Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 2019-20 through 2021-22

Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 2019-20 through 2021-22

IPEDS 2019-20 through 2021-22 EF Fall Enrollment

Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 2019-20 through 2021-22

OMB: 1850-0582

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Fall Enrollment
Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 2019-20 to 2021-22

The only changes for 2019-20 through 2021-22 are the general changes to cross-cutting definitions
and instructions related to reporting students in Experimental Pell programs. These are highlighted
in the instructions.

Image description. The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System End of image description.

IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Form

Fall Enrollment for 4-year degree-granting institutions

Overview 
Fall Enrollment Overview
The Fall Enrollment component collects student enrollment counts by level of student, enrollment status, gender and race/ethnicity. In
addition, first-time student retention rates and the student-to-faculty ratio are collected. Every other year data on residence of first-time
undergraduates is required and in opposite years, enrollment by student age is required to be reported.
Institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4) report Fall enrollment as of the
institution's official fall reporting date or October 15. Institutions operating on a calendar that differs by program or that enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters) report Fall enrollment as students enrolled any time during the period August 1 and
October 31.
Data Reporting Reminders:
•

Resources:
To download the survey materials for this component: Survey Materials
If you have questions about completing this survey, please contact the IPEDS Help Desk at 1-877-225-2568.

Part Selection - even years 
Completion of Part B (Enrollment of Students by Age) is optional this year.
Do you wish to complete Part B this year?
If you select 'Yes', you will be expected to complete the Part B screens.
If you select 'No', you will skip Part B.
No, I will not complete Part B
Yes, I will complete Part B

- odd years

Fall Enrollment - CIPCODE Selection (Even Years) 
Indicate which of the following fields of study are offered by your institution. Students are to be reported by their major field of study
for the categories listed below. Fields for which enrollment was reported for Fall 2016 have already been checked; please make sure
all listed fields that are offered by your institution are checked.
Undergraduate and graduate fields
13.0000 -- Education
14.0000 -- Engineering
26.0000 -- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
27.0000 -- Mathematics
40.0000 -- Physical Sciences
52.0000 -- Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services
Graduate-only fields
22.0101 -- Law (LL.B., J.D.)
51.0401 -- Dentistry (D.D.S., D.M.D.)
51.1201 -- Medicine (M.D.)
None of the above

Yes, I confirm that I reviewed the fields of study are offered by my institution above.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Full-Time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Full-time Undergraduate Students
Reporting Reminders:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only
•Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission, they are considered subbaccalaureate
undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate students.

Men
Students enrolled for
credit

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateseeking
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
Full-time
undergraduate
students

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateReturning
seeking

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
Full-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African
American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for
credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African
American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total
(men+women)
Grand total
(men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Part-time Undergraduate Students
Reporting Reminders:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only
•Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission, they are considered subbaccalaureate
undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate students.

Men
Student enrolled for
credit

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateseeking
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateReturning
seeking

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for
credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total
(men+women)
Grand total
(men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Graduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.

Graduate Students
Race/Ethnicity Reporting Reminder:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Graduate Student Reporting Reminder:
•Report all postbaccalaureate degree and certificate students as graduate students, including any doctor's-professional practice students
(formerly first-professional)
•Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission, they are considered subbaccalaureate
undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate students.

Men
Enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien

Total full-time

Total part-time

Total graduate students

Total full-time

Total part-time

Total graduate students

Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment Summary 
Fall Enrollment Summary
Men
Students enrolled for credit

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand Total (men+women)

Sample pages for 13.0000 Education (undergraduate and graduate) and 21.0101 Law (firstprofessional) follow. Please duplicate these pages as needed for any fields of study listed above that
are offered by your institution. (Even years)
Part A - Fall Enrollment by race/ethnicity and gender 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
CIPCODE: 13.0000 -- Education
Full-time undergraduate students
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit

Degree/certificate-seeking
First-time
Transfer-in
Continuing/ Total
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
full-time
undergraduate
students

Degree/certificate-seeking
First-time
Transfer-in
Continuing/ Total
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
full-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) 2016-17

Part A - Fall Enrollment by race/ethnicity and gender 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
CIPCODE: 13.0000 -- Education
Part-time undergraduate students
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit

Degree/certificate-seeking
First-time
Transfer-in
Continuing/ Total
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

Degree/certificate-seeking
First-time
Transfer-in
Continuing/ Total
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race/ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race/ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) 2016-17

Part A - Fall Enrollment by race/ethnicity and gender 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
CIPCODE: 13.0000 -- Education
Graduate students
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only
•Report all postbaccalaureate degree and certificate students as graduate students, including any doctor's-professional practice students
(formerly first-professional)

Men
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien

Total full-time

Total part-time

Total graduate students

Total full-time

Total part-time

Total graduate students

Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) 2016-17

Part A - Fall Enrollment by race/ethnicity and gender 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
CIPCODE: 22.0101 -- Law (LL.B., J.D.)
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien

Total full-time

Total part-time

Total

Total full-time

Total part-time

Total

Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) 2016-17

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Undergraduate Students
Degree/certificate-seeking Non-degree/non-certificate-seeking

Graduate
Students

Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education
courses
Not enrolled in any distance education courses
Total (from prior part A screens)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
may
beon
posted
the College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes may be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Of those students exclusively enrolled in distance
education courses, report the number that are:
Located in
Located in the U.S. but not in
Located in the U.S. but state/jurisdiction unknown
Located outside the U.S.
Location unknown/unreported
Total students exclusively enrolled in distance education (from
section above)

Undergraduate Students
Degree/certificate-seeking Non-degree/non-certificate-seeking

Graduate
Students

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Full-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total full-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Full-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total part-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Part-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Full-time Graduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total full-time graduate students (from part A)

Full-time Graduate Students
Men
Women

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Part-time Graduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total part-time graduate students (from part A)

Part-time Graduate Students
Men
Women

Part C - Screening Question 
Did any of your first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students (reported in Part A) enroll within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED?
No, we do not have any first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
Yes, we have first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Of students in column 1, those
Total first-time
was first admitted
who enrolled within 12 months
degree/certificate-seeking
of high school graduation
undergraduates
or receiving their GED
(1)
(2)
Alabama
01
Alaska

02

Arizona

04

Arkansas

05

California

06

Colorado

08

Connecticut

09

Delaware

10

District of Columbia

11

Florida

12

Georgia

13

Hawaii

15

Idaho

16

Illinois

17

Indiana

18

Iowa

19

Kansas

20

Kentucky

21

Louisiana

22

Maine

23

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
degree/certificate-seeking
who enrolled within 12 months
undergraduates
of high school graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
Maryland
24
Massachusetts

25

Michigan

26

Minnesota

27

Mississippi

28

Missouri

29

Montana

30

Nebraska

31

Nevada

32

New Hampshire

33

New Jersey

34

New Mexico

35

New York

36

North Carolina

37

North Dakota

38

Ohio

39

Oklahoma

40

Oregon

41

Pennsylvania

42

Rhode Island

44

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
Code degree/certificate-seeking who enrolled within 12 months of high school
undergraduates
graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
South Carolina
45
South Dakota

46

Tennessee

47

Texas

48

Utah

49

Vermont

50

Virginia

51

Washington

53

West Virginia

54

Wisconsin

55

Wyoming

56

State Unknown

57

American Samoa

60

Federated States of Micronesia

64

Guam

66

Marshall Islands

68

Northern Marianas

69

Palau

70

Puerto Rico

72

Virgin Islands

78

Foreign Countries

90

Residence unknown/unreported
Total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
(from Part A)

98

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

This part is only required from academic reporters.
Part D - Total Undergraduate Entering Class 
Total Undergraduate Entering Class, Fall 2018
D1 Total full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates from Part A (GR cohort)
D2 Total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates (full-time + part-time) from Part A
D3 Total transfer-in degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates (full-time + part-time) from Part A
D4 Total non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates (full-time + part-time) from Part A
D5 Of the total non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates displayed on line D4, the number that are new to the
institution in Fall 2018
D6 Total entering students at the undergraduate level
Note: This is calculated as first-time students (line D2) + students transferring to the institution (line D3) + non-degree/noncertificate-seeking undergraduates entering in Fall 2018 (line D5).
D7 Percentage of undergraduate entering class represented by your GR cohort (line D1/line D6)

Part E - First-time Bachelor's Cohort Retention Rates (Full-time) 
Retention Rates
Full-time, First-time Bachelor's Cohort from Fall 2017
Academic reporters determine the cohort and retention as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program
reporters determine the cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1,
2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from and inclusions are
added to the original cohort and the resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only full-time, first-time bachelor's students in this cohort.
•
Determine the full-time cohort using Fall 2017 status (e.g. if a student was full-time in Fall 2017, report them in the full-time cohort
regardless of their Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E2a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E2b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E1) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)
FULL-TIME, FIRST-TIME BACHELOR'S COHORT RETENTION:
E1
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 bachelor's cohort
E2a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E2b

Inclusion to the Fall 2017 cohort

E3
E4

Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E1- E2a + E2b)
Students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled as of Fall 2018

E5

Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 bachelor's cohort retention rate (line E4 / line E3)

Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part E - First-time Bachelor's Cohort Retention Rates (Part-time) 
Retention Rates
Part-time, First-time Bachelor's Cohort from Fall 2017
Academic reporters determine the cohort and retention as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program
reporters determine the cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1,
2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort
and the resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only part-time, first-time bachelor's-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine part-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was part-time in Fall 2017, report them in the part-time cohort
regardless of their Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E7a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E7b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E6) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)
PART-TIME, FIRST-TIME BACHELOR'S COHORT RETENTION:
E6
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 bachelor's cohort
E7a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E7b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E8
E9

Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E6 - E7a + E7b)
Students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled as of Fall 2018

E10

Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 bachelor's cohort retention rate (line E9 / line E8)

Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Student-to-Faculty Ratio 
Please provide your institution's student-to-faculty ratio (i.e., student-to-instructional staff) for undergraduate programs for Fall
2018. The student-to-faculty ratio and any accompanying context that is provided will be displayed on College Navigator.
Note: Logic in this item is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

Click here to use a worksheet to help you determine the student-to-faculty ratio
Student-to-faculty ratio

to 1

Student-to-faculty ratio prior year

to 1

Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Four-Year Institutions with Graduate Programs Student-to-Faculty Ratio Worksheet 
This worksheet is designed to help you determine your institution's student-to-faculty ratio.
Data entered on this worksheet will NOT be collected or saved. Therefore, please PRINT this screen if you would like to refer to the
ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
The term "stand-alone graduate or professional program" used below is defined as a graduate or professional practice program
such as medicine, law, veterinary, dentistry, social work, or public health, in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level
students (often referred to as "independent" programs).
Note: The logic used for this calculation is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.
Students, Fall 2018
FULL-TIME STUDENTS:
F1 Total full-time students from Part A
Full-time Student Exclusion (Line F2):
F2 Of the full-time students reported in Line F1, the number enrolled in stand-alone graduate or
professional programs
F3

Total adjusted full-time student count
(Line F1 - F2)
PART-TIME STUDENTS:
F4 Total part-time students from Part A
Part-time Student Exclusion (Line F5):
F5 Of the part-time students reported in Line F4, the number enrolled in stand-alone graduate or
professional programs
F6
F7

F8

Total adjusted part-time student count
(Line F4 - F5)
Full-time equivalent of adjusted part-time student count
(Line F6 * 1/3)
Total adjusted full-time equivalent students
(Line F3 + F7)

Instructional Staff, Fall 2018
FULL-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F9 Number of full-time instructional staff (non-medical) as reported on the HR survey component
Full-time Instructional Staff Exclusions (Line F10A and 10B):
(Note: an individual instructor meeting both exclusion criteria should only be reported in ONE exclusion line item.)
F10A Of the full-time instructional staff reported in Line F9, the number teaching exclusively in stand-alone
graduate or professional programs
F10B Of the full-time instructional staff reported in Line F9, the number teaching exclusively non-credit
courses
F11 Total adjusted full-time instructional staff
(Line F9 - (F10A + F10B))
PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F12 Number of part-time instructional staff (non-medical) as reported on the HR survey component
Part-time Instructional Staff Exclusions (Line F13A and 13B):
(Note: an individual instructor meeting both exclusion criteria should only be reported in ONE exclusion line item.)
F13A Of the part-time instructional staff reported in Line F12, the number teaching exclusively in standalone graduate or professional programs
F13B Of the part-time instructional staff reported in Line F12, the number teaching exclusively non-credit
courses
Part-time Instructional Staff Addition (Line F14):
F14 Number of administrators, or other staff not reported to IPEDS as instructors, that are teaching a
credit course(s) in the Fall
F15 Total adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F12 - (F13A + F13B) + F14)
F16 Full-time equivalent of adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F15 * 1/3)
F17 Total full-time equivalent of adjusted instructional staff

(Line F11 + F16)
F18 Student-to-faculty ratio
(Line F8/F17)

to 1

Prepared by 
The name of the preparer is being collected so that we can follow up with the appropriate person in the event that there are questions
concerning the data. The Keyholder will be copied on all email correspondence to other preparers.
The time it took to prepare this component is being collected so that we can continue to improve our estimate of the reporting burden
associated with IPEDS. Please include in your estimate the time it took for you to review instructions, query and search data sources, complete
and review the component, and submit the data through the Data Collection System.
Thank you for your assistance.
This survey component was prepared by:
Keyholder
Finance Contact

SFA Contact

HR Contact

Academic Library Contact

Other

Name:
Email:

How many staff from your institution only were involved in the data collection and reporting process of this survey component?
Number of Staff (including yourself)

How many hours did you and others from your institution only spend on each of the steps below when responding to this survey
component?
Exclude the hours spent collecting data for state and other reporting purposes.
Staff member
Collecting Data Needed
Revising Data to Match
IPEDS Requirements
Your office
hours
hours
Other offices

U.S. Department of Education
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Of
Education
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hours

Entering Data

hours

Software Provider Resources
Browsers Supported

Use of Cookies
Troubleshooting

Revising and Locking Data

hours

hours

hours

hours

Section 508 Compliance
NCES Privacy Policy

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IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Instructions

Fall Enrollment Full Instructions

Purpose of the Survey
Changes in Reporting
General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
Context Boxes

Coverage
Who To Include
Who To Exclude

Where to Get Help for Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
AIR Website
IPEDS Website Resources

Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Institution Level
Aggregate Level

Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Reporting Individuals by Racial/Ethnic Categories
Part A: Fall Enrollment by Level, Attendance Status, Race/Ethnicity, and Gender
Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age
Part C: Residence of First-Time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part D: Total Undergraduate Entering Class
Part E: Retention Rates for First-Time Bachelor's Seeking Students
Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio

Purpose of Survey
The purpose of the Fall Enrollment component of IPEDS is to collect enrollment data on all students enrolled for credit
in courses/programs that could lead to awards ranging from postsecondary certificates of less than 1 year to doctoral
degrees. Fall enrollment data are collected by level of student, attendance status, race/ethnicity, and gender. In
addition, the Fall Enrollment component collects data on the institution's undergraduate entering class, first-time
student retention rates, and the student-to-faculty ratio. Every other year data on enrollment by nine selected fields of
study are collected, as is residency of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students. In opposite years,
enrollment by student age is collected.
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Changes in Reporting
Enrollment by residence will be mandatory this year. Enrollment by age is optional.
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General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
For institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4), fall
enrollment should be reported as of the institution's official fall reporting date or October 15.
For institutions operating on an "other academic calendar," a calendar that differs by program, or enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters), fall enrollment is reported for students enrolled any time during
the period August 1 and October 31.

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Context Boxes
Context boxes are provided to allow institutions to provide more information regarding survey component items. Note
that some context boxes are posted on the College Navigator Website, which is the college search tool offered by
NCES. NCES will review entries in these context boxes for applicability and appropriateness before posting them on the
College Navigator Website; institutions should check grammar and spelling of their entries.
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Coverage
Who to Include
Include all students enrolled for credit (enrolled in instructional activity, courses or programs, that can be applied
towards the requirements for a postsecondary degree, diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary
credential), regardless of whether or not they are seeking a degree or certificate. This includes:

•
•
•
•
•
•

Students enrolled for credit in off-campus centers
High school students taking regular college courses for credit
Students taking remedial courses if the student is degree-seeking for the purpose of student financial aid
determination
Students from overseas enrolled for credit at your institution (e.g., online students)
Graduate students enrolled for thesis credits, even when zero credits are awarded, as these students are still
enrolled and seeking their degree
Graduate students enrolled for credit while not seeking a degree or certificate.

Who to Exclude
Exclude students who are not enrolled for credit. For example, exclude:

•
•
•
•
•
•

Students enrolled exclusively in courses that cannot be applied towards a recognized postsecondary
credential
Students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses)
Students enrolled exclusively in Continuing Education Units (CEUs)
Students exclusively auditing classes
Residents or interns in doctor's - professional practice programs, since they have already received their
doctor's degree
 

In addition, the following students should be excluded:

•
•
•

Any student studying abroad (e.g., at a foreign university) if their enrollment at the 'home' institution serves
as an administrative record
Students enrolled in any branch campus located in a foreign country
Students in Experimental Pell Programs 

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Where to Get Help with Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
Phone: (877) 225-2568
E-mail: ipedshelp@rti.org

Web Tutorials
You can consult the IPEDS Website's Trainings & Outreach page which contains several tutorials on IPEDS data
collection, a self-paced overview of IPEDS tools, and other valuable resources.

IPEDS Resource Page
The IPEDS Website's Reporting Tools page contains frequently asked questions, a link to data tip sheets, tutorials,
taxonomies, information centers (e.g., academic libraries, average net price, human resources, race/ethnicity, etc.),
and other valuable information.
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Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Data collected through IPEDS will be accessible at the institution and aggregate levels.
At the institution-level, data will appear in the:
•
•
•
•

College Navigator Website
IPEDS Data Center
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
College Affordability and Transparency Center Website

At the aggregate-level, data will appear in:
•
•
•
•
•

IPEDS First Looks
IPEDS Table Library
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
The Digest of Education Statistics
The Condition of Education

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Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Before entering any data, screening questions will need to be answered.
Part B Selection
Part B (Enrollment by Age) is optional this year. Indicate whether or not you will complete Part B of the Fall Enrollment
survey component this year.
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CIPCODE Selection
Reporting enrollment by selected fields of study is required this year and all even-numbered years. In Part A,
enrollment in the selected fields will need to be reported in addition to the total enrollment data reported.
Select the fields of study that are offered by your institution. Field names and corresponding CIP codes for the
programs known to exist at your institution will already be checked. Please update this list, if necessary, by adding or
removing checks in the associated boxes. Undergraduate and graduate fields:

•
•
•
•
•
•

13.0000 -- Education
14.0000 -- Engineering
26.0000 -- Biological and Biomedical Sciences
27.0000 -- Mathematics
40.0000 -- Physical Sciences
52.0000 -- Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services

Graduate-only fields:

•
•
•

22.0101 -- Law (LL.B., J.D.)
51.0401 -- Dentistry (D.D.S., D.M.D.)
51.1201 -- Medicine (M.D.) -  Only select 51.1201 if the institution offers an M.D. program.

Once you have updated this CIPCODE Selection screen and saved the results, screens similar to the Part A Summary
screens will be generated at the appropriate levels and fields of study.
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Reporting Persons by Racial/Ethnic Category (1997 OMB)
This information is being collected in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 and Sec. 421(a)(1) of the Carl D. Perkins Vocational Education Act. These instructions
correspond with the Final Guidance on Maintaining, Collecting, and Reporting Racial and Ethnic Data to the U.S.
Department of Education, published in the Federal Register on October 19, 2007.
Method of collection - Institutions must collect race and ethnicity information using a 2-question format. The first
question is whether the respondent is Hispanic/Latino. The second question is whether the respondent is from one or
more races from the following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native
Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White. Institutions should allow students and staff to self-identify their race
and ethnicity. For further details on the guidance for collecting these data, please see the full Federal Register notice.
Method of reporting aggregate data - Institutions must report aggregate data to the U.S. Department of Education
using the NINE categories below. Racial/ethnic designations are requested only for United States citizens, resident
aliens, and other eligible non-citizens.

•

Hispanic or Latino, regardless of race

For Non-Hispanic/Latino individuals:

•
•
•
•
•
•

American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races

In addition, the following categories may be used:

•
•

Nonresident alien
Race and ethnicity unknown

Racial/ethnic descriptions - Racial/ethnic designations as used in this survey do not denote scientific definitions of
anthropological origins. The categories are:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Hispanic or Latino- A person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
culture or origin, regardless of race.
American Indian or Alaska Native- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
America (including Central America) who maintains cultural identification through tribal affiliation or
community attachment.
Asian- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian
Subcontinent, including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine
Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Black or African American- A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii,
Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
White - A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.

Other descriptive categories

•

•

Nonresident alien - A person who is not a citizen or national of the United States and who is in this country
on a visa or temporary basis and does not have the right to remain indefinitely. NOTE - Nonresident aliens are
to be reported separately, in the boxes provided, rather than included in any of the seven racial/ethnic
categories. Resident aliens and other eligible (for financial aid purposes) non-citizens who are not citizens or
nationals of the United States and who have been admitted as legal immigrants for the purpose of obtaining
permanent resident alien status (and who hold either an alien registration card (Form I-551 or I-151), a
Temporary Resident Card (Form I-688), or an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) with a notation that
conveys legal immigrant status such as Section 207 Refugee, Section 208 Asylee, Conditional Entrant Parolee
or Cuban-Haitian) are to be reported in the appropriate racial/ethnic categories along with United States
citizens.
Race and ethnicity unknown - This category is used only if the person did not select EITHER a racial or
ethnic designation.

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Part A: Full-Time Undergraduate Students by Race/Ethnicity and Gender
On this screen, include all students enrolled for credit, full-time at the undergraduate level. The undergraduate level
includes students enrolled in undergraduate level courses, in 4 or 5-year bachelor's degree programs, associate's
degree programs, or any certificate programs below the baccalaureate level. Students who have already earned a
bachelor's degree but are taking undergraduate courses for credit should be included as undergraduates.

Full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students
In column 1, report undergraduate students who have no prior postsecondary
experience and have enrolled full-time with the intent to earn a degree, certificate, or other recognized
postsecondary credential. The following are also considered first-time:

•
•

Students enrolled in the fall term who attended college for the first time in the prior summer session
(applicable to academic reporters only)
Students who entered with advanced standing (any college credits or recognized postsecondary
credential earned before graduation from high school)

In order to be considered degree or certificate-seeking, the student must be enrolled in courses for credit and be
recognized by the institution as seeking a degree or other recognized postsecondary credential. Note: All students 
eligible to receive federal student financial aid are to be considered degree/certificate-seeking. Dual enrolled high 
school students are not degree/certificate-seeking students. 
Program Reporters: Include first-time students who entered your institution between August 1, 2018 and October
31, 2018.
Academic Reporters: Student counts reported in column 1 define the initial cohort for reporting graduation rates in
the IPEDS Graduation Rates (GR) component to meet Student Right-to-Know reporting requirements. Students
reported in this group will become your GR cohort in the reporting year appropriate for your institution. The number of
students reported in column 1 will also appear in Part D to be used in determining the percentage of the
undergraduate entering class represented by the cohort.

Full-time, transfer-in degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 2, report the total number of full-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students entering the
reporting institution for the first time but known to have previously attended a postsecondary institution at the
undergraduate level. Include students enrolled in the fall term who transferred into the institution the prior summer
term. These students may or may not have transferred credit(s).
Program Reporters: Include students who transferred into your institution between August 1, 2018 and October 31,
2018

Academic Reporters: Include students who transferred into your institution as of the institution's official fall
reporting date or October 15, 2018 and those who transferred in the prior summer term.

Full-time, continuing degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 3, report the total number of continuing (i.e., not first-time and not transfer-in) full-time degree/certificateseeking undergraduate students. These are students who are not new to the institution in the fall, but instead are
continuing their studies at the institution.

Full-time, non-degree/non-certificate-seeking full-time undergraduates
In column 5, report the total number of full-time non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates. These students
are enrolled for credit but not with the intent of earning a degree or other recognized postsecondary credential. Note: 
High school students enrolled in creditable courses prior to high school graduation are considered non-degree/noncertificate-seeking students.
Once you save the data by clicking the 'Verify and Save' button, the 'Total full-time degree/certificate-seeking
undergraduates' (column 4) and 'Total, full-time undergraduate students' (column 6) will be calculated by the system
and display on the survey screen.

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Part A: Part-time Undergraduate Students
Report part-time students using the same definitions and instructions provided for full-time undergraduate students.
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Part A: Graduate Students by Race/Ethnicity and Gender
Report all students enrolled for credit at the graduate level as either full-time (column 1) or part-time (column 2).
Include graduate students enrolled for thesis credits, even when zero credits are awarded, as these students are still
enrolled and seeking their degree.
Graduate Student Reporting Reminder: Institutions are required to report using the postbaccalaureate
classifications. Report all postbaccalaureate degree and certificate students as graduate students, including doctor's professional practice students (formerly first-professional).
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Part A: Enrollment by Selected Fields of Study
Report students in the selected fields using the same definitions and instructions provided for Part A: Enrollment by
Race/Ethnicity screens.
Students at your institution that have not declared a major field of study or their major field of study is not one of the
selected fields should be reported on Part A Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity. The enrollment reporting by the selected
fields of study is most likely only a subset of the total students enrolled in your institution. Note: Enrollment by
Selected Fields of Study is not an unduplicated count. Thus, students that declared more than one selected major field
of study may be reported as enrolled in more than one field of study. 
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Part A: Enrollment by Distance Education Status
On this screen, report all students reported on previous Part A screens who are:
•

Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses offered at your institution: Students who are
enrolled only in courses that are considered distance education courses at your institution.

•

Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses offered at your institution: Students
who are enrolled in at least one course that is considered a distance education course, but are not enrolled
exclusively in distance education courses.

Note: Requirements for coming to campus for orientation, testing, or academic support services do not exclude a
course from being classified as exclusively distance education. Similarly, if a student is taking instructional portions of
their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a practicum, residency, or internship, the student can
still be considered enrolled in entirely distance education courses.
Not enrolled in any distance education courses offered at your institution: This number represents the
students who are not enrolled in any distance education courses at your institution. It will be calculated by subtracting
the (students enrolled exclusively in distance education + students enrolled in some but not all distance education
courses) from the total enrolled students from Part A, which is the totals for degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate
(first-time + transfer-in + continuing), non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduate and graduate students. 
Location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses
If there are students reported as enrolled exclusively in distance education courses, further data on the location of
these distance education students will need to be reported. Report, by student level and undergraduate degreeseeking status, the number of exclusively distance education students that are located in the same state/jurisdiction
as the institution, in a different state/jurisdiction than the institution, in the U.S. but the state/jurisdiction is unknown,
and residing outside the U.S.
The total students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses will be carried forward from earlier on the screen.
If the total students reported by location does not equal the total enrolled exclusively in distance education from
above, the “Location unknown/unreported” is calculated.
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Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender
Part B is optional this year. This part is required in odd-numbered years.
This distribution of students should include all students reported in Part A.

Enrollment by Age
Use institutional records to calculate student age.
Academic reporters: report student age as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters: report student age as of August 1, 2018.
The totals by gender for each attendance status (full- or part-time) and student level (undergraduate or graduate) will
be carried forward from the corresponding Part A screens. When the Part B and Part A totals do not agree, the "Age
unknown/unreported" is calculated.
Note: If the Part B student count total is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in a negative
value), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine both the age data and comparable portion of Part A to identify the
error and make appropriate corrections.
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Part C: Residence of First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduate Students
Part C is mandatory this year. This part is required in even-numbered years only.
This distribution of students should include all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
(both full- and part-time) reported in Part A.

Recent High School Graduates Screening Question
Part C begins with a screening question to determine whether or not your institution has first-time degree/certificateseeking undergraduate students who enrolled within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED. If the
answer is 'No', then only one column for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates will display in Part C.
If the answer is 'Yes', then 2 columns will be reported in Part C, one for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking
undergraduates and one for those first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates enrolled within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED. 

State of residence
Use the state identified by the student as his/her permanent address at the time of application to the institution. This
may be the legal residence of a parent or guardian, or the state in which a student has a driver's license or is
registered to vote. It is not necessarily the state in which the student's high school is located.

Residence of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column (1), report all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students, both full-time and parttime, by state of residence. The total line for column (1) will be carried forward from the total first-time
degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students reported in Part A. If the sum of the students reported by state of
residence in column (1), lines 1-90, does not agree with the total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
from Part A, the "Residence unknown/unreported" (line 98) will be calculated.
Note: When the sum of students by state of residence is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in
a negative value calculated for the "Residence unknown/unreported" line), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine
both the residence data and comparable section of Part A to identify the error and make appropriate corrections.

If your institution responded 'Yes' to the screening question, the subset of students from column (1) who enrolled
within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED are to be reported again by their state of residence
in column (2).
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Part D: Total Undergraduate Entering Class
Program reporters and non-degree-granting institutions do not complete Part D.
Total entering class data are included to address concerns some institutions have raised about the cohort that is
defined by the IPEDS Graduation Rates (GR) component. The GR cohort includes only full-time, first-time
degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students. For institutions with substantial part-time, transfer-in, and nondegree/non-certificate-seeking enrollment, this may result in graduation rates that are not representative of their
typical entering class.
The total undergraduate entering class is comprised of all first-time undergraduates (full-time and part-time), all
transfer-in undergraduates (full-time and part-time) and the subset of non-degree/non-certificate-seeking
undergraduates who are new to the institution in the Fall. To reach the total entering class total, Part D follows a lineby-line step process.
Lines D1 - D4 are carried forward from Part A reporting.
In Line D5, report the subset of non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduate students displayed on line D4,
who are new to the institution in Fall 2018.
Line D6 will calculate the total undergraduate entering students. This is calculated as all first-time students (line D2)
+ all transfer-in students (line D3) + non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduate students new to the
institution in Fall 2018 (line D5).
After clicking 'Save', Line D7 will display the percentage of the undergraduate entering class that is represented by
the current GR cohort (the GR cohort is carried forward from Part A and displayed in Line D1). The percentage is
calculated as line D1/D6.
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Part E: Retention Rates for First-Time Bachelor's Degree Seeking Student Cohort
Retention rates examine the percentage of first-time bachelor's degree (or equivalent) seeking students
enrolled in the fall of the prior year that are still enrolled in the fall of the current year.
On each retention screen (full-time cohort and part-time cohort screens) institutions must report:
•

First-time bachelor's degree (or equivalent) seeking Fall 2017 cohort.
Academic reporters: determine the cohort using the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October
15, 2017.
Program reporters: determine the cohort based on students who were enrolled in the institution at any time
between August 1 and October 31, 2017.
Note: The retention cohorts are the subset of first-time degree/certificate-seeking students reported in Part A
of the prior year Fall Enrollment survey that are bachelor's degree (or equivalent) seeking. Attendance status
(full- or part-time) should be based on the student's Fall 2017 status.

•
•
•

Exclusions from the cohorts (see below for allowable exclusions)
Inclusion to the Fall 2017 cohort. Report on this line first-time bachelor's seeking study abroad students who
were excluded from the first-time cohort but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.
Total number of students retained from the Fall 2017 cohort. Include students who were reported as firsttime but who are studying abroad Fall 2018.
Total students retained = students from the Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled as of Fall 2018.
Academic reporters: Report students retained as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of
October 15, 2018.
Program reporters: Report students retained as of August 1, 2018.

Exclusions:
Institutions may report cohort exclusions. Allowable exclusions are students who left the institution for any of the
following reasons:

•
•
•
•

Died or were totally and permanently disabled
To serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty)
To serve with a foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g., Peace Corps)
To serve on official church missions

The system will compute an adjusted cohort by subtracting the student exclusions from the original cohort prior to
calculating the retention rate.
Retention rates will be computed by the system after clicking 'Save.' The retention rate is calculated as:
(Students from the Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled as of Fall 2018/Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort)*100
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Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio
Graduate only institutions do not complete Part F.
Report the student-to-faculty ratio for undergraduate programs at your institution. A worksheet is available to help
determine your institution's ratio. Click on the link from the Part F screen to access the worksheet.

Worksheet for Institutions with Graduate or Professional Programs
The worksheet is designed to help institutions determine their student-to-faculty ratio for undergraduate programs. It
is NOT mandatory that you use this worksheet to calculate your student-to-faculty ratio. Data entered on the
worksheet will NOT be collected or saved in the system. Make sure to print the screen in order to refer to the ratio
calculation for your institution at a later time.
Please note: The logic used in this calculation is similar to that of item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.
The term "stand-alone graduate or professional programs" used on the worksheet is defined as graduate or
professional programs such as medicine, law, veterinary, dentistry, social work, or public health, in which faculty teach
virtually only graduate-level students (also referred to as "independent" programs). Student and instructional staff
counts will be adjusted for stand-alone graduate or professional programs to allow the ratio to come closer to an
undergraduate program student-to-faculty ratio without overburdening institutions with reporting detail on the level of
instruction taught by each instructor.

FULL- AND PART-TIME STUDENT DATA:
The total number of full-time and part-time students (lines F1 and F4) are carried forward from Part A.
Institutions with stand-alone graduate or professional programs (see definition above) report the following Fall 2018
student exclusions:

•
•

In line F2, report the total number of full-time students enrolled in stand-alone graduate or professional
programs.
In line F5, report the total number of part-time students enrolled in stand-alone graduate or professional
programs.

With the above student exclusions, the system will then compute the following on the worksheet:

•

•
•

Lines F3 and F6. Total adjusted full-time and total adjusted part-time student counts.
These are the total full-time and part-time students reported in Part A, excluding those enrolled in stand-alone
graduate or professional programs. The system will calculate line F3 as line F1 (total full-time students) minus
line F2 (total full-time students enrolled in stand-alone graduate or professional programs) and calculate line
F6 as line F4 (total part-time students) minus line F5 (total part-time students enrolled in stand-alone
graduate or professional programs).
Line F7. A full-time equivalent (FTE) of the adjusted part-time student count.
The FTE will be calculated as line F6 (total adjusted part-time student count) * 1/3.
Line F8. Total adjusted FTE students.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F3 (total adjusted full-time students) and F7 (FTE of total adjusted parttime students). Line F8 is used in the ratio calculation.

FULL-AND PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF DATA:
Lines F9 and F12 should be reported based on data your institution is reporting in the IPEDS Human Resources (HR)
survey component. Please work together with the appropriate staff at your institution to ensure that the data used on
this worksheet and reported in the HR component are the same.

•
•

Line F9. The total number of full-time instructional staff (non-medical) as reported on the HR survey
component.
Line F12. The total number of part-time instructional staff (non-medical) as reported on the HR survey
component. NOTE: Graduate assistants are not included.

Instructional Staff Exclusions for Stand-Alone Programs:
Institutions with stand-alone graduate or professional programs (see definition above) report the following Fall 2018
instructional staff exclusions on the worksheet:

•

•

In line F10A, report the number of full-time instructional staff teaching exclusively in stand-alone graduate or
professional programs.
Please note that instructional staff reported on the medical school screens in the HR component (medical
school screens are seen only by institutions with M.D. and/or D.O. programs) are already excluded from the
counts in line F9 and therefore should not be reported in line F10.
In line F13A, report the number of part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively in stand-alone graduate
or professional programs.
Please note that instructional staff reported on the medical school screens in the HR survey component
(medical school screens are seen only by institutions with M.D. and/or D.O. programs) are already excluded
from the counts in line F12 and therefore should not be reported in line F13.

Instructional Staff Exclusion for Non-Credit Instructors:

•
•

In line F10B, report the number of full-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses.
In line F13B, report the number of part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses.

For institutions that have a large amount of non-credit activity (most often public two-year institutions), the above
exclusions will better align the student data with the instructional staff data being used in the ratio.

Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition:

•

In line F14, report the number of administrators or other staff NOT reported to IPEDS as instructors (and
therefore not included in the HR survey component count reported in line F12) that are teaching a credit
course in Fall 2018.

For institutions that have administrators and other professionals on staff that are not reported to IPEDS as instructors
(because it is not their "primary function") but they teach credit courses throughout the year, the above allowable
addition will produce a more accurate ratio.
With the above instructional staff exclusions and part-time instructional staff addition information above, the system
will compute the following on the worksheet:

•

•

•
•
•

Line F11. Total adjusted full-time instructional staff.
The adjusted full-time instructional staff is the total full-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching
exclusively in stand-alone graduate or professional programs and those teaching exclusively non-credit
classes. The system will calculate line F11 as line F9 (total full-time instructional staff as reported on HR
survey component) minus the total exclusions [line F10A (total full-time instructional staff teaching exclusively
in stand-alone graduate or professional programs) + line F10B (total full-time instructional staff teaching
exclusively non-credit courses)].
Line F15. Total adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The adjusted part-time instructional staff is the total part-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching
exclusively in stand-alone graduate or professional programs and those teaching exclusively non-credit
classes, and adding those administrators and other staff teaching credit courses. The system will calculate line
F15 as line F12 (total part-time instructional staff as reported on HR survey component) minus the total
exclusions [line F13A (total part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively in stand-alone graduate or
professional programs) + line F13B (total part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses)]
+ line F14 (administrators and other staff teaching credit courses).
Line F16. Total FTE of adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The FTE will be calculated as line F15 (total adjusted part-time instructional staff) * 1/3.
Line F17. Total FTE of adjusted instructional staff.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F11 (total adjusted full-time instructional staff) and F16 (FTE of total
adjusted part-time instructional staff). Line F17 is used in the ratio calculation.
Line F18. Student-to-faculty ratio.
The ratio will be calculated by the system as line F8 (total adjusted FTE students) divided by line F17 (total
adjusted FTE instructional staff). The ratio will be displayed on the worksheet as xxx to 1.
The calculated ratio can then be entered onto the Part F (Student-to-Faculty Ratio) screen.

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Image description. The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System End of image description.

IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > FAQ

Fall Enrollment
Click one of the following questions to view the answer.
General
1)
2)
3)
4)

Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Should I report students who are studying abroad?
In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for reporting firstprofessional students?
My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment?
5)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in Fall
6)
Enrollment?
Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?
1)
2)
Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall (without prior
3)
postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses in the fall?
4)
5)
Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the same
institution?
6)
How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual enrolled
student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
7)
Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled student)?
8)
If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how do I
determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
9)
Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
10)
How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and re-enrolls as a
degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution?
11)
My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender unknown” on the
IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
12)
How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
13)
How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the determination of a
student's full-time status?
14)
In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
2)
How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part A (i.e.,
13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Distance Education
1)
If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a
practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance education courses?
2)
What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses?
3)
How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
4)
Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for distance
education location reporting?
5)
We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses). How should
students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall Enrollment?
Fall Enrollment by Age (Part B)
1)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose ages are
unknown?
2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the second column
that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries on a
temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data, what location do I
use?
Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort) and the
undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?

Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
2)
How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time) between
one fall and the next?
Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
3)
For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at the same
4)
institution in another program, how should they count that student?
My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment count. How
5)
can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s retention calculation?
Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are taking classes
6)
in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
1)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as medicine, law,
2)
veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "stand-alone"
programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these types of programs on
the worksheet for Part F?

Answers:
General
1)
Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
All students enrolled for credit should be reported. Credit is defined as “Recognition of attendance or performance in
an instructional activity (course or program) that can be applied by a recipient toward the requirements for a degree,
diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary credential, irrespective of the activity's unit of measurement.”
Students who are not seeking a degree or certificate may be still be enrolled for credit. These students are to be
reported in the non-degree/non-certificate-seeking column.

2)

3)

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What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Fall enrollment is a count of students enrolled on a particular date in the Fall. Fall enrollment is often referred to as a
"snapshot" of the enrollment at an institution at a specific time in the Fall. The date/period used depends on whether
the institution is an academic reporter or a program reporter for IPEDS purposes.
Academic reporters: Report enrollment as of October 15 or as of the institution's official fall reporting date.
Program reporters: Report enrollment during the 3-month period of August 1 to October 31. If a student enrolls or
remains enrolled at any time during that period, the student is included in the fall enrollment counts.
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Should I report students who are studying abroad?
U.S. students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country should be included in your
institution's enrollment report if your institution provides instructional resources (classroom, instructors), even though
the education occurs abroad. Students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country
should NOT be included in your enrollment report if:

•
•
•

The students are enrolled ONLY in courses offered by another institution;
The students are enrolled at a branch campus of your institution in a foreign country;
Your institution does not provide the instructional resources (i.e., classrooms, instructors), even if
the student pays tuition to your institution.

Foreign students who are enrolled for credit and taking courses at the institution should be included in the
institution's enrollment report. 
While study abroad students may be excluded from the enrollment count for reasons cited above, they may
be included in the institution’s retention calculation. Please see the specific instructions on Part E: Retention
or the FAQ on including study abroad students in retention.
For additional information on how to report study abroad students in all IPEDS survey components, please
visit the following link: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/pdf/Reporting_Study_Abroad_Students.pdf.
4)

5)

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In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for
reporting first-professional students?
Beginning with the 2009-10 collection year, institutions are required to use reclassified postbaccalaureate degree
categories that exclude the first-professional category. In parts A and B, all postbaccalaureate students are to be
reported as graduate students, including doctor's-professional practice students (formerly reported as firstprofessional). Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission,
they are considered subbaccalaureate undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate
students.
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My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment?

For reporting students studying in consortium agreements, please refer to the Resource page
at https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/report-your-data/data-tip-sheet-reporting-data-consortium-institutions. 
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6)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in
Fall Enrollment?
ESL has never been considered a postsecondary program by IPEDS.  Since it is considered non-postsecondary,
students who are ONLY enrolled in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses),
regardless of whether or not they are receiving Title-IV aid, should NOT be counted in enrollment.
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Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
1)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?

•
•
•
•
•
•

2)

3)

4)

5)

6)

7)

8)

9)

Credit for military service/training from an association such as the American Council on Education,
Credit from any non-credit courses, as defined by the institution,
Credit received for completion of tests/assessments,
Credit received before the student has earned a high school diploma (i.e., dual enrollment
credits),
Postsecondary award received before the students earned a high school diploma (e.g., certificate,
associate's, bachelor's, etc.), or
Credit for life experience. 

Students with prior postsecondary experience credit from attending a military academic institution (e.g., Community
College of the Air Force, West Point, U.S. Naval Academy, etc.) would NOT be considered first-time students. 
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Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
If their status is not indicated directly and the student does not enroll with prior credits or transcripts from another
institution, then assume the student is first-time.
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Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall
(without prior postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
These students should be reported as first-time undergraduates. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to
still be classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned occurred in the summer immediately
prior to enrollment.
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How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses
in the fall?
For the Fall Enrollment survey, count the student as a "transfer-in," even if the student transferred into the institution
during the prior summer term and is not entering the institution for the first time in the fall. (Applies only to academic
reporters)
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Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the
same institution?
Yes, "continuing/returning student" is meant to capture students who are not first-time or transfer-in. This includes
students who have been continuously enrolled in the institution and those who have stopped out and re-enrolled,
without having transferred to another institution.
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How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual
enrolled student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
If the college credit or postsecondary award was earned prior to the student graduating high school, then this student
would be considered a first-time student in the Fall. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to still be
classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned was prior to their high school graduation.
(Applies only to academic reporters)
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Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled
student)?
This student would be reported as non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. Prior to receipt of a high school diploma or
recognized equivalent (see glossary definition), a student is non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. After receipt of the
high school diploma or recognized equivalent, they can be classified as degree/certificate-seeking, if appropriate.
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If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how
do I determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
If the student has not indicated any intent but is applying for Title IV federal financial aid, assume the student to be
degree/certificate-seeking.
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Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
Report these students in the column labeled "Continuing" degree/certificate-seeking students (column 3). This column
is intended to capture all degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students who are not first-time and did not
transfer-in to the institution in that Fall.
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10)

11)

12)

13)

How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and reenrolls as a degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution?
This student should be reported as a "continuing/returning" student. IPEDS defines "continuing/returning students" as
"A student who is not new to the institution in the fall, but instead is continuing his or her studies at the institution
(i.e., not first-time and not transfer-in)."
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My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender
unknown” on the IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
These individuals are still to be reported to IPEDS, even though their gender is unknown. It is up to the institution to
decide how best to handle reporting individuals whose gender is unknown. However, a common method used is to
allocate students with gender unknown based on the known proportion of men to women.
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How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
There has been no change to how these students should be reported. Foreign students living outside the U.S., such as
a foreign student living outside the U.S. who is enrolled in distance education at your institution, should be classified
in the Race/Ethnicity Unknown category. Only U.S. citizens are to be categorized in the specific Race/Ethnicity
categories. The non-resident alien category is reserved specifically for students that are in the U.S. under that specific
legal status.
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How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the
determination of a student's full-time status?
Students in the following categories are considered degree-seeking in IPEDS, though they may be enrolled in courses
not creditable for an award:

•
•
•

14)

Students enrolled in remedial courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been
admitted into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Students enrolled in ESL courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been admitted
into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Co-op students enrolled in courses that are not creditable toward an award but are required for
award attainment

In determination of the student's full-time status, credit or clock hours (up to one academic year's worth) of remedial 
and ESL courses may be used in the determination of a student's full-time status if the remedial or ESL course is part 
of a program that leads to a postsecondary award. In these cases, the remedial or ESL courses should count the same 
as the comparable full-credit class. For co-op students, the work portion of a cooperative education program in which 
the amount of work performed is equivalent to the academic workload of a full-time student will also count toward the 
determination of full-time status.
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In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Because the race and ethnicity designations are reported only for U.S. citizens and the "nonresident alien" category is
a legal status for students with specific types of visas, undocumented students would not be reported under any of
these statuses. Instead, they should be reported as "Race/ethnicity unknown." Please visit the race/ethnicity FAQ for
more information: https://surveys.nces.ed.gov/ipeds/visFaq_re.aspx.

However, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) students are a particular group of undocumented students
that have been authorized by the Department of Homeland Security to be lawfully present in the U.S. for the duration
of their DACA, and as such, this status would allow them to be reported under the "nonresident alien" category.
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Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
Select “None of the above” on the CIP selection screen and report all students enrolled for credit, regardless of field of
study, Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
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How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
The program areas on the CIP selection screen are the only fields for which enrollment data is collected separately. In
addition to reporting enrollment by the selected fields requested, report all students enrolled for credit (regardless of
field of study) on the "Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
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3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
These students should only be reported on the Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A,
where all students enrolled for credit (regardless of field of study) are reported.
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4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part
A (i.e., 13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Report the students as either full-time or part-time depending on their status at the institution. Then report them on
the corresponding CIP pages. The CIP pages are not an unduplicated count and students can be included on more
than one page.
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Distance Education
2)

1)

 

2)
 

3)
 

4)
 

5)

 

Fall
1)
 

If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to
complete a practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance
education courses?
Yes, if the instructional portions are entirely online, the student is considered to be enrolled in exclusive distance
education course. 
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What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education
courses?
If you have no information about the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education, do not report
them in any of the location fields. The system will calculate the number of "Location Unknown" exclusively distance
education enrollments. 
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How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
Location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or current
address, as of the institution's Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the student. For
students enlisted in the military on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's physical location. 
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Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for
distance education location reporting?
Yes, Students located in a U.S. jurisdiction while they are enrolled in distance education courses should be reported as
located in the U.S.
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We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses).
How should students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall
Enrollment?
Hybrid courses are not considered by IPEDS as distance education. Students enrolled in “hybrid” courses should be
reported as “not enrolled in any distance education courses.”
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Enrollment by Age (Part B)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose
ages are unknown?
The number of students whose age is unknown will be computed by the data collection system. The difference
between the sum of students reported by age category in Part B and the corresponding total enrollment reported in
Part A results in the number of students whose age is unknown.

If this results in a negative number, a fatal error will appear and you will need to either correct your data or contact
the IPEDS Help Desk for assistance.
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2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
 
In order to have consistent data from all institutions, IPEDS must use standard age categories. Use the students'
dates of birth to report the enrollment by IPEDS age categories.
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Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the
second column that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
 
If the student received the GED within the past 12 months, they should be included in the second column.
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2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries
on a temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data,
what location do I use?
 
The home state could be the student’s or parent’s official home state, the state where they are registered to vote or
pay taxes, or the state issuing their driver’s license. If no such information is available, they would be reported under
“State unknown”(57).
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Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort)
and the undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?
 
In addition to the students in the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort, the total undergraduate
entering class includes part-time students of the same criteria as well as transfers-in and full- and part-time nondegree/non-certificate-seeking students that are new to your institution in the Fall.
The entering class is intended to represent all students new to an institution in a given fall and provide context for the
GRS cohort. The percent of the entering class that is represented by the institution's GRS cohort is included on College
Navigator as a note to the graduation rate data displayed.
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Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
 
The retention rate is calculated as follows:
4-year Institutions:

first-time bachelor's degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018/(first-time bachelor's
degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)

2)
 

3)
 
4)
 

5)

 

2-year and Less-than-2-year Institutions:
(first-time students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018 + first-time students in Fall 2017 who completed
their program by Fall 2018)/(first-time students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)
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How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time)
between one fall and the next?
Report students based on their attendance status in the fall the cohort was initially based on, even if that status
changed in the following fall.
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Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
No. Students must be enrolled for credit at the institution in the Fall to be considered retained from the previous fall.
Back to top
For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at
the same institution in another program, how should they count that student?
The institution should count that student as "retained" only once. Do NOT count that student twice, once for having
completed the program and another time for still being enrolled. 
Back to top
My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment
count. How can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s
retention calculation?

Freshman study abroad students can be added to the first-time cohort. Report in the inclusion box
first-time bachelor’s degree/certificate-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the
first-time cohort but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Back to top
Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are
taking classes in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
 
Sophomore study abroad students are considered part of the retained cohort even though they may not be included in
the institution’s fall enrollment count. Count these students in the retained cohort.
Back to top
Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
1)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
 
A worksheet has been provided to guide the process of calculating the student-to-faculty ratio for your institution. The
worksheet can be accessed from the Part F screen in the Data Collection System.
Back to top
2)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as
medicine, law, veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
 
An example of a program that would fall into this category (typically a doctor's-professional practice program) is a
school of medicine that only awards degrees/certificates at the graduate level and therefore its faculty exclusively (or
in some cases almost exclusively) teach graduate students. Programs that are "stand-alone" graduate programs may
have some undergraduate students enrolled in their courses, however a "stand-alone" graduate program would only
award degrees/certificates at the graduate level. An example of a graduate program that would not meet this criteria
is a school of business that has an undergraduate and graduate program and therefore enrolls both types of students
and awards degrees/certificates at both levels. Further, the faculty would teach a mix of undergraduate and graduate
students. Excluding “stand-alone” graduate programs is intended to make the student-to-faculty ratio closer to an
undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio than it would be if these programs were included in the calculation, without
overburdening institutions.
Back to top
3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "standalone" programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these
types of programs on the worksheet for Part F?
 
If your institution does not have any "stand-alone" graduate or professional programs, then enter 0 for students and 0
for faculty in the lines for these types of programs. Most institutions do not have these types of graduate or
professional programs, so entering 0 in those lines will be fairly common.
Back to top
6)

 
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2018-19 Survey Materials > Form

Fall Enrollment for 2-year degree-granting institutions

Overview 
Fall Enrollment Overview
The Fall Enrollment component collects student enrollment counts by level of student, enrollment status, gender and race/ethnicity. In
addition, first-time student retention rates and the student-to-faculty ratio are collected. Every other year data on residence of first-time
undergraduates is required and in opposite years, enrollment by student age is required to be reported.
Institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4) report Fall enrollment as of the
institution's official fall reporting date or October 15. Institutions operating on a calendar that differs by program or that enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters) report Fall enrollment as students enrolled any time during the period August 1 and
October 31.
Data Reporting Reminders:
•

Resources:
To download the survey materials for this component: Survey Materials
If you have questions about completing this survey, please contact the IPEDS Help Desk at 1-877-225-2568.

Part Selection - even years 
Completion of Part B (Enrollment of Students by Age) is optional this year.
Do you wish to complete Part B this year?
If you select 'Yes', you will be expected to complete the Part B screens.
If you select 'No', you will skip Part B.
No, I will not complete Part B
Yes, I will complete Part B

- odd years

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Full-Time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Full-time Undergraduate Students
Reporting Reminders:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only
•Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission, they are considered subbaccalaureate
undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate students.

Men
Students enrolled for
credit

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateseeking
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
Full-time
undergraduate
students

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateReturning
seeking

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
Full-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African
American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled
for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African
American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total
(men+women)
Grand total
(men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Part-time Undergraduate Students
Reporting Reminders:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only
•Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission, they are considered subbaccalaureate
undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate students.

Men
Students enrolled for
credit

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateseeking
Returning

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

First-time

Degree/certificate-seeking
Transfer-in Continuing/
Total degree/certificateReturning
seeking

Non-degree/
non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for
credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or
Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity
unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total
(men+women)
Grand total
(men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment Summary 
Fall Enrollment Summary
Men
Students enrolled for credit

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand Total (men+women)

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Undergraduate Students
Degree/certificate-seeking
Non-degree/non-certificate-seeking
Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses
Not enrolled in any distance education courses
Total (from prior part A screens)
Image
description.
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context
notes
may
beon
posted
the College
Navigator.
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description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes may be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Of those students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses,
report the number that are:
Located in
Located in the U.S. but not in
Located in the U.S. but state/jurisdiction unknown
Located outside the U.S.
Location unknown/unreported
Total students exclusively enrolled in distance education (from section above)

Undergraduate Students
Degree/certificate-seeking Non-degree/non-certificate-seeking

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Full-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total full-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Full-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total part-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Part-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part C - Screening Question 
Did any of your first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students (reported in Part A) enroll within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED?
No, we do not have any first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
Yes, we have first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Of students in column 1, those
Total first-time
was first admitted
who enrolled within 12 months
degree/certificate-seeking
of high school graduation
undergraduates
or receiving their GED
(1)
(2)
Alabama
01
Alaska

02

Arizona

04

Arkansas

05

California

06

Colorado

08

Connecticut

09

Delaware

10

District of Columbia

11

Florida

12

Georgia

13

Hawaii

15

Idaho

16

Illinois

17

Indiana

18

Iowa

19

Kansas

20

Kentucky

21

Louisiana

22

Maine

23

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
degree/certificate-seeking
who enrolled within 12 months
undergraduates
of high school graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
Maryland
24
Massachusetts

25

Michigan

26

Minnesota

27

Mississippi

28

Missouri

29

Montana

30

Nebraska

31

Nevada

32

New Hampshire

33

New Jersey

34

New Mexico

35

New York

36

North Carolina

37

North Dakota

38

Ohio

39

Oklahoma

40

Oregon

41

Pennsylvania

42

Rhode Island

44

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
Code degree/certificate-seeking who enrolled within 12 months of high school
undergraduates
graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
South Carolina
45
South Dakota

46

Tennessee

47

Texas

48

Utah

49

Vermont

50

Virginia

51

Washington

53

West Virginia

54

Wisconsin

55

Wyoming

56

State Unknown

57

American Samoa

60

Federated States of Micronesia

64

Guam

66

Marshall Islands

68

Northern Marianas

69

Palau

70

Puerto Rico

72

Virgin Islands

78

Foreign Countries

90

Residence unknown/unreported
Total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
(from Part A)

98

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

This part is only required from academic reporters.
Part D - Total Undergraduate Entering Class 
Total Undergraduate Entering Class, Fall 2018
D1 Total full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates from Part A (GR cohort)
D2 Total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates (full-time + part-time) from Part A
D3 Total transfer-in degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates (full-time + part-time) from Part A
D4 Total non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates (full-time + part-time) from Part A
D5 Of the total non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates displayed on line D4, the number that are new to the
institution in Fall 2018
D6 Total entering students at the undergraduate level
Note: This is calculated as first-time students (line D2) + students transferring to the institution (line D3) + non-degree/noncertificate-seeking undergraduates entering in Fall 2018 (line D5).
D7 Percentage of undergraduate entering class represented by your GR cohort (line D1/line D6)

Part E - First-Time Student Cohort Retention Rates (Full-time) 
Retention Rates
Full-time, First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Cohort from Fall 2017
The Fall 2017 cohort is preloaded based on data reported in the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
Academic reporters report retention data as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program reporters determine the
cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1, 2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort and the
resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine full-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was full-time in Fall 2017, report them in the full-time cohort
regardless of Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E2a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E2b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E1) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Preloaded
cohort

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)

FULL-TIME, FIRST-TIME COHORT RETENTION:
E1
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort
E2a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E2b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E3
Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E1 - E2a + E2b)
E4
Students from Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled + students from Fall 2017
cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018
E5
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort retention rate (line E4 / line E3)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part E - First-Time Student Cohort Retention Rates (Part-time) 
Retention Rates
Part-time, First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Cohort from Fall 2017
The Fall 2017 cohort is preloaded based on data reported in the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
Academic reporters report retention data as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program reporters determine the
cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1, 2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort and the
resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only part-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine part-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was part-time in Fall 2017, report them in the part-time cohort
regardless of their Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E7a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E7b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E6) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Preloaded
cohort

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)

PART-TIME, FIRST-TIME COHORT RETENTION:
E6
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort
E7a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E7b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E8
Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E6 - line E7)
E9
Students from Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled + students from Fall 2017
cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018
E10
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort retention rate (line E9 / line E8)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Student-to-Faculty Ratio 
Please provide your institution's student-to-faculty ratio (i.e., student-to-instructional staff) for undergraduate programs for Fall
2018. The student-to-faculty ratio and any accompanying context that is provided will be displayed on College Navigator.
Note: Logic in this item is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

Click here to use a worksheet to help you determine the student-to-faculty ratio
Student-to-faculty ratio

to 1

Student-to-faculty ratio prior year

to 1

Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Less Than Four-Year Institutions and Four Year-Institutions Without Graduate Programs
Student-to-Faculty Ratio Worksheet 
This worksheet is designed to help you determine your institution's student-to-faculty ratio.
Data entered on this worksheet will NOT be collected or saved. Therefore, please PRINT this screen if you would like to refer to the
ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
Note: The logic used for this calculation is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.
Students, Fall 2018
F1 Total full-time students from Part A
F2 Total part-time students from Part A
F3 Full-time equivalent of part-time students
(Line F2 * 1/3)
F4 Total full-time equivalent students
(Line F1 + F3)
Instructional Staff, Fall 2018
FULL-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F5 Number of full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component
Full-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion (Line F6):
F6 Full-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion:
Of the number of full-time instructional staff reported in Line F5, the number teaching exclusively non-credit
courses
F7 Total adjusted full-time instructional staff
(Line F5 - F6)
PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F8 Number of part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component
Part-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion (Line F9):
F9 Of the number of part-time instructional staff reported in Line F8, the number teaching exclusively noncredit courses
Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition (Line F10):
F10 Number of administrators, or other staff not reported to IPEDS as instructors, that are teaching a credit
course(s) in the Fall
F11 Total adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F8 - F9 + F10)
F12 Full-time equivalent of adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F11 * 1/3)
F13 Total full-time equivalent instructional staff
(Line F7 + F12)
F14 Student-to-faculty ratio
(Line F4/F13)

to 1

Prepared by 
The name of the preparer is being collected so that we can follow up with the appropriate person in the event that there are questions
concerning the data. The Keyholder will be copied on all email correspondence to other preparers.
The time it took to prepare this component is being collected so that we can continue to improve our estimate of the reporting burden
associated with IPEDS. Please include in your estimate the time it took for you to review instructions, query and search data sources, complete
and review the component, and submit the data through the Data Collection System.
Thank you for your assistance.
This survey component was prepared by:
Keyholder
Finance Contact

SFA Contact

HR Contact

Academic Library Contact

Other

Name:
Email:

How many staff from your institution only were involved in the data collection and reporting process of this survey component?
Number of Staff (including yourself)

How many hours did you and others from your institution only spend on each of the steps below when responding to this survey
component?
Exclude the hours spent collecting data for state and other reporting purposes.
Staff member
Collecting Data Needed
Revising Data to Match
IPEDS Requirements
Your office
hours
hours
Other offices

U.S. Department of Education
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Department
Of
Education
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description.

hours

Entering Data

hours

Software Provider Resources
Browsers Supported

Use of Cookies
Troubleshooting

Revising and Locking Data

hours

hours

hours

hours

Section 508 Compliance
NCES Privacy Policy

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IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Instructions

Fall Enrollment Full Instructions

Purpose of Survey
Changes in Reporting
General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
Context Boxes

Coverage
Who To Include
Who To Exclude

Where to Get Help For Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
AIR Website
IPEDS Website Resources

Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Institution Level
Aggregate Level

Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Reporting Individuals by Racial/Ethnic Categories
Part A: Fall Enrollment by Level, Attendance Status, Race/Ethnicity, and Gender
Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age
Part C: Residence of First-Time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part D: Total Undergraduate Entering Class
Part E: Retention Rates for First-Time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio

Purpose of Survey
The purpose of the Fall Enrollment component of IPEDS is to collect enrollment data on all students enrolled for credit
in courses/programs that could lead to awards ranging from postsecondary certificates of less than 1 year to doctoral
degrees. Fall enrollment data are collected by level of student, attendance status, race/ethnicity, and gender. In
addition, the Fall Enrollment component collects data on the institution's undergraduate entering class, first-time
student retention rates, and the student-to-faculty ratio. Every other year data on enrollment by nine selected fields of
study are collected, as is residency of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students. In opposite years,
enrollment by student age is collected.
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Changes in Reporting
Enrollment by residence will be mandatory this year. Enrollment by age is optional.
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General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
For institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4), fall
enrollment should be reported as of the institution's official fall reporting date or October 15.
For institutions operating on an "other academic calendar," a calendar that differs by program, or enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters), fall enrollment is reported for students enrolled any time during
the period August 1 and October 31.

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Context Boxes
Context boxes are provided to allow institutions to provide more information regarding survey component items. Note
that some context boxes are posted on the College Navigator Website, which is the college search tool offered by
NCES. NCES will review entries in these context boxes for applicability and appropriateness before posting them on the
College Navigator Website; institutions should check grammar and spelling of their entries.
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Coverage
Who to Include
Include all students enrolled for credit (enrolled in instructional activity, courses or programs, that can be applied
towards the requirements for a postsecondary degree, diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary
credential), regardless of whether or not they are seeking a degree or certificate. This includes:

•
•
•
•

Students enrolled for credit in off-campus centers
High school students taking regular college courses for credit
Students taking remedial courses if the student is degree-seeking for the purpose of student financial aid
determination
Students from overseas enrolled in for credit at your institution (e.g., online students)

Who to Exclude
Exclude students who are not enrolled for credit. For example, exclude:

•
•
•
•

Students enrolled exclusively in courses that cannot be applied towards a recognized
postsecondary credential
Students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses)
Students enrolled exclusively in Continuing Education Units (CEUs)
Students exclusively auditing classes

In addition, the following students should be excluded:

•
•
•

Any student studying abroad (e.g., at a foreign university) if their enrollment at the 'home' institution serves
as an administrative record
Students enrolled in any branch campus located in a foreign country
Students in Experimental Pell Programs 

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Where to Get Help with Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
Phone: (877) 225-2568
E-mail: ipedshelp@rti.org

Web Tutorials
You can consult the IPEDS Website's Trainings & Outreach page which contains several tutorials on IPEDS data
collection, a self-paced overview of IPEDS tools, and other valuable resources.

IPEDS Resource Page
The IPEDS Website's Reporting Tools page contains frequently asked questions, a link to data tip sheets, tutorials,
taxonomies, information centers (e.g., academic libraries, average net price, human resources, race/ethnicity, etc.),
and other valuable information.
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Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Data collected through IPEDS will be accessible at the institution and aggregate levels.
At the institution-level, data will appear in the:
•
•
•
•

College Navigator Website
IPEDS Data Center
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
College Affordability and Transparency Center Website

At the aggregate-level, data will appear in:
•
•
•
•
•

IPEDS First Looks
IPEDS Table Library
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
The Digest of Education Statistics
The Condition of Education

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Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Before entering any data, screening questions will need to be answered.
Part B Selection
Part B (Enrollment by Age) is optional this year. Indicate whether or not you will complete Part B of the Fall Enrollment
survey component this year.
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Reporting Persons by Racial/Ethnic Category (1997 OMB)
This information is being collected in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 and Sec. 421(a)(1) of the Carl D. Perkins Vocational Education Act. These instructions
correspond with the Final Guidance on Maintaining, Collecting, and Reporting Racial and Ethnic Data to the U.S.
Department of Education, published in the Federal Register on October 19, 2007.
Method of collection - Institutions must collect race and ethnicity information using a 2-question format. The first
question is whether the respondent is Hispanic/Latino. The second question is whether the respondent is from one or
more races from the following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native
Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White. Institutions should allow students and staff to self-identify their race
and ethnicity. For further details on the guidance for collecting these data, please see the full Federal Register notice.
Method of reporting aggregate data - Institutions must report aggregate data to the U.S. Department of Education
using the NINE categories below. Racial/ethnic designations are requested only for United States citizens, resident
aliens, and other eligible non-citizens.

•

Hispanic or Latino, regardless of race

For Non-Hispanic/Latino individuals:

•
•
•
•

American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander

•
•

White
Two or more races

In addition, the following categories may be used:

•
•

Nonresident alien
Race and ethnicity unknown

Racial/ethnic descriptions - Racial/ethnic designations as used in this survey do not denote scientific definitions of
anthropological origins. The categories are:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Hispanic or Latino- A person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
culture or origin, regardless of race.
American Indian or Alaska Native- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
America (including Central America) who maintains cultural identification through tribal affiliation or
community attachment.
Asian- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian
Subcontinent, including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine
Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Black or African American- A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii,
Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
White - A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.

Other descriptive categories

•

•

Nonresident alien - A person who is not a citizen or national of the United States and who is in this country
on a visa or temporary basis and does not have the right to remain indefinitely. NOTE - Nonresident aliens are
to be reported separately, in the boxes provided, rather than included in any of the seven racial/ethnic
categories. Resident aliens and other eligible (for financial aid purposes) non-citizens who are not citizens or
nationals of the United States and who have been admitted as legal immigrants for the purpose of obtaining
permanent resident alien status (and who hold either an alien registration card (Form I-551 or I-151), a
Temporary Resident Card (Form I-688), or an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) with a notation that
conveys legal immigrant status such as Section 207 Refugee, Section 208 Asylee, Conditional Entrant Parolee
or Cuban-Haitian) are to be reported in the appropriate racial/ethnic categories along with United States
citizens.
Race and ethnicity unknown - This category is used only if the person did not select EITHER a racial or
ethnic designation.

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Part A: Full-Time Undergraduate Students by Race/Ethnicity and Gender
On this screen, include all students enrolled for credit, full-time at the undergraduate level. The undergraduate level
includes students enrolled in undergraduate level courses, in 4 or 5-year bachelor's degree programs, associate's
degree programs, or any certificate programs below the baccalaureate level. Students who have already earned a
bachelor's degree but are taking undergraduate courses for credit should be included as undergraduates.

Full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students
In column 1, report undergraduate students who have no prior postsecondary
experience and have enrolled full-time with the intent to earn a degree, certificate, or other recognized
postsecondary credential. The following are also considered first-time:

•
•

Students enrolled in the fall term who attended college for the first time in the prior summer session
(applicable to academic reporters only)
Students who entered with advanced standing (any college credits or recognized postsecondary credential 
earned before graduation from high school) 

In order to be considered degree or certificate-seeking, the student must be enrolled in courses for credit and be
recognized by the institution as seeking a degree or other recognized postsecondary credential. Note: All students 
eligible to receive federal student financial aid are to be considered degree/certificate-seeking. Dual enrolled high 
school students are not degree/certificate-seeking students. 
Program Reporters: Include first-time students who entered your institution between August 1, 2018 and October
31, 2018.
Academic Reporters: Student counts reported in column 1 define the initial cohort for reporting graduation rates in
the IPEDS Graduation Rates (GR) component to meet Student Right-to-Know reporting requirements. Students
reported in this group will become your GR cohort in the reporting year appropriate for your institution. The number of
students reported in column 1 will also appear in Part D to be used in determining the percentage of the
undergraduate entering class represented by the cohort.

Full-time, transfer-in degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 2, report the total number of full-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students entering the
reporting institution for the first time but known to have previously attended a postsecondary institution at the
undergraduate level. Include students enrolled in the fall term who transferred into the institution the prior summer
term. These students may or may not have transferred credit(s).
Program Reporters: Include students who transferred into your institution between August 1, 2018 and October 31,
2018
Academic Reporters: Include students who transferred into your institution as of the institution's official fall
reporting date or October 15, 2018 and those who transferred in the prior summer term.

Full-time, continuing degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 3, report the total number of continuing (i.e., not first-time and not transfer-in) full-time degree/certificateseeking undergraduate students. These are students who are not new to the institution in the fall, but instead are
continuing their studies at the institution.

Full-time, non-degree/non-certificate-seeking full-time undergraduates
In column 5, report the total number of full-time non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates. These students
are enrolled for credit but not with the intent of earning a degree or other recognized postsecondary credential. Note: 
High school students enrolled in creditable courses prior to high school graduation are considered non-degree/noncertificate-seeking students.
Once you save the data by clicking the 'Verify and Save' button, the 'Total full-time degree/certificate-seeking
undergraduates' (column 4) and 'Total, full-time undergraduate students' (column 6) will be calculated by the system
and display on the survey screen.

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Part A: Part-time Undergraduate Students
Report part-time students using the same definitions and instructions provided for full-time undergraduate students.
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Part A: Enrollment by Distance Education Status
On this screen, report all students reported on previous Part A screens who are:
•
•

Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses offered at your institution: Students who are
enrolled only in courses that are considered distance education courses at your institution.
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses offered at your institution: Students
who are enrolled in at least one course that is considered a distance education course, but are not enrolled
exclusively in distance education courses.

Note: Requirements for coming to campus for orientation, testing, or academic support services do not exclude a
course from being classified as exclusively distance education. Similarly, if a student is taking instructional portions of
their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a practicum, residency, or internship, the student can
still be considered enrolled in entirely education courses.
Not enrolled in any distance education courses offered at your institution: This number represents the
students who are not enrolled in any distance education courses at your institution. It will be calculated by subtracting
the (students enrolled exclusively in distance education + students enrolled in some but not all distance education
courses) from the total enrolled students from Part A, which is the totals for degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
and non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates. 
Location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses
If there are students reported as enrolled exclusively in distance education courses, further data on the location of
these distance education students will need to be reported. Report, by degree/certificate-seeking status, the number
of exclusively distance education students that are located in the same state/jurisdiction as the institution, in a
different state/jurisdiction than the institution, in the U.S. but the state/jurisdiction is unknown, and residing outside
the U.S.  Location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or
current address, as of the institution's Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the
student. For students enlisted in the military on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's
physical location or current address.
The total students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses will be carried forward from earlier on the screen.
If the total students reported by location does not equal the total enrolled exclusively in distance education from
above, the “Location unknown/unreported” is calculated.
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Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender
Part B is optional this year. This part is required in odd-numbered years.
This distribution of students should include all students reported in Part A.

Enrollment by Age
Use institutional records to calculate student age.
Academic reporters: report student age as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters: report student age as of August 1, 2018.
The totals by gender for each attendance status (full- or part-time) and student level (undergraduate or graduate) will
be carried forward from the corresponding Part A screens. When the Part B and Part A totals do not agree, the "Age
unknown/unreported" is calculated.
Note: If the Part B student count total is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in a negative
value), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine both the age data and comparable portion of Part A to identify the
error and make appropriate corrections.
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Part C: Residence of First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduate Students
Part C is mandatory this year. This part is required in even-numbered years only.
This distribution of students should include all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
(both full- and part-time) reported in Part A.

Recent High School Graduates Screening Question
Part C begins with a screening question to determine whether or not your institution has first-time degree/certificateseeking undergraduate students who enrolled within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED. If the
answer is 'No', then only one column for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates will display in Part C.
If the answer is 'Yes', then 2 columns will be reported in Part C, one for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking
undergraduates and one for those first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates enrolled within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED. 

State of residence
Use the state identified by the student as his/her permanent address at the time of application to the institution. This
may be the legal residence of a parent or guardian, or the state in which a student has a driver's license or is
registered to vote. It is not necessarily the state in which the student's high school is located.

Residence of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column (1), report all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students, both full-time and parttime, by state of residence. The total line for column (1) will be carried forward from the total first-time
degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students reported in Part A. If the sum of the students reported by state of
residence in column (1), lines 1-90, does not agree with the total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
from Part A, the "Residence unknown/unreported" (line 98) will be calculated.
Note: When the sum of students by state of residence is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in
a negative value calculated for the "Residence unknown/unreported" line), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine
both the residence data and comparable section of Part A to identify the error and make appropriate corrections.
If your institution responded 'Yes' to the screening question, the subset of students from column (1) who enrolled
within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED are to be reported again by their state of residence
in column (2).
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Part D: Total Undergraduate Entering Class

Program reporters and non-degree-granting institutions do not complete Part D.
Total entering class data are included to address concerns some institutions have raised about the cohort that is
defined by the IPEDS Graduation Rates (GR) component. The GR cohort includes only full-time, first-time
degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students. For institutions with substantial part-time, transfer-in, and nondegree/non-certificate-seeking enrollment, this may result in graduation rates that are not representative of their
typical entering class.
The total undergraduate entering class is comprised of all first-time undergraduates (full-time and part-time), all
transfer-in undergraduates (full-time and part-time) and the subset of non-degree/non-certificate-seeking
undergraduates who are new to the institution in the Fall. To reach the total entering class total, Part D follows a lineby-line step process.
Lines D1 - D4 are carried forward from Part A reporting.
In Line D5, report the subset of non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduate students displayed on line D4,
who are new to the institution in Fall 2018.
Line D6 will calculate the total undergraduate entering students. This is calculated as all first-time students (line D2)
+ all transfer-in students (line D3) + non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduate students new to the
institution in Fall 2018 (line D5).
After clicking 'Save', Line D7 will display the percentage of the undergraduate entering class that is represented by
the current GR cohort (the GR cohort is carried forward from Part A and displayed in Line D1). The percentage is
calculated as line D1/D6.
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Part E: Retention Rates for the First-Time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Student Cohort
Retention rates examine the percentage of first-time degree/certificate seeking students enrolled in the fall of the prior
year that are either still enrolled in the fall of the current year or have completed their program in that time.
The retention cohorts, full-time and part-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates from Fall 2017, are
preloaded from Part A of the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
On each retention screen (full-time cohort and part-time cohort screens), institutions must:
•
•
•
•

Verify the preloaded Fall 2017 cohort.
Attendance status (full- or part-time) should be based on the student's Fall 2017 attendance status.
Report any exclusions for the cohort (see below for allowable exclusions).
Report any inclusions of first-time study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort but
who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.
Report the total number of students retained from the Fall 2017 cohort. Include students who were reported
as first-time but who are studying abroad in Fall 2018.
Total students retained = students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled as of Fall 2018 + students
from Fall 2017 cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018.

Academic reporters: Report students retained as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15,
2018.
Program reporters: Report students retained as of August 1, 2018.

Exclusions:
Institutions may report exclusions for the Fall 2017 cohort. Allowable exclusions are students who left the institution
for any of the following reasons:
•
•
•
•

Died or were totally and permanently disabled
To serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty)
To serve with a foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g., Peace Corps)
To serve on official church missions

The system will compute an adjusted cohort by subtracting the student exclusions from the original cohort prior to
calculating the retention rate.
Retention rates will be computed by the system after clicking 'Save.' The retention rate is calculated as:
(Students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled + Students from Fall 2017 cohort who completed their
program as of Fall 2018/Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort)*100.
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Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio

Graduate only institutions do not complete Part F.
Report the student-to-faculty ratio for undergraduate programs at your institution. A worksheet is available to help
determine your institution's ratio. Click on the link from the Part F screen to access the worksheet.

Worksheet for Less Than Four-Year Institutions and Four-Year Institutions without Graduate or
Professional Programs
The worksheet is designed to help institutions determine their student-to-faculty ratio. It is NOT mandatory that you
use this worksheet to calculate your student-to-faculty ratio. Data entered on the worksheet will NOT be collected or
saved. Make sure to print the screen in order to refer to the ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
Please note: The logic used in this calculation is similar to that of item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

FULL- AND PART-TIME STUDENT DATA:
All student data on the worksheet is either carried forward from Part A or a calculated field.
Lines F1 and F2. Total full-time and total part-time students.
The total number of full- and part-time students are carried forward from Part A.
Line F3. A full-time equivalent (FTE) of the part-time student count.
The FTE will be calculated as line F2 (total part-time student count) * 1/3.
Line F4. Total FTE students.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F1 (total full-time students) and F3 (FTE of part-time students). Line F4 is used in
the ratio calculation.

FULL-AND PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF DATA:
Lines F5 and F8 should be reported based on data your institution is reporting in the IPEDS Human Resources (HR)
survey component. Please work together with the appropriate staff at your institution to ensure that the data used on
this worksheet and reported in the HR component are the same.
In line F5, report the total number of full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component.
In line F8, report the total number of part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component.

Instructional Staff Exclusion for Non-Credit Instructors:
In line F6, report the number of full-time instructional staff reported in line F5 that are teaching exclusively noncredit courses.
In line F9, report the number of part-time instructional staff reported in line F8 that are teaching exclusively noncredit courses.
For institutions that have a large amount of non-credit activity, the above exclusions will better align the student data
with the instructional staff data being used in the ratio.

Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition:
In line F10, report the number of administrators or other staff NOT reported to IPEDS as instructors (and therefore
not included in the instructional staff count reported in line F8) that are teaching a credit course in the Fall.
For institutions that have administrators and other professionals on staff that are not reported to IPEDS as instructors
(because it is not their "primary function") but they teach credit courses, the above allowable addition will produce a
more accurate ratio.
With the above instructional staff exclusions and part-time instructional staff addition information above, the system
will compute the following on the worksheet:

Line F7. Total adjusted full-time instructional staff.
The adjusted full-time instructional staff is the total full-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching exclusively
non-credit classes. The system will calculate line F7 as line F5 (total full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR
survey component) minus line F6 (total full-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses).
Line F11. Total adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The adjusted part-time instructional staff is the total part-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching exclusively
non-credit classes, and adding those administrators and other staff teaching credit courses. The system will calculate
line F11 as line F8 (total part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component) minus line F9 (total
part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses) + line F10 (administrators and other staff
teaching credit courses).
Line F12. Total FTE of adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The FTE will be calculated as line F11 (total adjusted part-time instructional staff) * 1/3.
Line F13. Total FTE of adjusted instructional staff.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F7 (total adjusted full-time instructional staff) and F12 (FTE of total adjusted part
-time instructional staff). Line F13 is used in the ratio calculation.
Line F14. Student-to-faculty ratio.
The ratio will be calculated by the system as line F4 (total adjusted FTE students) divided by line F13 (total adjusted
FTE instructional staff). The ratio will be displayed on the worksheet as xxx to 1.
The calculated ratio can then be entered onto the Part F (Student-to-Faculty Ratio) screen.
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IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > FAQ

Fall Enrollment
Click one of the following questions to view the answer.
General
1)
2)
3)
4)

Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Should I report students who are studying abroad?
In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for reporting firstprofessional students?
My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment?
5)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in Fall
6)
Enrollment?
Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?
1)
2)
Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall (without prior
3)
postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses in the fall?
4)
5)
Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the same
institution?
6)
How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual enrolled
student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
7)
Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled student)?
8)
If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how do I
determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
9)
Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
10)
How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and re-enrolls as a
degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution?
11)
My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender unknown” on the
IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
12)
How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
13)
How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the determination of a
student's full-time status?
14)
In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
2)
How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part A (i.e.,
13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Distance Education
1)
If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a
practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance education courses?
2)
What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses?
3)
How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
4)
Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for distance
education location reporting?
5)
We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses). How should
students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall Enrollment?
Fall Enrollment by Age (Part B)
1)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose ages are
unknown?
2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the second column
that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries on a
temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data, what location do I
use?
Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort) and the
undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?

Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
2)
How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time) between
one fall and the next?
Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
3)
For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at the same
4)
institution in another program, how should they count that student?
My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment count. How
5)
can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s retention calculation?
Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are taking classes
6)
in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
1)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as medicine, law,
2)
veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "stand-alone"
programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these types of programs on
the worksheet for Part F?

Answers:
General
1)
Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
All students enrolled for credit should be reported. Credit is defined as “Recognition of attendance or performance in
an instructional activity (course or program) that can be applied by a recipient toward the requirements for a degree,
diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary credential, irrespective of the activity's unit of measurement.”
Students who are not seeking a degree or certificate may be still be enrolled for credit. These students are to be
reported in the non-degree/non-certificate-seeking column.

2)

3)

Back to top
What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Fall enrollment is a count of students enrolled on a particular date in the Fall. Fall enrollment is often referred to as a
"snapshot" of the enrollment at an institution at a specific time in the Fall. The date/period used depends on whether
the institution is an academic reporter or a program reporter for IPEDS purposes.
Academic reporters: Report enrollment as of October 15 or as of the institution's official fall reporting date.
Program reporters: Report enrollment during the 3-month period of August 1 to October 31. If a student enrolls or
remains enrolled at any time during that period, the student is included in the fall enrollment counts.
Back to top
Should I report students who are studying abroad?
U.S. students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country should be included in your
institution's enrollment report if your institution provides instructional resources (classroom, instructors), even though
the education occurs abroad. Students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country
should NOT be included in your enrollment report if:

•
•
•

The students are enrolled ONLY in courses offered by another institution;
The students are enrolled at a branch campus of your institution in a foreign country;
Your institution does not provide the instructional resources (i.e., classrooms, instructors), even if
the student pays tuition to your institution.

Foreign students who are enrolled for credit and taking courses at the institution should be included in the
institution's enrollment report. 
While study abroad students may be excluded from the enrollment count for reasons cited above, they may
be included in the institution’s retention calculation. Please see the specific instructions on Part E: Retention
or the FAQ on including study abroad students in retention.
For additional information on how to report study abroad students in all IPEDS survey components, please
visit the following link: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/pdf/Reporting_Study_Abroad_Students.pdf.
4)

5)

Back to top
In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for
reporting first-professional students?
Beginning with the 2009-10 collection year, institutions are required to use reclassified postbaccalaureate degree
categories that exclude the first-professional category. In parts A and B, all postbaccalaureate students are to be
reported as graduate students, including doctor's-professional practice students (formerly reported as firstprofessional). Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission,
they are considered subbaccalaureate undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate
students.
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My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment?

For reporting students studying in consortium agreements, please refer to the Resource page
at https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/report-your-data/data-tip-sheet-reporting-data-consortium-institutions. 
Back to top
6)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in
Fall Enrollment?
ESL has never been considered a postsecondary program by IPEDS.  Since it is considered non-postsecondary,
students who are ONLY enrolled in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses),
regardless of whether or not they are receiving Title-IV aid, should NOT be counted in enrollment.
Back to top
Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
1)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?

•
•
•
•
•
•

2)

3)

4)

5)

6)

7)

8)

9)

Credit for military service/training from an association such as the American Council on Education,
Credit from any non-credit courses, as defined by the institution,
Credit received for completion of tests/assessments,
Credit received before the student has earned a high school diploma (i.e., dual enrollment
credits),
Postsecondary award received before the students earned a high school diploma (e.g., certificate,
associate's, bachelor's, etc.), or
Credit for life experience. 

Students with prior postsecondary experience credit from attending a military academic institution (e.g., Community
College of the Air Force, West Point, U.S. Naval Academy, etc.) would NOT be considered first-time students. 
Back to top
Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
If their status is not indicated directly and the student does not enroll with prior credits or transcripts from another
institution, then assume the student is first-time.
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Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall
(without prior postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
These students should be reported as first-time undergraduates. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to
still be classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned occurred in the summer immediately
prior to enrollment.
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How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses
in the fall?
For the Fall Enrollment survey, count the student as a "transfer-in," even if the student transferred into the institution
during the prior summer term and is not entering the institution for the first time in the fall. (Applies only to academic
reporters)
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Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the
same institution?
Yes, "continuing/returning student" is meant to capture students who are not first-time or transfer-in. This includes
students who have been continuously enrolled in the institution and those who have stopped out and re-enrolled,
without having transferred to another institution.
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How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual
enrolled student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
If the college credit or postsecondary award was earned prior to the student graduating high school, then this student
would be considered a first-time student in the Fall. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to still be
classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned was prior to their high school graduation.
(Applies only to academic reporters)
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Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled
student)?
This student would be reported as non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. Prior to receipt of a high school diploma or
recognized equivalent (see glossary definition), a student is non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. After receipt of the
high school diploma or recognized equivalent, they can be classified as degree/certificate-seeking, if appropriate.
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If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how
do I determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
If the student has not indicated any intent but is applying for Title IV federal financial aid, assume the student to be
degree/certificate-seeking.
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Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
Report these students in the column labeled "Continuing" degree/certificate-seeking students (column 3). This column
is intended to capture all degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students who are not first-time and did not
transfer-in to the institution in that Fall.
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10)

11)

12)

13)

How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and reenrolls as a degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution?
This student should be reported as a "continuing/returning" student. IPEDS defines "continuing/returning students" as
"A student who is not new to the institution in the fall, but instead is continuing his or her studies at the institution
(i.e., not first-time and not transfer-in)."
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My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender
unknown” on the IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
These individuals are still to be reported to IPEDS, even though their gender is unknown. It is up to the institution to
decide how best to handle reporting individuals whose gender is unknown. However, a common method used is to
allocate students with gender unknown based on the known proportion of men to women.
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How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
There has been no change to how these students should be reported. Foreign students living outside the U.S., such as
a foreign student living outside the U.S. who is enrolled in distance education at your institution, should be classified
in the Race/Ethnicity Unknown category. Only U.S. citizens are to be categorized in the specific Race/Ethnicity
categories. The non-resident alien category is reserved specifically for students that are in the U.S. under that specific
legal status.
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How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the
determination of a student's full-time status?
Students in the following categories are considered degree-seeking in IPEDS, though they may be enrolled in courses
not creditable for an award:

•
•
•

14)

Students enrolled in remedial courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been
admitted into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Students enrolled in ESL courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been admitted
into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Co-op students enrolled in courses that are not creditable toward an award but are required for
award attainment

In determination of the student's full-time status, credit or clock hours (up to one academic year's worth) of remedial 
and ESL courses may be used in the determination of a student's full-time status if the remedial or ESL course is part 
of a program that leads to a postsecondary award. In these cases, the remedial or ESL courses should count the same 
as the comparable full-credit class. For co-op students, the work portion of a cooperative education program in which 
the amount of work performed is equivalent to the academic workload of a full-time student will also count toward the 
determination of full-time status.
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In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Because the race and ethnicity designations are reported only for U.S. citizens and the "nonresident alien" category is
a legal status for students with specific types of visas, undocumented students would not be reported under any of
these statuses. Instead, they should be reported as "Race/ethnicity unknown." Please visit the race/ethnicity FAQ for
more information: https://surveys.nces.ed.gov/ipeds/visFaq_re.aspx.

However, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) students are a particular group of undocumented students
that have been authorized by the Department of Homeland Security to be lawfully present in the U.S. for the duration
of their DACA, and as such, this status would allow them to be reported under the "nonresident alien" category.
Back to top
Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
Select “None of the above” on the CIP selection screen and report all students enrolled for credit, regardless of field of
study, Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
Back to top
How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
The program areas on the CIP selection screen are the only fields for which enrollment data is collected separately. In
addition to reporting enrollment by the selected fields requested, report all students enrolled for credit (regardless of
field of study) on the "Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
Back to top
3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
These students should only be reported on the Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A,
where all students enrolled for credit (regardless of field of study) are reported.
Back to top
4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part
A (i.e., 13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Report the students as either full-time or part-time depending on their status at the institution. Then report them on
the corresponding CIP pages. The CIP pages are not an unduplicated count and students can be included on more
than one page.
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Distance Education
2)

1)

 

2)
 

3)
 

4)
 

5)

 

Fall
1)
 

If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to
complete a practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance
education courses?
Yes, if the instructional portions are entirely online, the student is considered to be enrolled in exclusive distance
education course. 
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What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education
courses?
If you have no information about the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education, do not report
them in any of the location fields. The system will calculate the number of "Location Unknown" exclusively distance
education enrollments. 
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How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
Location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or current
address, as of the institution's Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the student. For
students enlisted in the military on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's physical location. 
Back to top
Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for
distance education location reporting?
Yes, Students located in a U.S. jurisdiction while they are enrolled in distance education courses should be reported as
located in the U.S.
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We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses).
How should students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall
Enrollment?
Hybrid courses are not considered by IPEDS as distance education. Students enrolled in “hybrid” courses should be
reported as “not enrolled in any distance education courses.”
Back to top
Enrollment by Age (Part B)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose
ages are unknown?
The number of students whose age is unknown will be computed by the data collection system. The difference
between the sum of students reported by age category in Part B and the corresponding total enrollment reported in
Part A results in the number of students whose age is unknown.

If this results in a negative number, a fatal error will appear and you will need to either correct your data or contact
the IPEDS Help Desk for assistance.
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2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
 
In order to have consistent data from all institutions, IPEDS must use standard age categories. Use the students'
dates of birth to report the enrollment by IPEDS age categories.
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Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the
second column that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
 
If the student received the GED within the past 12 months, they should be included in the second column.
Back to top
2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries
on a temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data,
what location do I use?
 
The home state could be the student’s or parent’s official home state, the state where they are registered to vote or
pay taxes, or the state issuing their driver’s license. If no such information is available, they would be reported under
“State unknown”(57).
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Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort)
and the undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?
 
In addition to the students in the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort, the total undergraduate
entering class includes part-time students of the same criteria as well as transfers-in and full- and part-time nondegree/non-certificate-seeking students that are new to your institution in the Fall.
The entering class is intended to represent all students new to an institution in a given fall and provide context for the
GRS cohort. The percent of the entering class that is represented by the institution's GRS cohort is included on College
Navigator as a note to the graduation rate data displayed.
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Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
 
The retention rate is calculated as follows:
4-year Institutions:

first-time bachelor's degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018/(first-time bachelor's
degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)

2)

3)

4)

5)

2-year and Less-than-2-year Institutions:
(first-time students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018 + first-time students in Fall 2017 who completed
their program by Fall 2018)/(first-time students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)
Back to top
How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time)
between one fall and the next?
Report students based on their attendance status in the fall the cohort was initially based on, even if that status
changed in the following fall.
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Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
No. Students must be enrolled for credit at the institution in the Fall to be considered retained from the previous fall.
Back to top
For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at
the same institution in another program, how should they count that student?
The institution should count that student as "retained" only once. Do NOT count that student twice, once for having
completed the program and another time for still being enrolled.
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My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment
count. How can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s
retention calculation?

Freshman study abroad students can be added to the first-time cohort. Report in the inclusion box
first-time bachelor’s degree/certificate-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the
first-time cohort but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.
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Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are
taking classes in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
Sophomore study abroad students are considered part of the retained cohort even though they may not be included in
the institution’s fall enrollment count. Count these students in the retained cohort.
Back to top
Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
1)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
A worksheet has been provided to guide the process of calculating the student-to-faculty ratio for your institution. The
worksheet can be accessed from the Part F screen in the Data Collection System.
Back to top
2)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as
medicine, law, veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
An example of a program that would fall into this category (typically a doctor's-professional practice program) is a
school of medicine that only awards degrees/certificates at the graduate level and therefore its faculty exclusively (or
in some cases almost exclusively) teach graduate students. Programs that are "stand-alone" graduate programs may
have some undergraduate students enrolled in their courses, however a "stand-alone" graduate program would only
award degrees/certificates at the graduate level. An example of a graduate program that would not meet this criteria
is a school of business that has an undergraduate and graduate program and therefore enrolls both types of students
and awards degrees/certificates at both levels. Further, the faculty would teach a mix of undergraduate and graduate
students. Excluding “stand-alone” graduate programs is intended to make the student-to-faculty ratio closer to an
undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio than it would be if these programs were included in the calculation, without
overburdening institutions.
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3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "standalone" programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these
types of programs on the worksheet for Part F?
If your institution does not have any "stand-alone" graduate or professional programs, then enter 0 for students and 0
for faculty in the lines for these types of programs. Most institutions do not have these types of graduate or
professional programs, so entering 0 in those lines will be fairly common.
Back to top
6)

U.S. Department of Education
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(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Form

Fall Enrollment for public 2-year and less-than-2-year non-degree-granting institutions

Overview 
Fall Enrollment Overview
The Fall Enrollment component collects student enrollment counts by level of student, enrollment status, gender and race/ethnicity. In
addition, first-time student retention rates and the student-to-faculty ratio are collected. Every other year data on residence of first-time
undergraduates is required and in opposite years, enrollment by student age is required to be reported.
Institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4) report Fall enrollment as of the
institution's official fall reporting date or October 15. Institutions operating on a calendar that differs by program or that enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters) report Fall enrollment as students enrolled any time during the period August 1 and
October 31.
Data Reporting Reminders:

Resources:
To download the survey materials for this component: Survey Materials
If you have questions about completing this survey, please contact the IPEDS Help Desk at 1-877-225-2568.

Part Selection - even years 
Completion of Part B (Enrollment of Students by Age) is optional this year.
Do you wish to complete Part B this year?
If you select 'Yes', you will be expected to complete the Part B screens.
If you select 'No', you will skip Part B.
No, I will not complete Part B
Yes, I will complete Part B

- odd years

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Full-Time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Full-time Undergraduate Students
Race/Ethnicity Reporting Reminder:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit

First-time, certificate-seeking Other certificate-seeking Non-certificate-seeking

Total,
full-time
undergraduate
students

First-time, certificate-seeking Other certificate-seeking Non-certificate-seeking

Total,
full-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for credit

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Part-time Undergraduate Students
Race/Ethnicity Reporting Reminder:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit

First-time, certificate-seeking Other certificate-seeking Non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

First-time, certificate-seeking Other certificate-seeking Non-certificate-seeking

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for credit

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment Summary 
Fall Enrollment Summary
Men
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand Total (men+women)

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Undergraduate Students
Degree/certificate-seeking
Non-degree/non-certificate-seeking
Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses
Not enrolled in any distance education courses
Total (from prior part A screens)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
may
beon
posted
the College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes may be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Of those students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses,
report the number that are:
Located in
Located in the U.S. but not in
Located in the U.S. but state/jurisdiction unknown
Located outside the U.S.
Location unknown/unreported
Total students exclusively enrolled in distance education (from section above)

Undergraduate Students
Degree/certificate-seeking Non-degree/non-certificate-seeking

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Full-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total full-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Full-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total part-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Part-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part C - Screening Question 
Did any of your first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students (reported in Part A) enroll within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED?
No, we do not have any first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
Yes, we have first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Of students in column 1, those
Total first-time
was first admitted
who enrolled within 12 months
degree/certificate-seeking
of high school graduation
undergraduates
or receiving their GED
(1)
(2)
Alabama
01
Alaska

02

Arizona

04

Arkansas

05

California

06

Colorado

08

Connecticut

09

Delaware

10

District of Columbia

11

Florida

12

Georgia

13

Hawaii

15

Idaho

16

Illinois

17

Indiana

18

Iowa

19

Kansas

20

Kentucky

21

Louisiana

22

Maine

23

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
degree/certificate-seeking
who enrolled within 12 months
undergraduates
of high school graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
Maryland
24
Massachusetts

25

Michigan

26

Minnesota

27

Mississippi

28

Missouri

29

Montana

30

Nebraska

31

Nevada

32

New Hampshire

33

New Jersey

34

New Mexico

35

New York

36

North Carolina

37

North Dakota

38

Ohio

39

Oklahoma

40

Oregon

41

Pennsylvania

42

Rhode Island

44

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
Code degree/certificate-seeking who enrolled within 12 months of high school
undergraduates
graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
South Carolina
45
South Dakota

46

Tennessee

47

Texas

48

Utah

49

Vermont

50

Virginia

51

Washington

53

West Virginia

54

Wisconsin

55

Wyoming

56

State Unknown

57

American Samoa

60

Federated States of Micronesia

64

Guam

66

Marshall Islands

68

Northern Marianas

69

Palau

70

Puerto Rico

72

Virgin Islands

78

Foreign Countries

90

Residence unknown/unreported
Total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
(from Part A)

98

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part E - First-Time Student Cohort Retention Rates (Full-time) 
Retention Rates
Full-time, First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Cohort from Fall 2017
The Fall 2017 cohort is preloaded based on data reported in the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
Academic reporters report retention data as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program reporters determine the
cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1, 2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort and the
resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine full-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was full-time in Fall 2017, report them in the full-time cohort
regardless of Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E2a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E2b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E1) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Preloaded
cohort

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)

FULL-TIME, FIRST-TIME COHORT RETENTION:
E1
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort
E2a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E2b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E3
Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E1 - E2a + E2b)
E4
Students from Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled + students from Fall 2017
cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018
E5
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort retention rate (line E4 / line E3)
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will
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%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part E - First-Time Student Cohort Retention Rates (Part-time) 
Retention Rates
Part-time, First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Cohort from Fall 2017
The Fall 2017 cohort is preloaded based on data reported in the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
Academic reporters report retention data as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program reporters determine the
cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1, 2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort and the
resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only part-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine part-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was part-time in Fall 2017, report them in the part-time cohort
regardless of their Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E7a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E7b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E6) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Preloaded
cohort

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)

PART-TIME, FIRST-TIME COHORT RETENTION:
E6
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort
E7a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E7b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E8
Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E6 - line E7)
E9
Students from Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled + students from Fall 2017
cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018
E10
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort retention rate (line E9 / line E8)
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%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Student-to-Faculty Ratio 
Please provide your institution's student-to-faculty ratio (i.e., student-to-instructional staff) for undergraduate programs for Fall
2018. The student-to-faculty ratio and any accompanying context that is provided will be displayed on College Navigator.
Note: Logic in this item is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

Click here to use a worksheet to help you determine the student-to-faculty ratio
Student-to-faculty ratio

to 1

Student-to-faculty ratio prior year

to 1

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description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
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You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Less Than Four-Year Institutions and Four Year-Institutions Without Graduate Programs
Student-to-Faculty Ratio Worksheet 
This worksheet is designed to help you determine your institution's student-to-faculty ratio.
Data entered on this worksheet will NOT be collected or saved. Therefore, please PRINT this screen if you would like to refer to the
ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
Note: The logic used for this calculation is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.
Students, Fall 2018
F1 Total full-time students from Part A
F2 Total part-time students from Part A
F3 Full-time equivalent of part-time students
(Line F2 * 1/3)
F4 Total full-time equivalent students
(Line F1 + F3)
Instructional Staff, Fall 2018
FULL-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F5 Number of full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component
Full-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion (Line F6):
F6 Full-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion:
Of the number of full-time instructional staff reported in Line F5, the number teaching exclusively non-credit
courses
F7 Total adjusted full-time instructional staff
(Line F5 - F6)
PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F8 Number of part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component
Part-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion (Line F9):
F9 Of the number of part-time instructional staff reported in Line F8, the number teaching exclusively noncredit courses
Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition (Line F10):
F10 Number of administrators, or other staff not reported to IPEDS as instructors, that are teaching a credit
course(s) in the Fall
F11 Total adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F8 - F9 + F10)
F12 Full-time equivalent of adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F11 * 1/3)
F13 Total full-time equivalent instructional staff
(Line F7 + F12)
F14 Student-to-faculty ratio
(Line F4/F13)

to 1

Prepared by 

The name of the preparer is being collected so that we can follow up with the appropriate person in the event that there are questions
concerning the data. The Keyholder will be copied on all email correspondence to other preparers.
The time it took to prepare this component is being collected so that we can continue to improve our estimate of the reporting burden
associated with IPEDS. Please include in your estimate the time it took for you to review instructions, query and search data sources, complete
and review the component, and submit the data through the Data Collection System.
Thank you for your assistance.
This survey component was prepared by:
Keyholder
Finance Contact

SFA Contact

HR Contact

Academic Library Contact

Other

Name:
Email:
How many staff from your institution only were involved in the data collection and reporting process of this survey component?
Number of Staff (including yourself)
How many hours did you and others from your institution only spend on each of the steps below when responding to this survey
component?
Exclude the hours spent collecting data for state and other reporting purposes.
Staff member
Collecting Data Needed
Revising Data to Match
IPEDS Requirements
Your office
hours
hours
Other offices

hours

hours

Entering Data

Revising and Locking Data

hours

hours

hours

hours

 
U.S. Department of Education
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Of
Education
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Software Provider Resources
Browsers Supported

Use of Cookies
Troubleshooting

Section 508 Compliance
NCES Privacy Policy

Image description. The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System End of image description.

  

IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Instructions

date: 8/6/2018

Fall Enrollment Full Instructions
 

Purpose of Survey
Changes in Reporting
General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
Context Boxes

Coverage
Who To Include
Who To Exclude

Where to Get Help For Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
AIR Website
IPEDS Website Resources

Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Institution Level
Aggregate Level

Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Reporting Individuals by Racial/Ethnic Categories
Part A: Fall Enrollment by Level, Attendance Status, Race/Ethnicity, and Gender
Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age
Part C: Residence of First-Time Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part E: Retention Rates for First-Time Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio

Purpose of Survey
The purpose of the Fall Enrollment component of IPEDS is to collect enrollment data on all students enrolled for credit
in courses/programs that could lead to awards ranging from postsecondary certificates of less than 1 year to doctoral
degrees. Fall enrollment data are collected by level of student, attendance status, race/ethnicity, and gender. In
addition, the Fall Enrollment component collects data on the institution's undergraduate entering class, first-time
student retention rates, and the student-to-faculty ratio. Every other year data on enrollment by nine selected fields of
study are collected, as is residency of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students. In opposite years,
enrollment by student age is collected.
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Changes in Reporting
Enrollment by residence will be mandatory this year. Enrollment by age is optional.

 

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General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
For institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4), fall
enrollment should be reported as of the institution's official fall reporting date or October 15.
For institutions operating on an "other academic calendar," a calendar that differs by program, or enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters), fall enrollment is reported for students enrolled any time during
the period August 1 and October 31.

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Context Boxes
Context boxes are provided to allow institutions to provide more information regarding survey component items. Note
that some context boxes are posted on the College Navigator Website, which is the college search tool offered by
NCES. NCES will review entries in these context boxes for applicability and appropriateness before posting them on the
College Navigator Website; institutions should check grammar and spelling of their entries.
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Coverage
Who to Include
Include all students enrolled for credit (enrolled in instructional activity, courses or programs, that can be applied
towards the requirements for a postsecondary degree, diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary
credential), regardless of whether or not they are seeking a degree or certificate. This includes:

•
•
•
•

Students enrolled for credit in off-campus centers
High school students taking regular college courses for credit
Students taking remedial courses if the student is degree-seeking for the purpose of student financial aid
determination
Students from overseas enrolled in for credit at your institution (e.g., online students)

Who to Exclude
Exclude students who are not enrolled for credit. For example, exclude:

•
•
•
•

Students enrolled exclusively in courses that cannot be applied towards a recognized
postsecondary credential
Students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses)
Students enrolled exclusively in Continuing Education Units (CEUs)
Students exclusively auditing classes

In addition, the following students should be excluded:

•
•
•

Any student studying abroad (e.g., at a foreign university) if their enrollment at the 'home' institution serves
as an administrative record
Students enrolled in any branch campus located in a foreign country
Students in Experimental Pell Programs 

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Where to Get Help with Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
Phone: (877) 225-2568
E-mail: ipedshelp@rti.org

Web Tutorials
You can consult the IPEDS Website's Trainings & Outreach page which contains several tutorials on IPEDS data
collection, a self-paced overview of IPEDS tools, and other valuable resources.

IPEDS Resource Page
The IPEDS Website's Reporting Tools page contains frequently asked questions, a link to data tip sheets, tutorials,
taxonomies, information centers (e.g., academic libraries, average net price, human resources, race/ethnicity, etc.),
and other valuable information.
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Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Data collected through IPEDS will be accessible at the institution and aggregate levels.
At the institution-level, data will appear in the:
•
•
•
•

College Navigator Website
IPEDS Data Center
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
College Affordability and Transparency Center Website

At the aggregate-level, data will appear in:
•
•
•
•
•

IPEDS First Looks
IPEDS Table Library
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
The Digest of Education Statistics
The Condition of Education

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Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Before entering any data, screening questions will need to be answered.
Part B Selection
Part B (Enrollment by Age) is optional this year. Indicate whether or not you will complete Part B of the Fall Enrollment
survey component this year.
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Reporting Persons by Racial/Ethnic Category (1997 OMB)
This information is being collected in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 and Sec. 421(a)(1) of the Carl D. Perkins Vocational Education Act. These instructions
correspond with the Final Guidance on Maintaining, Collecting, and Reporting Racial and Ethnic Data to the U.S.
Department of Education, published in the Federal Register on October 19, 2007.
Method of collection - Institutions must collect race and ethnicity information using a 2-question format. The first
question is whether the respondent is Hispanic/Latino. The second question is whether the respondent is from one or
more races from the following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native
Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White. Institutions should allow students and staff to self-identify their race
and ethnicity. For further details on the guidance for collecting these data, please see the full Federal Register notice.
Method of reporting aggregate data - Institutions must report aggregate data to the U.S. Department of Education
using the NINE categories below. Racial/ethnic designations are requested only for United States citizens, resident
aliens, and other eligible non-citizens.

•

Hispanic or Latino, regardless of race

For Non-Hispanic/Latino individuals:

•
•
•
•

American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander

•
•

White
Two or more races

In addition, the following categories may be used:

•
•

Nonresident alien
Race and ethnicity unknown

Racial/ethnic descriptions - Racial/ethnic designations as used in this survey do not denote scientific definitions of
anthropological origins. The categories are:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Hispanic or Latino- A person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
culture or origin, regardless of race.
American Indian or Alaska Native- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
America (including Central America) who maintains cultural identification through tribal affiliation or
community attachment.
Asian- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian
Subcontinent, including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine
Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Black or African American- A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii,
Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
White - A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.

Other descriptive categories

•

•

Nonresident alien - A person who is not a citizen or national of the United States and who is in this country
on a visa or temporary basis and does not have the right to remain indefinitely. NOTE - Nonresident aliens are
to be reported separately, in the boxes provided, rather than included in any of the seven racial/ethnic
categories. Resident aliens and other eligible (for financial aid purposes) non-citizens who are not citizens or
nationals of the United States and who have been admitted as legal immigrants for the purpose of obtaining
permanent resident alien status (and who hold either an alien registration card (Form I-551 or I-151), a
Temporary Resident Card (Form I-688), or an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) with a notation that
conveys legal immigrant status such as Section 207 Refugee, Section 208 Asylee, Conditional Entrant Parolee
or Cuban-Haitian) are to be reported in the appropriate racial/ethnic categories along with United States
citizens.
Race and ethnicity unknown - This category is used only if the person did not select EITHER a racial or
ethnic designation.

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Part A - Full-Time Undergraduate Students by Race/Ethnicity and Gender
On this screen, include all students enrolled for credit, full-time at the undergraduate level. The undergraduate level
includes students enrolled in undergraduate level courses or any certificate programs below the baccalaureate level.
Students who have already earned a bachelor's degree but are taking undergraduate courses for credit should be
included as undergraduates.

Full-time, first-time certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 1, report undergraduate students who have no prior postsecondary
experience and have enrolled full-time with the intent to earn a certificate or other recognized postsecondary
credential. The following are also considered first-time:
•

Students enrolled in the fall term who attended college for the first time in the prior summer
session (applicable to academic reporters only)

•

Students who entered with advanced standing (any college credits or recognized postsecondary credential 
earned before graduation from high school) 

In order to be considered certificate-seeking, the student must be enrolled in courses for credit and be recognized by
the institution as seeking a certificate or other recognized postsecondary credential. Dual enrolled high school 
students are not considered certificate-seeking. Note: All students eligible to receive federal student financial aid are 
to be considered certificate-seeking.
Program Reporters: Include first-time students who entered your institution between August 1, 2018 and October
31, 2018.
Academic Reporters: Student counts reported in column 1 define the initial cohort for reporting graduation rates on
the IPEDS Graduation Rates (GR) component to meet Student Right-to-Know reporting requirements. Students
reported in this group will become your GR cohort in the reporting year appropriate for your institution.

Full-time, Other certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 2, report the total number of all other (i.e. not first-time) full-time certificate-seeking undergraduate
students. This includes:

•
•

transfer-in certificate-seeking students
continuing certificate-seeking students (i.e. students not new to the institution in the fall, but instead are
continuing in their courses/program at the institution)

Full-time, Non-certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column 3, report the total number of full-time non-certificate-seeking undergraduates. These students are enrolled
for credit but not with the intention of earning a certificate or recognized postsecondary credential. Note: High school 
students enrolled in creditable courses prior to high school graduation are considered non-certificate-seeking students.
Once you save the data by clicking the 'Verify and Save' button, the 'Total full-time undergraduates' (column 4) will be
calculated by the system and display on the survey screen.

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Part A: Part-time Undergraduate Students
Report part-time students using the same definitions and instructions provided for full-time undergraduate students.
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Part A: Enrollment by Distance Education Status
On this screen, report all students reported on previous Part A screens who are:
•
•

Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses offered at your institution: Students who are
enrolled only in courses that are considered distance education courses at your institution.
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses offered at your institution: Students
who are enrolled in at least one course that is considered a distance education course, but are not enrolled
exclusively in distance education courses.

Note: Requirements for coming to campus for orientation, testing, or academic support services do not exclude a
course from being classified as exclusively distance education. Similarly, if a student is taking instructional portions of
their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a practicum, residency, or internship, the student can
still be considered enrolled in entirely education courses.
Not enrolled in any distance education courses offered at your institution: This number represents the
students who are not enrolled in any distance education courses at your institution. It will be calculated by subtracting
the (students enrolled exclusively in distance education + students enrolled in some but not all distance education
courses) from the total enrolled students from Part A, which is the totals for degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
and non-degree/non-certificate-seeking undergraduates. 
Location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses

If there are students reported as enrolled exclusively in distance education courses, further data on the location of
these distance education students will need to be reported. Report, by degree/certificate-seeking status, the number
of exclusively distance education students that are located in the same state/jurisdiction as the institution, in a
different state/jurisdiction than the institution, in the U.S. but the state/jurisdiction is unknown, and residing outside
the U.S.  Location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or
current address, as of the institution's Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the
student. For students enlisted in the military on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's
physical location or current address.
The total students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses will be carried forward from earlier on the screen.
If the total students reported by location does not equal the total enrolled exclusively in distance education from
above, the “Location unknown/unreported” is calculated.
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Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender
Part B is optional this year. This part is required in odd-numbered years.
This distribution of students should include all students reported in Part A.

Enrollment by Age
Use institutional records to calculate student age.
Academic reporters: report student age as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters: report student age as of August 1, 2018.
The totals by gender for each attendance status (full- or part-time) and student level (undergraduate or graduate) will
be carried forward from the corresponding Part A screens. When the Part B and Part A totals do not agree, the "Age
unknown/unreported" is calculated.
Note: If the Part B student count total is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in a negative
value), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine both the age data and comparable portion of Part A to identify the
error and make appropriate corrections.
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Part C: Residence of First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduate Students
Part C is mandatory this year. This part is required in even-numbered years only.
This distribution of students should include all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
(both full- and part-time) reported in Part A.

Recent High School Graduates Screening Question
Part C begins with a screening question to determine whether or not your institution has first-time degree/certificateseeking undergraduate students who enrolled within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED. If the
answer is 'No', then only one column for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates will display in Part C.
If the answer is 'Yes', then 2 columns will be reported in Part C, one for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking
undergraduates and one for those first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates enrolled within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED. 

State of residence
Use the state identified by the student as his/her permanent address at the time of application to the institution. This
may be the legal residence of a parent or guardian, or the state in which a student has a driver's license or is
registered to vote. It is not necessarily the state in which the student's high school is located.

Residence of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column (1), report all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students, both full-time and parttime, by state of residence. The total line for column (1) will be carried forward from the total first-time
degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students reported in Part A. If the sum of the students reported by state of
residence in column (1), lines 1-90, does not agree with the total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
from Part A, the "Residence unknown/unreported" (line 98) will be calculated.
Note: When the sum of students by state of residence is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in
a negative value calculated for the "Residence unknown/unreported" line), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine
both the residence data and comparable section of Part A to identify the error and make appropriate corrections.
If your institution responded 'Yes' to the screening question, the subset of students from column (1) who enrolled
within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED are to be reported again by their state of residence
in column (2).
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Part E: Retention Rates for the First-Time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Student Cohort
Retention rates examine the percentage of first-time degree/certificate seeking students enrolled in the fall of the prior
year that are either still enrolled in the fall of the current year or have completed their program in that time.
The retention cohorts, full-time and part-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates from Fall 2017, are
preloaded from Part A of the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
On each retention screen (full-time cohort and part-time cohort screens), institutions must:
•
•
•

Verify the preloaded Fall 2017 cohort.
Attendance status (full- or part-time) should be based on the student's Fall 2017 attendance status.
Report any exclusions for the cohort (see below for allowable exclusions).
Report any inclusions of first-time study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort but
who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

•

Report the total number of students retained from the Fall 2017 cohort. Include students who were reported
as first-time but who are studying abroad in Fall 2018.
Total students retained = students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled as of Fall 2018 + students
from Fall 2017 cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018.

Academic reporters: Report students retained as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15,
2018.
Program reporters: Report students retained as of August 1, 2018.

Exclusions:
Institutions may report exclusions for the Fall 2017 cohort. Allowable exclusions are students who left the institution
for any of the following reasons:
•
•
•
•

Died or were totally and permanently disabled
To serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty)
To serve with a foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g., Peace Corps)
To serve on official church missions

The system will compute an adjusted cohort by subtracting the student exclusions from the original cohort prior to
calculating the retention rate.
Retention rates will be computed by the system after clicking 'Save.' The retention rate is calculated as:
(Students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled + Students from Fall 2017 cohort who completed their
program as of Fall 2018/Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort)*100.
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Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio
Graduate only institutions do not complete Part F.
Report the student-to-faculty ratio for undergraduate programs at your institution. A worksheet is available to help
determine your institution's ratio. Click on the link from the Part F screen to access the worksheet.

Worksheet for Less Than Four-Year Institutions and Four-Year Institutions without Graduate or
Professional Programs
The worksheet is designed to help institutions determine their student-to-faculty ratio. It is NOT mandatory that you
use this worksheet to calculate your student-to-faculty ratio. Data entered on the worksheet will NOT be collected or
saved. Make sure to print the screen in order to refer to the ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
Please note: The logic used in this calculation is similar to that of item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

FULL- AND PART-TIME STUDENT DATA:
All student data on the worksheet is either carried forward from Part A or a calculated field.
Lines F1 and F2. Total full-time and total part-time students.
The total number of full- and part-time students are carried forward from Part A.
Line F3. A full-time equivalent (FTE) of the part-time student count.
The FTE will be calculated as line F2 (total part-time student count) * 1/3.
Line F4. Total FTE students.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F1 (total full-time students) and F3 (FTE of part-time students). Line F4 is used in
the ratio calculation.

FULL-AND PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF DATA:
Lines F5 and F8 should be reported based on data your institution is reporting in the IPEDS Human Resources (HR)
survey component. Please work together with the appropriate staff at your institution to ensure that the data used on
this worksheet and reported in the HR component are the same.
In line F5, report the total number of full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component.

In line F8, report the total number of part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component.

Instructional Staff Exclusion for Non-Credit Instructors:
In line F6, report the number of full-time instructional staff reported in line F5 that are teaching exclusively noncredit courses.
In line F9, report the number of part-time instructional staff reported in line F8 that are teaching exclusively noncredit courses.
For institutions that have a large amount of non-credit activity, the above exclusions will better align the student data
with the instructional staff data being used in the ratio.

Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition:
In line F10, report the number of administrators or other staff NOT reported to IPEDS as instructors (and therefore
not included in the instructional staff count reported in line F8) that are teaching a credit course in the Fall.
For institutions that have administrators and other professionals on staff that are not reported to IPEDS as instructors
(because it is not their "primary function") but they teach credit courses, the above allowable addition will produce a
more accurate ratio.
With the above instructional staff exclusions and part-time instructional staff addition information above, the system
will compute the following on the worksheet:
Line F7. Total adjusted full-time instructional staff.
The adjusted full-time instructional staff is the total full-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching exclusively
non-credit classes. The system will calculate line F7 as line F5 (total full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR
survey component) minus line F6 (total full-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses).
Line F11. Total adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The adjusted part-time instructional staff is the total part-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching exclusively
non-credit classes, and adding those administrators and other staff teaching credit courses. The system will calculate
line F11 as line F8 (total part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component) minus line F9 (total
part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses) + line F10 (administrators and other staff
teaching credit courses).
Line F12. Total FTE of adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The FTE will be calculated as line F11 (total adjusted part-time instructional staff) * 1/3.
Line F13. Total FTE of adjusted instructional staff.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F7 (total adjusted full-time instructional staff) and F12 (FTE of total adjusted part
-time instructional staff). Line F13 is used in the ratio calculation.
Line F14. Student-to-faculty ratio.
The ratio will be calculated by the system as line F4 (total adjusted FTE students) divided by line F13 (total adjusted
FTE instructional staff). The ratio will be displayed on the worksheet as xxx to 1.
The calculated ratio can then be entered onto the Part F (Student-to-Faculty Ratio) screen.
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Image description. The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System End of image description.

  

IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > FAQ

date: 8/6/2018

Fall Enrollment
Click one of the following questions to view the answer.
General
1)
2)
3)
4)

Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Should I report students who are studying abroad?
In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for reporting firstprofessional students?
My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment? 
5)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in Fall
6)
Enrollment?
Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?
1)
2)
Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall (without prior
3)
postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses in the fall? 
4)
5)
Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the same
institution? 
6)
How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual enrolled
student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
7)
Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled student)?
8)
If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how do I
determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
9)
Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
10)
How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and re-enrolls as a
degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution? 
11)
My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender unknown” on the
IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
12)
How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
13)
How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the determination of a
student's full-time status?
14)
In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
2)
How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part A (i.e.,
13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Distance Education
1)
If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a
practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance education courses?
2)
What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses?
3)
How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
4)
Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for distance
education location reporting?
5)
We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses). How should
students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall Enrollment? 
Fall Enrollment by Age (Part B)
1)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose ages are
unknown?
2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the second column
that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries on a
temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data, what location do I
use?
Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort) and the
undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?

Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
2)
How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time) between
one fall and the next?
Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
3)
For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at the same
4)
institution in another program, how should they count that student?
My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment count. How
5)
can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s retention calculation?
Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are taking classes
6)
in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
1)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as medicine, law,
2)
veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "stand-alone"
programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these types of programs on
the worksheet for Part F?

Answers:
General
1)
Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
All students enrolled for credit should be reported. Credit is defined as “Recognition of attendance or performance in
an instructional activity (course or program) that can be applied by a recipient toward the requirements for a degree,
diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary credential, irrespective of the activity's unit of measurement.”
Students who are not seeking a degree or certificate may be still be enrolled for credit. These students are to be
reported in the non-degree/non-certificate-seeking column.

2)

3)

Back to top
What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Fall enrollment is a count of students enrolled on a particular date in the Fall. Fall enrollment is often referred to as a
"snapshot" of the enrollment at an institution at a specific time in the Fall. The date/period used depends on whether
the institution is an academic reporter or a program reporter for IPEDS purposes.
Academic reporters: Report enrollment as of October 15 or as of the institution's official fall reporting date.
Program reporters: Report enrollment during the 3-month period of August 1 to October 31. If a student enrolls or
remains enrolled at any time during that period, the student is included in the fall enrollment counts.
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Should I report students who are studying abroad?
U.S. students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country should be included in your
institution's enrollment report if your institution provides instructional resources (classroom, instructors), even though
the education occurs abroad. Students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country
should NOT be included in your enrollment report if:

•
•
•

The students are enrolled ONLY in courses offered by another institution;
The students are enrolled at a branch campus of your institution in a foreign country;
Your institution does not provide the instructional resources (i.e., classrooms, instructors), even if
the student pays tuition to your institution.

Foreign students who are enrolled for credit and taking courses at the institution should be included in the
institution's enrollment report. 
While study abroad students may be excluded from the enrollment count for reasons cited above, they may
be included in the institution’s retention calculation. Please see the specific instructions on Part E: Retention
or the FAQ on including study abroad students in retention.
For additional information on how to report study abroad students in all IPEDS survey components, please
visit the following link: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/pdf/Reporting_Study_Abroad_Students.pdf.
4)

5)

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In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for
reporting first-professional students?
Beginning with the 2009-10 collection year, institutions are required to use reclassified postbaccalaureate degree
categories that exclude the first-professional category. In parts A and B, all postbaccalaureate students are to be
reported as graduate students, including doctor's-professional practice students (formerly reported as firstprofessional). Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission,
they are considered subbaccalaureate undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate
students.
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My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment?

For reporting students studying in consortium agreements, please refer to the Resource page
at https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/report-your-data/data-tip-sheet-reporting-data-consortium-institutions. 
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6)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in
Fall Enrollment?
ESL has never been considered a postsecondary program by IPEDS.  Since it is considered non-postsecondary,
students who are ONLY enrolled in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses),
regardless of whether or not they are receiving Title-IV aid, should NOT be counted in enrollment.
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Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
1)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?

•
•
•
•
•
•

2)

3)

4)

5)

6)

7)

8)

9)

Credit for military service/training from an association such as the American Council on Education,
Credit from any non-credit courses, as defined by the institution,
Credit received for completion of tests/assessments,
Credit received before the student has earned a high school diploma (i.e., dual enrollment
credits),
Postsecondary award received before the students earned a high school diploma (e.g., certificate,
associate's, bachelor's, etc.), or
Credit for life experience. 

Students with prior postsecondary experience credit from attending a military academic institution (e.g., Community
College of the Air Force, West Point, U.S. Naval Academy, etc.) would NOT be considered first-time students. 
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Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
If their status is not indicated directly and the student does not enroll with prior credits or transcripts from another
institution, then assume the student is first-time.
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Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall
(without prior postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
These students should be reported as first-time undergraduates. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to
still be classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned occurred in the summer immediately
prior to enrollment.
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How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses
in the fall?
For the Fall Enrollment survey, count the student as a "transfer-in," even if the student transferred into the institution
during the prior summer term and is not entering the institution for the first time in the fall. (Applies only to academic
reporters)
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Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the
same institution?
Yes, "continuing/returning student" is meant to capture students who are not first-time or transfer-in. This includes
students who have been continuously enrolled in the institution and those who have stopped out and re-enrolled,
without having transferred to another institution.
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How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual
enrolled student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
If the college credit or postsecondary award was earned prior to the student graduating high school, then this student
would be considered a first-time student in the Fall. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to still be
classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned was prior to their high school graduation.
(Applies only to academic reporters)
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Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled
student)?
This student would be reported as non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. Prior to receipt of a high school diploma or
recognized equivalent (see glossary definition), a student is non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. After receipt of the
high school diploma or recognized equivalent, they can be classified as degree/certificate-seeking, if appropriate.
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If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how
do I determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
If the student has not indicated any intent but is applying for Title IV federal financial aid, assume the student to be
degree/certificate-seeking.
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Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
Report these students in the column labeled "Continuing" degree/certificate-seeking students (column 3). This column
is intended to capture all degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students who are not first-time and did not
transfer-in to the institution in that Fall.
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10)

11)

12)

13)

How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and reenrolls as a degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution?
This student should be reported as a "continuing/returning" student. IPEDS defines "continuing/returning students" as
"A student who is not new to the institution in the fall, but instead is continuing his or her studies at the institution
(i.e., not first-time and not transfer-in)."
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My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender
unknown” on the IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
These individuals are still to be reported to IPEDS, even though their gender is unknown. It is up to the institution to
decide how best to handle reporting individuals whose gender is unknown. However, a common method used is to
allocate students with gender unknown based on the known proportion of men to women.
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How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
There has been no change to how these students should be reported. Foreign students living outside the U.S., such as
a foreign student living outside the U.S. who is enrolled in distance education at your institution, should be classified
in the Race/Ethnicity Unknown category. Only U.S. citizens are to be categorized in the specific Race/Ethnicity
categories. The non-resident alien category is reserved specifically for students that are in the U.S. under that specific
legal status.
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How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the
determination of a student's full-time status?
Students in the following categories are considered degree-seeking in IPEDS, though they may be enrolled in courses
not creditable for an award:

•
•
•

14)

Students enrolled in remedial courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been
admitted into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Students enrolled in ESL courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been admitted
into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Co-op students enrolled in courses that are not creditable toward an award but are required for
award attainment

In determination of the student's full-time status, credit or clock hours (up to one academic year's worth) of remedial 
and ESL courses may be used in the determination of a student's full-time status if the remedial or ESL course is part 
of a program that leads to a postsecondary award. In these cases, the remedial or ESL courses should count the same 
as the comparable full-credit class. For co-op students, the work portion of a cooperative education program in which 
the amount of work performed is equivalent to the academic workload of a full-time student will also count toward the 
determination of full-time status.
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In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Because the race and ethnicity designations are reported only for U.S. citizens and the "nonresident alien" category is
a legal status for students with specific types of visas, undocumented students would not be reported under any of
these statuses. Instead, they should be reported as "Race/ethnicity unknown." Please visit the race/ethnicity FAQ for
more information: https://surveys.nces.ed.gov/ipeds/visFaq_re.aspx.

However, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) students are a particular group of undocumented students
that have been authorized by the Department of Homeland Security to be lawfully present in the U.S. for the duration
of their DACA, and as such, this status would allow them to be reported under the "nonresident alien" category.
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Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
Select “None of the above” on the CIP selection screen and report all students enrolled for credit, regardless of field of
study, Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
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How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
The program areas on the CIP selection screen are the only fields for which enrollment data is collected separately. In
addition to reporting enrollment by the selected fields requested, report all students enrolled for credit (regardless of
field of study) on the "Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
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3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
These students should only be reported on the Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A,
where all students enrolled for credit (regardless of field of study) are reported.
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4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part
A (i.e., 13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Report the students as either full-time or part-time depending on their status at the institution. Then report them on
the corresponding CIP pages. The CIP pages are not an unduplicated count and students can be included on more
than one page.
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Distance Education
2)

1)

 

2)
 

3)
 

4)
 

5)

 

Fall
1)
 

If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to
complete a practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance
education courses?
Yes, if the instructional portions are entirely online, the student is considered to be enrolled in exclusive distance
education course. 
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What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education
courses?
If you have no information about the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education, do not report
them in any of the location fields. The system will calculate the number of "Location Unknown" exclusively distance
education enrollments. 
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How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
Location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or current
address, as of the institution's Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the student. For
students enlisted in the military on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's physical location. 
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Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for
distance education location reporting?
Yes, Students located in a U.S. jurisdiction while they are enrolled in distance education courses should be reported as
located in the U.S.
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We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses).
How should students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall
Enrollment?
Hybrid courses are not considered by IPEDS as distance education. Students enrolled in “hybrid” courses should be
reported as “not enrolled in any distance education courses.”
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Enrollment by Age (Part B)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose
ages are unknown?
The number of students whose age is unknown will be computed by the data collection system. The difference
between the sum of students reported by age category in Part B and the corresponding total enrollment reported in
Part A results in the number of students whose age is unknown.

If this results in a negative number, a fatal error will appear and you will need to either correct your data or contact
the IPEDS Help Desk for assistance.
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2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
 
In order to have consistent data from all institutions, IPEDS must use standard age categories. Use the students'
dates of birth to report the enrollment by IPEDS age categories.
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Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the
second column that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
 
If the student received the GED within the past 12 months, they should be included in the second column.
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2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries
on a temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data,
what location do I use?
 
The home state could be the student’s or parent’s official home state, the state where they are registered to vote or
pay taxes, or the state issuing their driver’s license. If no such information is available, they would be reported under
“State unknown”(57).
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Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort)
and the undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?
 
In addition to the students in the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort, the total undergraduate
entering class includes part-time students of the same criteria as well as transfers-in and full- and part-time nondegree/non-certificate-seeking students that are new to your institution in the Fall.
The entering class is intended to represent all students new to an institution in a given fall and provide context for the
GRS cohort. The percent of the entering class that is represented by the institution's GRS cohort is included on College
Navigator as a note to the graduation rate data displayed.
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Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
 
The retention rate is calculated as follows:
4-year Institutions:

first-time bachelor's degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018/(first-time bachelor's
degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)

2)
 

3)
 
4)
 

5)

 

2-year and Less-than-2-year Institutions:
(first-time students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018 + first-time students in Fall 2017 who completed
their program by Fall 2018)/(first-time students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)
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How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time)
between one fall and the next?
Report students based on their attendance status in the fall the cohort was initially based on, even if that status
changed in the following fall.
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Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
No. Students must be enrolled for credit at the institution in the Fall to be considered retained from the previous fall.
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For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at
the same institution in another program, how should they count that student?
The institution should count that student as "retained" only once. Do NOT count that student twice, once for having
completed the program and another time for still being enrolled. 
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My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment
count. How can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s
retention calculation?

Freshman study abroad students can be added to the first-time cohort. Report in the inclusion box
first-time bachelor’s degree/certificate-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the
first-time cohort but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

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Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are
taking classes in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
 
Sophomore study abroad students are considered part of the retained cohort even though they may not be included in
the institution’s fall enrollment count. Count these students in the retained cohort.
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Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
1)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
 
A worksheet has been provided to guide the process of calculating the student-to-faculty ratio for your institution. The
worksheet can be accessed from the Part F screen in the Data Collection System.
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2)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as
medicine, law, veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
 
An example of a program that would fall into this category (typically a doctor's-professional practice program) is a
school of medicine that only awards degrees/certificates at the graduate level and therefore its faculty exclusively (or
in some cases almost exclusively) teach graduate students. Programs that are "stand-alone" graduate programs may
have some undergraduate students enrolled in their courses, however a "stand-alone" graduate program would only
award degrees/certificates at the graduate level. An example of a graduate program that would not meet this criteria
is a school of business that has an undergraduate and graduate program and therefore enrolls both types of students
and awards degrees/certificates at both levels. Further, the faculty would teach a mix of undergraduate and graduate
students. Excluding “stand-alone” graduate programs is intended to make the student-to-faculty ratio closer to an
undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio than it would be if these programs were included in the calculation, without
overburdening institutions.
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3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "standalone" programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these
types of programs on the worksheet for Part F?
 
If your institution does not have any "stand-alone" graduate or professional programs, then enter 0 for students and 0
for faculty in the lines for these types of programs. Most institutions do not have these types of graduate or
professional programs, so entering 0 in those lines will be fairly common.
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6)

 
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NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Form

date: 8/6/2018

Fall Enrollment for private 2-year and less-than-2-year non-degree-granting institutions

Overview 
Fall Enrollment Overview
The Fall Enrollment component collects student enrollment counts by level of student, enrollment status, gender and race/ethnicity. In
addition, first-time student retention rates and the student-to-faculty ratio are collected. Every other year data on residence of first-time
undergraduates is required and in opposite years, enrollment by student age is required to be reported.
Institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4) report Fall enrollment as of the
institution's official fall reporting date or October 15. Institutions operating on a calendar that differs by program or that enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters) report Fall enrollment as students enrolled any time during the period August 1 and
October 31.
Data Reporting Reminders:
•

Resources:
To download the survey materials for this component: Survey Materials
If you have questions about completing this survey, please contact the IPEDS Help Desk at 1-877-225-2568.

Part Selection - even years 
Completion of Part B (Enrollment of Students by Age) is optional this year.
Do you wish to complete Part B this year?
If you select 'Yes', you will be expected to complete the Part B screens.
If you select 'No', you will skip Part B.
No, I will not complete Part B
Yes, I will complete Part B

- odd years

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Full-Time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Full-time Undergraduate Students
Race/Ethnicity Reporting Reminder:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit

First-time, certificate-seeking

All Other

Total,
full-time
undergraduate
students

First-time, certificate-seeking

All Other

Total,
full-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for credit

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Part-time Undergraduate Students
Race/Ethnicity Reporting Reminder:
•Report Hispanic/Latino individuals of any race as Hispanic/Latino
•Report race for non-Hispanic/Latino individuals only

Men
Students enrolled for credit

First-time, certificate-seeking

All Other

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

First-time, certificate-seeking

All Other

Total,
part-time
undergraduate
students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Total men prior year
Women
Students enrolled for credit

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Total women prior year
Grand total (men+women)
Grand total (men+women) prior year

Part A - Fall Enrollment Summary 
Fall Enrollment Summary
Men
Students enrolled for credit

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Total full-time
students

Total part-time
students

Grand total,
all students

Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total men
Women
Students enrolled for credit
Nonresident alien
Hispanic/Latino
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Two or more races
Race and ethnicity unknown
Total women
Grand Total (men+women)

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
All Undergraduate Students
Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses
Not enrolled in any distance education courses
Total (from prior part A screens)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
may
beon
posted
the College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes may be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part A - Fall Enrollment by Distance Education Status 
All Undergraduate Students
Of those students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses, report the number that are:
Located in
Located in the U.S. but not in
Located in the U.S. but state/jurisdiction unknown
Located outside the U.S.
Location unknown/unreported
Total students exclusively enrolled in distance education (from section above)

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Full-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total full-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Full-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part B - Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender for Part-time Undergraduate Students 
NOTE: These data are optional this year.
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Age
Under 18
18-19
20-21
22-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-49
50-64
65 and over
Age unknown/unreported
Total part-time undergraduate students (from part A)

Part-time Undergraduate Students
Men
Women

Part C - Screening Question 
Did any of your first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students (reported in Part A) enroll within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED?
No, we do not have any first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
Yes, we have first-time students who enrolled within 12 months of their high school graduation.
You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Of students in column 1, those
Total first-time
was first admitted
who enrolled within 12 months
degree/certificate-seeking
of high school graduation
undergraduates
or receiving their GED
(1)
(2)
Alabama
01
Alaska

02

Arizona

04

Arkansas

05

California

06

Colorado

08

Connecticut

09

Delaware

10

District of Columbia

11

Florida

12

Georgia

13

Hawaii

15

Idaho

16

Illinois

17

Indiana

18

Iowa

19

Kansas

20

Kentucky

21

Louisiana

22

Maine

23

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS Code
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
degree/certificate-seeking
who enrolled within 12 months
undergraduates
of high school graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
Maryland
24
Massachusetts

25

Michigan

26

Minnesota

27

Mississippi

28

Missouri

29

Montana

30

Nebraska

31

Nevada

32

New Hampshire

33

New Jersey

34

New Mexico

35

New York

36

North Carolina

37

North Dakota

38

Ohio

39

Oklahoma

40

Oregon

41

Pennsylvania

42

Rhode Island

44

Part C - Residence of First-time Undergraduates 
Academic reporters report enrollment as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters report students enrolled at any time between August 1 and October 31, 2018.
Enter at least one zero, where applicable, to verify that the screen has not been skipped.
State of residence when student
FIPS
Total first-time
Of students in column 1, those
was first admitted
Code degree/certificate-seeking who enrolled within 12 months of high school
undergraduates
graduation
(1)
or receiving their GED
(2)
South Carolina
45
South Dakota

46

Tennessee

47

Texas

48

Utah

49

Vermont

50

Virginia

51

Washington

53

West Virginia

54

Wisconsin

55

Wyoming

56

State Unknown

57

American Samoa

60

Federated States of Micronesia

64

Guam

66

Marshall Islands

68

Northern Marianas

69

Palau

70

Puerto Rico

72

Virgin Islands

78

Foreign Countries

90

Residence unknown/unreported
Total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
(from Part A)

98

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

Part E - First-Time Student Cohort Retention Rates (Full-time) 
Retention Rates
Full-time, First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Cohort from Fall 2017
The Fall 2017 cohort is preloaded based on data reported in the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
Academic reporters report retention data as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program reporters determine the
cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1, 2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort and the
resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine full-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was full-time in Fall 2017, report them in the full-time cohort
regardless of Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E2a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E2b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E1) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Preloaded
cohort

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)

FULL-TIME, FIRST-TIME COHORT RETENTION:
E1
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort
E2a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E2b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E3
Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E1 - E2a + E2b)
E4
Students from Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled + students from Fall 2017
cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018
E5
Full-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort retention rate (line E4 / line E3)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part E - First-Time Student Cohort Retention Rates (Part-time) 
Retention Rates
Part-time, First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Cohort from Fall 2017
The Fall 2017 cohort is preloaded based on data reported in the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
Academic reporters report retention data as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15. Program reporters determine the
cohort with enrollment any time between August 1 and October 31, 2017 and retention based on August 1, 2018.
The retention rate is calculated by the system after clicking "Save" on the screen. Exclusions are subtracted from the original cohort and the
resulting adjusted cohort is used for calculating the retention rate.
Retention Data Reporting Reminders:
•
Include only part-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking students in this cohort.
•
Determine part-time using Fall 2017 attendance status (e.g. if a student was part-time in Fall 2017, report them in the part-time cohort
regardless of their Fall 2018 status).
•
If there are no students to report in the cohort, enter zero. Do not leave the field blank.
•
Report in the exclusions box (line E7a) the number of students from the cohort who left the institution for any of the following reasons:
died or were totally and permanently disabled; to serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty); to serve with a
foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g. Peace Corps); or to serve on official church missions.
•
Report in the inclusion box (line E7b) first-time bachelor’s-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort
(line E6) but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

Preloaded
cohort

Prior year
data (Fall
2016 cohort)

PART-TIME, FIRST-TIME COHORT RETENTION:
E6
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort
E7a

Exclusions from the Fall 2017 cohort

E7b

Inclusions to the Fall 2017 cohort

E8
Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort (line E6 - line E7)
E9
Students from Fall 2017 cohort who are still enrolled + students from Fall 2017
cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018
E10
Part-time, first-time Fall 2017 cohort retention rate (line E9 / line E8)
Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

%

%

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Student-to-Faculty Ratio 
Please provide your institution's student-to-faculty ratio (i.e., student-to-instructional staff) for undergraduate programs for Fall
2018. The student-to-faculty ratio and any accompanying context that is provided will be displayed on College Navigator.
Note: Logic in this item is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

Click here to use a worksheet to help you determine the student-to-faculty ratio
Student-to-faculty ratio

to 1

Student-to-faculty ratio prior year

to 1

Image
description.
These
context
notes
will
be on
posted
the
College
Navigator.
End of image
description.

You may use the space below to provide context for the data you've reported above.

These context notes will be posted on the College Navigator website, and should be written to be understood by students and
parents.

Part F - Less Than Four-Year Institutions and Four Year-Institutions Without Graduate Programs
Student-to-Faculty Ratio Worksheet 
This worksheet is designed to help you determine your institution's student-to-faculty ratio.
Data entered on this worksheet will NOT be collected or saved. Therefore, please PRINT this screen if you would like to refer to the
ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
Note: The logic used for this calculation is similar to item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.
Students, Fall 2018
F1 Total full-time students from Part A
F2 Total part-time students from Part A
F3 Full-time equivalent of part-time students
(Line F2 * 1/3)
F4 Total full-time equivalent students
(Line F1 + F3)
Instructional Staff, Fall 2018
FULL-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F5 Number of full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component
Full-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion (Line F6):
F6 Full-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion:
Of the number of full-time instructional staff reported in Line F5, the number teaching exclusively non-credit
courses
F7 Total adjusted full-time instructional staff
(Line F5 - F6)
PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF:
F8 Number of part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component
Part-Time Instructional Staff Exclusion (Line F9):
F9 Of the number of part-time instructional staff reported in Line F8, the number teaching exclusively noncredit courses
Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition (Line F10):
F10 Number of administrators, or other staff not reported to IPEDS as instructors, that are teaching a credit
course(s) in the Fall
F11 Total adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F8 - F9 + F10)
F12 Full-time equivalent of adjusted part-time instructional staff
(Line F11 * 1/3)
F13 Total full-time equivalent instructional staff
(Line F7 + F12)
F14 Student-to-faculty ratio
(Line F4/F13)

to 1

Prepared by 
The name of the preparer is being collected so that we can follow up with the appropriate person in the event that there are questions
concerning the data. The Keyholder will be copied on all email correspondence to other preparers.
The time it took to prepare this component is being collected so that we can continue to improve our estimate of the reporting burden
associated with IPEDS. Please include in your estimate the time it took for you to review instructions, query and search data sources, complete
and review the component, and submit the data through the Data Collection System.
Thank you for your assistance.
This survey component was prepared by:
Keyholder
Finance Contact

SFA Contact

HR Contact

Academic Library Contact

Other

Name:
Email:

How many staff from your institution only were involved in the data collection and reporting process of this survey component?
Number of Staff (including yourself)

How many hours did you and others from your institution only spend on each of the steps below when responding to this survey
component?
Exclude the hours spent collecting data for state and other reporting purposes.
Staff member
Collecting Data Needed
Revising Data to Match
IPEDS Requirements
Your office
hours
hours
Other offices

U.S. Department of Education
Image description.
Department
Of
Education
End of image
description.

hours

hours

Software Provider Resources
Browsers Supported

Entering Data

Revising and Locking Data

hours

hours

hours

hours

Use of Cookies
Troubleshooting

Section 508 Compliance
NCES Privacy Policy

Image description. The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System End of image description.

IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

  
NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > Instructions

date: 8/6/2018

Fall Enrollment Full Instructions
 

Purpose of Survey
Changes in Reporting
General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
Context Boxes

Coverage
Who To Include
Who To Exclude

Where to Get Help For Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
AIR Website
IPEDS Website Resources

Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Institution Level
Aggregate Level

Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Reporting Individuals by Racial/Ethnic Categories
Part A: Fall Enrollment by Level, Attendance Status, Race/Ethnicity, and Gender
Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age
Part C: Residence of First-Time Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part E: Retention Rates for First-Time Certificate-Seeking Undergraduates
Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio

Purpose of Survey
The purpose of the Fall Enrollment component of IPEDS is to collect enrollment data on all students enrolled for credit
in courses/programs that could lead to awards ranging from postsecondary certificates of less than 1 year to doctoral
degrees. Fall enrollment data are collected by level of student, attendance status, race/ethnicity, and gender. In
addition, the Fall Enrollment component collects data on the institution's undergraduate entering class, first-time
student retention rates, and the student-to-faculty ratio. Every other year data on enrollment by nine selected fields of
study are collected, as is residency of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students. In opposite years,
enrollment by student age is collected.
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Changes in Reporting
Enrollment by residence will be mandatory this year. Enrollment by age is optional.

 

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General Instructions
Reporting Period Covered
For institutions operating on a traditional academic year calendar (semester, trimester, quarter, or 4-1-4), fall
enrollment should be reported as of the institution's official fall reporting date or October 15.
For institutions operating on an "other academic calendar," a calendar that differs by program, or enrolls students on a
continuous basis (referred to as program reporters), fall enrollment is reported for students enrolled any time during
the period August 1 and October 31.

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Context Boxes
Context boxes are provided to allow institutions to provide more information regarding survey component items. Note
that some context boxes are posted on the College Navigator Website, which is the college search tool offered by
NCES. NCES will review entries in these context boxes for applicability and appropriateness before posting them on the
College Navigator Website; institutions should check grammar and spelling of their entries.
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Coverage
Who to Include
Include all students enrolled for credit (enrolled in instructional activity, courses or programs, that can be applied
towards the requirements for a postsecondary degree, diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary
credential), regardless of whether or not they are seeking a degree or certificate. This includes:

•
•
•
•

Students enrolled for credit in off-campus centers
High school students taking regular college courses for credit
Students taking remedial courses if the student is degree-seeking for the purpose of student financial aid
determination
Students from overseas enrolled in for credit at your institution (e.g., online students)

Who to Exclude
Exclude students who are not enrolled for credit. For example, exclude:

•
•
•
•

Students enrolled exclusively in courses that cannot be applied towards a recognized
postsecondary credential
Students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses)
Students enrolled exclusively in Continuing Education Units (CEUs)
Students exclusively auditing classes

In addition, the following students should be excluded:

•
•
•

Any student studying abroad (e.g., at a foreign university) if their enrollment at the 'home' institution serves
as an administrative record
Students enrolled in any branch campus located in a foreign country
Students in Experimental Pell Programs 

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Where to Get Help with Reporting
IPEDS Help Desk
Phone: (877) 225-2568
E-mail: ipedshelp@rti.org

Web Tutorials
You can consult the IPEDS Website's Trainings & Outreach page which contains several tutorials on IPEDS data
collection, a self-paced overview of IPEDS tools, and other valuable resources.

IPEDS Resource Page
The IPEDS Website's Reporting Tools page contains frequently asked questions, a link to data tip sheets, tutorials,
taxonomies, information centers (e.g., academic libraries, average net price, human resources, race/ethnicity, etc.),
and other valuable information.
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Where the Reported Data Will Appear
Data collected through IPEDS will be accessible at the institution and aggregate levels.
At the institution-level, data will appear in the:
•
•
•
•

College Navigator Website
IPEDS Data Center
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
College Affordability and Transparency Center Website

At the aggregate-level, data will appear in:
•
•
•
•
•

IPEDS First Looks
IPEDS Table Library
IPEDS Data Feedback Reports
The Digest of Education Statistics
The Condition of Education

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Reporting Directions
Screening Questions
Before entering any data, screening questions will need to be answered.
Part B Selection
Part B (Enrollment by Age) is optional this year. Indicate whether or not you will complete Part B of the Fall Enrollment
survey component this year.
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Reporting Persons by Racial/Ethnic Category (1997 OMB)
This information is being collected in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 and Sec. 421(a)(1) of the Carl D. Perkins Vocational Education Act. These instructions
correspond with the Final Guidance on Maintaining, Collecting, and Reporting Racial and Ethnic Data to the U.S.
Department of Education, published in the Federal Register on October 19, 2007.
Method of collection - Institutions must collect race and ethnicity information using a 2-question format. The first
question is whether the respondent is Hispanic/Latino. The second question is whether the respondent is from one or
more races from the following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native
Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White. Institutions should allow students and staff to self-identify their race
and ethnicity. For further details on the guidance for collecting these data, please see the full Federal Register notice.
Method of reporting aggregate data - Institutions must report aggregate data to the U.S. Department of Education
using the NINE categories below. Racial/ethnic designations are requested only for United States citizens, resident
aliens, and other eligible non-citizens.

•

Hispanic or Latino, regardless of race

For Non-Hispanic/Latino individuals:

•
•
•
•

American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander

•
•

White
Two or more races

In addition, the following categories may be used:

•
•

Nonresident alien
Race and ethnicity unknown

Racial/ethnic descriptions - Racial/ethnic designations as used in this survey do not denote scientific definitions of
anthropological origins. The categories are:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Hispanic or Latino- A person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
culture or origin, regardless of race.
American Indian or Alaska Native- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
America (including Central America) who maintains cultural identification through tribal affiliation or
community attachment.
Asian- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian
Subcontinent, including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine
Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Black or African American- A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander- A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii,
Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
White - A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.

Other descriptive categories

•

•

Nonresident alien - A person who is not a citizen or national of the United States and who is in this country
on a visa or temporary basis and does not have the right to remain indefinitely. NOTE - Nonresident aliens are
to be reported separately, in the boxes provided, rather than included in any of the seven racial/ethnic
categories. Resident aliens and other eligible (for financial aid purposes) non-citizens who are not citizens or
nationals of the United States and who have been admitted as legal immigrants for the purpose of obtaining
permanent resident alien status (and who hold either an alien registration card (Form I-551 or I-151), a
Temporary Resident Card (Form I-688), or an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) with a notation that
conveys legal immigrant status such as Section 207 Refugee, Section 208 Asylee, Conditional Entrant Parolee
or Cuban-Haitian) are to be reported in the appropriate racial/ethnic categories along with United States
citizens.
Race and ethnicity unknown - This category is used only if the person did not select EITHER a racial or
ethnic designation.

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Part A - Full-Time Undergraduate Students by Race/Ethnicity and Gender
On this screen, include all students enrolled for credit, full-time at the undergraduate level. The undergraduate level
includes students enrolled in undergraduate level courses or any certificate programs below the baccalaureate level.
Students who have already earned a bachelor's degree but are taking undergraduate courses for credit should be
included as undergraduates.

Full-time, first-time certificate-seeking students
In column 1, report undergraduate students who have no prior postsecondary
experience and have enrolled full-time with the intent to earn a certificate or other recognized postsecondary
credential. The following are also considered first-time:
•

Students enrolled in the fall term who attended college for the first time in the prior summer
session (applicable to academic reporters only)

•

Students who entered with advanced standing (any college credits or recognized postsecondary credential
earned before graduation from high school)

In order to be considered certificate-seeking, the student must be enrolled in courses for credit and be recognized by
the institution as seeking a certificate or other recognized postsecondary credential. Note: All students eligible to 
receive federal student financial aid are to be considered certificate-seeking. Dual enrolled high school students are 
not considered certificate-seeking. 
Program Reporters: Include first-time students who entered your institution between August 1, 2018 and October
31, 2018.
Academic Reporters: Student counts reported in column 1 define the initial cohort for reporting graduation rates on
the IPEDS Graduation Rates (GR) component to meet Student Right-to-Know reporting requirements. Students
reported in this group will become your GR cohort in the reporting year appropriate for your institution.

All other full-time undergraduate students
In column 2, report the total number of all other (i.e. not first-time) full-time undergraduate students enrolled for
credit. This includes:

•
•
•

students transferring-in to your institution
continuing certificate-seeking students (i.e. students not new to the institution in the fall, but instead are
continuing in their courses/program at the institution)
non-certificate-seeking students (i.e. students enrolled for credit, but not intending to earn a certificate or
recognized postsecondary credential or high school students with dual enrollment)

Once you save the data by clicking the 'Verify and Save' button, the 'Total full-time undergraduates' (column 3) will be
calculated by the system and display on the survey screen.
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Part A: Part-time Undergraduate Students
Report part-time students using the same definitions and instructions provided for full-time undergraduate students.
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Part A: Enrollment by Distance Education Status
On this screen, report all students reported on previous Part A screens who are:
•
•

Enrolled exclusively in distance education courses offered at your institution: Students who are
enrolled only in courses that are considered distance education courses at your institution.
Enrolled in at least one but not all distance education courses offered at your institution: Students
who are enrolled in at least one course that is considered a distance education course, but are not enrolled
exclusively in distance education courses.

Note: Requirements for coming to campus for orientation, testing, or academic support services do not exclude a
course from being classified as being exclusively distance education. Similarly, if a student is taking instructional
portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a practicum, residency, or internship, the
student can still be considered enrolled in entirely education courses.
Not enrolled in any distance education courses offered at your institution: This number represents the
students who are not enrolled in any distance education courses at your institution. It will be calculated by subtracting
the (students enrolled exclusively in distance education + students enrolled in some but not all distance education
courses) from the total enrolled students from Part A, which is the total undergraduates. 
Location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses

If there are students reported as enrolled exclusively in distance education courses, further data on the location of
these distance education students will need to be reported. Report the number of exclusively distance education
students that are located in the same state/jurisdiction as the institution, in a different state/jurisdiction than the
institution, in the U.S. but the state/jurisdiction is unknown, and residing outside the U.S.  Location for those students
enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or current address, as of the institution's
Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the student. For students enlisted in the military
on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's physical location or current address.
The total students exclusively enrolled in distance education courses will be carried forward from earlier on the screen.
If the total students reported by location does not equal the total enrolled exclusively in distance education from
above, the “Location unknown/unreported” is calculated.
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Part B: Fall Enrollment by Age and Gender
Part B is optional this year. This part is required in odd-numbered years.
This distribution of students should include all students reported in Part A.

Enrollment by Age
Use institutional records to calculate student age.
Academic reporters: report student age as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15, 2018.
Program reporters: report student age as of August 1, 2018.
The totals by gender for each attendance status (full- or part-time) and student level (undergraduate or graduate) will
be carried forward from the corresponding Part A screens. When the Part B and Part A totals do not agree, the "Age
unknown/unreported" is calculated.
Note: If the Part B student count total is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in a negative
value), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine both the age data and comparable portion of Part A to identify the
error and make appropriate corrections.
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Part C: Residence of First-time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Undergraduate Students
Part C is mandatory this year. This part is required in even-numbered years only.
This distribution of students should include all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
(both full- and part-time) reported in Part A.

Recent High School Graduates Screening Question
Part C begins with a screening question to determine whether or not your institution has first-time degree/certificateseeking undergraduate students who enrolled within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED. If the
answer is 'No', then only one column for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates will display in Part C.
If the answer is 'Yes', then 2 columns will be reported in Part C, one for all first-time degree/certificate-seeking
undergraduates and one for those first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates enrolled within 12 months of
graduating high school or receiving their GED. 

State of residence
Use the state identified by the student as his/her permanent address at the time of application to the institution. This
may be the legal residence of a parent or guardian, or the state in which a student has a driver's license or is
registered to vote. It is not necessarily the state in which the student's high school is located.

Residence of first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students
In column (1), report all first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students, both full-time and parttime, by state of residence. The total line for column (1) will be carried forward from the total first-time
degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students reported in Part A. If the sum of the students reported by state of
residence in column (1), lines 1-90, does not agree with the total first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates
from Part A, the "Residence unknown/unreported" (line 98) will be calculated.
Note: When the sum of students by state of residence is larger than the total carried forward from Part A (resulting in
a negative value calculated for the "Residence unknown/unreported" line), a fatal error results. In this case, reexamine
both the residence data and comparable section of Part A to identify the error and make appropriate corrections.
If your institution responded 'Yes' to the screening question, the subset of students from column (1) who enrolled
within 12 months of graduating high school or receiving their GED are to be reported again by their state of residence
in column (2).
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Part E: Retention Rates for the First-Time Degree/Certificate-Seeking Student Cohort
Retention rates examine the percentage of first-time degree/certificate seeking students enrolled in the fall of the prior
year that are either still enrolled in the fall of the current year or have completed their program in that time.
The retention cohorts, full-time and part-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking undergraduates from Fall 2017, are
preloaded from Part A of the prior year Fall Enrollment survey component.
On each retention screen (full-time cohort and part-time cohort screens), institutions must:
•
•
•

Verify the preloaded Fall 2017 cohort.
Attendance status (full- or part-time) should be based on the student's Fall 2017 attendance status.
Report any exclusions for the cohort (see below for allowable exclusions).
Report any inclusions of first-time study abroad students who were excluded from the first-time cohort but
who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

•

Report the total number of students retained from the Fall 2017 cohort. Include students who were reported
as first-time but who are studying abroad in Fall 2018.
Total students retained = students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled as of Fall 2018 + students
from Fall 2017 cohort who completed their program as of Fall 2018.

Academic reporters: Report students retained as of the institution's official fall reporting date or as of October 15,
2018.
Program reporters: Report students retained as of August 1, 2018.

Exclusions:
Institutions may report exclusions for the Fall 2017 cohort. Allowable exclusions are students who left the institution
for any of the following reasons:
•
•
•
•

Died or were totally and permanently disabled
To serve in the armed forces (including those called to active duty)
To serve with a foreign aid service of the Federal Government (e.g., Peace Corps)
To serve on official church missions

The system will compute an adjusted cohort by subtracting the student exclusions from the original cohort prior to
calculating the retention rate.
Retention rates will be computed by the system after clicking 'Save.' The retention rate is calculated as:
(Students from Fall 2017 cohort still enrolled + Students from Fall 2017 cohort who completed their
program as of Fall 2018/Adjusted Fall 2017 cohort)*100.
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Part F: Student-to-Faculty Ratio
Graduate only institutions do not complete Part F.
Report the student-to-faculty ratio for undergraduate programs at your institution. A worksheet is available to help
determine your institution's ratio. Click on the link from the Part F screen to access the worksheet.

Worksheet for Less Than Four-Year Institutions and Four-Year Institutions without Graduate or
Professional Programs
The worksheet is designed to help institutions determine their student-to-faculty ratio. It is NOT mandatory that you
use this worksheet to calculate your student-to-faculty ratio. Data entered on the worksheet will NOT be collected or
saved. Make sure to print the screen in order to refer to the ratio calculation for your institution at a later time.
Please note: The logic used in this calculation is similar to that of item I-2 from the Common Data Set data collection.

FULL- AND PART-TIME STUDENT DATA:
All student data on the worksheet is either carried forward from Part A or a calculated field.
Lines F1 and F2. Total full-time and total part-time students.
The total number of full- and part-time students are carried forward from Part A.
Line F3. A full-time equivalent (FTE) of the part-time student count.
The FTE will be calculated as line F2 (total part-time student count) * 1/3.
Line F4. Total FTE students.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F1 (total full-time students) and F3 (FTE of part-time students). Line F4 is used in
the ratio calculation.

FULL-AND PART-TIME INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF DATA:
Lines F5 and F8 should be reported based on data your institution is reporting in the IPEDS Human Resources (HR)
survey component. Please work together with the appropriate staff at your institution to ensure that the data used on
this worksheet and reported in the HR component are the same.
In line F5, report the total number of full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component.

In line F8, report the total number of part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component.

Instructional Staff Exclusion for Non-Credit Instructors:
In line F6, report the number of full-time instructional staff reported in line F5 that are teaching exclusively noncredit courses.
In line F9, report the number of part-time instructional staff reported in line F8 that are teaching exclusively noncredit courses.
For institutions that have a large amount of non-credit activity, the above exclusions will better align the student data
with the instructional staff data being used in the ratio.

Part-Time Instructional Staff Addition:
In line F10, report the number of administrators or other staff NOT reported to IPEDS as instructors (and therefore
not included in the instructional staff count reported in line F8) that are teaching a credit course in the Fall.
For institutions that have administrators and other professionals on staff that are not reported to IPEDS as instructors
(because it is not their "primary function") but they teach credit courses, the above allowable addition will produce a
more accurate ratio.
With the above instructional staff exclusions and part-time instructional staff addition information above, the system
will compute the following on the worksheet:
Line F7. Total adjusted full-time instructional staff.
The adjusted full-time instructional staff is the total full-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching exclusively
non-credit classes. The system will calculate line F7 as line F5 (total full-time instructional staff as reported on the HR
survey component) minus line F6 (total full-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses).
Line F11. Total adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The adjusted part-time instructional staff is the total part-time instructional staff, excluding those teaching exclusively
non-credit classes, and adding those administrators and other staff teaching credit courses. The system will calculate
line F11 as line F8 (total part-time instructional staff as reported on the HR survey component) minus line F9 (total
part-time instructional staff teaching exclusively non-credit courses) + line F10 (administrators and other staff
teaching credit courses).
Line F12. Total FTE of adjusted part-time instructional staff.
The FTE will be calculated as line F11 (total adjusted part-time instructional staff) * 1/3.
Line F13. Total FTE of adjusted instructional staff.
This is calculated as the sum of lines F7 (total adjusted full-time instructional staff) and F12 (FTE of total adjusted part
-time instructional staff). Line F13 is used in the ratio calculation.
Line F14. Student-to-faculty ratio.
The ratio will be calculated by the system as line F4 (total adjusted FTE students) divided by line F13 (total adjusted
FTE instructional staff). The ratio will be displayed on the worksheet as xxx to 1.
The calculated ratio can then be entered onto the Part F (Student-to-Faculty Ratio) screen.
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Image description. The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System End of image description.

IPEDS Help Desk
(877) 225-2568 or ipedshelp@rti.org

  
NCES National Center for Education Statistics

2018-19 Survey Materials > FAQ

date: 8/6/2018

Fall Enrollment
Click one of the following questions to view the answer.
General
1)
2)
3)
4)

Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Should I report students who are studying abroad?
In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for reporting firstprofessional students?
5)
My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment? 
6)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in Fall
Enrollment?
Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
1)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?
2)
Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
3)
Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall (without prior
postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
4)
How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses in the fall? 
5)
Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the same
institution? 
6)
How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual enrolled
student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
7)
Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled student)?
8)
If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how do I
determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
9)
Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
10)
How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and re-enrolls as a
degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution? 
11)
My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender unknown” on the
IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
12)
How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
13)
How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the determination of a
student's full-time status?
14)
In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
2)
How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part A (i.e.,
13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Distance Education
1)
If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to complete a
practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance education courses?
2)
What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education courses?
3)
How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
4)
Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for distance
education location reporting?
5)
We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses). How should
students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall Enrollment? 
Fall Enrollment by Age (Part B)
1)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose ages are
unknown?
2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the second column
that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries on a
temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data, what location do I
use?
Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort) and the
undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?

Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
2)
How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time) between
one fall and the next?
Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
3)
For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at the same
4)
institution in another program, how should they count that student?
My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment count. How
5)
can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s retention calculation?
Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are taking classes
6)
in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
1)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as medicine, law,
2)
veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "stand-alone"
programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these types of programs on
the worksheet for Part F?

Answers:
General
1)
Who should I include in my enrollment reporting?
All students enrolled for credit should be reported. Credit is defined as “Recognition of attendance or performance in
an instructional activity (course or program) that can be applied by a recipient toward the requirements for a degree,
diploma, certificate, or other recognized postsecondary credential, irrespective of the activity's unit of measurement.”
Students who are not seeking a degree or certificate may be still be enrolled for credit. These students are to be
reported in the non-degree/non-certificate-seeking column.

2)

3)

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What is the reporting period/date for fall enrollment?
Fall enrollment is a count of students enrolled on a particular date in the Fall. Fall enrollment is often referred to as a
"snapshot" of the enrollment at an institution at a specific time in the Fall. The date/period used depends on whether
the institution is an academic reporter or a program reporter for IPEDS purposes.
Academic reporters: Report enrollment as of October 15 or as of the institution's official fall reporting date.
Program reporters: Report enrollment during the 3-month period of August 1 to October 31. If a student enrolls or
remains enrolled at any time during that period, the student is included in the fall enrollment counts.
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Should I report students who are studying abroad?
U.S. students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country should be included in your
institution's enrollment report if your institution provides instructional resources (classroom, instructors), even though
the education occurs abroad. Students who are enrolled in your institution and attend classes in a foreign country
should NOT be included in your enrollment report if:

•
•
•

The students are enrolled ONLY in courses offered by another institution;
The students are enrolled at a branch campus of your institution in a foreign country;
Your institution does not provide the instructional resources (i.e., classrooms, instructors), even if
the student pays tuition to your institution.

Foreign students who are enrolled for credit and taking courses at the institution should be included in the
institution's enrollment report. 
While study abroad students may be excluded from the enrollment count for reasons cited above, they may
be included in the institution’s retention calculation. Please see the specific instructions on Part E: Retention
or the FAQ on including study abroad students in retention.
For additional information on how to report study abroad students in all IPEDS survey components, please
visit the following link: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/pdf/Reporting_Study_Abroad_Students.pdf.
4)

5)

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In the past I reported first-professional students on this component. Why are there no screens for
reporting first-professional students?
Beginning with the 2009-10 collection year, institutions are required to use reclassified postbaccalaureate degree
categories that exclude the first-professional category. In parts A and B, all postbaccalaureate students are to be
reported as graduate students, including doctor's-professional practice students (formerly reported as firstprofessional). Even though Teacher Preparation certificate programs may require a bachelor's degree for admission,
they are considered subbaccalaureate undergraduate programs, and students in these programs are undergraduate
students.
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My school is part of a consortium of schools. How do I report student enrollment?

For reporting students studying in consortium agreements, please refer to the Resource page
at https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/report-your-data/data-tip-sheet-reporting-data-consortium-institutions. 
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6)
Do I include students enrolled only in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses) in
Fall Enrollment?
ESL has never been considered a postsecondary program by IPEDS.  Since it is considered non-postsecondary,
students who are ONLY enrolled in ESL programs (programs comprised exclusively of ESL courses),
regardless of whether or not they are receiving Title-IV aid, should NOT be counted in enrollment.
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Fall Enrollment by Student Level, Race/Ethnicity and Gender (Part A)
1)
What is NOT considered "prior postsecondary experience" when reporting first-time students?

•
•
•
•
•
•

2)

3)

4)

5)

6)

7)

8)

9)

Credit for military service/training from an association such as the American Council on Education,
Credit from any non-credit courses, as defined by the institution,
Credit received for completion of tests/assessments,
Credit received before the student has earned a high school diploma (i.e., dual enrollment
credits),
Postsecondary award received before the students earned a high school diploma (e.g., certificate,
associate's, bachelor's, etc.), or
Credit for life experience. 

Students with prior postsecondary experience credit from attending a military academic institution (e.g., Community
College of the Air Force, West Point, U.S. Naval Academy, etc.) would NOT be considered first-time students. 
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Where do I report students if I don't know whether or not they are first-time?
If their status is not indicated directly and the student does not enroll with prior credits or transcripts from another
institution, then assume the student is first-time.
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Where do I report undergraduate students who enrolled at my institution for the first time this fall
(without prior postsecondary experience), but earned college credits during the prior summer?
These students should be reported as first-time undergraduates. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to
still be classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned occurred in the summer immediately
prior to enrollment.
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How do I treat new students who transferred into the institution the prior summer term and take courses
in the fall?
For the Fall Enrollment survey, count the student as a "transfer-in," even if the student transferred into the institution
during the prior summer term and is not entering the institution for the first time in the fall. (Applies only to academic
reporters)
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Does "continuing/returning student" include those students who have stopped out and re-entered the
same institution?
Yes, "continuing/returning student" is meant to capture students who are not first-time or transfer-in. This includes
students who have been continuously enrolled in the institution and those who have stopped out and re-enrolled,
without having transferred to another institution.
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How do I report a student who earned college credit or postsecondary award while in high school (a dual
enrolled student) and has now graduated high school and enrolled in my institution in the Fall?
If the college credit or postsecondary award was earned prior to the student graduating high school, then this student
would be considered a first-time student in the Fall. The definition of “first-time” allows for students to still be
classified as first-time if the college credit they have previously earned was prior to their high school graduation.
(Applies only to academic reporters)
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Where do I report a high school student who is enrolled for credit at my institution (a dual enrolled
student)?
This student would be reported as non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. Prior to receipt of a high school diploma or
recognized equivalent (see glossary definition), a student is non-degree/non-certificate-seeking. After receipt of the
high school diploma or recognized equivalent, they can be classified as degree/certificate-seeking, if appropriate.
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If a student enrolled for credit has not indicated whether they intend to earn a degree or certificate, how
do I determine whether they are degree/certificate-seeking?
If the student has not indicated any intent but is applying for Title IV federal financial aid, assume the student to be
degree/certificate-seeking.
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Where do I report students who are seeking a second baccalaureate degree?
Report these students in the column labeled "Continuing" degree/certificate-seeking students (column 3). This column
is intended to capture all degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students who are not first-time and did not
transfer-in to the institution in that Fall.
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10)

11)

12)

13)

How do I report an undergraduate student who took courses as a non-degree-seeking student and reenrolls as a degree-seeking student at the same reporting institution?
This student should be reported as a "continuing/returning" student. IPEDS defines "continuing/returning students" as
"A student who is not new to the institution in the fall, but instead is continuing his or her studies at the institution
(i.e., not first-time and not transfer-in)."
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My institution has students for which gender is unknown. Since there is no place to report “gender
unknown” on the IPEDS data collection screens, how should we report these individuals?
These individuals are still to be reported to IPEDS, even though their gender is unknown. It is up to the institution to
decide how best to handle reporting individuals whose gender is unknown. However, a common method used is to
allocate students with gender unknown based on the known proportion of men to women.
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How do I report foreign students living outside the U.S. who are enrolled in my institution?
There has been no change to how these students should be reported. Foreign students living outside the U.S., such as
a foreign student living outside the U.S. who is enrolled in distance education at your institution, should be classified
in the Race/Ethnicity Unknown category. Only U.S. citizens are to be categorized in the specific Race/Ethnicity
categories. The non-resident alien category is reserved specifically for students that are in the U.S. under that specific
legal status.
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How does enrollment in non-credit or zero-credit remedial/ESL and co-op courses count in the
determination of a student's full-time status?
Students in the following categories are considered degree-seeking in IPEDS, though they may be enrolled in courses
not creditable for an award:

•
•
•

14)

Students enrolled in remedial courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been
admitted into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Students enrolled in ESL courses that are not creditable toward an award but have been admitted
into an eligible Title-IV program and receive Title-IV aid
Co-op students enrolled in courses that are not creditable toward an award but are required for
award attainment

In determination of the student's full-time status, credit or clock hours (up to one academic year's worth) of remedial 
and ESL courses may be used in the determination of a student's full-time status if the remedial or ESL course is part 
of a program that leads to a postsecondary award. In these cases, the remedial or ESL courses should count the same 
as the comparable full-credit class. For co-op students, the work portion of a cooperative education program in which 
the amount of work performed is equivalent to the academic workload of a full-time student will also count toward the 
determination of full-time status.
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In which race/ethnicity category do I report undocumented students?
Because the race and ethnicity designations are reported only for U.S. citizens and the "nonresident alien" category is
a legal status for students with specific types of visas, undocumented students would not be reported under any of
these statuses. Instead, they should be reported as "Race/ethnicity unknown." Please visit the race/ethnicity FAQ for
more information: https://surveys.nces.ed.gov/ipeds/visFaq_re.aspx.

However, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) students are a particular group of undocumented students
that have been authorized by the Department of Homeland Security to be lawfully present in the U.S. for the duration
of their DACA, and as such, this status would allow them to be reported under the "nonresident alien" category.
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Fall Enrollment in Selected Fields (Part A, 4-year institutions only)
1)
What do I do if my institution does not offer any of the program areas listed on the CIP selection screen?
Select “None of the above” on the CIP selection screen and report all students enrolled for credit, regardless of field of
study, Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
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How do I report students in program areas that do not appear on the CIP selection screen?
The program areas on the CIP selection screen are the only fields for which enrollment data is collected separately. In
addition to reporting enrollment by the selected fields requested, report all students enrolled for credit (regardless of
field of study) on the "Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A.
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3)
How do I report undergraduates who have not yet declared a major?
These students should only be reported on the Full-time and Part-time Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity screens of Part A,
where all students enrolled for credit (regardless of field of study) are reported.
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4)
How do we report a student that has majors falling under more than one of the CIP codes collected in Part
A (i.e., 13.0000 Education and 27.0000 Mathematics)?
Report the students as either full-time or part-time depending on their status at the institution. Then report them on
the corresponding CIP pages. The CIP pages are not an unduplicated count and students can be included on more
than one page.
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Distance Education
2)

1)

 

2)
 

3)
 

4)
 

5)

 

Fall
1)
 

If a student is taking the instructional portions of their program entirely online, but are then required to
complete a practicum, residency, or internship, is the student considered enrolled in exclusively distance
education courses?
Yes, if the instructional portions are entirely online, the student is considered to be enrolled in exclusive distance
education course. 
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What should I do if I do not know the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education
courses?
If you have no information about the location of students enrolled exclusively in distance education, do not report
them in any of the location fields. The system will calculate the number of "Location Unknown" exclusively distance
education enrollments. 
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How do I determine location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education?
Location for those students enrolled exclusively in distance education should be their physical location or current
address, as of the institution's Fall reporting date. If this is not available, use the address on file for the student. For
students enlisted in the military on active duty, use the permanent address instead of the student's physical location. 
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Are U.S. jurisdictions or territories (like Guam, the U.S. Virgin Island, etc.) considered in the U.S. for
distance education location reporting?
Yes, Students located in a U.S. jurisdiction while they are enrolled in distance education courses should be reported as
located in the U.S.
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We offer courses that combine distance education and traditional teaching methods (“hybrid” courses).
How should students enrolled in these courses be counted in the distance education portion of Fall
Enrollment?
Hybrid courses are not considered by IPEDS as distance education. Students enrolled in “hybrid” courses should be
reported as “not enrolled in any distance education courses.”
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Enrollment by Age (Part B)
I am not able to enter a number in the “Age unknown/unreported” box. How do I report students whose
ages are unknown?
The number of students whose age is unknown will be computed by the data collection system. The difference
between the sum of students reported by age category in Part B and the corresponding total enrollment reported in
Part A results in the number of students whose age is unknown.

If this results in a negative number, a fatal error will appear and you will need to either correct your data or contact
the IPEDS Help Desk for assistance.
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2)
My institution uses age range categories that differ from the ones IPEDS uses in Part B. What should I do?
 
In order to have consistent data from all institutions, IPEDS must use standard age categories. Use the students'
dates of birth to report the enrollment by IPEDS age categories.
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Residence of First-Time Undergraduates (Part C)
1)
When reporting students by residence (Part C), should I include students who completed a GED in the
second column that asks for numbers of students that graduated high school within 12 months?
 
If the student received the GED within the past 12 months, they should be included in the second column.
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2)
Some first-time undergraduates at my institution are dependents whose parents are in foreign countries
on a temporary basis (e.g., military/diplomatic service). When reporting residence and migration data,
what location do I use?
 
The home state could be the student’s or parent’s official home state, the state where they are registered to vote or
pay taxes, or the state issuing their driver’s license. If no such information is available, they would be reported under
“State unknown”(57).
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Total Undergraduate Entering Class (Part D)
1)
What is the difference between the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort (GRS cohort)
and the undergraduate entering class calculated in Part D?
 
In addition to the students in the full-time, first-time degree/certificate-seeking cohort, the total undergraduate
entering class includes part-time students of the same criteria as well as transfers-in and full- and part-time nondegree/non-certificate-seeking students that are new to your institution in the Fall.
The entering class is intended to represent all students new to an institution in a given fall and provide context for the
GRS cohort. The percent of the entering class that is represented by the institution's GRS cohort is included on College
Navigator as a note to the graduation rate data displayed.
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Retention Rates for First-Time Undergraduates (Part E)
1)
How is the retention rate calculated?
 
The retention rate is calculated as follows:
4-year Institutions:

first-time bachelor's degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018/(first-time bachelor's
degree-seeking students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)

2)
 

3)
 
4)
 

5)

 

2-year and Less-than-2-year Institutions:
(first-time students in Fall 2017 who are still enrolled in Fall 2018 + first-time students in Fall 2017 who completed
their program by Fall 2018)/(first-time students in Fall 2017 - cohort exclusions + cohort inclusions)
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How do I report students who changed attendance status (part-time to full-time or full-time to part-time)
between one fall and the next?
Report students based on their attendance status in the fall the cohort was initially based on, even if that status
changed in the following fall.
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Are students on a leave of absence from the institution considered retained?
No. Students must be enrolled for credit at the institution in the Fall to be considered retained from the previous fall.
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For less-than-4-year institutions that have a student who completed a program and are still enrolled at
the same institution in another program, how should they count that student?
The institution should count that student as "retained" only once. Do NOT count that student twice, once for having
completed the program and another time for still being enrolled. 
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My institution’s freshman study abroad students were excluded from the prior year first-time enrollment
count. How can I add these students back into the prior year’s first-time cohort for the current year’s
retention calculation?

Freshman study abroad students can be added to the first-time cohort. Report in the inclusion box
first-time bachelor’s degree/certificate-seeking study abroad students who were excluded from the
first-time cohort but who have re-enrolled at the institution their second year.

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Sophomore study abroad students have been excluded from my fall enrollment count because they are
taking classes in a foreign country. How can I include them as part of my retention calculation?
 
Sophomore study abroad students are considered part of the retained cohort even though they may not be included in
the institution’s fall enrollment count. Count these students in the retained cohort.
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Undergraduate Student-to-Faculty Ratio (Part F)
1)
How do I calculate my institution's student-to-faculty ratio?
 
A worksheet has been provided to guide the process of calculating the student-to-faculty ratio for your institution. The
worksheet can be accessed from the Part F screen in the Data Collection System.
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2)
Can you provide an example of a stand-alone graduate or professional program (a program such as
medicine, law, veterinary, or dentistry in which faculty teach virtually only graduate-level students)?
 
An example of a program that would fall into this category (typically a doctor's-professional practice program) is a
school of medicine that only awards degrees/certificates at the graduate level and therefore its faculty exclusively (or
in some cases almost exclusively) teach graduate students. Programs that are "stand-alone" graduate programs may
have some undergraduate students enrolled in their courses, however a "stand-alone" graduate program would only
award degrees/certificates at the graduate level. An example of a graduate program that would not meet this criteria
is a school of business that has an undergraduate and graduate program and therefore enrolls both types of students
and awards degrees/certificates at both levels. Further, the faculty would teach a mix of undergraduate and graduate
students. Excluding “stand-alone” graduate programs is intended to make the student-to-faculty ratio closer to an
undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio than it would be if these programs were included in the calculation, without
overburdening institutions.
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3)
My institution has graduate and/or doctors-professional practice programs but does not have any "standalone" programs. What should I enter on the student and faculty exclusion line items related to these
types of programs on the worksheet for Part F?
 
If your institution does not have any "stand-alone" graduate or professional programs, then enter 0 for students and 0
for faculty in the lines for these types of programs. Most institutions do not have these types of graduate or
professional programs, so entering 0 in those lines will be fairly common.
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6)

 
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