to pay in-state tuition. McBrayer, who is the faculty representative to the Board of Trustees, wanted to see what it looked like when those students weren’t excluded, he said.

Provost Barbara Morris said the picture looks different when evaluating percentages versus raw numbers, because while FLC has a high percentage of nonresidents, in raw numbers of out-of-state it lags far behind Front Range schools such as the University of Colorado and Metropolitan and Colorado state universities.

“Some of our growth is propelled by nonnative nonresidents,” said Michele Peterson, associate vice president for finance and administration, “but it’s mostly propelled by Native American students.”

Native American students make up about one-third of the student body at FLC, and their number has grown by about 66 percent since 2004-2005. They hail from 150 tribes from across the nation.

“A lot of that is because of the Karen Middleton bill,” said Steve Schwartz, vice president for finance and administration, referring to a bill introduced into the Colorado House of Representatives in 2010 that would reduce funding for the tuition waiver. Middleton later withdrew it. “It brought national attention to the tuition waiver, when we had media like The New York Times calling.”

The situation is complicated in other ways, Schwartz said.

Colorado has predicted a relatively flat high school graduation rate for the next 10 to 15 years.

“Many Colorado high school graduates, particularly in this area, are choosing to go out of state for college,” he said. “There are at least eight full-time recruiters from other states in Denver trying to attract Colorado’s students. And if students are staying in-state, they prefer to stay within 250 miles of home, which eliminates us as a choice for most Front Range students.”

Throw in the fact that Durango attracts students who are “migrating” out of their home states for college, and the picture becomes clearer.

“Some states, like New York, are places that see more students migrating out,” Morris said. “Colorado is a state they migrate to because this is a nice place to be.”

The situation of almost equal percentages of in-state and out-of-state students is unique to FLC, said Faculty Senate President Dugald Owen. After seeing McBrayer’s results, he analyzed several other public four-year colleges in the state, including Colorado Mesa University in Grand Junction, Western State College in Gunnison, Adams State University in Alamosa, CU Boulder and CSU in Fort Collins.

Morris was surprised Western State wasn’t more similar to Fort Lewis.

“They’ve put a lot of effort into recruiting out-of-state students,” she said. “But Western has a robust online concurrent program (students taking college courses while still in high school), which may change their numbers. And Adams State is close enough to draw from the Front Range.”

The faculty was concerned that such a high percentage of out-of-state students might impact how much, or little, the General Assembly funds the school.

“We don’t see that so much on operating funds,” Schwartz said, “but when we’re lobbying for capital projects, some legislators will ask why they should be funding so many buildings for out-of-state students. We tell them a lot of those students will like Durango so much, they’ll stay in Colorado.”

Advertisement