The university’s enrollment fell by 70 between Fall 2010 (13,277)
and Fall 2011 (13,207) due in part to tighter admissions standards and new
preparatory requirements for students admitted through the profile assessment
process. Former President James H. Ammons told the Board of Trustees that FAMU
rejected almost 2,000 applications for the class that began in Fall 2011.
FAMU experienced another enrollment decline in Fall 2012.
The Office of Institutional Research has not posted the final numbers on its
website.
The university must boost and stabilize its enrollment in
order to prevent bigger budget shortfalls.
Florida Auditor General David W. Martin has made favorable comments about FAMU’s enrollment growth for a number of years. In the university’s 2012 financial statement audit, he said that FAMU’s enrollment growth has helped it fill the gap from state budget cuts.
“As the Legislature continues to reduce higher education
funding in order to balance budget limitations, enrollment growth will play a
key role in the financial stability of the University,” Martin wrote. “For the
Fall 2010 semester, enrollment grew to an unprecedented 13,277 students. The
preliminary headcount for Fall 2011 is 13,207. Projections demonstrated enrollment
will remain relatively stable through the fiscal year 2016-17.”
FAMU still has an opportunity to increase its overall enrollment by taking in more students in the spring and summer semesters of 2013.
Source: FAMU Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) reports.
FAMU still has an opportunity to increase its overall enrollment by taking in more students in the spring and summer semesters of 2013.
Source: FAMU Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) reports.