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Dateline: September
23, 2004
CC enrollment hits new high
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Clarendon College
this month has posted its highest fall enrollment in the last 15 years –
and possibly the highest in the history of the institution.
CC President Myles
Shelton released information Monday showing the total headcount for the
current semester as 1,033 – approximately seven percent above last
fall’s total and a 32.1 percent increase since 1998.
“We’re very pleased
with the numbers,” Shelton said. “We think we still have room to grow on
this campus and in Pampa and Childress, and we’re going to work toward
that end.”
The total includes
402 students attending the home campus, 239 at the CC Pampa Center, and
the remainder enrolled at classes held throughout the college’s service
area and enrolled in distance learning or online classes.
Shelton said the
boost in enrollment was attributable to several things including the new
residence hall offering more places for students to live from outside
the area, better local enrollment from the surrounding area, and the
availability of programs that more students are interested in.
“It’s a combination
of these things,” Shelton said. “We have several good quality programs
and not just one or two programs carrying all the weight. It’s everybody
working together and good recruiting.”
The enrollment
figure counts students in academic and vocational classes and does not
include continuing education classes.
Shelton said he is
certain the college is at its highest point since the mid-1980s and is
confident that the number is the highest in school history but said his
staff would have to dig out records from the 1960s to be sure of that.
Despite the
increase, Clarendon College remains one of the two smallest community
colleges in the state. Ranger College was the smallest last year, and CC
was second. Shelton said Ranger had not yet posted its enrollment
numbers for fall 2004.
Enrollment this
semester and next spring will be used by the Legislature in determining
appropriations for the next biennium.
Despite a slightly
higher enrollment, CC’s sources are preliminarily predicting a five
percent cut in state funding.
“Obviously we’re
going to lobby for that not to happen,” Shelton said.
In other college
news, the CC Board of Regents met in regular session last Thursday and
set the tax rate for the coming year at $0.2065 per $100 valuation, up
from $0.1987 last year. The difference will amount to $3.98 on a $50,000
piece of property.
Regents also
adopted the catalog, policy manual, and student handbook for the current
academic year and accepted a bid on lot 27 in Carroll Creek Acres in
Howardwick as presented by the appraisal district.
Personnel at the
Pampa Center was the subject discussed in closed session.
Regents also
approved hiring two academic advisors/recruiters – Jaylene Watkins in
Clarendon and Lindsey Been at the Pampa Center. |