Post on 29-Jul-2018
TCC FACT BOOKOFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS
2017
CHESAPEAKE • NORFOLK • PORTSMOUTH • SUFFOLK • VIRGINIA BEACH
TIDEWATER COMMUNITY COLLEGE
From here, go anywhere.TM
FACT BOOK
Office of Institutional Effectiveness
2017
36th EDITION
The Tidewater Community College Fact Book is a summary of current and historical statistical information. Anyone seeking additional information may contact the Office of Institutional Effectiveness.
FFAACCTT BBOOOOKK TABLE OF CONTENTS
MMIISSSSIIOONN,, CCOORREE VVAA LLUUEESS,, AACCCCRREEDDIITTAATTIIOONN
Mission, Core Values, Accreditation ..................................................................................1
SSEERRVVIICCEE AARREEAA DDEEMMOO GGRRAAPPHHIICCSS
Service Area Population Trends .........................................................................................3 2016 Service Area Population Characteristics ...................................................................3 Residents Enrolled in Service Area Institutions – Fall 2016 ...............................................4
SSTTUUDDEENNTT IINNFFOO RRMMAATTIIOONN
At a Glance .........................................................................................................................5 Academic Programs for 2016-17 by Campus ................................................................. 7-9 College Student Profile 2016–17 .....................................................................................10 Annual Enrollment by Campus 2005-06 to 2016-17 (FTES/Headcount) ..........................11 Annual Enrollment Regional Automotive Center & Visual Arts Center ...........................11 VCCS Annual FTES 2013-14 to 2016-17 ...........................................................................12 Special Population Enrollment Fall 2014-16 Military and Veterans ...............................13 Proportion of Public High School Graduates Attending TCC 2011–16.............................13
CCAAMMPPUUSS PPRROOFFII LLEESS
Chesapeake Campus 10-Year Historical Profile ...............................................................14 Norfolk Campus 10-Year Historical Profile ......................................................................15 Portsmouth Campus 10-Year Historical Profile ...............................................................16 Virginia Beach Campus 10-Year Historical Profile ...........................................................17
GGRRAADDUUAATTEE IINNFFOORRMMAA TTIIOONN
Graduate Profile 2017 .....................................................................................................18 Top 10 TCC Graduate Institutions 2015 – 16 ...................................................................18 Graduate Awards by Curriculum Five-Year Average 2013 – 17 ................................ 19-21
FFAACCTT BBOOOOKK TABLE OF CONTENTS
CCOOLLLLEEGGEE RREESSOO UURRCCEESS
Core Revenues 2015-16 ...................................................................................................22 Core Expenses 2015-16 ....................................................................................................23 Total College Positions Allocated 2016–17 .................................................................... 24 Full-Time Faculty by Rank, Gender, Race – Fall 2016 .......................................................25 Administrative Faculty by Rank, Gender, Race – Fall 2016 ..............................................25 Classified Full-Time Staff by Gender, Race ......................................................................25
CCOOLLLLEEGGEE HHIISSTTOORRYY
Annual Unduplicated HC & Annualized FTES 25-Year History ........................................26 Ten-Year Semester Enrollment History, 2007-08 to 2016-17 .........................................27 Twenty-Five-Year TCC Graduate History 1993-2017 .......................................................28 College History Timeline 1965-66 to 2016-17 ............................................................ 29-33
DDEEFFIINNIITTIIOONNSS
Definitions ................................................................................................................. 34-35
MM II SS SS II OO NN
Tidewater Community College provides collegiate education and training to adults of all ages and backgrounds, helping them achieve their individual goals and contribute as citizens and workers to the vitality of an increasingly global community.
COMMITMENTS THAT INFORM THE MISSION:
• Open access to high-quality, affordable education to prepare students for transfer to a four-year baccalaureate institution, as well as for entry or advancement in the workforce.
• Cultural diversity as a critically important strength for students to meet the changing needs of a pluralistic, democratic society.
• Lifelong learning to heighten the awareness of students to multiple paths for achievement while helping them pursue the choices most conducive to their individual needs.
• Partnerships and proactive responsiveness to develop cutting-edge programs that meet the
changing needs of students and industry, while contributing to the economic, civic, and
cultural vitality of the region, the Commonwealth, the nation, and the international
community.
• A comprehensive range of programs and services recognized for excellence by leaders of
business, industry, and government, and by educators in K-12 education and four-year
colleges and universities.
CC OO RR EE VV AA LL UU EE SS
1. Access and successful student achievement
2. Respect for individuality and a commitment to fostering unique strengths in different people
3. Partnership with a range of constituencies
4. A vital and engaging learning environment
5. Service and accountability
AA CC CC RR EE DD II TT AA TT II OO NN
Tidewater Community College is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and
Schools Commission on Colleges to award the associate degree. Contact the Commission on College
at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the
accreditation of Tidewater Community College.
1
2
SS EE RR VV II CC EE AA RR EE AA PP OO PP UU LL AA TT II OO NN TT RR EE NN DD SS
Locality Census 2000 Census 2010 Est. 2017 Proj. 2020
Chesapeake 199,184 223,068 240,213 245,853
Norfolk 234,403 242,903 247,928 249,356
Portsmouth 100,565 95,633 96,178 96,152
Suffolk 63,677 84,881 89,930 92,348
Virginia Beach 425,257 439,148 457,456 462,653
Source: Economic Modeling Specialists International (EMSI) / www.economicmodeling.com
22 00 11 66 SS EE RR VV II CC EE AA RR EE AA
PP OO PP UU LL AA TT II OO NN CC HH AA RR AA CC TT EE RR II SS TT II CC SS
Locality Total Male Female White Black Other Participation Rate By City1
Chesapeake 238,004 49.0% 51.0% 62.7% 30.1% 7.1% 2.17%
Norfolk 247,307 52.5% 47.5% 50.1% 42.2% 7.5% 1.53%
Portsmouth 96,194 47.8% 52.2% 42.0% 53.5% 4.5% 2.16%
Suffolk 88,982 48.6% 51.4% 52.7% 42.8% 4.5% 1.32%
Virginia Beach 455,407 49.2% 50.8% 68.5% 20.1% 11.4% 2.14%
Region 1,125,894 49.7% 50.3% 59.7% 31.7% 8.6% 1.95%
1 Participation rate is the percentage of residents who are TCC students.
Source: Economic Modeling Specialists International (EMSI) / www.economicmodeling.com
3
City of Chesapeake
City of Norfolk
City of Portsmouth
City of Suffolk
City of Virginia Beach
Total
Christopher Newport U. 151 1% 27 <1% 14 <1% 54 1% 132 1% 378 1%
Coll. of Wm. & Mary 157 1% 96 1% 21 1% 45 1% 274 1% 593 1%
Hampton U. 70 1% 59 1% 37 1% 32 1% 77 <1% 275 1%
Medical Coll. H.R. 17 <1% 21 <1% 1 <1% 6 <1% 44 <1% 89 <1%
Norfolk State U. 607 5% 759 9% 369 10% 206 5% 707 3% 2,648 5%
Old Dominion U. 2,379 20% 2,137 26% 560 15% 609 15% 4,192 20% 9,877 20%
Paul D. Camp C.C. 16 <1% 6 <1% 16 <1% 537 14% 11 <1% 586 1%
Regent U. 592 5% 265 3% 122 3% 123 3% 1,323 6% 2,425 5%
Thomas Nelson C.C. 74 1% 128 2% 75 2% 70 2% 91 <1% 438 1%
Tidewater C.C. 4,545 37% 3,109 39% 1,874 50% 1,058 27% 8,349 39% 18,935 38%
Va. Wesleyan Coll. 147 1% 110 1% 30 1% 32 1% 282 1% 601 1%
Other Va. Coll. 3,411 28% 1,356 17% 637 17% 1,187 30% 5,797 27% 12,388 25%
TOTAL 12,166 8,073 3,756 3,959 21,279 49,233
Source: SCHEV
4
AATT AA GGLLAANNCCEE
THE COLLEGE
14th largest public two-year community college in the U.S.
The second largest provider of undergraduate public education in Virginia
Largest undergraduate African American enrollment in Virginia higher education and 10th largest associate degree producer among two-year colleges for African American students
The 30th largest associate degree producer in the U.S. among two-year institutions
12 nationally accredited degree programs
OUR STUDENTS
34,397 students served; 15,868 annual FTES 38% of south Hampton Roads residents who enrolled in higher education enrolled at TCC 36% full-time; 64% part-time 56% college transfer; 31% career/technical* Cities of residence: 41% Virginia Beach, 22% Chesapeake, 16% Norfolk, 9% Portsmouth, 5%
Suffolk Average age is 27 years; 49% 18-24 years of age 48% White, 32% African American, 21% other minorities 50% receive financial aid
OUR GRADUATES
3,696 graduates in 2016-2017 43% transfer degrees, 27% career/technical degrees, 30% certificates 64% of college-transfer graduates continue their education at a four-year institution
RESOURCES
2015-16 core revenue: 163.0 million 294 full-time teaching faculty 4 campuses, 7 regional centers
*Career/Technical = AAS, AAA, Certificate (Career Technical), Diploma, CSC
5
6
AA CC AA DD EE MM II CC PP RR OO GG RR AA MM SS CC UU RR RR II CC UU LL AA BB YY CC AA MM PP UU SS 22 00 11 66 –– 22 00 11 77
DEGREE CHESAPEAKE NORFOLK PORTSMOUTH VIRGINIA
BEACH
A S S O C I A T E I N A R T S ( A . A . )
648 Liberal Arts
A S S O C I A T E I N S C I E N C E ( A . S . )
213 Business Administration 831 Engineering 699 General Studies General Studies (Prof.
Communication)
880 Science Science (Computer
Science)
882 Social Sciences
A S S O C I A T E I N A P P L I E D A R T S ( A . A . A . )
Arts & Humanities
532 Studio Arts *
A S S O C I A T E I N A P P L I E D S C I E N C E ( A . A . S . )
Arts & Humanities
514 Graphic Design *
Business
203 Accounting
298 Admin Support Technology
212 Management
Engineering Science & Mathematics
915 Civil Engineering Tech
Health Professions
109 Diagnostic Medical Sonography
146 Emergency Medical Services
152 Health Info Mgmt.
151 Medical Lab Tech
7
AA CC AA DD EE MM II CC PP RR OO GG RR AA MM SS CC UU RR RR II CC UU LL AA BB YY CC AA MM PP UU SS 22 00 11 66 –– 22 00 11 77
DEGREE CHESAPEAKE NORFOLK PORTSMOUTH VIRGINIA
BEACH
156 Nursing
126 Occupational Therapy Assistant
180 Physical Therapist Assistant
172 Radiography
181 Respiratory Therapy
Computer Science & Information Technology
299 Info Systems Tech
Maritime Logistics
746 Maritime Technologies
Mechanical & Industrial Technologies
909 Automotive Tech *
729 Computer Aided Drafting & Design Tech
790 Diesel Technology * 841 Electrical Technology 981 Electronics Technology 904 Heating, Ventilation, Air
Conditioning, & Refrigeration (HVAC/R)
963 Industrial Technology
706 Mechatronics
Public & Professional Services
640 ASL-English Interpretation
400 Criminal Justice
242 Culinary Arts
427 Fire Science Technology
155 Funeral Service
8
AA CC AA DD EE MM II CC PP RR OO GG RR AA MM SS CC UU RR RR II CC UU LL AA BB YY CC AA MM PP UU SS 22 00 11 66 –– 22 00 11 77
DEGREE CHESAPEAKE NORFOLK PORTSMOUTH VIRGINIA
BEACH
335 Horticultural
775 Hospitality
Management
520 Interior Design 260 Paralegal Studies
Social Sciences & Education
636 Early Childhood
Development
480 Human Services C ER T I F I C A T E
Business
202 Accounting Specialist
Computer Science & Information Technology
200 Information Systems Tech
Mechanical & Industrial Technology 903 Air Conditioning &
Refrigeration
727 Comp Aided Draft & Design Tech
942 Electrical Wiring 943 Electronics Engineering
Tech
995 Welding
Public and Professional Services
261 Legal Assistant
221 Career Studies
Social Sciences and Education
632 Early Childhood Instruction
*Indicates an off-campus location: Portsmouth offering at Visual Arts Center, Chesapeake offering at Regional Automotive Center
9
CC OO LL LL EE GG EE SS TT UU DD EE NN TT PP RR OO FF II LL EE 11 22 00 11 66 –– 22 00 11 77
Summer 2016 Fall 2016 Spring 2017 Headcount 12,259 23,946 21,740
No. Percent No. Percent No. Percent Male Female
4,924 7,335
40% 60%
9,886 14,060
41% 59%
8.966 12,774
41% 59%
New Returning Transfer
690 9,890 1,679
6% 81% 14%
5,068 16,699
2,179
21% 70%
9%
1,358 18,850
1,532
6% 87%
7% Full-Time Part-Time
829 11,430
7% 93%
8,667 15,279
36% 64%
7,499 14,241
34% 66%
On-Campus Off-Campus
8,167 4,092
67% 33%
18,296 5,650
76% 24%
16,410 5,330
75% 25%
Day Evening Online Only
7,393 1,186 3,680
60% 10% 30%
18,223 2,127 3,596
76% 9%
15%
16,159 2,055 3,526
74% 9%
16% White African American Other
6,016 3,858 2,385
49% 31% 19%
11,402 7,618 4,926
48% 32% 21%
10,351 6,828 4,561
48% 31% 21%
AA AS Certificate Total College Transfer
209 5,957
35 6,201
2% 49%
0% 51%
480 12.858
44 13,382
2% 54%
0% 56%
421 11,553
41 12,015
2% 53%
0% 55%
AAS AAA Certificate Career Studies Total Career/Technical
2,940 88
160 528
3,716
24% 1% 1%
4% 30%
5,701 233 328
1,144 7,406
24% 1% 1%
5% 31%
5,321 217 257
1,001 6,796
24% 1% 1%
5% 31%
Dual Enrollment Other Non-Curricular Total Non-Curricular
98 2,244
2,342
1% 18%
19%
1,494 1,664
3,158
6% 7%
13%
1,393 1,536
2,929
6% 7%
13% Chesapeake Norfolk Portsmouth Suffolk Virginia Beach Other
2,491 1,918 1,022
700 4,802 1,326
20% 16%
8% 6%
39% 11%
5,155 3,774 2,075 1,176 9,736 2,030
22% 16%
9% 5%
41% 8%
4,694 3,404 1,807 1,100 8,886 1,849
22% 16%
8% 5%
41% 9%
17 and younger 18 – 24 25 – 34 35+
46 5,552 3,951 2,710
0% 45% 32% 22%
927 11,837
6,509 4,673
4% 49% 27% 20%
1,039 10,742
5,823 4,136
5% 49% 27% 19%
Average Age 29 27 27 1Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
10
AA NN NN UU AA LL EE NN RR OO LL LL MM EE NN TT BB YY CC AA MM PP UU SS 22 00 00 55 -- 00 66 –– 22 00 11 66 -- 11 77
Chesapeake2 Norfolk Portsmouth2 Virginia Beach
FTES HC1 FTES HC1 FTES HC1 FTES HC1
2005 – 2006 2,650 9,534 2,733 9,240 2,578 8,541 7,358 19,905
2006 – 2007 2,909 10,396 2,844 9,920 2,645 8,729 7,619 20,181
2007 – 2008 3,277 11,911 3,197 11,238 2,485 8,040 7,902 21,113
2008 – 2009 3,528 13,022 3,506 12,571 2,501 8,214 8,308 22,438
2009 – 2010 4,260 15,366 4,127 14,377 3,148 10,060 9,428 24,820
2010 – 2011 4,356 15,595 4,278 14,696 3,773 11,101 9,702 25,166
2011 – 2012 4,421 16,672 4,235 14,875 4,087 12,137 9,762 26,265
2012 – 2013 3,947 14,695 3,852 13,998 3,640 11,031 8,899 24,249
2013 – 2014 3,741 14,099 3,748 14,147 3,518 10,854 8,439 23,338
2014 – 2015 3,491 13,056 3,404 12,740 3,253 10,181 8,002 21,960
2015 – 2016 3,261 12,409 3,226 12,499 3,100 9,835 7,340 20,960
2016 – 2017 3,008 11,560 2,910 11,539 2,784 9,039 6,717 19,274
1Student is counted once in number served for each campus attended. 2RAC and VAC are not included in this table. See table below.
AA NN NN UU AA LL EE NN RR OO LL LL MM EE NN TT RR ee gg ii oo nn aa ll AA uu tt oo mm oo tt ii vv ee CC ee nn tt ee rr (( RR AA CC )) aa nn dd
VV ii ss uu aa ll AA rr tt ss CC ee nn tt ee rr (( VV AA CC ))
22 00 00 55 -- 00 66 –– 22 00 11 66 -- 11 77
Regional Automotive Center Visual Arts Center
F T E S H C 1 F T E S H C 1
2005 – 2006 - - 294 1,157
2006 – 2007 - - 295 1,141
2007 – 2008 - - 329 1,252
2008 – 2009 120 397 349 1,293
2009 – 2010 188 638 356 1,390
2010 – 2011 237 606 356 1,394
2011 – 2012 270 706 355 1,384
2012 – 2013 257 604 380 1,457
2013 – 2014 258 565 352 1,389
2014 – 2015 220 514 302 1,167
2015 – 2016 175 401 251 953
2016 – 2017 208 436 242 901
1 Student is counted once in number served for each regional center attended. 2 Regional Automotive Center opened for classes in fall 2008.
11
VV II RR GG II NN II AA CC OO MM MM UU NN II TT YY CC OO LL LL EE GG EE SS YY SS TT EE MM
AA NN NN UU AA LL FF UU LL LL -- TT II MM EE EE QQ UU II VV AA LL EE NN TT EE NN RR OO LL LL MM EE NN TT
22 00 11 33 -- 11 44 tt oo 22 00 11 66 -- 11 77
Community Colleges
2013-2014 2016-2017 3-year
Actual Actual Change
Blue Ridge 2,855 2,424 -15%
Central Virginia 2,668 2,459 -8%
Dabney S. Lancaster 738 748 1%
Danvi l le 2,604 2,021 -22%
Eastern Shore 511 382 -25%
Germanna 4,447 4,119 -7%
J. Sargeant Reynolds 7,945 6,292 -21%
John Tyler 5,709 5,352 -6%
Lord Fairfax 4,070 3,909 -4%
Mountain Empire 1,862 1,683 -10%
New River 2,880 2,806 -3%
Northern Virginia 35,559 32,869 -8%
Patrick Henry 2,166 1,696 -22%
Paul D. Camp 858 817 -5%
Piedmont Virginia 3,017 2,948 -2%
Rappahannock 1,890 1,914 1%
Souths ide Virginia 3,524 2,366 -33%
Southwest Virginia 1,749 1,706 -2%
Thomas Nelson 7,026 5,603 -20%
Tidewater 20,057 15,868 -21%
Virginia Highlands 1,614 1,514 -6%
Virginia Western 5,048 4,267 -15%
Wythevi l le 2,031 1,660 -18%
VCCS 120,828 105,242 -13%
Source: VCCS
12
SS PP EE CC II AA LL PP OO PP UU LL AA TT II OO NN EE NN RR OO LL LL MM EE NN TT
FF AA LL LL MM II LL II TT AA RR YY AA NN DD VV EE TT EE RR AA NN SS (( 22 00 11 44 –– 22 00 11 66 ))
2014 2015 2016
Active Duty Headcount FTES
1,341
704
1,281
679
1,156
625
Veterans Headcount FTES
2,914 1,987
2,595 1,752
2,350 1,580
Dependents Headcount FTES
4,894 3,094
4,739 2,941
4,584 2,797
Unknown Headcount FTES
145
86
105
68
87 59
Total Military-Related Enrollment
9,294
8,720
8,177
PP RR OO PP OO RR TT II OO NN OO FF PP UU BB LL II CC HH II GG HH SS CC HH OO OO LL GG RR AA DD UU AA TT EE SS AA TT TT EE NN DD II NN GG TT CC CC (( 22 00 11 11 –– 22 00 11 66 ))
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Chesapeake High School Graduates Grads attending TCC Percent attending TCC
3,274
722 22.1%
3,127
724 23.2%
3,115
667 21.4%
3,029
644 21.3%
3,008
621 20.6%
3,061
622 20.2%
Norfolk High School Graduates Grads attending TCC Percent attending TCC
1,932
361 18.7%
2,026
310 15.3%
1,880
301 16.0%
1,766
303 17.2%
1,462
242 16.6%
1,796
252 14.0%
Portsmouth High School Graduates Grads attending TCC Percent attending TCC
1,013
246 24.3%
940 189
20.1%
1,021
215 21.1%
847 202
23.8%
842 200
23.8%
949 142
14.9%
Suffolk High School Graduates Grads attending TCC Percent attending TCC
944 121
12.8%
952 173
18.2%
943 155
16.4%
943 155
16.4%
904 124
13.7%
959 127
13.1%
Virginia Beach High School Graduates Grads attending TCC Percent attending TCC
5,276 1,194 22.6%
5,297 1,119 21.1%
5,031 1,018 20.3%
5,009
952 19.0%
4,988
890 17.8%
4,987
990 19.8%
Total High School Graduates Grads attending TCC Percent attending TCC
12,439
2,644 21.3%
12,342
2,515 20.4%
12,060
2,350 19.5%
11,594
2,256 19.5%
11,204
2,077 18.5%
11,752
2,133 18.0%
13
CC HH EE SS AA PP EE AA KK EE CC AA MM PP UU SS
Located on sixty-nine acres off Cedar Road between Great Bridge and Deep Creek, the Chesapeake Campus was
established in 1973 when the City of Chesapeake purchased the former Chesapeake College. The George W. Pass
building houses academic programs, administration, student services, and the Library. The Marian P. Whitehurst
Technology Center, contains classrooms, laboratories, and a conference center. The Regional Automotive
Technology Center opened for classes in fall 2008 with nine classrooms, fifteen 20-foot-high bays – one designed
for an 18 wheeler – and the latest in instructional equipment. Additionally, a new 60,000 square-foot, state-of-
the-art academic building and a new student center opened during the 2013-14 academic year.
10-Year Historical Student Profi le 1
Category
Prof i le*
200 6-07 2011-12 2016-17
Annual Headcount
Annua l FTES
10,396
2,909
17,181
4,691
11,913
3,216
Ful l -Time
Part -Time
37%
63%
42%
58%
40%
60%
New
Return ing
Transfer
16%
75%
9%
16%
76%
8%
17%
74%
9%
Col lege Transfer
Career/Techn ical
Unclass i f ied
48%
37%
15%
45%
46%
9%
46%
43%
11%
Male
Female
34%
66%
39%
61%
42%
58%
White
Afr ican Amer ican
Other
63%
28%
9%
57%
33%
10%
54%
29%
17%
Day
Evening
On l ine
67%
14%
19%
69%
12%
19%
67%
11%
22%
Financia l A id 32% 52% 52%
17 or younger
18-24 years
25-34 years
35 or o lder
2%
49%
25%
24%
2%
48%
29%
22%
3%
48%
28%
21%
Average Age 28 28 28
*Except where noted, data reflect fall enrollment.
1 Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
14
NN OO RR FF OO LL KK CC AA MM PP UU SS
The Norfolk Campus was part of the original campus master plan for the Virginia Community College System. Its
doors opened in January 1997 as a result of a combined effort with the City of Norfolk in planning a downtown
campus. The Martin Building was donated by the heirs of Alvah H. Martin and contains the campus Library,
classrooms, faculty and administrative offices, and training and conference facilities. The Mason C. Andrews
Building contains student services, laboratories, classrooms, and faculty offices. The Stanley C. Walker
Technologies Building houses computer laboratories, classrooms, and faculty offices. The renovated Jeanne and
George Roper Performing Arts Center opened in July 2000; this performing arts facility supports local,
community, regional and national events. The Norfolk Campus Student Center opened in May 2011 with space
designated for student organizations, student activities, lounge/study areas, fitness/recreation areas, food
service operations, and child care.
11 00 -- YY ee aa rr HH ii ss tt oo rr ii cc aa ll SS tt uu dd ee nn tt PP rr oo ff ii ll ee 11
Category
Prof i le*
200 6-07 2011 -12 2016 -17
Annual Headcount
Annua l FTES
9,920
2,844
14,875
4,236
11,539
2,910
Ful l -Time
Part -Time
37%
63%
44%
56%
41%
60%
New
Return ing
Transfer
15%
75%
10%
15%
75%
10%
14%
75%
11%
Col lege Transfer
Career/Techn ical
Unclass i f ied
53%
32%
15%
49%
45%
6%
51%
42%
7%
Male
Female
31%
69%
32%
68%
35%
65%
White
Afr ican Amer ican
Other
42%
48%
10%
40%
50%
10%
37%
46%
17%
Day
Evening
On l ine
69%
11%
20%
70%
9%
21%
66%
8%
26%
Financia l A id 46% 67% 67%
17 or younger
18-24 yea rs
25-34 years
35 or o lder
2%
46%
31%
21%
1%
44%
35%
21%
1%
43%
33%
23%
Average Age 28 28 29
*Except where noted, data reflect fall enrollment.
1 Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
15
PP OO RR TT SS MM OO UU TT HH CC AA MM PP UU SS
The new Fred W. Beazley Portsmouth Campus opened for classes in spring 2010 and is located in the Victory
Village area of Portsmouth on 35 acres near Interstate 264 and Victory Boulevard. Totaling 183,000 square
feet, four buildings house academic programs, administrative offices, student services, and a physical plant. In
2013-14, a new student center opened on the campus. The new Portsmouth Campus replaces TCC’s founding
campus, which opened in 1968 when the Beazley Foundation donated the former Frederick College in
northern Suffolk and $1 million to the Commonwealth of Virginia to establish a community college to serve
South Hampton Roads.
11 00 -- YY ee aa rr HH ii ss tt oo rr ii cc aa ll SS tt uu dd ee nn tt PP rr oo ff ii ll ee 11
Category
Prof i le*
200 6-07 2011 -12 2016 -17
Annual Headcount
Annua l FTES
9,655
2,940
13,059
4,442
9,653
3,026
Ful l -Time
Part -Time
34%
66%
46%
54%
42%
58%
New
Return ing
Transfer
20%
72%
8%
19%
73%
8%
17%
73%
9%
Col lege Transfer
Career/Techn ical
Unclass i f ied
37%
41%
22%
40%
52%
8%
40%
50%
10%
Male
Female
44%
56%
39%
61%
39%
61%
White
Afr ican Amer ican
Other
53%
38%
9%
45%
47%
8%
42%
44%
14%
Day
Evening
On l ine
81%
12%
7%
78%
11%
11%
75%
10%
14%
Financia l A id 31% 59% 60%
17 or younger
18-24 years
25-34 years
35 or o lder
3%
47%
28%
22%
2%
46%
29%
22%
3%
46%
28%
23%
Average Age 28 28 28
*Except where noted, data reflect fall enrollment.
1 Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
16
VV II RR GG II NN II AA BB EE AA CC HH CC AA MM PP UU SS
The campus was established in temporary quarters on Camp Pendleton, a state military reservation, in 1971. It opened in fall of 1974 as a permanent campus, constructed on 115 acres off Princess Anne Road. Each of the buildings is named for a borough of Virginia Beach – Princess Anne, Bayside, Blackwater, Kempsville, Pungo, Lynnhaven and Virginia Beach. The Advanced Technology Center (ATC) opened at the end of 2002; it is a cooperative venture and partnership between the City of Virginia Beach, The Virginia Beach Public Schools, and TCC. The Science Building, opened in spring 2008, is a 70,000 square-foot building featuring a 90-seat planetarium, an outside “living laboratory”, an oceanography lab with a 30-foot wave tank, anatomy and physiology labs, a greenhouse, and a observatory. In 2011, the Regional Health Professions Center opened—a 65,000 square-foot facility providing clinical learning in simulated medical settings. In 2013-14, a $43 million Joint-Use Library, funded by both TCC and the City of Virginia Beach, opened on the campus, and the largest of four campus student centers opened as well.
11 00 -- YY ee aa rr HH ii ss tt oo rr ii cc aa ll SS tt uu dd ee nn tt PP rr oo ff ii ll ee 11
Category
Prof i le*
2006-07 2011 -12 2016 -17
Annual Headcount
Annua l FTES
20,181
7,619
26,265
9,762
19,274
6,717
Ful l -Time
Part -Time
38%
62%
43%
57%
39%
61%
New
Return ing
Transfer
16%
76%
8%
18%
74%
8%
19%
73%
8%
Col lege Transfer
Career/Techn ical
Unclass i f ied
52%
34%
14%
49%
43%
8%
49%
39%
12%
Male
Female
40%
60%
41%
59%
43%
57%
White
Afr ican Amer ican
Other
61%
23%
16%
57%
27%
16%
52%
24%
24%
Day
Evening
On l ine
80%
13%
7%
80%
11%
9%
79%
10%
11%
Financia l A id 30% 49% 50%
17 or younger
18-24 years
25-34 years
35 or o lder
2%
51%
26%
21%
2%
49%
29%
21%
3%
49%
28%
20%
Average Age 27 28 27
*Except where noted, data reflect fall enrollment. 1 Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
17
GG RR AA DD UU AA TT EE PP RR OO FF II LL EE
22 00 11 77 Male
Female
1,567
2,129
42%
58%
White
Afr ican Amer ican
Other
1,890
1,084
722
51%
29%
20%
21 and under
22-29
30-44
45+ above
951
1,389
979
377
26%
38%
26%
10%
AA/AS *
AAA/AAS *
Cert i f icate/Dip loma/CSC *
1,773
1,082
1,227
43%
27%
30%
Tota l 3,696
* Graduates may have more than one award.
TT OO PP 11 00 TT RR AA NN SS FF EE RR II NN SS TT II TT UU TT II OO NN SS FF OO RR CC OO LL LL EE GG EE
TT rr aa nn ss ff ee rr DD ee gg rr ee ee GG rr aa dd uu aa tt ee ss
22 00 11 55 –– 22 00 11 66
I n s t i t u t i o n N u m b e r o f T r a n s f e r s
% o f T r a n s f e r D e g r e e G r a d u a t e s 1
Old Do min ion Un iversi ty 659 58%
Norfolk State Univer sity 63 6%
Regent Univers ity 53 5%
Virg in ia Commonwealth University
51 5%
James Madison Un iversi ty 33 3%
Virg in ia Wesleyan Col lege 32 3%
Virg in ia Po lytech & S tate University 22 2%
Geo rge Mason Univers ity 18 2%
Saint Leo University 18 2%
University o f Vi rg in ia 16 1%
1 Percent of 2015-16 transfer degree graduates who transferred.
18
GG RR AA DD UU AA TT EE AA WW AA RR DD SS BB YY CC UU RR RR II CC UU LL UU MM
FF II VV EE –– YY EE AA RR AA VV EE RR AA GG EE
22 00 11 33 –– 22 00 11 77
A W A R D S
C U R R I C U L U M 2 0 1 3 2 0 1 4 2 0 1 5 2 0 1 6 2 0 1 7 5 - Y EA R
A V ER A G E
ASSOCIATE IN ARTS (A.A.)
648 Liberal Arts 88 69 70 62 56 69.0
ASSOCIATE IN SCIENCE (A.S.)
213 Business Administration 354 303 302 330 307 319.2
831 Engineering 82 71 89 99 97 87.6
699 General Studies 130 100 110 123 215 135.6
880 Science 348 326 351 380 322 345.4
8821 Social Sciences 926 860 794 801 776 831.4
ASSOCIATE IN APPLIED ARTS (A.A.A.)
532 Studio Arts 21 35 42 33 32 32.6
ASSOCIATE IN APPLIED SCIENCE (A.A.S.)
203 Accounting 47 41 33 49 47 43.4
2982 Admin Support Technology 56 77 81 93 68 75.0
400 Criminal Justice 108 108 85 137 82 104.0
640 ASL-English Interpretation 2 3 1 5 - 2.2
909 Automotive Technology 28 44 31 25 35 32.6
915 Civil Engineering Tech 13 7 12 6 12 10.0
7293 Computer Aided Drafting and Design Technology
24 17 19 23 23 21.2
242 Culinary Arts 34 27 43 30 25 31.8
109 Diagnostic Medical Sonography
16 14 12 12 15 13.8
790 Diesel Technology - - - 1 10 2.2
636 Early Childhood Dev’t 62 65 60 63 56 61.2
841 Electrical Technology - - - 1 10 2.2
981 Electronics Technology 10 21 22 17 13 16.6
19
GG RR AA DD UU AA TT EE AA WW AA RR DD SS BB YY CC UU RR RR II CC UU LL UU MM
FF II VV EE –– YY EE AA RR AA VV EE RR AA GG EE
22 00 11 33 –– 22 00 11 77
A W A R D S
C U R R I C U L U M 2 0 1 3 2 0 1 4 2 0 1 5 2 0 1 6 2 0 1 7 5 - Y EA R
A V ER A G E
ASSOCIATE IN APPLIED SCIENCE (A.A.S.) (cont.)
146 Emergency Medical Services 29 34 40 53 43 39.8
427 Fire Science Technology 17 19 21 21 19 19.4
155 Funeral Services 16 25 15 17 17 18.0
514 Graphic Design 58 52 39 37 43 45.8
152 Health Info Management 19 16 19 18 19 18.2
904 Heating, Ventilation, Air Conditioning & Refrigeration (HVAC/R)
- - 1 15 10 5.2
335 Horticulture 9 13 4 4 8 7.6
7754 Hospitality Management 20 27 35 14 18 22.8
480 Human Services 42 66 71 69 62 62.0
963 Industrial Technology 15 18 17 10 11 14.2
299 Info Systems Technology 66 67 63 79 82 71.4
520 Interior Design 15 7 16 13 11 12.4
212 Management 63 50 68 55 61 59.4
746 Maritime Technologies 2 6 2 7 9 5.2
706 Mechatronics 31 23 31 36 17 27.6
151 Medical Laboratory Tech - 8 12 8 14 8.4
156 Nursing 97 124 120 107 88 107.8
126 Occupational Therapy Asst 27 27 32 31 27 28.8
260 Paralegal Studies 42 36 40 36 20 34.8
180 Physical Therapist Assistant 31 29 28 29 27 28.8
172 Radiography 33 33 31 35 32 32.8
181 Respiratory Therapy 15 14 17 16 16 15.6
718 Technical Studies 78 64 15 6 - 32.6
CERTIFICATE
202 Accounting Specialist 6 6 10 12 5 7.8
20
GG RR AA DD UU AA TT EE AA WW AA RR DD SS BB YY CC UU RR RR II CC UU LL UU MM
FF II VV EE –– YY EE AA RR AA VV EE RR AA GG EE
22 00 11 33 –– 22 00 11 77
A W A R D S
C U R R I C U L U M 2 0 1 3 2 0 1 4 2 0 1 5 2 0 1 6 2 0 1 7 5 - Y EA R
A V ER A G E
CERTIFICATE (cont.)
903 Air Cond & Refrigeration 20 17 26 17 6 17.2
221 Career Studies 942 783 1,015 809 994 908.6
727 Computer Aided Drafting & Design Tech
8 9 13 6 4 8.0
632 Early Childhood Instruction 27 31 23 22 24 25.4
942 Electrical Wiring 11 8 15 8 7 9.8
943 Electronics Engineering Tech 5 5 9 6 6 6.2
695 General Education 210 234 216 226 140 205.2
190 Health Sciences 2 3 1 - - 1.2
200 Information System Tech 2 2 8 9 9 6.0
261 Legal Assistant 11 9 7 9 6 8.4
166 Medical Assisting 24 2 1 - - 5.4
995 Welding 13 17 14 16 26 17.2
Notes:
* Graduates may have more than 1 award; includes only curricula that are currently active. 1 Replaced 625-Education 2 Replaced 294-Office System Tech 3 Replaced 921-Draft/Design 4 Replaced 235-HRI Management
21
R e v e n u e S o u r c e A m o u n t
Tu it io n and Fees $ 41,515,526
Government Appropriat ions $ 60,738,527
Government Grants & Contracts $ 48,725,830
Pr ivate Gi ft s , Grants & Contracts $ 1 ,013,597
Investment Income $ 668,508
Other Co re Revenues $ 10,388,448
Tota l Core Revenues $ 163,050,436
Source: IPEDS
22
E x p e n s e F u n c t i o n A m o u n t
Instruct io n $ 76,050,623
Publ ic Serv ice $ 763,822
Academic Suppo rt $ 15,468,271
Inst i tu t ional Suppo rt $ 35,336,092
Student S ervic es $ 22,500,329
Other Co re Expenses $ 20,878,685
Tota l Core Expenses $170,997,822
Source: IPEDS
23
C A M P U S P R O F E S S I O N A L A D M I N I S T R A T I V E F A C U L T Y C L A S S I F I E D
Chesapeake 8 8 64 50
Portsmouth 10 9 74 56
Virg in ia Beach 20 14 138 96
Norfolk 8 5 49 37
Dist r ic t 8 36 0 216
Tota l 54 72 325 455
Note: Excludes College President
Source: Office of Human Resources
24
FF UU LL LL -- TT II MM EE FF AA CC UU LL TT YY **
BB YY RR AA NN KK ,, GG EE NN DD EE RR && RR AA CC EE FF AA LL LL 22 00 11 66
M a l e F e m a l e A v e r a g e S a l a r y * * W h i t e N o n - W h i t e W h i t e N o n - W h i t e
P r o f e s s o r 3 7 3 2 1 5 $ 7 1 , 2 7 7
A s s o c i a t e P r o f e s s o r 4 1 3 2 7 1 5 $ 6 5 , 3 3 2
A s s i s t a n t P r o f e s s o r 2 7 5 3 0 1 1 $ 5 6 , 3 2 4
I n s t r u c t o r 2 3 5 3 4 7 $ 5 1 , 4 2 4
L e c t u r e - - - - -
T o t a l 1 2 8 1 6 1 1 2 3 8 $ 6 1 , 1 6 6
*Includes only 9-month teaching faculty **Information provided by the Office of Human Resources
AA DD MM II NN II SS TT RR AA TT II VV EE // PP RR OO FF EE SS SS II OO NN AA LL FF AA CC UU LL TT YY BB YY RR AA NN KK ,, GG EE NN DD EE RR && RR AA CC EE
FF AA LL LL 22 00 11 66
M a l e F e m a l e A v e r a g e S a l a r y W h i t e N o n - W h i t e W h i t e N o n - W h i t e
P r o f e s s o r 1 0 2 6 3 $ 1 0 8 , 8 8 4
A s s o c i a t e P r o f e s s o r 2 1 8 4 $ 8 6 , 5 4 3
A s s i s t a n t P r o f e s s o r 1 2 2 9 1 0 $ 9 1 , 0 6 1
I n s t r u c t o r 1 4 9 3 6 2 3 $ 7 2 , 3 1 6
T o t a l 3 8 1 4 5 9 4 0 $ 8 4 , 5 6 8
CC LL AA SS SS II FF II EE DD FF UU LL LL -- TT II MM EE SS TT AA FF FF BB YY GG EE NN DD EE RR && RR AA CC EE
FF aa ll ll 22 00 11 66
M a l e F e m a l e T o t a l
W h i t e N o n - W h i t e W h i t e N o n - W h i t e
C l a s s i f i e d 8 1 6 7 1 3 6 1 7 1 4 5 5
Source: Office of Human Resources
25
26
TT EE NN -- YY EE AA RR SS EE MM EE SS TT EE RR EE NN RR OO LL LL MM EE NN TT HH II SS TT OO RR YY HH ee aa dd cc oo uu nn tt aa nn dd FF TT EE SS
22 00 00 77 -- 00 88 tt oo 22 00 11 66 -- 11 77
Summer Fal l Spring
2007-2008
Headcount
Semester FTES
13,586
4,934
25,857
15,022
25,312
14,425
2008-2009
Headcount
Semester FTES
14,399
5,193
26,898
15,709
27,124
15,721
2009-2010
Headcount
Semester FTES
15,245
5,618
30,447
18,512
31,422
18,885
2010-2011
Headcount
Semester FTES
16,839
6,739
31,308
19,353
31,942
19,312
2011-2012
Headcount
Semester FTES
18,187
7,240
32,101
20,013
32,169
19,007
2012-2013
Headcount
Semester FTES
15,836
6,268
30,134
18,474
28,642
17,207
2013-2014
Headcount
Semester FTES
14,777
5,773
28,999
17,755
27,392
16,585
2014-2015
Headcount
Semester FTES
13,118
5,023
27,646
16,737
26,082
15,587
2015-2016
Headcount
Semester FTES
13,085
5,076
25,927
15,551
24,043
14,079
2016-2017
Headcount
Semester FTES
12,259
4,799
23,946
14,245
21,740
12,693
27
28
CC OO LL LL EE GG EE HH II SS TT OO RR YY TT II MM EE LL II NN EE
11 99 66 55 –– 66 66 tt oo 22 00 11 66 -- 11 77
1965 - 1966 Governor Mills E. Godwin Jr. initiates the state sales tax with the goal of establishing a community college system. The Virginia General Assembly establishes the Virginia Community College System (VCCS) to provide college transfer and occupational/technical education.
1967 - 1968 The Beazley Foundation donates the Frederick College site to the Commonwealth of Virginia to begin a community college in South Hampton Roads. The Frederick Campus opens as Region 22 Community College. This year marks the official founding of the College.
1968 - 1969 The College's name is officially changed to Tidewater Community College, and Douglas Montgomery is named its first president. Harold McGee is named the first provost of the Frederick Campus.
1970 - 1971 The College begins to use 11 barracks at the Camp Pendleton National Guard facility as a temporary Virginia Beach location. The College holds its first graduation with 55 graduates.
1971 - 1972 Charles Downs is named provost of the Frederick Campus. The Virginia General Assembly and the City of Virginia Beach approve an allocation of $4.7 million to construct the Virginia Beach Campus in the Green Run section of Virginia Beach. Michael LaBouve is named the founding provost of the Virginia Beach Campus.
1972 - 1973 George B. Pass is named president of Tidewater Community College. The Virginia Beach Campus is formally dedicated by Governor Mills E. Godwin Jr., the "father" of Virginia community colleges. The City of Chesapeake pledges $1.8 million to open a third campus in Chesapeake and funds the purchase of adjacent land. Chesapeake College, a junior college founded in 1966 by Thomas E. Russ, is transferred to the city for the campus site, and the campus officially opens on February 1. Timothy H. Kerr is named the founding provost of the Chesapeake Campus.
1973 - 1974 The College graduates its first class of shipyard apprentices from its joint apprentice program with the Norfolk Naval Shipyard.
1974 - 1975 As a first step toward establishing a campus in Norfolk, the College opens the Norfolk Skills Center at a temporary location on 21st Street. Louis Monroe is named director.
1975 - 1976 A $2 million bond issue is approved to expand the Chesapeake Campus .
1977 - 1978 Construction begins on the first new building on the Chesapeake Campus. Named the George B. Pass Building in 1991 in recognition of the work of President Pass, the building provides additional classroom and office space.
1978 - 1979 With political resistance in the region, the Norfolk Skills Center closes. However,
tracking studies showed its students did not redirect to other neighboring higher
education institutions in Norfolk. The Applied Science Program in Horticulture begins
on the Chesapeake Campus and eventually expands in 1988 through a grant from the
Alison and Ella Parsons Foundation.
29
1979 - 1980 Governor John Dalton dedicates the new classroom building at the Chesapeake Campus. The Grammar Hotline, which quickly rises to national recognition, is established on the Virginia Beach Campus.
1980 - 1981 James C. Sears is named provost of the Frederick Campus. Tidewater Community College, through the Virginia Tidewater Consortium, begins offering college telecourses on Cox cable television. A $6.2 million, three-phase construction project at the Frederick Campus is completed.
1981 - 1982 Groundbreaking begins on the Pungo Building at the Virginia Beach Campus. The building will house humanities classes, including art and drama progra ms.
1983 - 1984 The Chesapeake Campus opens the region's first robotics lab, and the Frederick Campus initiates a $126,000 computer-aided drafting program.
1984 - 1985 Deborah M. DiCroce is named provost of the Frederick Campus.
1985 - 1986 Gov. Gerald L. Baliles dedicates the Pungo Building at the Virginia Beach Campus. A two-year decline in enrollment mandates the first TCC reduction in force.
1986 - 1987 The Frederick Campus is renamed the Frederick W. Beazley Portsmouth Campus to better reflect its ties to the city. TCC's international education program is established, the first among community colleges in Virginia. The first Aids Awareness Seminar is taught at the Portsmouth Campus.
1987 - 1988 As a part of the VCCS, Tidewater Community College c onverts from the quarter system to the semester system.
1988 - 1989 Belle S. Wheelan is named provost of the Portsmouth Campus. The Norfolk City Council endorses the establishment of a TCC campus in Norfolk.
1989 - 1990 The Norfolk Center opens in downtown Norfolk.
1990 - 1991 Former President George B. Pass dies. Larry L. Whitworth is named the third president of TCC.
1991 - 1992 Samuel H. Lamb is named provost of the Portsmouth Campus. John Massey is named director of development for the Norfolk Campus.
1992 - 1993 The Women's Center is established on the Portsmouth Campus to promote economic self-sufficiency for women. Within three years, it evolves from a single campus to a college-wide entity with offices on all four campuses.
1993 - 1994 With start-up costs funded by the Virginia General Assembly and a substantial contribution by the City of Norfolk, construction begins on the Norfolk Campus. TCC begins offering on-line, distance learning. Construction begins on the Chesapeake Campus Marian P. Whitehurst Technology building with funding provided through the state's General Obligation Bond for Higher Education.
1994 - 1995 The Visual Arts Center opens in the old Famous department store building in Olde Towne Portsmouth with Anne Lott serving as the founding director.
1995 - 1996 Michael LaBouve dies unexpectedly, and E.T. (Joe) Buchanan is named provost of the Virginia Beach Campus.
30
1996 - 1997 John Massey is named the founding provost of the Norfolk Campus, which officially becomes the Thomas W. Moss Jr. Campus of Tidewater Community College. The campus, a $26 million project, includes the Stanley C. Walker Technologies Building, the Mason C. Andrews Science Building, and the Alvah H. Martin Building. Larry Whitworth resigns as president, and Timothy Kerr is appointed interim president.
1997 - 1998 Deborah M. DiCroce is named the fourth president of Tidewater Community College. TCC begins the celebration of its 30th anniversary. The college starts the first of fifteen years of unprecedented and record enrollment growth.
1998 - 1999 In January, the College launches a major planning initiative designed to position TCC as a national model for community colleges in the next century — as the new millennium's strategic community college. The initiative frames the College's comprehensive mission via a two-pronged "mission core" of college transfer and workforce development. In March, the inauguration of President DiCroce becomes the first such ceremony in the history of the college. On June 18, guests gather to witness the groundbreaking ceremony marking the beginning of the renovation of the historic, long-closed Loews Theater at 340 Granby Street in downtown Norfolk. On December 13, the president submits an Impact Report on Relocation of the Portsmouth Campus to the State Board for Community Colleges and the Chancellor of the VCCS.
1999 - 2000 The Loews Theater, renamed the Jeanne and George Roper Performing Arts Center, becomes the fourth building in the ongoing development of the Norfolk Camp us and features lecture halls, large computer labs, meeting rooms, faculty offices, and the 832-seat theater.
2000 - 2001 John Massey announces his retirement as the Norfolk Campus provost , and Valarie Evans serves as chief campus administrator in the interim. Consultants complete a feasibility study on the Portsmouth Campus relocation.
2001 - 2002 The Advanced Technology Center, located on the Virginia Beach Campus, opens its doors for students. Quintin Bullock is selected as the second provost for the Norfolk Campus. Voters approve the Higher Education General Obligation Bond Referendum which includes $40 million in projects for TCC.
2002 - 2003 Timothy Kerr announces his retirement as the founding provost of the Chesapeake Campus, and Linda M. Rice is named as the second provost of the campus. The Advanced Technology Center is officially dedicated. TCC implements a new Student Information System with the summer term. In July 2003, the college relocates District Office personnel and functions from the Portsmouth Campus site in Suffolk to office space in downtown Norfolk. The State Board for Community Colleges grants conceptual approval for relocating the Portsmouth Campus to the Victory Crossing Business Park.
2003 - 2004 Terry Jones is named as the acting provost of the Portsmouth Campus to provide the leadership necessary for the relocation planning for the New Portsmouth Campus.
2004 - 2005 The college relocates the president and other district office staff from 121 College Place to temporary quarters at 500 E. Main Street in Norfolk. The State Board approves the purchase of "condominium space" for the entire District Office in the new mixed-use building that will be constructed on the site of the old 121 College Place building. The college receives the largest donation in its history, $1.4 million,
31
from the Beazley Foundation to help establish the Beazley School of Nursing on the New Portsmouth Campus. Terry Jones is named provost of the Portsmouth Campus.
2005 - 2006 Joe Buchanan retires as provost of the Virginia Beach Campus, and Quintin Bullock moves from the provost position in Norfolk to assume the provost position of the Virginia Beach Campus. Alex Kajstura is named as the new provost of the Norfolk Campus.
2006 - 2007 The State Board for Community Colleges approves the TCC Business Plan for four student centers. TCC partners with Barnes and Noble College Booksellers Inc. to create a two-story academic superstore at MacArthur Center in downtown Norfolk, a permanent satellite bookstore at the Virginia Beach Campus, and on-campus distribution centers and kiosks at the Chesapeake and Portsmouth campuses.
2007 - 2008 The TCC district office staff move to their new offices in the District Administration Building located in Downtown Norfolk — the first time in the college's history that all TCC district offices are housed under the same roof. Quintin Bullock leaves his position of provost of the Virginia Beach Campus to assume a college Presidency out of state. The TCC Regional Automotive Center, located in the Oakbrooke Business and Technology Center, opens for classes in fall 2008. Construction begins for the New Portsmouth Campus. The Science Building opens in spring 2008 on the Virginia Beach Campus.
2008 - 2009 Michael Summers is named provost of the Virginia Beach Campus. The College breaks ground in Norfolk for the first of four Student Centers. Dedications are held for the Regional Automotive Center and the Green District Administration Building.
2009 - 2010 The New Portsmouth Campus opens for classes in January 2010, relocating from its original site in Suffolk. The college experiences the largest one -year enrollment increase in its history—with all campuses reporting double digit increases — and serves over 45,000 students.
2010 - 2011 The first of four student centers opens on the Norfolk Campus with space designated for student organizations, student activities, lounge/study areas, fitness/recreation areas, food service operations and child minding. Student services are enhanced with an inter-campus shuttle service, a textbook rental program, and the implementation of the “StormCard” for use with various auxiliary services such as vending, child minding, and the bookstore. Terry Jones retires as provost of the Portsmouth Campus.
2011 - 2012 Deborah M. DiCroce retires as president of Tidewater Community College in February 2012, and Peter A. Spina is appointed interim president. Edna B. Baehre -Kolovani is named the fifth president of TCC in July 2012. Marvin L. Bright is named provost o f the Norfolk Campus, and Michelle W. Woodhouse is named provost of the Portsmouth Campus. The Regional Health Professions Center, located on the Virginia Beach Campus, opens and is dedicated in January 2012.
2012 - 2013 Linda Rice retires as provost of the Chesapeake Campus in February 2013, and Greg Frank is named interim provost. The Center for Military and Veterans Education (CMVE), located on the Virginia Beach Campus, is dedicated in November 2012. The CMVE provides a centralized and comprehensive clearing house for academic and student support services for the 14,000-plus military-related students at TCC.
32
2013 - 2014 Marvin Bright resigns as provost of the Norfolk Campus, and Michelle Woodhouse assumes interim leadership at the campus in addition to her Portsmouth provost duties. Lisa B. Rhine is named the third provost of the Chesapeake Campus. In addition to a state-of-the-art, 60,000 square foot academic building on the Chesapeake Campus, students centers are opened on the Chesapeake, Portsmouth, and Virginia Beach campuses. The $43 million dollar Joint -Use Library opens in August 2013 on the Virginia Beach Campus, combining the best of public library programming and materials with the research capacity of a public library. The Library is funded by both TCC and the City of Virginia Beach.
2014 - 2015 Jeffery S. Boyd is named the fifth provost of the Norfolk Campus and begins the leadership role in August. The Precision Machining Lab opens on the Chesapeake Campus in November. The new lab is outfi tted with equipment donated by local area manufactures and focuses on educating students in fast-growing, high-wage occupations.
2015 - 2016 Workforce Solutions opens an office in Virginia Beach Town Center in August 2015; the Main Street Tower office is next door to the Virginia Beach Economic Development office. Both TCC and City of Virginia Beach leadership hail the addition as an important step toward expanding economic development partnerships in the city. Gov. Terry McAuliffe announced in May 2016 that TCC is the latest Virginia institution to be named a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense (CAE2Y) by the United States National Security Agency (NSA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
2016 - 2017 TCC joins new Virginia Tech cyber education initiatives with eight other public colleges and universities to create a state-of-the-art platform for cybersecurity education. The college partners with Virginia Department of Labor and Industry and Peregrine Technical Solutions to launch the first cybersecurity apprenticeships in Virginia. A five-year decline in enrollment mandates the second TCC reduction in force.
33
A.A.
Associate in Arts Degree. A.A.A. Associate in Applied Arts. A.A.S. Associate in Applied Science Degree. A.S. Associate in Science Degree. Academic Year A semester-based year beginning with the summer term and ending with the spring semester (leading summer). Annual unduplicated headcount The number of different students that the college/campus has served in an academic year (i.e, if a student enrolled in both fall and spring he/she could be counted only once). Annualized FTES In a semester system, the sum of the summer term and fall and spring semester FTES divided by two. Campus The course campus of a student - it reflects where the student actually takes courses. Career/technical student A student enrolled in an A.A.S. degree, certificate or diploma program. College transfer student A student enrolled in an A.A. or A.S. degree program or the general education certificate program. Contract student A student enrolled through a special arrangement contract. Curricular student A student enrolled in an A.A., A.S., A.A.A., A.A.S., diploma, or certificate program. Day student A student who takes at least one course that begins prior to 6:00 p.m. Evening student A student who takes only courses that begin after 6:00 p.m. or a mix of night and online courses. Financial Aid Year A semester-based year beginning with the fall semester and ending with the summer term (lagging summer).
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Fiscal Year Commonwealth of Virginia financial year beginning on July 1 and ending on June 30. FTES Full-time equivalent student; used to determine overall budget for Tidewater Community College. Fifteen student credit hours. Full-time student A student who takes 12 or more credit hours in one term. Headcount Reported credit student enrollment which excludes audits, late adds, and non-credit students. New student A student who has never attended an institution of higher education. Non-curricular student A credit student not enrolled in an A.A., A.S., A.A.A., A.A.S., diploma or certificate program. Off-campus student A student who takes all his/her courses at off-campus locations. On-campus student A student who takes at least one course at an on-campus location. Online student A student who takes only online classes. Part-time student A student who takes fewer than 12 credit hours in one term. Regular Session The fall and spring semester (excludes summer term). Returning student A student who has attended the college on a previous occasion. Semester FTES Total # of student credit hours in a semester divided by 15 credits. Transfer student A student who has attended or is attending another institution of higher education. Unclassified student See non-curricular student.
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The 2016-17 edition of the Fact Book may be found on the web at
https://web.tcc.edu/welcome/collegeadmin/oie/IR/factbook
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