DOCUMENT RESUME
ED 082 621 HE 004 630
TITLE Enrollment in Florida's Institutions of HigherLearning. Fall 1972.
INSTITUTION Florida Board of Regents, Tallahassee.PUB DATE Jul 73NOTE 119p.
EDRS PRICE MF-$0.65 HC-$6.58DESCRIPTORS Annual Reports; *Educational Administration;
*Educational Demand; Educational Supply; *Enrollment;*Higher Education; *Statewide Planning
IDENTIFIERS *Florida
ABSTRACTThis document, published annually, reports general
information as well as detailed data concerning both the public andthe private segments of the higher education system of Florida.Various tables provide breakdowns of total, graduate, andfirst-time-in-college enrollment by State and county for each of thefour types of schools (public universities, public community andjunior colleges, private universities, and private colleges). ChapterI represents an attempt to familiarize the reader with theinstitutions from which data were gathered and with abbreviationsutilized throughout the ensuing chapters. The remaining chapters dealwith statewide college level enrollment. Chapter II provides anoverall picture of enrollment in the State of Florida, while ChapterIII deals primarily with enrollment by individual institution.First-time-in-college enrollment receives attention in Chapter IV.Chapter V contains an in-depth look at graduate .enrollment. Black andnonblackenrollment figures and percentages comprise the tables ofChapter VI. Recent trends and developments highlight the finalchapter. (Author/PG)
+.4
..,, .1 it Ir.'
NROL E-.IiN more AS ,
IN ittiTiONS o Hiq ER EARNINg0
IS
OFFICE Of ThE bOARd of RENTS
ENROLLMENT IN FLORIDA'S INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING
FALL 1972
The Florida Board of Regents
Tallahassee, Florida
THE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION
Reuben Askew Covernor
Floyd T. Christian Commissioner of Education
Richard B. Stone Secretary of State
Robert L. Shevin Attorney General
Fred 0. Dickinson, jr State Comptroller
Thomas D. O'Naley Treasurer-Insurance Commissioner
Doyle Conner Commissioner of Agriculture
THE FLORIDA BOARD OF REGENTS
J. J. Daniel, Chairman Jacksonville
Marshall M. Criser, Vice Chairman Palm Beach
Chester H. Ferguson Tampa
James J. Gardener Fort Lauderdale
E. W. Hopkins, Jr Pensacola
D. Burke Kibler, III Lakeland
Jack McGriff Gainesville
Julius F. Parker, Jr Tallahassee
Carolyn Pearce Coral Gables
THE STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM
Robert B. Mautz Chancellor
Philip F. Ashler Executive Vice Chancellor
W. Kenneth Boutwell, Jr. . . . Vice Chancellor for Administrative Affairs
Richard E. Hulet Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs
Kenneth E, Penrod . . . Vice Chancellor for Medical and Health Services
Allan Tucker Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs
ii
Preface
Annual reports of enrollment in the colleges and universities of
Florida have been published by the Office of the Board of Regents since
1958. This report of the enrollment for the fall of 1972 is the six-
teenth volume in an unbroken series of reports.
Now that enrollment. in colleges and universities in Florida appears
to be stabilizing, the report series reflects the high-water mark in the
opening of new institutions and the enrollment gains that accompanied
the addition of new institutions to Florida's array of colleges and uni-
versities, public and private alike.
This report contains information of enrollment by race (bla..k and
non-black students). The racial components of enrollment were obtained
from compliance reports submitted by institutions of higher learning to
the Office of Health, Education, and Welfare required by the Civil Rights
Act of 1964. Only the compliance reports from public institutions were
available and the section of enrollment by race (Chapter VI) is limited
to the state universities and community colleges.
I wish to thank the presidents and the registrars of the more than
sixty institutions cf higher learning in Florida for providing this of-
fice with enrollment data for the report.
This volume represents the work of three persons in the Department
of Education: Lloyd Lauffer; Division of Community Colleges, and Jerry
Baker and G. Emerson Tully, both of the Office of Academic Affairs,
Division of_UniVersities. The typist for the final manuscript and the
several drafts that preceded the final copy was Carole Mullins.
AT:tmc
July, 1973
Allan TuckerVice Chancellor for Academic Affairs
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FLORIDA BOARD OF REGENTS ii
PREFACE iii
LIST OF TABLES
Chapter
I. GENERAL INFORMATION 2
Changes, Additions, and DeletionsFlorida's Institutions of Higher LearningList of Abbreviations
II. REPORT OF STATEWIDE ENROLLMENT 12
III. ENROLLMENT BY INSTITUTIONS 33
IV. FIRST-TIME-TN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENT 56
V. GRADUATE STUDENT ENROLLMENT 79
VI. BLACK AND NON-BLACK ENROLLMENT 93
VII. TRENDS AND NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN FLORIDA HIGHER EDUCATION 103
iv
LIST OF TABLES
Table Page
1. Enrollment in Florida's Institutions of Higher Learning,Fall, 1972 16
2. Undergraduate On-Campus Enrollment by Type of Program,Fall, 1972 17
3. Florida and Non-Florida On-Campus Enrollment in Florida'sColleges and Universities, Fall, 1972 . 18
4. Florida and Non-Florida On-Campus Enrollment by Level ofProgram, Fall, 1972 19
5. Florida and Non-Florida On-Campus Enrollment by Type ofInstitution, Fall, 1972 90
6. Origin of Total On-Campus Enrollment by State or. Other.Geographical Area and Type of Institution, Fall, 1972 71
7. Origin of Florida On-Campus Enrollment by Countyand Type of Institution, Fall, 1972 23
8. Percentage of Total On-Campus Enrollment in Each Typeof Institution, 1957-1972 26
9. Percentage of Florida On-Campus Enrollment inEach Type of Institution, 1957-1972 27
10. Percentage of Non-Florida Total On-Campus Enrollment inEach Type of Institution, 1957-1972 28
11. Florida On-Campus Enrollment by Type of Inntitution1957-- 1972 29
12. Non-Florida On-Campus Enrollment by Type of Institution1957-1972 30
13. Percentage of Male On-Campus Enrollment to Total Enrollmentby Type of Institution, 1962-1972 31
14. Total Male Enrollment and First-Time-In-College Male Enrollmentin Florida's Colleges and Universities, Fall, 1972 32
Table Page
15. Institutions Enrolling More than 2,500 On-CampusStudents by Rank, Fall, 1972 36
16. Florida :institutions of Higher. Learning by Size ofEnrollment, Fall, 1972 37
17. On-Campus Enrollment in Florida Colleges and Universities byInstitution, Type of Enrollment, and Sex, Fall, 1972 38
18. Total Enrollment, First-Time-In-College Enrollment and TerminalEnrollment by Type of Institution and Sex, Fall, 1972 41
19. Percentage of On-Campus Enrollment in Florida Colleges andUniversities by Institution, Type of Enrollment, and Sex,Fall, 1972 41
20. On-Campus Enrollments from Florida, Other States and Countriesby Institution, Fall, 1972 42
21. Total On-Campus Enrollments by Institution, AlternateYears, 1962-1972 44
22. Origin of State University System On-Campus Enrollment byState or Other Geographical Area, Fall, 1972 47
23. Origin of State University System Florida On-Campus Enrollmentby County, Fall, 1972
24. Florida On-Campus Enrollment in the State Universities,1964-1972
25. Non-Florida On-Campus Enrollment in the State Universities1964-1972
26. On-Campus Enrollments by Institution, State UniversitySystem, 1964-1972
50
53
54
55
27. Percentage of On-Campus Enrollments by Institution, StateUniversity System, 1964-1972 55
28. Origin of First-Time-In-College On-Campus Enrollment by Stateor Other Geographical Area and Type c)! Institutf_on, Fall, 1977 59
29. Origin of State University System First-Time-In-College On-CampusEnrollment by State or Other Geographical Area, Fall, 1972 61
30 Origin of Florida First-Time-In-College On-Campus Enrollmentby County and Type of Institution, Fall, 1972 63
vi
Table Page
31. Origin of State University System Florida First-Time-In-CollegeOn-Campus Enrollment by County, Fall, 1972 66
32. Percentage of Total First-Time-In-College On-Campus Enrollmentin Each Type of Institution, 1958-1972 69
33. Percentage of First-Time-In-College Florida On-CampusEnrollment in Each Type of Institution, 1958-1972 70
34. Percentage of First-Time-In-College Non-Florida On-CampusEnrollment in Each Type of Institution, 1958-1972 71
35. Origin of First-Time-In-College Enrollment by State or OtherGeographical Area, 1965-1972 72
36. Origin of Florida First-Time-In-College Enrcllment byCounty, 1965-1972 74
37. First-Time-In-College Enrollments by Institution, AlternateYears, 1962-1972 76
38. Origin of Graduate On-Campus Enrollment by State or OtherGeographical Area, Fall, 1972 81
39. Origin 01 Florida Graduate On-Campus Enrollment by County,Fall, 1972 84
40. Origin of Graduate On-Campus Enrollment by State or OtherGeographical Area, 1965-1972 87
41. Origin of Florida Graduate On-Campus Enrollment by County,1965-1972 89
42. Graduate On-Campus Enrollment by Institution, 1965-1972 92
43. Black and Non - -Black Enrollment in the State UniversitySystem, Fall, 1972 96
44. Black and Non-Black Enrollment in Florida's PublicCommunity and Junior Colleges, Fall, 1972
45. Enrollment Increase Since 1957 and Percentage of TotalOn-Campus Enrollment by Type of Institution
98
110
46. On-Campus Enrollments and Percentage Changes by Type ofInstitution, 1959-1972 111
vii
CHAPTER I
GENERAL INFORMATION
CHAPTER I
GENERAL INFORMATION
Enrollment in Florida's Institutions of Higher Learning_ is an an-
nual publication of the Office of the Florida Board of Regents. The
report includes general information as well as detailed data concern-
ing both the public and the private segments of the higher education
system of Florida. Various tables exhibited in this document provide
breakdowns of total, graduate, and first-time-in-college enrollment by
state and county for each of the four types of schools, the public
universities, the public community and junior colleges, the private
universities, and the private junior colleges.
Chapter I represents an attempt to familiarize the reader with
the institutions from which data were gathered and with abbreviations
utilized throughout the ensuing chapters. The first section of Chapter
summarizes the changes necessary to update the current edition of the
enrollment report. After a complete alphabetical listing, including
location, of each institution by degree type, two maps follow, The first
identifies the public and private universities, and the second positions
the public and private community and junior colleges. This further
details the location of the sixty-two reporting schools. Chapter I is
concluded with an enumeration of abbreviations, which the reader will
encounter repeatedly as he uses this publication.
The remaining chapters deal with state-wide college-level enrollment.
Chapter II provides an overall picture of enrollment in the State of: Florida,
2
while Chapter III deals primarily with enrollment by individual institution.
First - time -in- college enrollment receives attention in Chapter IV.
Chapter V contains an in-depth look at graduate enrollment. Black and
non-black enrollment figures and percentages comprise the tables of
Chapter VI. Recent trends and developments highlight the final chapter,
Chapter VII.
3
CHANGES, ADDITIONS, AND DELETIONS
Many noteworthy changes in the lineup of institutions of higher
learning in Florida have occurred since the production of the Fall, 1971
enrollment report. Two new State University System (SUS) institutions
opened for classes in September of 1972: Florida International Univer-
sity, Miami, and the University of North Florida, Jacksonville. Both
institutions are upper-division universities, in that instruction begins
at the junior class level. Also, the initial class of a new public
community college, Pasco-Hernando Community College, Dade City, convened
last September. Jones College, Orlando, has switched from a private
junior college to a private baccalaureate degree-granting institution
(PBDGI). A private junior college, St. Joseph College of Florida, located
at Jensen Beach, closed following the 1971-72 school year. One public
two-year institution, Edison Junior College of Fort Myers, changed its
name to Edison Community College, making a total of 15 of Florida's
28 public two-year schools using the designation "community college."
Finally, two private baccalaureate degree granting schools, Eckerd College.
of St. Petersburg, formerly known as Florida Presbyterian College, and
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University of Daytona Beach, formerly titled
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Institute, have acquired their new names within
the last year.
Also, this year a new chapter has been inserted into the enrollment
report. Chapter VI now consists of a report on black and non-black en-
rollment in the public sector of the institutions of higher learning in
Florida. Recent trends and developments in higher educational enrollment
4
in Florida, which formerly appeared in Chapter VI, now are discussed
in Chapter VII.
FLORIDA'S INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING
State University System
1. Florida Agricultural andMechanical UniversityTallahassee
2. Florida Atlantic UniversityBoca Raton
3. Florida International UniversityMiami
4. Florida State UniversityTallahassee
5. Florida Technological UniversityOrlando
6. University ofGainesville
7. University ofJacksonville
8. University ofTampa
9. University ofPensacola
Public Community and Junior Colleges
1. Brevard Community CollegeCocoa
2. Broward Community CollegeFort Lauderdale
3. Central Florida Community CollegeOcala
4. Chipola Junior CollegeMarianna
5. Daytona Beach Community CollegeDaytona Beach
6. Edison Community CollegeFort Myers
7. Florida Junior College at JacksonvilleJacksonville
8. Florida Keys Community CollegeKey West
6
Fi'rida
North Florida
South Florida
West Florida
9. Gulf Coast Community CollegePanama City
10. Hillsborough Community CollegeTampa
11. Indian River Community CollegeFort Pierce
12. Lake City Community CollegeLake City
13. Lake-Sumter Community CollegeLeesburg
14. Manatee Junior CollegeBradenton
15. Miami-Dade Junior CollegeMiami
16. North Florida Junior CollegeMadison
Public Community and Junior Colleges (continued)
17. Okaloosa-Walton Junior CollegeNiceville
18. Palm Beach Junior CollegeLake Worth
19. Pasco-Hernando Community CollegeDade City
20. Pensacola Junior CollegePensacola
21. Polk Community CollegeWinter Haven
22. St. Johns River Junior CollegePalatka
23. St. Petersburg Junior CollegeSt. Petersburg
24. Santa Fe Junior CollegeGainesville
25. Seminole Junior CollegeSanford
26. South Florida Junior CollegeAvon Park
27. Tallahassee Community CollegeTallahassee
28. Valencia Community CollegeOrlando
Private Baccalaureate Degree-Granting Institutions
1. Barry CollegeMiami
2. Bethune-Cookman CollegeDaytona Beach
3. Biscayne CollegeOpa Locka
4. Eckerd CollegeSt. Petersburg
5. Edward Waters CollegeJacksonville
6. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical UniversityDaytona Beach
7. Florida Institute of TechnologyMelbourne
8. Florida Memorial CollegeMiami
9. Florida Southern CollegeLakeland
10. Jacksonville UniversityJacksonville
11. Jones CollegeJacksonville
7
12. Jones CollegeOrlando
13. New CollegeSarasota
14. Nova UniversityFort Lauderdale
15. Ringling School of ArtSarasota
16. Rollins CollegeWinter Park
17. Saint Leo CollegeSaint Leo
18. Seminary of St. Vincent de PaulBoynton Beach
19. South-Eastern Bible CollegeLakeland
20. Stetson UniversityDeLand
21. University of MiamiMiami
22. University of TamaTampa
Private Junior Colleges
1. Florida CollegeTemple Terrace
2. Marymount CollegeBoca Raton
3. Webber CollegeBabson Park
*U of North Florida
Edward WatersJacksonville U
1,
Jones C.,........Hoi NIS ON
Z! 61 1 ` I f`i I.' ;',i'i t :
i_ ..1--61; °sot', ,) (00N ,..,'"f"S'iri
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t I- . o j is-- 49uVALf.. A A> tflUATY
17;;;;;*U of West Florida*Florida A & M U
*Florida State U
wAiet4 I j TAYLOR SUMAWI 31 -
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*U of Florida
Bethune-CookmanEmbry-Riddle Aero.
Stetson UJones C
Rollins C*Florida Technological
St. Leo CFlorida Inst. of Tech.
South-Eastern C- .SC
Florida Southern C*U of South Florida :41-regip-
U of Tampa((r,i,..:*4.!VA kAAOCE NISSIANAS
New C (:)-1
(aammml--ST (MI(Eckerd C
Ringling School ofL._ O.: SOCO
MAASOM
Sem. of St. Vincent de Paul ariotora wen*Florida Atlantic U
'WW1
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+Nova U
Biscayne CBarry C
Florida Memorial CU of Miami
*Florida International U
STATE UNIVERSITIES AND PRIVATE BACCALAUREATEDEGREE-GRANTING INSTITUTIONS OF FLORIDA
'TALL 1972
Denotes State University+Offers Post-Baccalaureate Degrees Only
9
..._.KAMM
IJPULH (EACH
WPM
C011if
-61:2 zr.
Gulf Coast CC
pNOI
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Lake City CC
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rAINA.LIN
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Tallahassee CCNorth Florida J
'POW 14
LE VY
Santa Fe JCSt. Johns River JC
Central Florida CCDaytona Beach CC-
Lake- Sumter CCSeminole JC
Valencia CCPasco-Hernando CC
Brevard CCHillsborough CC
*Florida CSt. Petersburg JC
Polk CC*Webber C-
Manatee JC-Indian River C
South Florida JCPalm Beach JC
Edison CC*Marymount C
Broward CCMiami-Dade JC
Florida Keys CC
MARION
vomit LA E
PASCO
TOOLE&
VOL USIA
SEANCIlf
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PUBLIC AND PRIVATE JUNIOR AND COMMUNITYCOLLEGES OF FLORIDA
FALL 1972
Denotes a Private Junior College
10
tot
C
CC
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
College
Community College
Co. County
DGI Degree-Granting Institutions
Div. Division
Enrol. Fnrollment
Fla. Florida
FAMU
FAU
Florida Agricultural andMechanical University
Florida Atlantic University
FIU Florida International University
FSU Florida State University
FTIC First Time Tn College
FTU Florida Technological University
Grad. Graduate
Inst. Institute, Institution
JC Junior College
PBDGI Private Baccalaureate Degree-Granting Institutions
Priv. Private
Pub.
SUS Pi-ate University System
U Univers:l.ty
OF University of Florida
UNF University of North Florida
U5F University of South Florida
UWF University of West Florida
11
CHAPTER II
REPORT OF STATEWIDE ENROLLMENT
CHAPTER II
REPORT OF STATEWIDE ENROLLMENT
On-campus enrollment in colleges and universities throughout Florida
is reported in this chapter. Off-campus enrollment information is not
reflected in the tables of this document, with one exception; the tables
in Chapter VI showing enrollment by race include off-campus enrollments.
As seen below, the enrollment irowth rate has continued to slacken.
The combined sectors, public anc' private, showed a 4.3 per cent rate of
growth, down 3.2 per cent from a year ago. A growth rate of 6 per cent
was the lowest the public sector has eRneienced in at least the last eight
years. Moreover, the rate of decline in enrollment in the private sector
was even greater this year than a year ago. The obvious result was the
lowest rate of growth for the combined sectors in the last eight years, as
shown by the tabulation below:
PublicSector
Private CombinedSector Sectors
(Annual Percentage Change)
Fall, 1965 over Fall, 1964 21.1 9.3 17.5
Fall, 1966 over Fall, 1965 14.6 3.4 13.5
Fall, 1967 over Fall, 1966 13.2 7.0 10.3
Fall, 1968 over Fall, 1967 13.2 9.2 12.2
Fall, 1969 over Fall, 1968 11.4 3.6 9.7Fall, 1970 over Fall, 3.969 8.4 2.1 7.1Fall, 1971 over Fall, 1970 9.5 -0.3 7.5Fall, 1972 over Fall, 1971 6.0 -3.6 4.3
Three mutually exclusive categories, first-time-in-college, previously
enrolled undergraduate, and graduate students, partition the enrollment
figures appearing in Table 1, page 16. Summation over either marginal
column yields a grand total on-campus headcount enrollment of 254,112.
Undergraduate types of programs highlight Table 2.
13
Tables 3, 4, and 5 report enrollment of Florida and non-Florida
residents. In Table 3, students are classified solely on the basis of
Florida or non-Florida residency. Table 4, proceeding one step further,
displays Florida and non-Florida enrollment by undergraduate and graduate
levels. In a slightly more sophisticated approach, Table 5 shows not
only both Florida and non-Florida students, but also the number and the
percentage of students enrolled in each of the four types of institutions.
In the next two tables, enrollment is sorted according to geographic
areas. Total enrollment by state (Table 6) precedes Florida enrollment
by county (Table 7).
Tables 8 through 12 deal with enrollment percentages dating back to
1957. Table 8 offers total enrollment by type of institution. Table 9
presents the percentage of Florida enrollment by type of institution for
each of the 16 years, whereas Table 10 complements Table 9 with the per-
centage of non-Florida enrollment by type of institution for each year.
Table 11 includes Florida enrollment as a per cent of total on-campus
enrollment for each type of institution. Table 12 has the same type of
information for non-Florida students.
Tables 13 and 14 take a look at enrollment by sex. Since 1967, male
enrollment, expressed as a percentage of total enrollment, has declined
by 2.4 per cent from 60.5 per cent to 58.1 per cent (Table 13). Neverthe-
less, a great deal of disparity, especially in the private sector, still
exists between male and female enrollment. Table 14 offers a more detailed
account of current male-female enrollment data. As can be seen, male FTIC
14
enrollment percentages lagged behind male total enrollment per cents,
but remained larger than female FTIC per cents.
15
TABLE 1
ENROLLMENT IN FLORIDA'S INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING
FALL 1972
Institutions
On-Campus Enrollment)
Undergraduate2
Graduate
Total
First-Time-
In College
Previously
Enrolled
In College
FAMU
982
3,359
222
4,563
FAU
4,201
1,480
5,681
FIB
4,807
373
5,180
1-.
FSU
2,152
12,985
4,023
19,160
oN
FTU
831
5,097
924
6,852
OF
2,709
15,771
5,090
23,570
UNF
1,788
209
1,997
USF
2,670
13,700
1,781
18,151
UWF
3,100
459
3,559
SUS Total
9,344
64,808
14,561
88,713
Public CC & JC
43,476
78,351
121,827
Private BDGI
8,822
29,194
4,576
42,592
Private JC
492
488
980
Total
62,134
172,841
19,137
254,112
1On-Campus Enrollment--includes only students who are attending courses for college credit on the campus
of the institution offering the courses.
The student is counted only once regardless of the number of
courses in which he is enrolled for the term.
2lncludes students pursuing first professional degrees.
TABLE 2
UNDERGRADUATE ONCAMPUS ENROLLMENT BYTYPE OF PROGRAM
FALL 1972
InstitutionDegreePrograms
TerminalPrograms
TotalUndergraduate
FAMU 4,341 . . 4,341FAU 4,201 . 4,201FIU 4,807 4,807FSU 15,137 15,137.
FTU 5,928 5,923OF 18,480 18,480UNF 1,788 1,738USF 16,370 16,:'70
UWF 3,100 3,100
SUS Total 74,152 74,152
Public CC & JC 91,052 30,775 121,P9.7
Private BDGI 35,511 2,505 3'.,016Private JC 492 488 flA
Total 201,207 33,768 234,75
17
TABLE 3
FLORIDA AND NON-FLORIDA ON-,CAMPUS FTWLLMENT IN FLORIDA'SCOLLEGES AND 1INTITEESITTES
FALL 1972.
Institution Lion -- Florida Total Enrollment
FAMU 4,125 438 4,563FAU 4,977 704 5,681Fill 4,35? 828 5,130FSU 15,725 3,435 19,160FTU 6,557 295 6,852OF 21,731 1,840 23,570UNF 1,936 61 1,997USF 16,211 1,940 13,151UWF 3,301 258 3,559
SUS Total 78,914 9,799 88,713
Public CC & JC 114,669 7,158 121,827Private BDGI 23,626 18,966 42,592Private JC 276 704 980
Total 217,485 36,627 254,112
18
TABLE 4
FLORIDA AND NON-FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY LEVEL OF PROGRAM
FALL 1972
Institution
Undergraduate
Graduate
Florida
Enrollment
Non-
Florida
Enrollment
% Non-
Florida
Under-
graduate
Total
Florida
Enrollment
Non-
Florida
Enrollment
% Non-
Florida
Graduate
Total
FAMU
3,915
426
9.8
4,341
210
12
5.4
222
FAU
3,666
535
12.7
4,201
1,311
169
11.4
1,480
FIU
4,003
804
16.7
4,807
349
24
6.4
373
FSU
13,307
1,830
12.1
15,137
2,418
1,605
39.9
4,023
FTU
5,649
279
4.7
5,928
908
16
1.7
924
OF
17,476
1,004
5.4
18,480
4,254
836
16.4
5,090
UNF
1,732
56
3.1
1,788
204
52.4
209
USF
14,589
1,781
10.9
16,370
1,622
159
8.9
1,781
UWF
2,894
206
6.6
3,100
407
52
11.3
459
SUS Total
67,231
6,921
9.3
74,152
11,683
2,878
19.8
14,561
Pub. CC & JC
114,669
7,158
5.9
121,827
..
Private BDGI
19,954
18,062
47.5
38,016
3,672
904
19.8
4,576
Private JC
276
704
71.8
980
e
Total
202,130
32,845
14.0
234,975
15,355
3,782
19.8
19,137
TABLE 5
FLORIDA AND NON-FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION
FALL 1972
Institution
Florida
Students
% of
Florida
Students
% of
State
Total
Non-
Florida
Students
% of Non-
Florida
Students
% of
State
Total
Total
% of
State
Total
SUS
78,914
36.3
31.1
9,799
26.8
3.8
88,713
34.9
Pub. CC & JC
114,669
52.7
45.1
7,158
19.5
2.8
121,827
47.9
Private BDGI
23,626
10.9
9.3
18,966
51.8
7.5
42,592
16.8
Private JC
276
0.1
0.1
704
1.9
0.3
980
0.4
Total
217,485
100.0
,85.6
36,627
100.0
14.4
254,112
100.0
TABLE 6
ORIGIN OF TOTAL ONCAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY STATEOR OTHER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA AND TYPE OF
INSTITUTIONFALL 1972
State or OtherGeographical Area SUS
Pub.
CC & JCPriv.BDGI
Priv.JC Total
Alabama 315 155 212 41 723Alaska 7 5 13 25Arizona 18 9 22 11 60Arkansas 35 20 26 14 95California 142 95 207 31 475
Colorado 55 27 69 4 155Connecticut 142 129 921 23 1,215Delaware 29 37 80 7 153Dist. of Columbia 51 17 97 . ; 165Florida 78,914 114,669 23,626 276 217,485
Georgia 698 246 571 16 1,531Hawaii 10 6 10 , 26Idaho 10 9 5 2 26Illinois 307 236 780 28 1,351Indiana 139 212 226 36 613
Iowa 49 39 59 3 150Kansas 38 19 46 3 106Kentucky 97 61 123 33 314Louisiana 113 60 65 6 244Maine 22 26 89 3 140
Maryland 203 129 641 15 988Massachusetts 188 149 765 11 1,113Michigan 194 170 274 10 648Minnesota 68 37 85 2 192Mississippi 76 30 57 4 167
Missouri 95 61 141 16 313Montana 2 3 12 17Nebraska 21 11 26 58Nevada 4 6 6 16New Hampshire 24 26 71 121
New Jersey 459 530 2,562 61 3,612New Mexico 9 8 . 17 : 3. 35New York 825 910 3,648 76 5,459North Carolina 179 99 297 17 592North Dakota 6 3 6 15
21
TABLE 6 (continued)
State or OtherGeographical Area SUS
Pub.
CC & JCPriv.BDGI
Priv.
JC Total
OhioOklahomaOregonPennsylvaniaRhode Island
37230
23
46331
28418
6
341
32
787
47
18
1,590126
452
2
331
1,48897
49
2,427190
South Carolina 148 67 211 5 431South Dakota 5 3 12 20
Tennessee 175 72 155 25 427Texas 141 68 169 28 406Utah 10 4 3 1 18
Vermont 17 28 27 2 74
Virginia 317 182 633 18 1,150Washington 39 17 27 2 85
West Virginia 45 32 65 5 147Wisconsin 99 64 117 1 281Wyoming 3 5 14 22
U. S. Total 85,462 119,472 39,856 920 245,710
Canal Zone 12 9 26 6 53GuamPuerto Rico 37 41 109 11 198U. S. Virgin Islands 7 5 33 1 46
Other Countries 2,963 1,571 835 41 5,410Unclassified 232 729 1,733 1 2,695
Total 88,713 121,827 42,592 980 254,112
22
TABLE 7
ORIGIN OF FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY COUNTY ANDTYPE
OF INSTITUTION
FALL 1972
County
SUS
Pub.
CC & JC
Priv.
BDGI
Priv.
JC
Total
% of
Total
% of
Change*
Alachua
5,790
2,071
73
37,937
3.65
8.77
Baker
43
108
3154
.07
27.27
Bay
559
1,918
34
2,511
1.15
9.13
Bradford
122
279
6407
.19
19.70
Brevard
3,013
6,295
1,734
511,047
5.08
- 2.00
Broward
5,535
9,728
1,392
34
16,689
7.67
10.49
Calhoun
54
110
5169
.08
- 5.59
Charlotte
114
218
27
1360
.17
28.57
Citrus
100
155
16
1272
.12
7.94
ro t...)
Clay
345
596
142
..
1,083
.50
21.14
Collier
275
276
70
7628
.29
9.98
Columbia
215
643
32
890
.41
11.11
Dade
12,307.
24,917
7,866
10
45,100
20.74
1.06
DeSoto
65
113
12
1191
.09
- 3.04
Dixie
32
47
382
.04
-11.83
Duval
5,380
8,610
3,528
617,524
8.06
6.55
Escambia
2,612
4,441
78
17,132
3.28
7.18
Flagler
25
48
10
83
.04
18.57
Franklin
70
45
4119
.05
3.48
Gadsden
557
291
26
674
.40
14.25
011errist
33
60
22
97
.04
42.65
Glades
15
71
23
.01
-11.54
Gulf
65
134
1200
:09
- 5.21
Hamilton
46
86
5137
.06
0.00
Hardee
81
96
17
194
.09
- 7.18
TABLE 7 (continued)
County
SUS
Pub.
CC & JC
Priv.
BDGI
Priv.
JC
Total
% of
Total
of
Change*
Hendry
71
110
17
..
198
.09
27.74
Hernando
131
258
43
3435
.20
64.15
Highlands
201
250
33
2486
.22
- 7.95
Hillsborough
7,706
6,436
1,189
58
15,389
7.08
2.14
Holmes
58
135
5198
.09
-12.39
Indian River
233
584
64
1882
.41
12.07
Jackson
318
608
16
942
.43
-.95
Jefferson
142
72
8222
.10
- 4.31
Lafayette
21
30
51
.02
-34.62
Lake
513
997
160
21,672
.77
4.63
Lee
686
1,369
95
22,152
.99
-.37
Leon
4,454
2,064
45
..
6,563
3.02
4.96
Levy
103
116
31
223
.10
- 4.29
Liberty
32
38
171
.03
0.00
Madison
157
250
3410
.19
-.48
Manatee
642
1,419
79
42,144
.99
5.56
Marion
662
1,161
86
11;910
.88
4.71
Martin
230
376
51
1658
.30
24.86
Monroe
263
1,030
70
11,364
.63
- 2.15
Nassau
181
263
50
494
.23
18.46
C'kaloosa
920
2,324
32
13,277
1.51
4.96
Okeechobee
57
148
4.
.209
.10
39.33
Orange
5,944
5,338
2,582
12
13,876
6.38
6.14
Osceola
156
37
84
277
.13
4.14
Palm Beach
3,340
6,180
496
80
10,096
4.64
9.70
TABLE 7 (continued)
County
SUS
Pub.
,n
c a JC
vv
a
Pr1v.
BDGI
JC
Total
% of
Total
% of
Change*
Pasco
421
787
128
41,340
.62
61.44
P'110as
5,765
8,058
623
11
14,457
6.65
3.03
Polk
9;199
3,445
572
11
6,157
2.83
1.08
Putnam
289
535
56
880
.40
5.38
Saint Johns
281
311
103
..
695
.32
1.16
Saint Lucie
347
943
70
.1,360
.62
4.06
Santa Rosa
467
803
17
1,287
.59
11.72
Sarasota
988
1,562
157
52,712
1.25
3.00
Seminole
1,329
1,422
373
13,125
1.44
9.84
Sumter
93
264
16
373
.17
- 5.33
Suwannee
128
214
10
352
.16
- 6.38
Taylor
146
221
6373
.17
5.37
r..)
vi
Union
47
287
3.
337
.15
29.62
Volusia
1,362
2,416
935
24,715
2.17
1.07
Wakulla
45
48
..
194
.04
- 3.09
Walton
124
223
6353
.16
- 2.22
Washington
60
150
6216
.10
5.68
Unclassified
219
95
242**
1557
.26
264.05
Total
78,914
114,669
23,626
276
217,485
100.00
4.32
Comparison to County Enrollments 1971
**Unable to provide a further sub-classification of Florida enrollment, Florida Southern College
and Ringling School of Art have included respectively 90 and 140 students in this category
TABLE 8
PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL CN-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT IN EACH
TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1957-1972
Fall
of
State
University
System
Public
Comm. & Jr.
Colleges
Public
Institutions
Total
Private Baccalaureate
Degree-Granting
Institutions
Private
Junior
Colleges
Private
Institutions
Total
1957
43.0%
11.1%
54.1%
43.3%
2.7%
46.0%
1958
41.3
15.6
56.9
39.8
3.3
43.1
1959
39.5
18.3
57.8
38.7
3.5
42.2
1960
39.7
23.2
62.9
34.8
2.3
37.1
1961
37.3
28.2
65.5
32.2
2,3
34.5
1962
37.4
31.6
69.0
28.9
2.1
31.0
1963
32.7
37.7
70.4
26.5
3.0
29.5
1964
32.9
39.3
72.2
25.6
2.2
27.8
1965
31.8
42.4
74.2
23.5
2.3
25.8
1966
31.0
45.5
76.5
21.5
2.0
23.5
1967
31.5
45.7
77.2
20.7
2.1
22.8
1968
31.4
46.5
77.9
20.3
1.9
22.2
1969
32.0
47.0
79.0
19.4
1.6
21.0
1970
32.4
47.6
80.0
18.1
1.9
20.0
1971
32.2
49.3
81.5
17.7
.8
18.5
1972
34.9
48.0
82.9
16.7
.4
17.1
TABLE 9
PERCENTAGE OF FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT IN EACH
TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1957-1972
Fall
of
State
University
System
Public
Comm. & Jr.
Colleges
Public
Institutions
Total
Private Baccalaureate
Degree-Granting
Institutions
Private
Junior
Colleges
Private
Institutions
Total
1957
46.0%
13.3%
59.3%
37.9%
2.9%
40.8%
1958
43.3
18.6
61.9
34.6
3.5
33.1
1959
40.8
21.5
62.3
33.9
3.8
37.7
1960
41.5
27.4
68.9
28.8
2.3
31.1
1961
38.5
32.8
71.3
26.4
2.3
28.7
1962
38.7
36.2
74.9
23.0
2.1
25.1
1963
32.5
42.5
75.0
21.7
3.2
24.9
1964
32.8
44.1
76.9
20.9
2.2
23.1
1965
32.2
47.1
79.3
18.5
2.2
20.7
1966
32.2
49.9
82.1
15.9
1.9
17.8
1967
32.8
50.5
83.3
14.6
2.0
16.6
1968
32.8
51.2
84.0
14.3
1.7
16.0
1969
33.5
51.9
85.4
13.2
1.4
14.6
1970
33.8
52.2
86.0
12.4
1.6
14.0
1971
33.8
54.1
87.9
11.6
.5
12.1
1972
35.3
52.7
89.0
10.9
.1
11.0
TABLE 10
PERCENTAGE OF NON-FLORIDA TOTAL ON-CAMPUS
ENROLLMENT IN EACH
TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1957-1972
Fall
of
State
University
System
Public
Comm. & Jr.
Colleges
Public
Institutions
Total
Private Baccalaureate
Degree-Granting
Institutions
Private
Junior
Colleges
Private
Institutions
Total
1957
30.0%
1.6%
31.6%
66.4%
2.0%
68.4%
1958
31.5
2.0
33.5
64.1
2.4
66.5
1959
32.9
3.0
35.9
61.7
2.4
64.1
1960
31.3
2.9
34.2
63.5
2.3
65.8
1961
31.2
4.8
36.0
61.2
2.8
64.0
1962
32.3
6.9
39.2
58.8
2.0
60.3
1963
33.7
8.2
41.9
56.2
1.9
58.1
1964
33.9
8.4
42.3
55.4
2.4
57.8
1965
29.8
14.8
44.6
52.7
2.8
55.5
1966
24.2
21.1
45.3
52.3
2.3
54.6
1967
24.2
19.1
43.3
54.3
2.4
56.7
1968
23.1
19.1
42.2
54.6
3.1
57.7
1969
23.5
19.4
42.9
54.2
2.9
57.1
1970
23.7
19.4
43.1
53.0
3.9
56.9
1971
22.3
21.1
43.4
53.9
2.7
55.6
1972
26.8
19.5
46.3
51.8
1.9
53.7
TABLE 11
FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1957-1972
Fall of
SUS
Public CC & JC
Priv. BDGI
Priv. JC
All lusts.
Enrol.
XEnrol.
7*
Enrol.
7*
Enrol.
%*
Enrol.
7*
1957
18,368
86.9
6,021
97.3
15,427
71.1
1,205
85.9
41,021
81.2
1958
19,512
86.5
9,416
97.7
15,835
71.5
1,615
87.1
46,378
82.3
1959
20,288
85.6
10,696
9/.2
16,843
72.4
1,887
88.5
49,714
82.7
1960
23,356
86.3
15,443
97.8
16,247
68.4
1,293
82.4
56,339
82.6
1961
25,210
86.3
21,498
97.2
17,310
68.8
1,477
80.5
65,495
83.6
1962
26,326
85.8
28,444
96.9
18,052
69.5
1,646
85.6
74,468
84.7
1963
28,546
85.6
37,329
97.0
19,077
70.5
2,812
91.3
87,764
86.0
1964
33,146
86.1
44,631
97.1
21,166
70.8
2,181
85.3
101,124
86.5
1965
37,862
81.6
55,455
94.9
21,741
67.3
2,570
82.3
117,628
85.4
1966
42,560
87.9
65,795
92.8
21,075
62.7
2,499
82.0
131,929
84.6
1967
47,727
88.2
73,541
93.6
21,277
59.7
2,940
81.9
145,485
84.6
1968
53,868
89.0
84,160
93.9
23,467
59.9
2,733
75.2
164,228
85.1
1969
60,333
89.0
93,393
93.8
23,804
58.1
2,460
72.5
179,990
85.0
1970
65,944
89.7
101,633
94.2
24,177
58.9
3,004
70.9
194,758
85.9
1971
70,520
90.9
112,712
93.8
24,160
56.0
1,095
53.8
208,487
85.5
1972.
78,914
C9.0
114,669
94.1
23,626
55.5
276
28.2
217,485
85.6
Florida enrollment expressed as a
percent of total on-campus enrollment.
TABLE 12
NON-FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1957-1972
Fall of
SUS
Public CC & JC
Priv. BDGI
Priv. JC
All Insts.
Enrol.
%*
Enrol.
%*
Enrol.
%W
:Enrol.
%*
Enrol.
%*
1957
2,778
13.1
148
2.7
6,150
28.9
189
14.1
9,265
18.8
1958
3,057
13.5
198
2.3
6,217
28.5
232
12.9
9,704
17.7
1959
3,425
14.4
312
2.8
6,424
27.6
246
11-5
10,407
17.3
1960
3,697
13.7
347
2.2
7,513
31.6
276
17.6
11,833
17.4
1961
4,009
13.7
618
2.8
7,848
31.2
358
19.5
12,833
16.4
1962
4,349
14.2
912
3.1
7,918
30.5
276
14.4
13,455
15.3
1963
4,802
14.4
1,162
3.0
7,997
29.5
268
8.7
14,229
14.0
1964
5,332
13.9
1,318
2.9
8,714
29.2
377
14.7
15,741
13.5
1965
5,984
13.6
2,971
5.1
10,587
32.7
554
17.7
20,096
14.6
1966
5,812
12.0
5,055
7.1
12,537
37.2
546
17.9
23,950
15.3
1967
6,392
11.8
5,056
6.4
14,365
40.3
650
18.1
26,463
15.4
1968
6,647
11.0
5,501
6.1
15,722
40.1
901
24.8
28,771
14.9
1969
7,461
11.0
6,146
6.2
17,182
41.9
933
27.5
31,722
15.0
1970
7,544
10.3
6,201
5.8
16,903
41.1
1,235
29.1
31,883
14.1
1971
7,876
10.0
7,437
6.2
19,005
44.0
941
46.2
35,259
14.5
1972
9,799
11.0
7,158
5.9
18,966
44.5
704
71.8
36,627
14.4
Non-Florida enrollment expressed as a percent of totalon-campus enrollment.
TABLE 13
PERCENTAGE OF MALE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT TO TOTAL ENROLLMENT
BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1962-1972
Institution
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
SUS
60.8
60.4
60.2
60.2
60.0
58.4
59.2
58.8
59.4
59.5
58.7
Public CC & JC
59.0
56.2
59.8
60.8
60.3
60.8
60.1
59.5
58.8
57.6
55.6
Private BDGI
59.8
60.3
59.1
57.7
60.0
63.3
62.3
62.3
62.4
63.7
64.3
Private JC
65.7
63.3
58.7
57.5
55.0
57.6
58.8
63.7
72.3
66.0
40.4
Total Yearly Average
60.0
58.9
59.7
59.8
60.0
60.5
60.3
59.9
59.9
59.4
58.1
TABLE 14
TOTAL MALE ENROLLMENT AND FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE MALE ENROLLMENT
IN FLORIDA'S COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
FALL 1972
Institution
Total
Male
Enrol.
% of
Total
Enrol.
Total
Enrol.
First-Time
Male
Enrol.
% of Total
First-Time
Enrol.
Total
First-Time
Enrol.
FAMU
2,341
51.3
4,563
510
51.9
982
FAU
3,356
59.1
5,681
FIU
2,858
55.2
5,180
FSU
10,205
53.3
19,160
936
43.5
2,152
FTU
4,246
62.0
6,852
472
56.8
831
OF
15,118
64.1
23,570
1,600
59.1
2,709
UNF
1,197
59.9
1,997
co
USF
10,528
58.0
18,151
1,391
52.1
2,670
tVUWF
2,237
62.9
3,559
SUS Total
52,086
58.7
88,713
4,909
52.5
9,344
Public CC & JC
67,687
55.6
121,827
23,361
53.7
43,476
Private BDGI
27,367
64.3
42,592
56,344
63.9
8,822
.Private JC
396
40.4
980
184
37.4
492
Total
147,536
58.1
254,112
34,088
54.9
62,134
9t
CHAPTER III
ENROLLMENT BY INSTITUTIONS
CHAPTER III
ENROLLMENT BY INSTITUTIONS
Individual institution enrollment and institutional enrollment
characteristics are the subjects of the tables contained in Chapter III.
Miami-Dade Junior College heads the list, sorted according to total on-
campus enrollment, of institutions which recorded more than 2,500 on-
campus students (Table 15). This year marked the seventh consecutive
year that Miami-Dade Junior College has enrolled more students than any
other Florida institution of higher learning. The only addition to the
list this year was Florida International University, which opened for
classes initially in the Fall, 1972. Last year's rank appears in
parenthesis to the right of the name of each school. Table 16 ranks
the nine state universities, the 28 public community and junior colleges,
thi! 22 private baccalaureate degree-granting institutions, and,the three
private junior colleges by size of enrollment.
Tables 17, 18, and 19 offer another look at male-female enrollment.
Table 17 reports both male and female enrollment for total, FTIC and
terminal program enrollment for each school. Terminal enrollment means
a college-grade enrollment in a terminal or technical program consisting
of curriculums of at least one year but fewer than four years. On-campus,
FTIC, and terminal program enrollment by sex account for a portion of the
categorization of Tables 18 and 19. A further division of these groups by
type of institution produces the remaining sub-classification of students
for the two tables. Table 19 provides the percentages corresponding to
the numbers appearing in Table 18.
34
Table 20 associates each institution with its Florida, other states,
other countries, total, and percentage of non-Florida enrollment. Once
again this year, New College, a PBDGI, had a larger percentage (90.4 per cent)
of non-Florida students than any other school in the state. Conversely,
the school with the smallest percentage (0.6 per cent) of non-Florida
students was also a PBDGI, Jones College at Orlando.
Alternate year enrollment, contained in Table 21, indicates recent
enrollment trends at every reporting institution. Florida on-campus
enrollment by county for the individual SUS schools (Table 23) follows
SUS enrollment data by state (Table 22). A brief historical glance at
Florida and non-Florida enrollment for the SUS institutions appears in
Table 24 and Table 25. SUS enrollment figures for the past nine years
and the percentages which correspond to those numbers form the data for
Tables 26 and 27, the concluding tables of Chapter III.
35
TABLE 15
INSTITUTIONS ENROLLING MORE THAN 2,500 ON-CAMPUS STUDENTSBY RANK
FALL 1972
Rank Institution Rank Last Year Enrollment
1 Miami-Dade Junior. College ( 1) 28,0252 University of Florida ( 2) 23,5703 Florida State University ( 3) 19,1604 University of South Florida ( 4) 18,1515 University of Miami ( 5) 14,465
6 St. Petersburg Junior College ( 6) 9,204.
7 Florida Junior College at Jacksonville ( 7) 9,1948 Broward Community College ( 8) 9,0419 Florida Technological University (10) 6,85210 Palm Beach Junior College (11) 6,740
11 Brevard Community College ( 9) 6,46512 Hillsborough Community College (14) 6,C6213 Pensacola Junior College (13) 5,7C0
.14 Florida Atlantic University (12) 5,68115 Florida International University ( *) 5,180
16 Florida A & M University (15) 4,56316 Santa Fe Junior College (16) 4,56318 Valencia Community College (17) 4,31219 Rollins College (18) 3,72420 University of West Florida (21) 3,559
21 Polk Community College (19) 3,50422 Manatee Junior College (22) 3,12523 Stetson University (23) 2,78424 Tallahassee Community College (25) 2,75125 Daytona Beach Community College (24) 2,62126 Jacksonville University (20) 2,584
*Did not have an enrollment of more than 2,500 on-campus studentslast year.
36
TABLE 16
FLORIDA INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING BY SIZE 'OF ENROLLMENTFALL 1972
;0
EnrollmentPub. Priv. Priv.
SUS CC & JC BDGI JC. Total
499 or under
500-999
1,000-1,999
2,000-2,999
3,000-3,999
4,000-4,999
5,000-5,999
6,000-6,999
7,000-7,999
8,000-8,999
9,000-9,999
10,000-11,999
12,000-13,999
14,000-15,999
16,000-17,999
18,000-19,999
20,000 or more
. .
1
1
2
1
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
2
1
.
.
.
.
1
2
7
6
2
2
1
3
.
.
3
.
.
1
.
.
3
7
6
4
1
1
.
.
.
3
.
.
.
.
0
7
9
14
10
4
3
3
4
.
3
1
2
2
Total9 28 22 62
37
TABLE 17
ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT IN FLORIDA COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES BY INSTITUTION,
TYPE OF ENROLLMENT, AND SEX
FALL 1972
Institution
On-Campus
Enrollment
First-Time
Students
Terminal
Students
MF
TM
FT
MF
T
State University System
FAMU
2,341
2,222
4,563
510
472
982
..
..
FAU
3,356
2,325
5,681
..
..
.FIU
2,858
2,322
5,180
..
FSU
10,205
8,955
19,160
936
1,216
2,152
..
..
FTU
4,246
2,606
6,852
472
359
831
..
..
..
OF
15,118
8,452
23,570
1,600
1,109
2,709
..
..
..
UNF
1,197
800
1,997
..
..
..
USF
10,528
7,623
18,151
1,391
1,279
2,670
..
..
U1417
2,237
1,322
3,559
..
.
Public Community and Junior
Colleges
Brevard CC
3,886
2,579
6,465
1,705
1,199
2,904
1,870
966
2,836
Broward CC
5,258
3,783
9,041
2,290
1,639
3,929
1,482
1,313
2,795
Central Florida CC
796
636
1,432
331
241
572
226
196
422
Chipola JC
595
507
1,102
195
165
360
60
96
156
Daytona Beach CC
1,520
1,101
2,621
724
549
1,273
394
275
669
Edison CC
1,003
895
1,898
390
345
735
275
312
587
Fla. JC at Jacksonville
5,284
3,910
9,194
1,483
1,255
2,738
916
966
1,882
Florida Keys CC
574
446
1,020
175
154
329
224
155
379
Gulf Coast CC
1,304
944
2,248
428
268
696
419
408
827
Hillsborough CC
3,378
2,684
6,062
1,390
1,236
2,626
780
998
1,778
TABLE 17 (continued)
Institution
On-Campus
Enrollment
First-Time
Students
Terminal
Students
FF
F
Indian River CC
1,039
1,094
2,133
542
608
1,150
380
484
864
Lake City CC
1,092
515
1,607
380
181
561
336
177
513
Lake-Sumter CC
752
493
1,245
260
172
432
52
51
103
Manatee JC
1,733
1,392
3,125
865
717
1,582
251
368
619
Miami-Dade JC
15,088
12,937 28,025
3,982
3,621
7,603
3,299
3,345
6,644
North Florida JC
453
498
951
158
185
343
11
17
28
Okaloosa-Walton JC
1,448
843
2,291
410
289
699
218
100
318
Palm Beach JC
3,449
3,291
6,740
873
985
1,858
832
1,155
1,987
Pasco-Hernando CC
328
382
710
185
228
413
171
165
336
Pensacola JC
3,307
2,393
5,700
1,323
1,049
2,372
519
497
1,016
Polk CC
1,694
1,810
3,504
576
661
1,237
389
634
1,023
St. Johns River JC
601
450
1,051
230
167
397
178
128
306
St. Petersburg JC
4,929
4,275
9,204
1,689
1,759
3,448
924
1,063
1,987
Santa Fe JC
2,346
2,217
4,563
1,028
926
1,954
350
435
785
Seminole JC
1,566
850
2,416
487
282
769
231
88
319
South Florida JC
277
139
416
140
67
207
34
23
57
Tallahassee CC
1,468
1,283
2,751
353
408
761
193
238
431
Valencia CC
2,519
1,793
4,312
769
759
1,528
544
564
1,108
Private Baccalaureate Degree-Granting Institutions
Barry College
268
1,119
1,387
185
185
Bethune -Cookman C
560
656
1,216
184
189
373
..
Biscayne C
613
345
958
154
..
154
..
Eckerd C
485
510
995
118
103
221
..
Edward Waters C
286
350
636
67
88
155
..
Embry- Riddle Aero. Univ.
1,591
13
1,604
293
4297
95
196
TABLE 17 (continued)
Institution
On-Campus
Enrollment
First-Time
Students
Terminal
Students
MF
TM
FT
MF
T
Fla. Inst. of Technology
2,138
208
2,346
890
89
979
2,138
208
2,346
Florida Memorial C
334
431
765
104
137
241
..
Florida Southern C
684
757
1;441
222
242
464
..
Jacksonville U
1,532
1,052
2,584
391
207
598
Jones C (Jacksonville)
1,298
155
1,453
308
89
397
Jones C (Orlando)
771
57
828
68
10
78
..
New College
325
288
613
107
113
220
Nova University
85
76
161
..
..
.Ringling School of Art
213
226
439
104
124
228
..
..
..
Rollins College
2,210
1,514
3,724
230
247
477
Saint Leo C
750
391
1,141
249
115
364
16
16
St. Vincent de Paul
62
62
23
23
South-Eastern Bible C
413
311
724
110
117
227
20
424
Stetson U
1,750
1,034
2,784
228
197
425
..
University of Miami
9,360
5,105
14,465
1,410
743
2,153
University of Tampa
1,639
627
2,266
397
189
586
..
Private Junior Colleges
Florida College
219
209
428
120
125
245
..
..
Marymount College
167
240
407
60
112
172
133
212
345
Webber College
10
135
145
471
75
9134
143
TABLE 18
TOTAL ENROLLMENT, FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENT AND TERMINAL ENROLLMENT
BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION AND SEX
FALL 1972
On-Campus
First-Time
Terminal
Institution
Enrollment
Students
Students
MF
TM
FT
MF
SUS
52,086
36,627
88,713
4,909
4,435
9,344
..
Public CC & JC
67,687
54,140
121,827
23,361
20,115
43,476
15,558
15,217
30,775
Private BDGI
27,367
15,225
42,592
5,634
3,188
8,822
2,276
229
2,505
Private JC
396
584
980
184
308
492
142
346
488
'Grand Total
147,536
106,576
254,112
34,088
28,046
62,134
17,976
15,792
33,768
TABLE 19
PERCENTAGE OF ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT IN FLORIDA COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
BY INSTITUTION, TYPE OF ENROLLMENT, AND SEX
FALL 1972
Institution
On-Campus
Enrollment
First-Time
Students
Terminal
Students
FT
MF
TM
F
SUS
20.50
14.41
34.91
7.90
7.14
15.04
..
Public CC & JC
26.64
21.31
47.94
37.60
32.37
69.97
46.07
45.06
91.14
Private BDGI
10.77
5.99
16.76
9.07
5.13
14.20
6.74
0.68
7.42
Private JC
01 5
0.23
0.39
0.29
0.50
0.79
0.42
1.03
1.44
Grand Total
58.06
41.94
100.00
54.86
45.14
100.00
53.23
46.77
100.00
% of Total Enrollment
58.06
41.94
100.00
13.41
11.04
24.45
7.07
6.22
13.29
TABLE 20
ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENTS FROM FLORIDA, OTHER STATES ANDCOUNTRIES BY INSTITUTION
FALL 1972
Institution FloridaOtherStates
OtherCountries Total Non-Fla.
State University SystemFAMU 4,125 367 71 4,563 9.60FAUFIU
4,977
4,352
444186
260642
5,6815,180
12.3915.98
FSU 15,725 2,900 535 19,160 17.93FTU 6,557 116 179 6,852 4.30
OF 21,730 1,274 566 23,570 7.81UNF 1,936 26 35 1,997 3.06USF 16,211 1,216 724 18,151 10.69UWF 3,301 251 7 3,559 7.25
Public Community and Junior Colleges
Brevard CC 6,181 269 15 6,465 4.39Broward CC 8,406 553 82 9,041 7.02Central Florida CC 1,352 67 13 1,432 5.59Chipola JC 1,044 56 2 1,102 5.26Daytona Beach. CC 2,416 186 19 2,621 7.82
Edison CC 1,751 138 9 1,898 7.74Fla. JC at Jacksonville 8,822 322 50 9,194 4.05Florida Keys CC 958 48 14 1,020 6.08Gulf Coast CC 2,116 121 11 2,248 5.87Hillsborough CC 5,792 270 6,062 4.45
Indian River CC 1,982 115 36 2,133 7.08Lake City CC 1,469 129 9 1,607 8.59Lake-Sumter CC 1,200 36 9 1,245 3.61Manatee JC 2,931 189 5 3,125 6.21Miami- -Dade JC 25,846 1,114 1,065 28,025 7.78
North Florida JC 868 79 4 951 8.73Okaloosa-Walton JCPalm Beach JCPasco-Hernando CC
2,2756,374
702
16
3288
382,2916,740
710
.70
5.431.13
Pensacola JC 5,517 161 22 5,700 3.21
Polk CC 3,417 87 . 3,504 2.48St. Johns River JC 993 38 20 1,051 5.52St. Petersburg JC 8,768 402 34 9,204 4.74
42
TABLE 20 (continued)
Institution FloridaOtherStates
OtherCountries Total Non-Fla.
Santa Fe JC 3,889 552 122 4,563 14.77Seminole JC 2,331 74 11 2,416 3.52South Florida JC 407 8 1 416 2.16Tallahassee CC 2,635 88 28 2,751 4.22Valencia CC 4,227 78 7 4,312 1.97
Private Baccalaureate Degree-Granting InstitutionsBarry College 1,063 265 59 1,387 23.36Bethune-Cookman C 990 200 26 1,216 18.59Biscayne C 723 213 22 958 24.53Eckerd C 393 584 . 18 995 60.50Edward Waters C 598 36 2 636 5.98
Embry-Riddle Aero. Univ. 185 1,329 90 1,604 88.47Fla. Inst. of Technology 807 1,495 44 2,346 65.60Florida Memorial C 651 42 72 765 14.90Florida Southern C 871 531 39 1,441 39.56Jacksonville U 1,609 928 47 2,584 37.73
Jones C (Jacksonville) 1,349 92 12 1,453 7.16Jones C (Orlando) 823 3 2 828 .60
New College 59 540 14 613 90.38Nova U 133 23 5 161 17.39Ringling School of Art 140 286 13 439 68.11
Rollins C 2,890 797 37 3,724 22.40Saint Leo C 290 803 48 1,141 74.58St. Vincent de Paul 43 12 7 62 30.64South-Eastern Bible C 289 430 5 724 60.08Stetson U 2,071 672 41 2,784 25.61
U of Miami 6,501 7,619 345 14,465 55.06U of Tampa 1,148 1,063 55 2,266 49.34
Private Junior CollegesFlorida C 112 310 6 428 73.83Marymount C 119 245 43 407 70.76Webber C 45 90 10 145 68.97
43
TABLE 21
TOTAL ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENTS BY INSTITUTIONALTERNATE YEARS 1962-1972
Institution 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972
State University SystemFAMU 2,794 3,265 3,482 3,956 4,456 4,563FAU 867 3,482 4,338 5,249 5,681FIU
. . 5,180FSU 10,391 12,135 14,319 16,303 16,941 19,160FTU
. . 1,492 4,738 6,852
OF 13,826 15,701 18,039 19,848 22,255 23,570UNF 1,997USF 3,664 6,498 9,050 12,334 16,644 18,151UWF
. . 2,244 3,206 3,559
Public Community and Junior CollegesBrevard CC 1,747 2,583 4,335 5,006 6,141 6,465Broward CC 1,939 2,987 4,961 4,877 7,077 9,041Central Florida CC 691 1,096 1,411 1,199 1,491 1,432Chipola JC 726 944 1,252 1,236 1,152 1,102Daytona Beach CC 1,256 1,587 2,321 2,338 2,478 2,621
Edison CC 498 940 1,197 1,194 1,427 1,898Florida JC at Jacksonville
2,579 5,410 6,660 9,194Florida Keys CC
609 691 969 1,020Gulf Coast CC 722 1,028 1,576 1,971 2,011 2,248Hillsborough CC
1,625 3,947 6,062
Indian River CC 431 682 971 1,217 1,676 2,133Lake City CC 375' 679 1,084 1,154 1,312 1,607Lake-Sumter CC 280 576 854 1,030 1,174 1,245Manatee JC 1,256 1,744 2,203 2,375 2,485 3,125Miami-Dade JC 5,736 10,822 18,531 24,098 24,950 28,025
North Florida JC706 1,114 1,126 1,208 951
Okaloosa-Walton JC 422 616 1,184 1,940 2,178 2,291Palm Beach JC 2,676 3,623 4,691 5,279 5,494 6,740Pasco-Hrnando CC
710Pensacola JC 2,860
.
3,435 4,418 4,595 5,412 5,700
Polk CC1,067 2,256 2,963 3,476 3,504
St. Johns River JC 697 1,665 2,024 1,266 1,181 1,051St. Petersburg JC 4,663 5,978 8,467 9,371 9,628 9,204
44
TABLE 21 (continued)
Institution 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972
Santa Fe JC 1,099 2,084 3,295 4,563Seminole JC 745 1,765 2,256 2,416South Florida JC 283 386 440 416Tallahassee CC . 698 1,704 2,100 2,751Valencia CC 1,761 3,216 4,312
Private Baccalaureate De ree-Orantin InstitutionsBarry C 818 1,006 1,144 1,224 1,260 1,387Bethune-Cookman C 720 867 1,078 960 1,065 1,216
Biscayne C 128 339 352 420 958Eckerd C (formerly Florida
PreSbyterian C) 459 681 811 957 1,050 995
Edward Waters C 798 841 967 1,014 915 636
Embry-Riddle Aero. Univ. 204 159 758 800 1,560 1,604Fla. Inst. of Technology 695 853 1,541 1,929 1,971 2,346Florida Memorial C 341 327 480 756 756 765
Florida Southern C 2,031 1,765 1,650 1,695 1,344 1,441
Jacksonville U 2,105 2,311 2,627 2,915 3,137 2,584
Jones College*Jacksonville Div.** . 652 735 1,453
Orlando Div.** 256 241 . 828
New College 101 240 351 509 613Nova U 19 62 161
Ringling School of Art 351 360 457 430 439
Rollins C *** 2,013 2,838 2,887 3,549 3,443 3,724Saint Joseph C 268Saint Leo C 560 1,108 1,220 1,171 1,141
St. Vincent de Paul 39 74 84 74 62
South-Eastern Bible C 310 456 594 592 724
Stetson U 2,096 2,225 2,420 2,405 2,862 ;2,784
U of Miami 12,053 11,763 11,465 15,149 16,035 14,465U of Tampa 1,979 . 2,671 2,224 2,403 2,424 2,266Webber C1 94 87 96 88
45
TABLE 21 (continued)
Institution 1962 1964 1966 1963 1970 1972
Private Junior CollegesThe College of Orlando## 1,331 1,949 2,361 1,285 496Florida Collee 268 346 370 402 443 428Jones College
Jacksonville Div.** 1,036 1,60Orlando Div.** 422 906
Marymount C 229 314 489 393 407Saint Joseph ** 9 314 . .
Saint Leo C 323 . .
Webber C# 79 145
Jones College shifted from PBDGI to Private JC in 1967.**Prior to 1971, Jones College, Jacksonville was a two year institutionand prior to 1972, Jones College, Orlando was a two year institution.
* * *St. Joseph College shifted from PBDGI to Private JC in 1970 andclosed after the 1971-72 school year.
Webber College shifted from PBDGI tn Private JC in 1970.##The College of Orlando closed after the 1970-71 school year.
46
TABLE 22
ORIGIN OF STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT
BY STATE OR OTHER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
FALL 1972
State or Other
Geographical Area
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UNF
Total
Alabama
26
7184
.38
28
32
315
Alaska
2.
1.
.3
17
Arizona
.6
37
218
Arkansas
3.
.16
19
.1
535
California
510
-.
65-
118
127
15
142
Colorado
418
14
19
72
55
Connecticut
15
..
53
329
39
3142
Delaware
2.
14
67
29
Dist. of Columbia
15
112
.12
11
.51
Fl-orida
4,125.
4,977
4,352
15,725
6,557
21,730
1,936
16,211
3,301
78,914
Georgia
52
6416
1132
380
8698
Hawaii
..
63
110
Idaho
11
41
.3
..
10
Illinois
17
28
.136
555
..
55
11
307
Indiana
315
59
31
28
3139
Iowa
.1
34
.3
83
49
Kansas
51
11
811
238
Kentucky
32
55
19
114
397
Louisiana
52
55
228
-.
.18
3113
Maine
..
2.
9.
5.
6.
.22
TABLE
22 (continued)
State of Other
Geographical Area
FAMU
FAIJ
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
Maryland
922
.82
248
37
3203
Massachusetts
862
237
72
7188
Michigan
13
25
.77
122
245
9194
Minnesota
332
18
117
668
Mississippi
..
.53
116
24
76
Missouri
Montana
52
.32
213 1
2
.
36 1
395 2
Nebraska
..
10
..
45
221
Nevada
44
New Hampshire
112
12
.6
224
New Jersey
27
66
3154
6113
277
11
459
New Mexico
..
6.
39
New York
43
99
6290
21
164
4168
30
825
North Carolina
68
119
331
93
179
North Dakota
32
16
Ohio
733
1134
677
191
22
372
Oklahoma
52
..
13
72
130
Oregon
..
.15
15
223
Pennsylvania
51
41
6148
395
5100
14
463
Rhode Island
47
611
331
South Carolina
20
69
.36
19
4148
South Dakota
21
25
Tennessee
47
.89
.41
126
7175
Texas
26
66
28
129
9141
Utah
..
.7
.1
.1
110
TABLE 22 (continued)
State or Other
Geographical Area
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
Vermont
2.
51
2.
717
Virginia
13
10
169
180
43
1317
Washington
..
122
.4
93
39
West Virginia
1.
28
10
.6
.45
Wisconsin
44
41
417
.25
499
Wyoming
21
3
U. S. Total
4,492
5,413
4,369
18,625
6,626
23,004
1,960
17,427
3,546
85,462
Canal Zone
1.
9.
2.
..
12
Guam.
.
-F-
Puerto Rico
2.
18
16
.1
37
.0U. S. Virgin Islands
51
1.
7
Other Countries
63
260
642
507
179
547
35
724
62,963
Unclassified
8169
47
26
232
Total
4,563
5,681
5,180
19,160
6,852
23,570
1,997
18,151
3,559
88,713
TABLE 23
ORIGIN OF STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT
BY COUNTY
FALL
1972
County
FANU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
1JNF
USF
UWF
Total
% of
Total
Alachua
51
811
175
95,406
12
108
10
5,790
7.34
Baker
17
20
92
443
.05
Bay
30
4.
252
2128
21
122
559
.71
Bradford
76
12
.78
413
2122
.15
Brevard
47
95
3582
1,019
822
426
19
3,013
3.82
Broward
165
1,951
230
948
29
1,608
1587
16
5,535
7.01
Calhoun
10
23
14
25
54
.07
Charlotte
28
30
343
27
1114
.14
u, o
Citrus
Clay
5 93
..
3476
2 338
150
87
18 13
3 4100
345
.13
.44
Collier
19
23
587
461
73
3275
.35
Columbia
21
3.
.50
114
65
16
215
.27
Dade
314
898
3,963
2,198
21
3,565
31,302
43
12,307
15.60
DeSoto
26
126
28
265
.08
Dixie
33
25
132
.04
Duval
353
31
71,306
31
1,539
1,671
396
46
5,380
6.82
Escambia
112
91
305
4269
241
1,869
2,612
3.31
Flagler
1.
.5
98
225
.03
Franklin
23
..
.31
13
370
.09
Gadsden
268
1.
221
336
115
12
557
.71
Gilchrist
15
24
21
33
.04
Glades
12
13
53
15
.02
TABLE 23
(continued)
Gounty
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
% of
Total
Gulf
14
28
10
.1
12
65
.08
Hamilton
19
14
18
.4
46
.06
Hardee
62
11
118
43
81
.10
Hendry
87
112
4,28
11
..
71
.09
Hernando
62
20
433
64
2131
.17
Highlands
13
14
.46
11
68
40
9201
.26
Hillsborough
244
23
7597
7868
15,944
15
7,706
9.76
Holmes
1.
18
15
222
58
.07
Indian River
13
32
51
11
87
35
4233
.30
Jackson
56
3126
51
973
318
.40
Jefferson
50
72
17
3142
.18
Lafayette
14
61
21
.03
Lake
58
91
144
90
145
357
6513
.65
Lee
23
64
6165
5200
204
19
686
.87
Leon
1,094
66
3,154
2109
171
11
4,454
5.64
Levy
6...
123
168
31
103
.13
Liberty
322
61
32
.04
Madison
63
260
..
25
15
1157
.20
Manatee
32
15
.133
2143
306
11
642
.81
Marion
75
8.
.134
19
350
544
27
662
.84
Martin
10
63
136
172
146
..
230
.29
Monroe
631
18
85
368
246
263
.33
Nassau
11
11
44
274
37
92
181
.23
Okaloosa
92
..
358
2174
131
343
920
1.17
Okeechobee
18
12
22
32
57
.07
TABLE 23
(continued)
County
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
% of
Total
Orange
Osceola
Palm Beach
Pasco
Pinellas
Polk
Putnam
Saint Johns
Saint Lucie
Santa Rosa
Sarasota
Seminole
Sumter
Suwannee
Taylor
Union
Volusia
Wakulla
Walton
Washington
Unclas'sified
Total
173 1
134
21
92
165
16
24
6812
18 9
15'
19
18 1
41
10
18 5
..
26 1
1,361 5
60
27 8 3
63
15 7 1 1
52 1 1
6
11 1 9
..
..
.. 5 1 2
55
75621
575
36
972
451
638260
59
272
134
14 45
82 6
27733
4516
3,647
85 35 3
34
83 3 6 6 .
11
900 8 1 1
356
70
88430
94968
1,083
502
167
112
133 32
285
189
29
52
41
32
446 2
12 15
4 1 1 2 1
17
41 1 1 8 1 1 3 6
43217
269
285
3,470
887 14
10
15 2
374
74
26 4 1 2
173 1
93
16
.. 5 2
43
13 1 3 1
361 8 7 6 2 2 9
..
48
23
5,944
156
3,340
421
5,765
2,129
289
281
347
467
988
1,329 93
128
146
47
1,362
45
124
60
219
7.53
.20
4.23
.53
7.30
2.70
.37
.36
.44
.59
1.25
1.68
.12
.16
.18
.06
1.73
.06
.16
.08
.28
4,125
4,977
4,352
15,725
6,557
21,730
1,936
16,211
3,301
78,914
100.00
TABLE 24
FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT IN THE STATE UNIVERSITIES
1964-1972
Fall of:
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
FAMU
Enrol.
2,996
3,248
3,100
3,338
3,484
3,731
4,006
4,071
4,125
91.8
90.5
89.0
88.2
88.1
87.6
89.9
91.9
90.4
FAU
Enrol.
844
2,301
3,350
3,954
3,999
4,566
4,674
5,048
4,977
97.3
96.2
96.2
95.4
92.2
90.3
89.0
88.1
87.6
Enrol.
FIU
..
.-
4,352
..
..
..
.84.0
FSU
Enrol.
9,750
10,575
11,567
12,129
13,317
14,008
14,311
15,121
15,725
80.3
80.1
80.8
79.8
81.7
82.4
84.5
82.8'
82.1
Enrol.
FTU
..
..
1,456
3,462
4,689
5,917
6,557
..
.97.6
96.0
99.0
97.5
95.7
OF
Enrol.
13,292
14,242
15,897
17,050
17,980
18,915
20,162
21,718
21,730
84.7
84.4
88.1
89.7
90.6
91.1
90.6
92.4
92.2
Enrol.
UNF
..
1,936
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
97.0
USF
Enrol.
6,264
7,496
8,646
10,040
11,519
13,022
15,103
15,868
16,211
%96.4
96.2
95.5
94.1
93.4
91.3
90.7
91.0
89.3
Enrol.
UWF
1,216
2,113
2,629
2,999
2,777
3,301
..
92.3
94.2
93.1
93.5
93.1
92.8
TABLE 25
NON-FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT IN THE STATE UNIVERSITIES
1964-1972
Fall of:
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
FAMD
Enrol.
269
340
382
445
472
529
450
358
438
8.2
9.5
11.0
11.8
11.9
12.4
10.1
8.1
9.6
FAU
Enrol.
23
91
132
190
339
491
575
684
704
2.7
3.8
3.8
4.6
7.8
9.7
11.0
11.9
12.4
Enrol.
FIU
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
828
--
16.0
Enrol.
FSU
2,397
2,695
2,752
3,073
2,987
3,002
2,630
3,138
3,435
19.7
19.9
19.2
20.2
18.3
17.7
15.5
17.2
17.9
Enrol.
FTU
..
36
146
49
151
295
..
..
..
..
2.4
4.1
1.0
2.5
4.3
OF
Enrol.
2,409
2,632
2,142
1,954
1,868
1,854
2,093
1,778
1,840
15.3
15.6
11.9
11.3
9.4
8.9
9.4
7.6
7.8
Enrol.
UNF
..
..
.;
..
..
..
61
..
3.0
USF
Enrol.
234
296
404
628
815
1,243
1,540
1,560
1,940
3.6
3.8
4.5
5.9
6.6
8.7
9.3
9.0
10.7
Enrol.
UWF
..
..
..
102
131
196
207
207
258
..
..
'
..
7.7
5.8
6.9
6.5
6.9
7.2
TABLE 26
ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENTS BY INSTITUTION
STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM
1964-1972
Institution
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
FANU
3,265
3,588
3,482
3,783
3,956
4,260
4,456
4,429
4,563
FAU
867
2,392
3,482
4,144
4,338
5,057
5,249
5,732
5,681
FIU
..
..
..
5,180
FSU
12,135
13,200
14,319
15,202
16,303
17,010
16,941
18,259
19,160
FTU
1,492
3,608
4,738
6,068
6,852
UF
15,701
16,874
18,039
19,004
19,848
20,769
22,255
23,496
23,570
UNF
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
1,997
USF
6,498
7,795
9,050
10,668
12,334
14,265
16,643
17,428
18,151
UWF
..
..
1,318
2,244
2,825
3,206
2,984
3,559
Total
38,466
43,849
48,372
54,119
60,515
67,794
73,488
78,396
88,713
TABLE 27
PERCENTAGE OF ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENTS BYINSTITUTION
STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM
1964-1972
Institution
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
FAMU
8.84
8.18
7.19
6.99
6.54
6.28
6.06
5.65
5.14
FAU
2.25
5.45
7.19
7.66
7.17
7.46
7.14
7.31
6.40
FIU
..
..
.5.84
FSU
31.54
30.10
29.60
28.09
26.94
25.09
23.05
23.29
21.60
FTU
.2.47
5.32
6.45
7.74
7.73
UF
40.81
38.48
37.29
35.16
32.80
30.64
30.29
29.97
26.57
UNF
2.25
USF
16.89
17.77
18.70
19.71
20.38
21.04
22.65
22.23
20.46
UWF
2.44
3.71
4.17
4.36
3.81
4.01
CHAPTER IV
FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENT
CHAPTER IV
FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENT
A first-time-in-college (FTIC) student is an on-campus student who
initially enrolls at an institution of higher learning in courses for
college credit and has never been previously enrolled in any kind of
college or university. A student is counted only once as an FTIC enrollee.
Subsequent enrollment by the student in any institution of higher learning
does not constitute a FTIC enrollment.
Tables 28 through 31 contain an extensive examination of geographic
breakdowns of current FTIC enrollment. FTIC data by state for each type'
of institution make up the first table, Table 28, of Chapter IV. Moreover,
Table 29 furnishes the same kind of information for the separate SUS insti-
tutions. With the exception of Florida, New York, with 1,614 FTIC enrollees,
accounted for more FTIC student in Florida than any other state (Table 28).
Not surprisingly the University of Florida, with a FTIC registration of
2,709, listed more FTIC students than any other SUS school (Table 29).
Table 30 has FTIC information by county for each class of instruction,
whereas the county data for the individual SUS schools fills Table 31.
Tables 32 through 34 chronicle some of the recent history of FTIC
enrollment in Florida. Table 32 reviews total FTIC enrollment percentages
dating back to 1958, while Table 33, covering the same time period, con-
cerns itself with Florida FTIC registration per cents. Accordingly
historical non-Florida FTIC data, appearing in percentage form, follow in
Table 34. Adhering to the existing trend, the public sector, particularly
the public community and junior colleges, continued to enroll a larger and
57
larger percentage of the total FTIC enrollment (Table 32). A closer
inspection shows that the Florida students were the primary contributors
to this flow toward the public sector (Table 33), while non-Florida
FTIC students maintained a tendency towards the private baccalaureate
degree-granting schools (Table 34).
Past and present FTIC enrollment figures by geographic area comprise
Tables 35 and 36. Table 35, which has FTIC data by state, precedes Florida
FTIC county totals found in Table 36. Table 35 indicates a substantial
FTIC registration increase of 4,831 students this year over last year.
This occurred after a net decrease of 894 students last year over the year
before. Florida FTIC enrollment alone increased 3,620 or 7.5 per cent
over the 1971 figure of 47,959, which represented only a 0.5 per cent
increase over 1970 Florida FTIC enrollment. Chapter IV ends with Table 37
which shows FTIC enrollment by institution in alternate years. An exami-
nation of Table 37 reveals that Miami-Dade Junior College enrolls 3,674
more FTIC students than any other school in the state.
58
TABLE 28
ORIGIN OF FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY STATEOR OTHER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA AND TYPE OF INSTITUTION
FALL 1972
State or OtherGeographical Area SUS
Pub.
CC & JCPriv.
BDGIPriv.JC Total
Alabama 27 76 62 33 198Alaska 1 3 5 9Arizona 6 6 5 17Arkansas 1 14 8 8 31California 7 41 44 18 110
Colorado 6 12 14 2 34Connecticut 36 71 306 12 425Delaware 16 24 4 44Dist. of Columbia 14 8 26 48Florida 8,194 39,993 3,269 123 51,579
Georgia 97 127 179 11 414Hawaii 3 5 8Idaho 5 1 2 8Illinois 26 118 235 15 39/t
Indiana 13 120 75 20 2'i
Iowa 2 18 16 3 39Kansas 3 10 10 1 :14
Kentucky 11 33 45 17 106Louisiana 5 19 17 4 45Maine 4 15 19 2 40
Maryland 30 67 201 9 307Massachusetts 29 83 228 5 345Michigan 18 79 68 8 173Minnesota 4 19 26 1 50Mississippi 1 15 7 1 24
Missouri 11 31 44 11 97Montana 1 1 3 5Nebraska 1 7 5 13Nevada 1 4 4 9New Hampshire 1 13 22 . 36
New Jersey 68 301 903 22 1,294New Mexico 1 5 7 1 14New York 106 500 982 26 1,614North Carolina 16 44 76 12 1r8North Dakota 1
. 1
59
TABLE 28 (continued)
State of OtherGeographical Area SUS
Pub.
CC & JCPriv.
BDGIPriv.
JC Total
OhioOklahomaOregonPennsylvaniaRhode Island
South CarolinaSouth Dakota
61
6
1
956
25
149
10
2
189
16
34
2
2538
4
48443
61
2
20
1
2
17
1
5
48325
9
78566
125
4
Tennessee 30 36 44 13 123Texas 10 31 39 11 91Utah 1 1 1 3
Vermont 1 16 12 1 30Virginia 51 85 211 10 357Washington 2 8 3 13
West Virginia 4 13 21 3 41Wisconsin 15 28 45 1 89Wyoming 2 4 . . 6
U. S. Total 9,043 42,499 8,177 462 60,181
Canal Zone 1 5 9 2 17GuamPuerto Rico 3 19 30 4 56U. S. Virgin Islands 2 3 15 1 21
Other Countries 295 409 178 23 905Unclassified 541 413* 954
Total 9,344 43,476 8,822 492 62,134
This figure includes 297 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University FTICstudents whose residences are unknown to the reporting institution.
60
TABLE 29
ORIGIN OF STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGEON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY STATE OR OTHER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
FALL 1972
State or OtherGeographical Area FAMU FSU FTU OF USF Total
*% ofTotal
Alabama 8 11 . . 5 3 27 .29Alaska . . . . 1 1 .01
Arizona . . . .
Arkansas . . . 1 . . 1 .01
California 1 1 1 4 7 .08
Colorado 1 2 1 2 6 .06Connecticut 9 9 3 8 7 36 .39
Delaware . . . . . .
Dist. of Columbia 12 . 1 1 14 .15
Florida 830 1,861 799 2,421 2,283 8,194 87.69
Georgia ,11 49 22 15 97 1.04Hawaii . .
Idaho
Illinois 8 8 10 . . 26 .28
Indiana 2 9 2 13 .14
Iowa . 1 1 2 .02
Kansas 2 1 . 3 .03
Kentucky 1 4 2 4 11 .12
Louisiana 2 2 1 5 .06
Maine . 2 2 4 .04
Maryland 3 5 22 . . 30 .37.
Massachusetts . . 5 . . 6 18 29 .31
Michigan 6 6 1 1 4 18 .19
Minnesota . 1 . 3 4 .04
Mississippi 1 . 1 .01
Missouri 1 3 1 2 4 11 .12
Montana . . 1 1 .01
Nebraska 1 1 .01
Nevada . . 1 1 .01
New Hampshire 1 1 .01
Iew Jersey 14 25 4 25 68 .73New Mexico 1 1 .01New York 18 33 5 50 106 1.14North Carolina 1 12 1 2 16 .17North Dakota . . 1 .01
TABLE 29 (continued)
State or OtherGeographical Area
% ofFAMU FSU FTU OF USF Total Total
Ohio 4 12 21 24 61 .65Oklahoma 4 2 6 .06Oregon 1 1 .01Pennsylvania 20 18 1 32 24 95 1.02Rhode Island . . 3 3 6 .06
South Carolina 5 7 7 6 25 .27South Dakota . . . .
Tennessee . . 14 11 5 30 .32Texas 1 3 5 1 10 .11Utah
. . .
Vermont ,
Virginia 5 17 1 27 1 51 .55Washington 1 1 2 .02West Virginia . 4 .042
Wisconsin 1 2 1 5 6 15 .16
Wyoming
U. S. Total 968 2,132 817 2,702 2,424 9,043 96.78
Canal Zone 1 1 .01Guam
. . . . .
Puerto Rico 1 2 3 .03U. S. Virgin Islands 2 . 2 .02
Other Countries 11 19 14 5 246 295 3.16Unclassified
Total 982 2,152 831 2,709 2,670 9,344 100.00
Florida Atlantic University, Florida International University, theUniversity of North Florida and the University of West Florida area part of the State University System but have no first-time-in-collegestudents.
62
TABLE 30
ORIGIN OF FLORIDA FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT
BY COUNTY AND TYPE OF INSTITUTION
FALL 1972
Pub.
Priv.
Priv.
% of
County
SUS
CC & JC
BDGI
JC
Total
Total
Alachua
199
713
16
3931
1.80
Baker
46
46
.09
Bay
44
580
5629
1.22
Bradford
11
95
106
.21
Brevard
375
2,798
187
23,362
6.52
Broward
601
3,941
249
20
4,811
9.33
Calhoun
437
41
.08
Charlotte
24
108
91
142
.27
Citrus
15
65
383
.16
Clay
38
241
22
301
.58
Collier
42
110
23
2177
.34
Columbia
10
208
3221
.43
Dade
1,082
6,610
521
48,217
15.93
DeSoto
758
267
.13
Dixie
425
130
.06
Duval
442
2,574
770
33,789
7.35
Escambia
110
1,736
23
1,869
3.62
Flagler
222
.24
.05
Franklin
812
121
.04
Gadsden
85
79
2166
.32
Gilchrist
431
22
39
.08
Glades
13
4.01
Gulf
364
67
.13
Hamilton
924
336
.07
Hardee
534
140
.08
TABLE 30
(continued)
County
SUS
Pub.
CC & JC.
Priv.
BDGI
Priv.
JC
Total
% of
Total
Hendry
16
47
265
.13
Hernando
17
122
10
1150
.29
Highlands
27
118
52
152
.30
Hillsborough
1,186
2,573
30
3,903
7.57
Holmes
139
40
.08
Indian River
33
278
10
1322
.62
Jackson
12
190
3.
.205
.40
Jefferson
23
24
350
.10
Lafayette
12
..
12
.02
Lake
63
357
25
2447
.87
Lee
80
476
16
2574
1.11
c"
.p.-
Leon
Levy
399 15
56942
4 1
..
..
97258
1.88
.11
Liberty
116
17
.03
Madison
13
78
192
.18
Manatee
49
.687.
12
.748
1.45
Marion
56
464
12
.532
1.03
Martin
28
218
12
.258
.50
Monroe
33
331
12
376
.73
Nassau
40
112
14
166
.32
\
-
Okaloosa
89
738
12
1840
1.63
Okeechobee
2106
2.
.110
.21
Orange
888
1,834
228
52,955
5.73
Osceola
24
816
..
48
.09
Palm Beach
283
1,711
95
25
2,114
4.10
TABLE 30
(continued)
County
SUS
Pub.
CC & JC
Priv.
BDGI
Priv.
JC
Total
% of
Total
Pasco
65
440
29
2536
1.04
Pinellas
665
2,924
129
53,723
7.22
Polk
289
1,234
101
51,629
3.16
Putnam
14
179
7.
.200
.39
Saint Johns
29
119
19
167
.32
Saint Lucie
31
497
18
546
1.06
Santa Rosa
10
348
4362
.70
Sarasota
163
784
37
3987
1.91
Seminole
182
455
27
665
1.29
Sumter
594
.99
.19
Suwannee
14
81
95
.18
ca.
Taylor
23
68
394
.18
kil
Union
372
1.
76
.15
Volusia
155
1,130
131
11,417
2.75
Wakulla
517
22
.04
Walton
16
81
198
.19
Washington
454
260
.12
Unclassified
18
52
308*
378
.73
Total
8,194
39,993
3,269**
123
51,579
100.00
This figure includes 233 Florida Memorial College and 75 Ringling School of
Art FTIC students
whose residences in Florida are unknown to the respective reportinginstitution.
**This figure does not include any students from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University, which could
not provide any breakdown of FTIC students.
TABLE 31
ORIGIN OF STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM FLORIDA FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ON-CAMPUS
ENROLLMENT BY COUNTY
.FALL 1972
County
FANU
FSU
FTU
OF
USF
Total*
% of Total
Alachua
428
14
199
2.43
Baker
Bay
515
122
144
.54
Bradford
12
62
11
.13
Brevard
15
78
90
132
60
375
4.58
Broward
48
153
5280
115
601
7.34
Calhoun
4.
.4
.05
Charlotte
111
66
24
.29
Citrus
25
53
15
.18
aN 0\
Clay
216
..
18
238
.46
Collier
315
312
942
.51
Columbia
34
310
.12
Dade
68
312
3492
207
1,082
13.21
DeSoto
14
27
.09
Dixie
21
.1
4.05
Duval
47
167
6159
63
442
5.39
Escambia
39
32
32
7110
1.34
Flagler
1.
1.
2.02
Franklin
35
8.10
Gadsden
52
16
15
11
85
1.04
Gilchrist
2.
11
4.05
Glades
11
.01
Gulf
12
3.04
Hamilton
54
9.11
Hardee
.1
..
13
5.06
TABLE 31
(continued)
County
FAMU
FSU
FTU
OF
USF
Total*
% of Total
Hendry
23
26
316
.20
Hernando
23
12
917
.21
Highlands
110
211
327
.33
Hillsborough
38
104
.151
893
1,186
14.47
Holmes
11
.01
Indian River
29
215
533
.40
Jackson
53
31
12
.15
Jefferson
89
623
.28
Lafayette
Lake
12
20
312
16
63
.77
Lee
913
26
32
80
.98
Leon
199
181
12
7399
4.87
cs.
-.4
Levy
Liberty
34 1
815 1
.18
.01
Madison
11
11
13
.16
Manatee
413
12
20
49
.60
Marion,
17
82
19
10
56
.68
Martin
14
14
928
.34
Monroe
115
12
533
.40
Nassau
43
127
540
.49
Okaloosa
350
32
489
1.09
Okeechobee
11
2.02
Orange
51
103
494
158
82
888
10.84
Osceola
12
10
83
24
.29
Palm Beach
33
77
3121
49
283
3.45
TABLE 31
(continued)
County
FAMU
FSU
FTU
UF.
USF
Total*
% of Total
Pasco
47
18
45
65
.79
Pinellas
22
121
3171
348
665
8.12
Polk
36
68
646
133
289
3.53
Putnam
52
52
14
.17
Saint Johns
88
..
10
329
.35
Saint Lucie
16
78
31
.38
Santa Rosa
..
8.
.2
10
.12
Sarasota
243
252
64
163
1.99
Seminole
..
20
120
27
15
182
2.22
Sumter
21
..
25
.06
Suwannee
15
.8
14
.17
Taylor
310
10
23
.28
Union
33
.04
Volusia
12
43
17
65
18
155
1.89
Wakulla
41
..
.5
.06
Walton
313
16
.20
Washington
..
22
4.05
Unclassified
..
1818
.22
Total
830
1,861
799
2,421
2,283
8,194
100.00
*Florida Atlantic University, Florida InternationalUniversity, the University of North Florida,
and the University of West Florida are apart of the State University System but have no first-
time-in-college students.
TABLE 32
PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT
IN EACH TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1958-1972
.
'State
Public
Public
Private Baccalaureate
Private
Private
Fall
University
Comm. & Jr.
Institutions
Degree-Granting
Junior
Institutions
of
System
Colleges
Total
Institutions
Colleges
Total
1958
31.9%
28.6%
60.5%
34.4%
5.1%
39.5%
1959
31.3
28.5
59.8
35.0
5.2
40.2
1960
31.7
35.6
67.3
29.3
3.4
32.7
1961
28.6
41.6
70.2
25.9
3.9
29.8
1962
23.6
50.7.
74.3
21.8
3.9
25.7
1963
22.2
49.8
72.0
21.2
6.8
28.0
aN
1964
21.9
54.8
76.7
19.7
3.6
23.3
ko
1965
18.8
58.5
77.3
19.0
3.7
22.7
1966
15.0
62.8
77.8
19.2
3.0
22.2
1967
15.2
65.2
80.4
16.2
3.4
19.6
1968
15.5
65.4
80.9
15.8
3.3
19.1
1969
16.3
65.6
81.9
15.8
2.3
18.1
1970
17.6
64.0
81.6
15.3
3.1
18.4
1971
15.7
68.8
84.5
14.2
1.3
15.5
1972
15.0
70.0
85.0
14.2
0.8
15.0
TABLE 33
PERCENTAGE OF FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS
ENROLLMENT IN EACH TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1958-1972
Fall
of
State
Universtiy
System
Public,
Comm. & jr.
Colleges
Public
Institutions
Total
Private Baccalaureate
Degree-Granting
Institutions
Private
Junior
Colleges
Private
Institutions
Total
1958
33.9%
32.7%
66.6%
28.2%
5.2%
33.4%
1959
34.2
33.5
67.7
27.0
5.3
32.3
1960
35.2
42.9
7811
18.6
3.3
21.9
1961
31.2
48.5
79.7
16.6
3.7
20.3
1962
24.9
57.0
81.9
14.3
3.8
18.1
1963
23.3
56.1
79.4
13.5
7.1
20.6
1964
23.1
61.6
84.7
11.9
3.4
15.3
1965
20.1
65.3
85.4
11.2
3.4
14.6
19.66
16.4
69.4
85.8
11.4
2.8
14.2
1967
16.2
72.5
88.7
8.2
3.1
11.3
1968
17.0
72.7
89.7
7.7
2.6
10.3
1969
17.6
73.5
91.1
7.2
1.7
8.9
1970
19.5
70.8
90.3
7.3
2.4
9.7
1971
17.2
75.4
92.6
6.8
0.6
7.4
1972
15.9
77.5
93.4
6.4
0.2
6.6
TABLE 34
PERCENTAGE OF FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE NON-FLORIDA ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT
IN EACH TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1958-1972
Fall
of
State
University
System
Public
Comm. & Jr.
Colleges
Public
Institutions
Total
Private Baccalaureate
Degree-Granting
Institutions
Private
Junior
Colleges
Private
Institutions
Total
1958
20.2%
4.7%
24.9%
70.5%
4.6%
75.1%
1959
18.0
5.7
23.7
71.3
5.0
76.3
1960
16.3
4.7
21.0
75.0
4.0
79.0
1961
16.6
9.1
25.7
69.7
4.6
74.3
1962
16.2
14.1
30.3
65.2
4.5
69.7
1963
16.3
14.7
31.0
64.2
4.8
69.0
J 1-.
1964
14.7
14.7
29.4
65.8
4.8
70.6
1965
11.8
23.4
35.2
59.4
5.4
64.8
1966
7.7
29.1
36.8
59.6
3.7
63.3
1967.
10.1
29.7
39.8
55.5
4.7
60.2
1968
8.8
30.5
39.3
54.4
6.3
60.7
1969
9.9
28.9
38.8
55.9
5.3
61.2
1970
8.6
33.6
42.2
51.7
6.1
57.8
1971
8.2
34.6
42.8
52.0
5.2
57.2
1972
10.9
33.0
43.9
52.6
3.5
56.1
TABLE 35
ORIGIN CF FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENTBY STATE OR OTHER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
1965-1972
State or OtherGeographical Area 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Alabama 248 214 179 150 189 200 211 198Alaska 6 3 4 4 4 8 4 9Arizona 7 11 16 8 12 18 11 17Arkansas 19 18 17 19 23 16 25 31California 50 62 73 75 85 119 107 110
Colorado 16 24 23 23 23 28 30 34Connecticut 256 299 319 362 358 390 338 425Delaware 38 43 64 47 56 59 33 44Dist. of Columbia 68 57 65 64 57 46 51 48Florida 34,609 37,518 39,081 41,746 44,403 47,729 47,957 51,579
Georgia 442 413 433 433 456 389 402 414Hawaii 4 7 8 7 12 15 11 8Idaho 3 11 7 6 3 8 8Illinois 292 295 349 392 389 381 382 394Indiana 130 181 167 194 206 219 220 228
Iowa 15 22 35 25 41 34 38 39Kansas 14. 15 9 15 26 18 22 24Kentucky 72 90 86 100 119 111 100 106Louisiana 36 36 37 48 61 50 47 45Maine 35 42 67 63 62 48 46 40
Maryland 159 169 200 240 350 313 289 307Massachusetts 254 278 348 335 417 347 324 345Michigan 113 123 126 155 181 161 205 173Minnesota 24 27 40 32 41 40 55 50Mississippi 37 45 45 27 40 31 45 24
Missouri 38 44 74 69 69 76 '81 97Montana 2 4 6 5 4 3 5Nebraska 5 10 11 16_ 12 11 12 13Nevada 4 1 3 4 8 2 5 9New Hampshire 24 25 35 42 48 38 25 36
New Jersey 928 1,076 1,288 1,294 1,328 1,346 1,204 1,294New Mexico 10 9 10 7 11 6 9 14New York 1,081 1,451 1,542 1,760 2,013 1,730 1,650 1,614North Carolina 155 '14-1-. 143 153 --151 168 163 148North Dakota 3 3 3 1 9 6 1 1
72
TABLE 35 (continued)
State or OtherGeographical Area 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Ohio 271 310 371 406 484 455 431 483Oklahoma 14 12 7 13 26 21 22 25Oregon 5 4 10 5 8 13 11 9
Pennsylvania 465 498 562 640 715 673 669 785Rhode Island 42 41 31 51 53 59 59 66
South Carolina 106 117 118 127 126 126 95 125South Dakota 4 2 8 4 5 7 2 4
Tennessee 104 127 120 108 129 128 113 123Texas 57 61 63 68 71 96 85 91Utah 1 2 4 4 1 1 3 3
Vermont 13 14 18 27 17 30 18 30Virginia 319 261 318 320 280 353 340 357Washington 8 12 17 28 18 19 18 13
West Virginia 43 39 '42 34 45 37 38 41Wisconsin 49 71 59 76 74 71 73 89Wyoming 1 1 3 3 2 2 3 6
U. S. Total 40,696 44,331 46,662 49,837 53,325 56,251 56,094 60,181
Canal Zone 8 10 6 8 9 16 11 17
Guam 1 3 9 1
Puerto Rico 25 45 25 22 33 65 46 56
U. S. Virgin Islands 2 2 1 4 15 16 12 21
Other Countries 511 337 366 428 541 646 620 905Unclassified 123 501 7 195 51 1,194 519 954**
Total 41,365 45,226 47,068 50,497 53,974* 58,197 57,303 62,134
*Includes 82 transfer students enrolled at Florida Southern College.**This figure includes 297 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University FTICstudents whose residences are unknown to the reporting institution.
73
...
TABLE 36
ORIGIN OF FLORIDA FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENTBY COUNTY19651972
County 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Alachua 424 763 840 619 703 869 908 931Baker 38 36 42 34 56 39 35 46Bay 634 584 511 605. 667 607 611 629Bradford 58 58 26 68. 92 106 77 106Brevard 1,503 1,943 :,399 3,231 3,223 4,113 3,397 3,362
Broward 2,713 2,824 2,553 2,777 3,126 3,225 3,382 4,811Calhoun 42 58 43 56 43 36 50 41Charlotte 82 89 91 93 71 76 88 142Citrus 58 65 56 56 75 62 74 83Clay 173 158 144 156 231 220 256 301
Collier 115 123 147 204 123 144 132 177
Columbia 184 165 168 179 229 189 204 221Dade 6,388 6,967 7,612 8,023 8,691 9,187 9,423 8,217DeSoto 61 44 38 57 -18 44 73 67
Dixie 42 40 16 31 28 26 20 30
Duval 2,357 3,481 3,295 3,398 3,709 3,837 4,178 3,789
Escambia 1,280 1,276 1,379 1,298 1,308 1,189 803 1,869
Flagler 30 27 29 14 20 22 26 24
Franklin 20 29 40 .36 26 15 32 21
Gadsden 131 151 141 161 166 149 172 166
Gilchrist 20 24 15 20 17 23 18 39
Glades 11 9 14 13 5 8 2 4
Gulf 72 96 60 61 126 54 54 67
Hamilton 52 25 31 28 32 50 36 36
Hardee 76 60 90 68 63 72 51 41)
Hendry 33 58 27 46 48 .41 32 65
Hernando 39 56 60 48 81 64 73 150
Highlands 102 57 153 128 144 155 155 152
Hillsborough 2,351 2,370 2,276 3,151 3,580 3,261 3,416 3,903
Holmes 76 66 52 59 56 . 62 40
Indian River 176 163 219 170 179 1E15 217 322Jackson 210 235 230 220 255 2/.2 213 205
Jefferson 59 27 36 38 51 55 60 50
Lafayette 15 18 21 23 21 18 21 12
Lake 361 371 413 371 367 485 404 447
74
TABLE 36 (continued)
County 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Lee 506 471 444 673 399 439 496 574Leon 521 725 623 686 813 847 908 972Levy 60 77 39 45 58 86 49 58Liberty 13 13 8 11 10 17 17 17
Madison 93 91 82 95 90 99 104 92
Manatee 454 508 535 583 483 603 639 748Marion 442 484 426 389 438 533 496 532Martin 92 82 99 136 111 96 159 258Monroe 441 253 216 340 393 243 429 376Nassau 82 125 91 87 100 95 107 166
Okaloosa 581 569 592 667 691 762 836 840Okeechobee 42 145 55 41 41 26 36 1.10
Orange 1,837 1,954 2,265 2,785 2,648 3,378 2,782 2,955Osceola 80 90 90 93 140 110 49 48Palm Beach 1,842 1,852 1,769 1,862 1,903 1,992 2,125 2,114
Pasco 122 133 156 163 175 219 219 536Pinellas 2,783 2,595 2;682 2,686 2,921 3,198 3,225 3,723Polk 1,300 1,277 1,261 1,361 1,470 1,756 1,573 1,69Putnam 209 257 192 200 299 233 248 200Saint Johns 233 172 196 169 218 190 176 167
Saint Lucie 313 277 266 308 270 261 312 546
Santa Rosa 261 266 240 195 226 168 448 3C.2
Sarasota 549 578 644 595 598 772 1,019 987Seminole 245 416 434 500 536 810 626 665Sumter 80 76 57 79 129 112 109 99
Suwannee 97 88 67 99 100 86 129 95Taylor 83 69 102 75 111 101 96 94Union 27 81 44 57 27 84 42 76Volusia 981 1,034 925 957 1,099 1,074 1,488 1,417Wakulla E-, 26 18 32 19 7 32 22
Walton 135 132 87 110 93 97 93 98Washington 56 51 59 59 51 69 75 60
Unclassified 44 35 50 24 64 251 57 378*
Total 34,609 37,518 39,081 41,702 44,354 47,729 47,959 51,579**
*This figure includes 233 Florida Memorial College and 75 Ringling School ofArt FTIC students whose residenCes in Florida are unknown to therespective reporting institutions.
**This figure does not include any students from Embry-Riddle AeronauticalUniversity which could not provide any breakdown of FTIC students.
75
TABLE 37
FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS BY INSTITUTIONALTERNATE YEARS 1962-1972
Institution .1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972
State University SystemFAMU 466 795 538 843 1,067 982FAUFIUFSU 1,995 2,206 1,864 2,067 2,143 2,1.52FTU 470 1,688 831OF 2,478 2,764 2,699 2,873 2,888 2,709UNFUSF 1,059 1,706 1,695 1,593 2,428 2,670UWF
Public Community and Junior CollegesBrevard CC 682 942 1,527 2,602 3,324 2,904Broward CC 765 900 1,973 1,719 3,042 3,929Central Fla. CC 327 435 617 429 617 572Chipola JC 310 435 550 472 459 360Daytona Beach CC 512 644 797 788 824 1,273
Edison CC 321 360 566 854 435 735Florida JC
. 1,644 2,025 2,200 2,738Florida Keys CC 201 276 188 329Gulf Coast CC 305 352 679 690 677 696Hillsborough CC
. . . 1,158 1,375 2,626
Indian River CC 178 298 394 553 409 1,150Lake City CC 244 344 460 447 508 561Lake-Sumter CC 154 259 331 353 465 432Manatee JC 427 688 1,017 1,103 1,221 1,582Miami-Dade JC - 2,710 4,131 6,631 7,784 8,239 7,603
North Florida JC 182 308 390 478 490 343Okaloosa-Walton JC 401 529 607 693 699Palm Beach JC 987 1,359 1,796 1,729 1,692 1,858Pasco-Hernando CC 413Pensacola JC 1,182 1,426 1,586 1,590 1,394 2,372
Polk CC 707 979 1,099 1,320 1,237St. Johns River JC 343 860 748 430 452 397St. Petersburg JC 2,024 2,332 3,208 2,991 3,073 3,448Santa Fe JC
. 604 692 1,416 1,954Seminole JC
. . 533 679 958 769
76
1
TABLE 37 (continued)
Institution 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972
South Florida JC. 188 157 198 207
Tallahassee CC . 448 463 555 761Valencia CC
. 844 1,059 1,528
Private Baccalaureate Degree-Granting InstitutionsBarry C 216 203 197 173 122 185Bethune-Cookman C 184 196 385 210 429 373Biscayne C 102 159 121 139 154Eckerd College (formerly Florida
Presbyterian C) 250 247 265 270 279 221Edward Waters C 243 231 303 333 238 155
Embry-Riddle Aero. Univ. 71 25 543 176 394 297Fla. Inst. of Technology 105 120 396 570 730 979Florida Memorial C 87 51 131 223 160 241Florida Southern C 747 610 465 427 1,280 464Jacksonville U 563 438 432 547 585 598
Jones College*Jacksonville Div.** 194 425 397Orlando Div.**
. 218 190 78New College 101 109 307 224 220Nova UniversityRingling School of Art 112 127 156 150 228
Rollins C 428Saint Joseph C
*** 432 466 435163
459 477
Saint Leo C. . 342 551 411 500 364
St. Vincent de PaulSouth-Eastern Bible C 126 187 233 180 227
Stetson U 430 470 434 439 438 425U of Miami 1,660 1,864 2,160 2,160 2,027 2,153U of Tampa 489 501 618 600 546 586Webber Cli 50 61 46 50
77
TABLE 37 (continued)
Institution 1962 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972
Private Junior CollegesThe College of Orlando## 638 910 994 448 169Florida Collee 127 _ 170 188 185 248 245Jones College
Jacksonville Div.** . . . . 362 781Orlando Div.** . . 370 212
Marymount C . 135 159 295 196 172Saint Joseph C*** . 167Saint Leo C 216 .
Webber C# 47 75
Jones College shifted from PBDGI to Private JC in 1967.**Prior to 1971, Jones College, Jacksonville was a two year institutionand prior to 1972, Jones College, Orlando was a two year institution.
***St. Joseph College shifted from PBDGI to Private JC in 1970 andclosed after the 1971-72 school year.
#Webber College shifted from PBDGI to Private JC in 1970.
##The allege of Orlando closed after the 1970-71, school year.
78
CHAPTER V
GRADUATE STUDENT ENROLLMENT
CHAPTER V
GRADUATE STUDENT ENROLLMENT
A graduate student is an on-campus student who has enrolled in at
least one graduate level course for college credit after earning a
baccalaureate or higher degree.
Table 38 includes SUS versus PBDGI graduate enrollment as well as
total graduate enrollment for each state. Table 39 yields the same com-
parisons for Florida graduate students by county. Table 38 indicates
that a total of 19,137 students enrolled in graduate school in Florida
this year; moreover, SUS institutions accounted for over 75 per cent of
these students. More than 76 per cent of the Florida residents who
registered for graduate school in Florida in 1972 attended SUS schools
(Table 39).
Not only did total graduate enrollment (Florida and non-Florida
students) decline this year for the first time in recent years (Table 40),
but 1972 Florida graduate enrollment also was down by 107 students from
last year. Table 42 shows that the University of Florida registered 1,067
more graduate students than any other school in Florida. Among graduate
students, the percentage in the State University System as opposed to the
private sector, after remaining fairly constant for some years, has suddenly
expanded and in 1972 encompassed 76.1 per cent of the total number of post-
baccalaureate students. Finally, the number of graduate students expressed
as a per cent of total college level enrollment in Florida has fallen for
the third consecutive year and currently stands at 7.5 per cent.
80
TABLE 38
ORIGIN OF GRADUATE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY STATE OR OTHER
GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
FALL 1972
State or Other
SUS
PBDGI
Geographical Area
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
Total
Total
Alabama
2
Alaska
Arizona
.
Arkansas
California
1
83
19
1 42
11
4
40
12
64
..
3
1
74
Colorado
47
.3
Connecticut
.21
..
9.
.2
Delaware
72
Dist. of Columbia
18
53
c°
Florida
210 1,311
349
2,418
908
4,254
204
1,622
407
,--
Georgia
Hawaii
l,
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
10
.124
28
61
.4
..
.
1.
.4
..
1.
879
219
62
4.
,29
..
11
4.
1 1
0.
..
..
..
20
..
1
10
4
28
..
7-
37
12
3.
.2
11
3 41
1
428
.8
.2
1
229
17
8
13
38
7.
63
22
6.
21
32
15
2
114
12
126
11
2
93
12
16
117
64
41
105
14
519
32
16
48
95
14
17
724
11,683
3,672
15,355
169
11
180
44
66
116
40
156
48
14
62
24
529
17
421
35
540
55
459
69
15
43
16
59
56
37
93
67
13
80
31
738
49
958
TABLE 38 (continued)
State or Other
Geographical Area
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
SUS
Total
PBDGI
Total
Total
Missouri
19
16
.3
..
29
736
Montana
1a
12
3
Nebraska
.7
..
41
..
12
315
Nevada
..
.1
..
11
2
New Hampshire
.1
8,
.2
11
13
518
New Jersey
9.
.50
23
43
89
33
122
New Mexico
.3
2.
.5
5
New York
.25
..
116
46
11
7205
131
336
North Carolina
..
2.
.61
..
21
.2
..
86
10
96
North Dakota
2.
.1
31
4
Ohio
9.
.56
23
10
7106
45
151
co
Oklahoma
8e
513
619
IN)
Oregon
9.
.1
1.
.11
112
Pennsylvania
11
..
70
..
20
110
1113
60
173
Rhode Island
11
..
.1
35
8
South Carolina
..
29
13
91
43
447
South Dakota
1.
11
Tennessee
2.
.35
..
11
21
51
960
Texas
152
..
13
a5
576
12
88
Utah
..
.7
18
8
Vermont
13
..
1.
16
6
Virginia
360
17
585
24
109
Washington
..
118
423
225
West Virginia
.16
..
420
424
Wisconsin
127
17
32
41
748
Wyoming
..
.i
.2
1.
.3
.3
Ti.
S. Total
220
1,418
350
3,747
913 4,673
205
1,751
455
13,732
4,309
18,041
TABLE 38
(continued)
State or Other
SUS
PBDGI
Geographical Area
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
Total
Total
Canal Zone
22
2Guam
.
Puerto Rico
12
8.
..
20
11
31
U.S. Virgin Islands
..
.1
11
Other Countries
260
18
262
11
408
330
2796
95
891
Unclassified
.2
51
..
210
161
171
Total
222
1,480
373
4,023
924
5,090
209
1,781
459
14,561
4,576
19,137
TABLE 39
ORIGIN OF FLORIDA GRADUATE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY COUNTY
FALL 1972
SUS
Priv.
% of
County
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
Total
BDGI
Total
Total
Alachua
Baker
Bay
Bradford
Brevard
11
122 1
4
15
..
..
..
2,310
f
31
1
2
67
182
Bru-kard
3588
13
89
Calhoun
23
Charlotte
,
Citrus
13
Clay
11
3co
1
10
11
67
3156
.2 3 7
19
Collier
32
5Columbia
312
Dade
4208
328
228
3DeSoto
1
Dixie
1
Duval
36
9Escambia
4
Flagler
..
Franklin
2
Gadsden
22
Gilchrist
Glades
Gulf
Hamilton
Hardee
1
..
..
8
29
335 3 1
72,342
72,349
15.30
44
.03
..
450
151
.33
14
14
.09
24
.355
459
814
5.30
15
..
867
269
1,136
7.40
77
.05
2.
.8
19
.06
213
518
.12
81
..
33
538
.25
..
119
625
.16
44
246
.30
136
41,147
1,674
2,821
18.37
37
7.05
22
.01
150
261
181
17
3657
125
782
5.09
57
136
3287
388
1389
2.53
11
13
25
.03
42
88
.05
40
264
165
.42
6F
66
.04
11
1.01
41
17
7.05
21
47
7.05
11
14
512
214
.09
TABLE 39
(continued)
County
FAIN
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
SUS
Total
Priv.
BDGI
Total
% of
Total
Hendry
5.
.1
17
18
.05
Hernando
21
3.
15
21
223
.15
Highlands
16
24
73
23
225
.16
Hillsborough
66
106
11rK1
772
..
i,006
14
1,020
6.64
Holmes
7.
4.
.11
..
11
.07
Indian River
15
69
122
931
.20
Jackson
51
15
83
32
.32
.21
Jefferson
512
2.
2.
.21
21
.14
Lafayette
.1
11
.01
Lake
11
14
14
24
5.
.59
40
99
.64
Lee
.10
20
117
10
159
59
.38
co u
Leon
67
51
889
26
16
1,004
10
1,014
6.60
Levy
.12
12
12
.08
Liberty
.1
11
.01
Madison
512
219
19
.12
Manatee
12
21
..
21
29
175
479
.51
Marion
15
..
51
268
472
.47
Martin
17
4.
.6
..
1.
28
230
.20
Monroe
62
10
..
31
11
24
10
34
.22
Nassau
.9
..
93
21
324
.16
Okaloosa
2.
43
20
29
94
195
.62
Okeechobee
1.
21
44
.03
Orange
43
94
455
133
..
35
724
580
1,304
8.49
Osceola
.12
41
118
11
29
.19
Palm Beach
1384
88
20
106
..
14
613
47
660
4.30
TABLE 39
(continued)
County
FAMU
FAU
FIU
FSU
FTU
OF
UNF
USF
UWF
SUS
Total
Priv.
BDGI
Total
% of
Total
Pasco
11
17
..
938
.57
.57
.37
Pinellas
88
123
2131
397
..
669
11
680
4.43
Polk
27
.37
858
..-,
.103
1216
108
324
2.11
Putnam
.13
32
..
45
348
.31
Saint Johns
11
.11
17
41
.35
742
.27
Saint Lucie
29
.5
112
..
29
11
40
.26
Santa Rosa
..
55
162
73
174
.48
Sarasota
13
.30
33
31
199
1100
.65
Seminole
11
14
150
27
81
202
107
309
2.01
Sumter
..
15
..
713
417
.11
co
Suwannee
2.
57
7.05
a.
,
Taylor
..
62
.1
9.
.9
.06
Union
441
5.
.5
.03
Volusia
16
147
44
51
7.
.157
119
276
1.80
Wakulla,
1
3.
710
.10
.07
Walton
51
39
9.06
Washington
2.
22
28
8.05
Unclassified
..
..
2.
.6
..
88
.05
Total
210
1,311
349
2,418
908
4,254
204
1,622
407
11,683
3,672
15,355
100.00
TABLE 40
ORIGIN OF GRADUATE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY STATE OROTHER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
1965-1972
State or OtherGeographical Area 1965 1966. 1967. 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
Alabama 91 96 124 136 156 147 141 126Alaska 1, 2 1 . . 2 1 7 2
Arizona 10 8 13 8 15 15 12 12
Arkansas 22 20 23 19 15 26 17 17
California 53 56 81 111 134 118 114 105.
Colorado 10 15 12 8 20 19 15 19
Connecticut 35 29 43 53 64 50 50 48Delaware 10 6 9 14 18 20 8 14
Dist. of Columbia 10 16 6 8 23 21 19 24Floxida
,...
6,400 7,864 10,595 12,291 14;342 14,818 15,462 15,355
Georgia 168 157 195 176 228 183 190 180
Hawaii 1 2 6 2 5 4 3 4Idaho 3 3 22 1 7 5 4 6
Illinois 103 85 118 200 167 150 138 156
Indiana 39 42 47 .1.:5 72 62 67 62
Iowa 17 24 26 26 24 26 37 29
Kansas 21 22 20 20 18 14 12 21
Kentucky 45 56 60 65 60 43 45 40
Louisiana 46 60 69 68 66 72 54 59
Maine 12 5 17 10 12 10 8 15
Maryland 37 48 50 56 77 66 76 59
Massachusetts 62. 65 87 88 115 102 110 93
Michigan 50 44 70 67 62 70 70 80
Minnesota 24 27 38 33 39 38 35 38
Mississippi 45 55 60 54 50 57 51 58
Missouri 35 34 38 35 45 43 37 36Montana 2 4 3 1 3 5 2 3
Nebraska 12 8 11 16 6 5 10 15
Nevada 4 2 2 1 . . 2 2 2
New Hampshire 10 10 14 11 12 10 12 18
87
TABLE 40 (continued)
State or OtherGeographical Area 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
New Jersey 88 82 125 120 178 132 117 122New Mexico 14 9 7 6 11 11 9 5New York 213 233 318 330 421 349 322 336North Carolina 90 84 98 99 103 115 114 96,North Dakota 3 6 6 4 6 13 6 4
Ohio 96 87 120 121 114 138 126 151Oklahoma 14 14 15 12 16 14 15 19Oregon 8 7 6 9 18 17 15 12Pennsylvania 116 105 144 130 163 156 163 173Rhode Island 4 9 14 14 11 11 12 8
South Carolina 67 53 69 95 96 57 56 47South Dakota 5 10 9 6 3 7 5 1
Tennessee 86 80 94 96 . 123 85 72 60Texas 66 68 84 82 106 84 82 89Utah 4 7 11 10 9 6 12 8
Vermont 5 5 6 7 10 15 8 6
Virginia 66 69 94 95 117 119 111 109Washington 16 16 11 16 19 18 12 25West Virginia 25 17 26 15 14 17 21 24Wisconsin 34 39 48 57 48 50 47 43Wyoming 4 3 4 4 1 1 3 3
U. S. Total 8,402 9,868 13,169 14,971 17,444 17,617 18,136 18,041
Canal Zone 4 5 2 2 1 2 3 2GuamPuerto Rico 21 23 42 17 20 18 20 31U.S. Virgin Islands . . 1 1
Other Countries 350 395 438 505 635 635 841 891Unclassified 3 1 837 1,123 774 171
Total 8,780 10,291 13,652 15,495 18,937 19,395 19,775 19,137
88
TABLE 41
ORIGIN OF FLORIDA GRADUATE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY COUNTY
1965-1972
County
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
Alachua
245
976
1,529
1,560
2,188
2,034
2,387
2,349
Baker
33
44
43
14
Bay
45
38
59
61
45
73
68
51
Bradford
12
18
24
14
11
20
19
14
Brevard
393
532
809
1,047
988
836
841
814
Broward
424
569
731
694
854
842
754
1,136
Calhoun
711
13
-
714
10
57
Charlotte
47
12
15
13
88
9
Citrus
57
13
11
11
22
17
18
Clay
13
18
24
24
23
23
40
38
Collier
66
22
20
32
41
28
25
Columbia
19
198
29
31
29
30
35
46
Dade
1,631
1,331
1,870
1,872
2,039
2,918
3,604
2,821
DeSoto
87
73
53
47
Dixie
22
47
65
22
Duval
373
439
641
588
565
622
645
782
Escambia
62
52
84
83
261
381
363
389
Flagler
75
11
..
33
5
Franklin
63
74
77
12
8
Gadsden
64
67
66
59
59
54
82
65
Gilchrist
41
33
53
56
Glades
23
33
1
Gulf
610
48
12
12
87
Hamilton
65
13
55
87
7
Hardee
35
22
915
914
TABLE 41
(continued)
County
1965
1965
1967
1968
1969
1970
Hendry
510
11
96
7
Hernando
89
11
919
17
Highlands
19
621
25
22
20
Hillsborough
341
535
742
1,059
1,148
1,371
Holmes
23
24
55
Indian River
18
813
18
26
29
Jackson
17
28
31
40
30
30
Jefferson
86
19
20
25
22
Lafayette
12
2.
..
..
.
Lake
33
38
52
53
69
99
Lee
20
23
46
38
44
73
Leon
561
578
685
998
1,000
997
v)
cp
Levy
76
10
13
10
14
Liberty
31
12
..
5
Madison
12
10
15
23
21
21
Manatee
38
44
48
75
74
87
Marion
37
36
68
71
76
70
Martin
98
813
13
12
Monroe
56
16
20
25
23
Nassau
35
79
913
Okaloosa
23
23
44
41
57
77
Okeechobee
410
54
75
Orange
591
637
734
806
1,001
1,025
Osceola
916
18
18
19
17
Palm Beach
514
606
564
521
753
584
1971
1972
88
13
23
23
25
936
1,020
10
11
38
,31
46
32
27
21
41
95
99
72
59
1,360
1,014
16
12
81
15
19
88
79
93
72
17
30
23
34
25
24
87
95
12
4
1,128
1,304
23
29
419
660
TABLE 41
(continued)
County
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
Pasco
19
30
25
44
49
62
36
57
Pinellas
242
322
473
902
975
1,2Z
675
680
Polk
109
125
177
283
283
-4/7
310
324
Putnam
28
21
36
39
42
4;
47
48
Saint Johns
12
14
35
28
27
31
38
42
Saint Lucie
27
33
21
22
44
54
45
40
Santa Rosa
97
11
11
37
56
59
74
Sarasota
40
53
74
85
124
90
116
100
Seminole
65
69
102
102
119
187
248
309
Sumter
66
14
915
17
12
17
Suwannee
16
12
22
29
16
13
20
7
Taylor
18
14
17
22
19
18
25
9
qc,
1.-
Union
Volusia
4
152
4
171
6
216
6
224
4
231
7
242
8
247
5
276
Wakulla
46
31
97
11
10
Walton
97
14
11
611
13
9
Washington
45
911
714
11
8
Unclassified
1194
447
688
15
8
Total
6,400
7,864
10,595
12,291
14,342
14,818
15,462
15,355
TABLE 42
GRADUATE ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY INSTITUTION1965-1972
Institution 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972
State University SystemFAMU 376 422 427 387 452 295 256 222
FAU 783 1,165 1,131 1,062 1,382 1,313 739 1,480FIU 373FSU 2,177 2,458 2,957 3,285 3,340 3,308 4,530 4,023FTU 121 345 569 924OF 2,182 2,478 4,218 4,254 4,877 5,265 5,579 5,090UNF 209
USF 377 763 1,017 2,021 2,469 2,643 1,593 1,781
UWF 257 394 364 459
SUS Total 5,895 7,286 9,750 11,009 12,898 13,563 13,630 14,561
Private Baccalaureate Degree-Granting InstitutionsBarry College 172 267 276 231 335 313 391 449
Edward Waters C . .
.* * 156* * *
. . .
Florida Beacon . . 4 . .
Fla. Inst. of Tech. 307 409 542 631 611 426 396 307
Jacksonville U 110 160 239 264 246 169 137 136
Nova U 21 19 25 62 126 161
Rollins C 600 705 739 802 838 847 858 962
St. Vincent de Paul 36 36 41 48 54 47 39 39
Stetson U 151 161 163 314 244 251. 260 231
U of Miami 1,509 1,267 1,721 2,177 3,686 3,717 3,938 2,291
PBDGI Total 2,885 3,005 3,092 4,486 6,039 5,632 6,145 4,576
Total 8,780 10,291 13,652 15,495 18,937 19,395 19,775 19,137
% of total in SUS 67.1 70.8 69.2 72.2 68.1 69.9 68.9 76.1% of total in Florida
Enrollment 6.4 6.6 7.4 7.9 8.9 8.6 8.1 7.5
Number not available.
92
CHAPTER VI
BLACK AND NON-BLACK ENROLLMENT
CHAPTER VI
BLACK AND NON-BLACK ENROLLMENT
The data utilized in this chapter were obtained from the "Compliance
Report of Institutions of Higher Education Under Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, Fall 1972." The discrepancies that exist between
some of the enrollment figures found in this chapter and the totals
reported in other chapters may have been the result of any one or a
combination of the following factors. The tables of this chapter include
both on -- campus and off-campus enrollment while the tables presented in
the other chapters report only on-campus enrollment. The compliance
report and the enrollment report may have been tabulated at two different
points in time. Therefore, due to late registrations and dropouts
different enrollment totals developed. Individual institutions may have
had differing interpretations of which students to include in each report.
Once again the result would have been unequal enrollment totals on two
separate enrollment reports from the same institution.
Black and non-black enrollment totals and percentages for the public
higher educational institutions in Florida comprise both of the tables of
Chapter VI. Table 43 indicates that of the state universities, with the
exception of predominately black Florida A & M University (96,8 per cent
black with 4,417 black students), the University of North Florida had
the highest percentage of black students (7.3 per cent), whereas Florida
State University had the highest black enrollment (935 students). On the
other hand, Florida Technological University enrolled both the smallest
percentage of blacks (2.0 per cent) and the smallest number of blacks
(136 students) of any of the SUS institutions.
94
Table 44 reveals that of all of the public community and junior
colleges, North Florida Junior College had the highest percentage of
black students (16.3 per cent), while Miami-Dade Junior College had
the most black students (3,214 registrants).
On a systemwide basis, the SUS institutions with 8.5 per cent of
their total enrollment consisting of black students (Table 43), enrolled
0.8 per cent less blacks than the public two-year schools, which had
a black enrollment of 9.3 per cent of their total student population
(Table 44).
95
TABLE 43
BLACK AND NON-BLACK ENROLLMENT IN THE
FALL 1972
STATE UNIVERSITY
SYSTEM
Institution
Classification
Black
No.
Non-Black
No.
Total
Florida Agricultural
Undergraduate
4,220
97.2
121
2.8
4,341
and Mechanical.
Graduate
197
88.7
25
11.3
222
University
Total
4,417
96.8
146
3.2
4,563
Florida
Undergraduate
106
2.5
4,115
97.5
4,221
Atlantic
Graduate
108
7.4
1,352
92.6
1,460
University
Total
214
3.8
5,467
96.2
5,681
Florida
Undergraduate
260
5.4
4,547
94.6
4,807
International
Graduate
26
7.1
347
92.9
373
University
Total
286
5.5
4,894
94.5
5,180
Florida
Undergraduate
722
4.7
14,541
95.3
15,263
State
Graduate
189
5.4
3,311
94.6
3,500
University
Professional
24
4.4
525
95.6
549
Total
935
4.8
18,377
95.2
19,312
Florida
Undergraduate
103
1.6
6,345
98.4
6,448
Technological
Graduate
33
8.2
371
91.8
404
University
Total
136
2.0
6,716
98.0
6,852
TABLE 43 (continued)
Institution
Classification
Black
No.
%
Non-Black
No.
Total
University
Undergraduate
529
2.9
17,948
97.1
18,477
of
Graduate
147
3.9
3,652
96.1
3,799
Florida
Professional
32
2.5
1,263
97.5
1,295
Total
708
3.0
22,863
97.0
23,571
University of
Undergraduate
131
7.3
1,657
92.7
1,788
North
Graduate
15
7.2
194
92.8
209
Florida
Total
146
7.3
1,851
92.7
1,997
University of
Undergraduate
543
3.3
15,827
96.7
16,370
South
Graduate
40
2.3
1,7i5
97.7
1,775
Florida
Total
583
3.2
17,562
96.8
18,145
University of
Undergraduate
124
3.4
3,578
96.6
3,702
West
Graduate
27
4.4
583
95.6
610
Florida
Total
151
3.5
4,161
96.5
4,312
Total
Undergraduate
6,738
9.0
68,679
91.0
75,417
State
Graduate
782
6.3
11,570
93.7
12,352
University
Professional
56
3.0
1,783
97.0
1,844
System
Total
7,576
8.5
82,037
91.5
89,613
TABLE 44
BLACK AND NON-BLACK ENROLLMENT IN FLORIDA'S
PUBLIC COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES, FALL 1972
Institution
Attendance
Schedule
Black
No.
%
Non-Black
No.
Total
Brevard CC
Full-time
451
11.8
3,374
88.2
3,825
Part-time
713
19.8
2,881
80.2
3;594
Total
1,164
15.7
6,255
84.3
7,419
Broward CC
Full-time
191
4.0
4,579
96.0
4,770
Part-time
107
2.5
4,164
97.5
4,271
Total
298
3.3
8,743
96.7
9,041
Central Fla. CC
Full-time
139
13.8
871
86.2
1,010
Part- -time
52
12.3
370
87.7
422
Total
191
13.3
1,241
86.7
1,432
Chipola JC
Full-time
150
17.8
694
82.2
844
Part-time
24
9.3
234
90.7
258
Total
174
15.8
928
84.2
1,102
Daytona Beach CC
Full-time
145
8.3
1,595
91.7
1,740
Pa-t-time
76
8.6
805
91.4
881
Total
221
8.4
2,400
91.6
2,621
Edison CC
Full-time
46
4.5
979
95.5
1,025
Part-tine
22
2.5
851
97.5
873
Total
58
3.6
1,330
95.4
1,233
TABLE 44
(continued)
Institution
Attendance
Schedule
Black
No.
%
Non-Black
No.
Total
Fla. JC at Jax.
Full-time
547
12.5
3,827
87.5
4,374
Part-time
501
10.4
4,319
89.6
4,820
Total
1,048
11.4
8,146
88.6
9,194
Fla. Keys CC
Full-time
52
12.4
366
87.6
418
Part-time
27
4.5
575
95.5
602
Total
79
7.7
941
92.3
1,020
Gulf Coast CC
Full-time
132
9.5
1,255
90.5
1,387
Part-time
59
6.9
802
93.1
861
Total
191
8.5
2,057
91.5
2,248
Hillsborough CC
Full-time
254
14.2
1,536
85.8
1,790
Part-time
396
9.3
3,876
90.7
4,272
Total
650
10.7
5,412
89.3
6,062
Indian River CC
Full-time
147
14.6
861
85.4
1,008
Part-time
130
6.1
2,003
93.9
2,133
Total
277
8.8
2,864
91.2
3,141
Lake City CC
Full-time
160
14.2
967
85.8
1,127
Part-time
119
18.9
509
81.1
628
Total
279
15.9
1,476
84.1
1,755
Lake- Sumter CC.
Full-time
42
5.9
57
93.1
609
Part-time
8.0
535
92.0
636
Total
03
7.5
1,152
92.5
1,245
TABLE 44
(continued)
Institution
Attendance
Schedule
Black
No.
%
Non-Black
No.
Total
Manatee JC
Full-time
109
6.3
1,616
93.7
1,725
Part-time
86
6.2
1,305
93.8
1,391
Total
195
6.3
2,921
93.7
3,116
Miami-Dade JC
Full-time
2,025
12.9
13,729
87.1
15,754
Part-time
1,189
9.7
11,082
90.3
12,271
Total
3,214
11.5
24,811
88.5
28,025
North Florida JC
Full-time
106
14.2
638
85.8
744
Part-time
49
23.7
158
76.3
207
Total
155
16.3
796
83.7
951
Okaloosa-Walton JC
Full-time
40
3.7
1,038
96.3
1,078
Part-time
66
5.4
1,157
94.6
1,223
Total
106
4.6
2,195
95.4
2,301
Palm Beach JC
Full-time
247
8.1
2,809
91.9
3,056
Part-time
286
,7.8
3,398
92.2
3,684
Total
533
7.9
6,207
92.1
6,740
Pasco-Hernando CC
Full-time
16
12.7
110
87.3
126
Part-time
10
1.7
574
98.3
584
Total
26
3.7
634
96.3
710
Pensacola JC
Full time
209
6.6
2,934
93.4
3,143
Part -time
149
5.8
2,402
94.2
2,551
Total
353
6.3
5,335
93.7
5,694
TABLE 44
(continued)
Institution
Attendance
Schedule
Black
No.
%
Non-Black
No.
Total
Polk CC
Full-time
174
10.0
1,562
90.0
1,736
Part-time
180
10.2
1,579
89.8
1,759
Total
354
10.1
3,141
89.9
3,495
St. Johns River JC
Full-time
45
6.2
679
93.8
724
Part-time
11
3.4
316
96.6
327
Total
56
5.3
995
94.7
1,051
St. Petersburg JC
Full-time
287
5.2
5,219
94.8
5,506
Part-time
132
3.6
3,566
96.4
3,698
Total
419
4.6
8,785
95.4
9,204
Santa Fe JC
Full-time
483
14.2
2,923
85.8
3,406
Part-time
157
13.6
1,000
86.4
1,157
Total
640
14.0
3,923
86.0
4,563
Seminole JC
Full-time
85
6.2
1,286
93.8
1,371
Part-time
56
5.4
989
94.6
1,045
Total
141
5.8
2,275
94.2
2,416
South Florida JC
Full-time
94.2
205
95.8
214
Part-time
28
13.9
173
86.1
201
Total
37
8.9
378
91.1
415
Tallahassee CC
Full-time
86
6.3
1,274
93.7
1,360
Part-time
80
5.8
1 309
94.2
1,389
Total
166
6.0
2,583
94.0
2,749
TABLE 44
(continued)
Institution
Attendance
Schedule
Black
No.
%
Non-Black
No.
Total
Valencia CC
Full-time
234
10.0
2,099
90.0
2,333
Part-time
136
6.9
1,843
93.1
1,979
Total
370
8.6
3,942
91.4
4,312
Total
Full-time
6,611
10.0
59,592
90.0
66,203
Part-time
4,892
8.5
52,825
91.5
57,717
Total
11,503
9.3
112,417
90.7
123,920
CHAPTER VII
TRENDS AND NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN FLORIDA HIGHER EDUCATION
CHAPTER VII
TRENDS AND NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN FLORIDA HIGHER EDUCATION
Twenty public and private institutions, with a total enrollment of
50,286 students, participated in the statewide survey leading to the
first issue, published in the autumn of 1958, of Enrollment in Florida's
Institutions of Higher Learning. Since that initial study the number
of reporting institutions has grown to 62 (a 210 per cent increase) and
the number of students has risen to 254,112 (a 405 per, cent increase).
Consistently enrolling an increasing proportion of college level students,
the public institutions have raised their percentage of total enrollment
from 57.1 per cent in 1957 to 82.9 per cent of the on-campus enrollment
this year. After peaking at 60.5 per cent in 1966, male enrollment per-
centage has ebbed slightly to 58.1 per cent of the total on-campus college
level population (Table 13). Although total on-campus enrollment continued
to grow, the rate of growth has steadily subsided. The growth rate of the
combined public and private sectors has now dropped below 5 per cent (Table 46).
STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM
This year the two newest SUS schools, Florida International Univer-
sity and the University of North Florida accepted their opening upper-
division classes. That brings the total number of SUS schools to nine.
Table 8 indicates that, after undergoing a period of regression
throughout the decade preceding 1967, the State University System then
started once again to expand its share of the total on-campus enrollment.
104
Enrolling o7er 10,000 more students this year than last, the SUS
schools seemed to be maintaining a solid pattern of growth (Table 26);
however, the two new SUS universities accounted for nearly 70 per cent
(7,177 students of the 10,317 enrollment increase) of the additional
students.
PUBLIC COMMUNITY/JUNIOR COLLEGES
This year Pasco-Hernando Community College makes its first appearance
in the enrollment report. Nevertheless, after fourteen consecutive years
of growth, the public two-year colleges' share of the total enrollment
receded by 1.3 per cent in 1972 to 48 per cent of the total on-campus
enrollment (Table 8). A look at Table 12 indicates that a fall-off in
non-Florida enrollment was a major reason for this decline in proportion
of total enrollment. In keeping with an apparent statewide trend toward
a decreasing percentage of male enrollment, the public community and junior
colleges showed an increase in female enrollment of two per cent last year
(Table 13). Total enrollment in the public two-year colleges was 121,827
students for an increase of 1,678 students (1.4 per cent) over a year ago
(Table 46).
PRIVATE BACCALAUREATE DEGREE GRANTING INSTITUTIONS
This year the list of private baccalaureate degree granting institutions
once again contains the name of Jones College, Orlando, which functioned last
year as a private junior college. Despite the additional school, the private
degree granting schools dropped to 16.7 per cent (a one per cent loss) of the
total on-campus enrollment (Table 8). The percentage of non-Florida students
105
continued to advance not only because of the increasing influx of non-
Florida PBDGI students (Table 12), but also because the number of Florida
PBDGI students has leveled off (Table 11). In contrast with the public
sectors of higher education, in the PBDGI the proportion of males in the
enrollment rose 0.6 per cent (Table 13). For the first time in at least
the last fourteen years, there was a net decrease of 1.3 per cent in PBDGI
enrollment, from 43,165 students in 1971 to 42,592 students last year
(Table 46). Of the twenty private baccalaureate degree granting institutions
reporting as four-year institutions in 1970, eight have declined in enroll-
ment over the past two years and twelve have reported enrollment increases
(Table 21).
PRIVATE JUNIOR COLLEGES
Two changes in the ranks of the private junior colleges have occurred
since last year. St. Joseph College, having closed after completion of
the 1971-72 school year, has been deleted from the current list of active
higher educational institutions. Jones College, Orlando, has returned
to baccalaureate degree granting status.
After trending downward for the last 13 years, private junior college
enrollment expressed as a percentage .of total on-campus enrollment in each
type of institution has dipped to 0.4 per cent of the total on-campus
enrollment (Table 8). A smaller number of out-of-state students willing
and able to attend private junior colleges in Florida accounted, at least
partially, for this fall-off in enrollment (Table 12). Over the last two
years the private junior colleges have shown the largest increase, 25.6 per
cent, in proportion of female to male enrollment of any of the four types
of institutions (Table 13).
106
On the other hand, total enrollment, falling nearly 52 per cent
this year after a 52 per cent drop last year, continued to plummet
(Table 46). The transition of many schools both to and away from junior
college status combined with the relatively small total number of students
enrolled in the private two-year schools have to a great degree caused
the large year-to-year fluctuations in oncampus enrollment in the private
junior colleges. St. Joseph College, after switching from a PBDGI to a
private junior college in 1967, closed after the 1971-72 school year.
In 1963, Jones College opened as a private baccalaureate degree granting
school. In 1967, Jones College shifted from a PBDGI to a private junior
college; then, in 1971 Jones College, Jacksonville branch, followed in
1972 by Jones College, Orlando branch, returned to a baccalaureate degree
issuing level. Prior to 1970, Webber College was a private school awarding
the baccalaureate degree, but in 1970 Webber College became a private
junior college. Moreover, the College of Orlando ceased operation after
completion of the 1970-71 school year.
FIRST-TIME-IN-COLLEGE ENROLLMENT
FTIC enrollment constituted over 24 per cent of total on-campus en-
rollment in Florida this year (Table 1). As evidenced in Table 32, the
public community and junior colleges have expanded their share of FTIC
enrollment to such an extent that they now enroll 70 per cent of all FTIC
students. Tables 33 and 34 indicate that over the last fifteen years,
while they have made proportionally large gains in both Florida and non-
Florida enrollment, the public two-year schools very definitely attract more
107
students residing in Florida than out-of-state FT1C students, who still
prefer Cle private baccalaureate degree granting schools. Although in
1971 there was a 1.5 per cent drop in FTIC enrollment (Table 35), this
year FTIC enrollment jumped by 8.4 per cent (4,831 students). A furthe-:
inspection of Table 35 reveals that 75 per cent of the increase this ve:Ir
(3,622 of 4,831 students) was attributable to a higher enrollment of
Florida FTIC students.
GRADUATE ENROLLMENT
Approximately 7.5 per cent of the 254,112 students recorded in the
1972 enrollment report were classified as graduate students (Table 1).
For the third year in succession the proportion of graduate students in
the general student population declined (Table 42). With an enrollment
of 5,090 students, the University of Florida had the largest graduate
school in the state, while of the SUS schools, Florida State University
not only had the largest percentage of non-Florida students enrolled,
but also had the larges number of non-Florida students (Table 4). Co-
incidentally, both the State University System and the private baccalaureate
degree awarding institutions had an identical non-Florida graduate-student
enrollment of 19.8 per cent:
Although graduate enrollment grew quite rapidly in the last half of
the decade of the 1960's, graduate registration has clearly leveled off
in the early 1970's (Table 40). In fact, graduate enrollment even receded
by 638 students this year to 19,137 (Table 42). Enrollment of Florida
residents in graduate-schools throughout the state has accurately mirrored
this same trend of development (Table 40).
108
NON-FLORIDA ENROLLMENT
A student who reports his permanent residency at the time of his
application to a higher educational institution in Florida as being
outside of the state of Florida is defined to be a non-Florida enrollee.
Non-Florida enrollment in Florida for the Fall, 1972 was 14.4 per cent
of the total student population (Table 3). This year a greater per-
centage (19.8 per cent to 14.0 per cent) of graduate than undergraduate
students came from outside of Florida (Table 4). Only about 8.0 per
cent of the students in the public sector were non-Florida students;
whereas over 45 per cent of the enrollment in the private sector were
composed of non-Florida students (Table 5). The private junior colleges
with a non-Florida enrollment of nearly 72 per cent leaned very heavily
toward a high registration of non-Florida students; however, only 5.9 per
cent of the students in the public two-year institutions were classified
as non-Florida residents (Table 12). Even though total non-Florida en-
rollment has nearly quadrupled since 1957, out-of-state enrollment never-
theless comprised a smaller proportion of the total student population
in 1972 than in 1957 (14.4 per cent in 1972 to 18.8 per cent in 1957).
109
TABLE 45
ENROLLMENT INCREASE SINCE 1957 AND PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL
ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENT BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION
On-Campus
On-Campus
% of 1957
% of 1972
Enrollment
Enrollment
Total
Total
Increase
Increase %
On-Campus
On-Campus
1957
1972
1957-1972
1957-1972
Enrollment
Enrollment
SUS
21,146
88,713
67,567
319.5
42.1
34.9
Pub. CC & JC
6,169
121,827
115,658
1,874.8
12.3
47.9
Priv. BDGI
21,577
42,592
21,015
97.4
42.9
i6.8
1-,
Priv. JC
1,394
980
-414
-29.7
2.7
0.4
Total
50,286
254,112
203,826
405.3
100.0
100.0
NOTE:
The 1958 Enrollment Report showed a total
on-campus enrollment of 49,219 for the fall of
1957.
Because of revision of counting procedures, the 1957 total enrollment
figure has been set as
50,286.
TABLE 46
ON-CAMPUS ENROLLMENTS AND PERCENTAGE CHANGES BY TYPE OF INSTITUTION
1959-1972
Fall of
SUS
Public CC & JC
Priv.
BDGI
Priv. JC
Total
Enrol.
% Inc.
Enrol.
% Inc.
Enrol.
% Inc.
Enrol.
% Inc.
Enrol.
% Inc.
1959
23,713
5.1
11,008
14.5
23,267
5.5
2,133
15.5
60,121
7.2
1960
27,053
14.1
15,790
43.4
23,760
2.1
1,569
-26.4
68,172
13.4
1961
29,219
8.0
22,116
40.1
25,158
5.9
1,835
17.0
78,328
11.8
1962
30,675
5.0
29,356
32.7
25,970
3.2
1,922
4.7
87,923
12.2
1963
33,348
8.7
38,491
31.1
27,074
4.3
3,080
60.2
101,993
16.0
1964
38,478
15.4
45,949
19.4
29,880
10.4
2,558
17.0*
116,865
14.6
1965
43,846
14.0
58,426
27.2
32,328
8.2
3,124
22.1
137,724
17.8
1966
48,372
10.3
70,850
21.3
33,879
4.8
3,045
- 2.5
156,146
13.4
1967
54,119
11.9
78,597
10.9
35,634
5.2
3,590
17.9*
171,940
10.1
1968
60,515
11.8
89,661
14.1
39,189
10.0
3,634
1.2
192,999
10.9
1969
67,794
12.0
99,539
11.0
40,986
4.6
3,393
- 6.6
211,712
9.7
1970
73,488
8.4
107,834
8.3
41,080
0.2
4,239
24.9*
226,641
7.1
1971
78,396
6.7
120,149
11.4
43,165
5.1
2,036
-52.0*
243,746
7.5
1972
88,713
13.2
121,827
1.4
42,592
-1.3
980
-51.9*
254,112
4.3
% Increase
1959-1972
274.1
1,006.7
83.1
-54.1
322.7
Jones rollese chifted from private der,rea-srantins to a
-17=2 jrnior zellage in 1:57, but the
Jacksonville branch returned to 271DGI statue in 1971, while the Oricnzlo 31:=2a reverL02.
tJ -'72ST status
in 1972.
St. Joseph College and Weber Collese shifted from private c:cgrce-3.1.anting to
private j=ior
colleges in 1970, then St. Joseph College closed in 1072.
The 1964 privace junior college total -
includes 34 Florida Military College students not
reported elsewhere in this text.