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TCU: TCU Reaches Goal for Six-Year Graduation Rate

TopFrog

Lifelong Frog

TCU: TCU Reaches Goal for Six-Year Graduation Rate

TCU set forth a goal in 2016: The university wanted at least 85% of students to graduate within six years. TCU has now exceeded the mark at 85.52%.

“This is a remarkable achievement, especially when you consider that that particular cohort – 2017 – felt the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic during their third and fourth years,” said Cathan Coghlan, executive director of the Agile Analytics Initiative, and part of Project 85, the task force set with achieving the goal.

“The good news is also that this appears not to be a one-year bump, but rather the first year of a new plateau of an 85 to 87% six-year graduation rate,” Coghlan said. “The 2018 and 2019 cohorts both appear to be on track for a graduation rate of at least 85% with five-year and four-year graduation rates of 84.5% and 75.4% respectively, both all-time highs for those time periods.”

Kathy Cavins-Tull, vice chancellor of Student Affairs was appointed to co-chair Project 85, which met intensively in the beginning to gather information and identify opportunity to provide additional student support.

“Several initiatives evolved from this process,” said Cavins-Tull. “For instance, the initiation of the Student Success Center incorporated comprehensive tutoring, testing and academic coaching. We also introduced exit interviews, onboarded new advising software that allows us to better store and access information, and formalized the process of contacting students who had not registered for the upcoming semester. This combination of data, programs and personal connection really combined for success, in my opinion.”

Other initiatives included an advanced registration campaign, an early-alert process for a targeted audience, faculty and staff mentors, a leave of absence option, transcript request alerts and researching where students go who leave TCU.

“We have high hopes for our continued graduation rate. This year we reached a first-year retention rate of 94.3%,” Cavins-Tull said. “This is such a testament to the combined efforts of our faculty, first-year programming and our engaged students, and I am confident that we will continue to make strides as we set our sights on our next goal for student success.” 

Next up? Project 90. The university will soon share plans on its goal to keep raising the bar and retain and graduate 90 percent of its students within six years.
 

HFrog1999

Member
Van Wilder cats GIF
 

Big Frog II

Active Member
Thankfully my 3 sons took only 4. I took 4.5, but never went to summer school. I always worked and they didn't have tests to get college hours in high school back then like they do now.
 

Boomhauer

Active Member
Proud member of the 5.5 year plan. Class of 2001, back when tuition by the credit/hour and still somewhat doable for those of us plebs who had to work while getting our degree.

Same. Tuition was still hourly and most semesters couldn’t afford to take more than 12hrs. So took me 5yrs
 

hometown frog

Active Member
It took me 4.5 years to get my degree. Engineering was a slog to complete in 8 semesters. That last semester w only a few core classes was REALLY fun….
 
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