Office of the Special Advisor to the President on American Indian Affairs
Arizona State University
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Bar and Pie Charts (December 2008) - American Indian Student Population and Tribal Representation

 

2008 ASU Institutional Analysis — Quick Facts      http://uoia.asu.edu

Quick Facts is a summary page of ASU FAQs for the semester, including enrollment, degrees awarded, persistence and graduation rates, undergraduate costs and more. It is updated after the 21st day of each semester.

American Indian Student Population

Fall 2008 = 1,453

Undergraduate = 1215

Graduate = 238

Top four colleges/schools for total American Indian student population

1. Liberal Arts & Sciences (423)

2. Education (134)

3. Engineering (109)

4. Nursing (86)

                For more information on other colleges/schools please visit the website.  The breakdown for American Indian students is as follows:

Undergraduate

Top 4 Colleges/Schools:

1.  Liberal Arts & Sciences (395)

         Male (157) Female (238)

2.  Engineering (103)

         Male (68) Female (35)

3.  Nursing (81)

         Male (9) Female (72)

4.  Education (76)

         Male (16) Female (60)

Graduate

Top 4 Colleges/Schools:

1.  Education (58)

         Male (12) Female (46)

2.  Law (37)

         Male (18) Female (19)

3.  Public Programs (31)

        Male (7) Female (24)

4.  Liberal Arts & Sciences (28)

         Male (10) Female (18)

Total ASU Student Enrollment 67,082

Note: there may be more American Indian/Alaskan Native students not accounted for due to provisions that students are not required to mark their ethnicity/tribal affiliation(s) when they enroll.  Ex.  Fall 2006, 318 students identified as American Indian/Alaskan Native, but did not mark tribal affiliation(s).

ASU American Indian Student Services Retreat

Agenda

Powerpoint Presentations 2006 :

Tempe Campus

Downtown Campus

Related Information:

RFP - Early College High Schools for Native Youth

American Indian Education and Cultural Training, Rio Salado College Conference Center; September 28, 2007.

The Retention and Graduation Challenge from Provost Elizabeth D. Capaldi

Office of the Vice President for Education Partnerships as a new reference and resource for future school partnerships.

Saenz named vice provost of undergraduate education Delia Saenz has been named ASU’s new vice provost for undergraduate education, effective Sept. 17. In her new role, Saenz will spearhead the university’s retention efforts.

Work Group Formed: An Integrated Work Group for Native American Student Success has been formed. This is a collaborative workgroup of staff from the Multicultural Student Services (MSS), American Indian Studies (AII), and American Indian Student Support Services (AISSS). The Work Group was started through the leadership of Alonzo Jones of MSS. Amongst many topics discussed, one idea we worked on is reaching out to students who have not reenrolled for the Fall semester. We made phone calls to students during the summer months. We were able to have some of the students reenroll and found out some students were transferring to other institutions. Some of the other ideas discussed are early warning & mid-term intervention, proactive effort to reenroll students for the following semester, tracking the entire freshmen students, initiatives to enhance social/cultural/academic integration, enhance existing programs, outreach to students in residence halls through RAs, host extra-curricular activities, Fall semester efforts to have students take ASU101/academic coaching/orientations, and a peer coach/mentoring program.

For continued efforts or the next steps from the Retreat, I think the Integrated Group would be a good working to continue the retention efforts. We can add a few more representatives from all campuses. Your thoughts?

Michael Begaye, Director
American Indian Student Support Services
American Indian Studies
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
(480) 965-6280
(480) 965-7201 fax

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