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title | Teaching & Learning Metrics |
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title | 1. Public University National Ranking |
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| A top-50 ranking on at least two well-known and highly respected national public university rankings, reflecting national preeminence, using most recent rankings, includes: Princeton Review, Fiske Guide, QS World University Ranking, Times Higher Education World University Ranking, Academic Ranking of World University, US News and World Report National University, US News and World Report National Public University, US News and World Report Liberal Arts Colleges, Forbes, Kiplinger, Washington Monthly Liberal Arts Colleges, Washington Monthly National University, and Center for Measuring University Performance. |
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title | 2. Freshmen in Top 10% of HS Graduating Class |
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| Percent of all degree-seeking, first-time, first-year (freshman) students who had high school class rank within the top 10% of their graduating high school class. Source: As reported by the university to the Common Data Set. |
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title | 3. Time to Degree for FTICs in 120hr programs |
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| This metric is the number of years between the start date (using the student entry date) and the end date (using the last month in the term degree was granted) for a graduating class of first-time, single-major baccalaureates in 120 credit hour programs within a (Summer, Fall, Spring) year. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 4. Percent of Bachelor's Degrees Without Excess Hours |
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| This metric is based on the percentage of baccalaureate degrees awarded within 110% of the credit hours requir ed for a degree based on the Board of Governors Academic Program Inventory. This metric excludes the following types of student credits: accelerated mechanisms, remedial coursework, non-native credit hours that are not used toward the degree, non-native credit hours from failed, incomplete, withdrawn, or repeated courses, credit hours from internship programs, credit hours up to 10 foreign language credit hours, and credit hours earned in military science courses that are part of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) program. Starting in 2018-19, the calculation for this metric included a new type of statutory exclusion of up to 12 credit hours for students who graduated in four years or less. This metric does not report the number of students who paid the “Excess Hour Surcharge” (Section 1009.286, Florida Statutes). Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 5. FTIC 6 year Graduation Rate [Includes full- and part-time students] |
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| The First-time-in-college (FTIC) cohort is defined as undergraduates entering in fall term (or summer continuing to fall) with fewer than 12 hours earned since high school graduation. The rate is the percentage of the initial cohort that has either graduated from the same institution by the summer term of their sixth academic year. Both full-time and part-time students are used in the calculation. FTIC includes ‘early admits’ students who were admitted as a degree-seeking student prior to high school graduation. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 6. FCS AA Transfer Three-Year Graduation Rate [full-& part-time students] |
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| This transfer cohort is defined as undergraduates entering in fall term (or summer continuing to fall)from the Florida College System with anAssociate in Arts (AA)degree. The rate is the percentage of the initial cohort that has either graduated from the same institution by the summer term of their third academic year. Both full-time and part-time students are used in the calculation. Students who were flagged as enrolled in advanced graduate programs that would not earn a bachelor’s degree were not excluded. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 7. Pell Recipient Four-Year Graduation Rate [for Full-Time FTIC] |
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| This metric is based on the percentage of first-time-in-college (FTIC) students who started in the Fall (or summer continuing to Fall) term and were enrolled full-time in their first semester and who received a Pell grant during their first year and who graduated from the same institution by the summer term of their fourth year. FTIC includes ‘early admit’ students who were admitted as a degree-seeking student prior to high school graduation. Students who were flagged as enrolled in advanced graduate programs that would not earn a bachelor’s degree were excluded. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 8. Bachelor’s Degrees Awarded |
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| This is a count of first-major baccalaureate and graduate degrees awarded. First Majors include the most common scenario of one student earning one degree in one Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) code. In those cases where a student earns a baccalaureate degree under two different degree CIPs, a distinction is made between “dual degrees” and “dual majors.” Also included in first majors are “dual degrees” which are counted as separate degrees (e.g., counted twice). In these cases, both degree CIPs receive a “degree fraction” of 1.0. The calculation of degree fractions is made according to each institution’s criteria. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 9. Graduate Degrees Awarded |
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| This is a count of first-major baccalaureate and graduate degrees awarded. First Majors include the most common scenario of one student earning one degree in one Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) code. In those cases where a student earns a baccalaureate degree under two different degree CIPs, a distinction is made between “dual degrees” and “dual majors.” Also included in first majors are “dual degrees” which are counted as separate degrees (e.g., counted twice). In these cases, both degree CIPs receive a “degree fraction” of 1.0. The calculation of degree fractions is made according to each institution’s criteria. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 10. Bachelor’s Degrees Awarded to African-American & Hispanic |
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| Race/Ethnicity data is self-reported by students. Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic do not include students classified as Non-Resident Alien or students with a missing race code. Degree data is based on first-major counts only – second majors are not included. Percentage of Degrees is based on the number of baccalaureate degrees awarded to non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic students divided by the total degrees awarded - excluding those awarded to non-resident aliens and unreported. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 11. % of Adult (Aged 25+) Undergraduates Enrolled |
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| This metric is based on the age of the student at the time of their Fall term enrollment - not their age upon entry. As a proxy, age is based on birth year not birth date. Note: Unclassified students with a HS diploma (or GED) and above are included in this calculation. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 12. % Bachelor's Degrees in STEM & Health |
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| The percentage of baccalaureate degrees that are classified as STEM or Health disciplines by the Board of Governors in the Academic Program Inventory. These counts include second majors. Second Majors include all dual/second majors (e.g., degree CIP receive a degree fraction that is less than 1). The calculation of degree fractions is made according to each institution’s criteria. The calculation for the number of second majors rounds each degree CIP’s fraction of a degree up to 1 and then sums the total. Second Majors are typically used when providing degree information by discipline/CIP, to better conveys the number of graduates who have specific skill sets associated with each discipline. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 13. % Graduate Degrees in STEM & Health |
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| The percentage of baccalaureate degrees that are classified as STEM or Health disciplines by the Board of Governors in the Academic Program Inventory. These counts include second majors. Second Majors include all dual/second majors (e.g., degree CIP receive a degree fraction that is less than 1). The calculation of degree fractions is made according to each institution’s criteria. The calculation for the number of second majors rounds each degree CIP’s fraction of a degree up to 1 and then sums the total. Second Majors are typically used when providing degree information by discipline/CIP, to better conveys the number of graduates who have specific skill sets associated with each discipline. Source: State University Database System (SUDS). |
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title | 14. Licensure & Certification Exam Pass Rates |
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| The average pass rates as a percentage of all first-time examinees for Nursing, Law, Medicine (3 subtests), Veterinary, Pharmacy, Dental (2 subtests), Physical Therapy, and Occupational Therapy, when applicable. The average pass rate for the nation or state is also provided as a contextual benchmark. The Board’s 2025 System Strategic Plan calls for all institutions to be above or tied the exam’s respective benchmark. Note about Benchmarks: The State benchmark for the Florida Bar Exam excludes non-Florida institutions. The national benchmark for the USMLE exams are based on rates for MD degrees from US institutions. |
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title | Scholarship, Research & Innovation Metrics |
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title | 15. National Academy Memberships |
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| National Academy Memberships held by faculty as reported by the Center for Measuring University Performance in the Top American Research Universities (TARU) annual report or the official membership directories maintained by each national academy. |
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| Awards include: American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Fellows, Beckman Young Investigators, Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Awards, Cottrell Scholars, Fulbright American Scholars, Getty Scholars in Residence, Guggenheim Fellows, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators, Lasker Medical Research Awards, MacArthur Foundation Fellows, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Distinguished Achievement Awards, National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Fellows, National Humanities Center Fellows, National Institutes of Health (NIH) MERIT, National Medal of Science and National Medal of Technology, NSF CAREER awards (excluding those who are also PECASE winners), Newberry Library Long-term Fellows, Pew Scholars in Biomedicine, Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), Robert Wood Johnson Policy Fellows, Searle Scholars, Sloan Research Fellows, Woodrow Wilson Fellows. |
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title | 17. Percent of Undergraduates Engaged in Research |
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| NEED DESCRIPTIONNumerator includes graduating seniors who completed an honors thesis, worked on their own research and/or creative activity topic with the guidance of a faculty member (individually or jointly), submitted an article or research for publication or exhibited research at a professional/academic conference (individually or jointly). The denominator includes graduating seniors who complete the survey. Source: Student survey data reported to the Florida Board of Governors. |
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title | 18. Total Research Expenditures ($M) |
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| Total expenditures(in millions of dollars)for all research activities (including non-science and engineering activities). Source:As reported by each institution to the National Science Foundation annual survey of Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) based on the NSF rules and definitions. |
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title | 19. Research Expenditures Funded from External Sources |
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| This metric reports the amount of research expenditures that was funded from federal, private industry and other (non-state and non-institutional) sources. Source: National Science Foundation annual survey of Higher Education Research and Development (HERD). |
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title | 20. Utility Patents Awarded |
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| The number of utility patents awarded by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) by Calendar year – does not include design, plant or other types. |
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title | 21. Licenses/Options Executed Annually |
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| Licenses/options executed in the fiscal year for all technologies – as reported by universities on the Association of University Technology Managers Annual (AUTM) annual Licensing Survey. |
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title | 22. Number of Start-up Companies Created |
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| The number of start-up companies that were dependent upon the licensing of University technology for initiation –as reported by universities on the Association of University Technology Managers Annual (AUTM) annual Licensing Survey. |
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title | Institution Specific Goals |
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| Institution Specific Goals are designated every year based on the institution strategic plan.
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title | Normalized Citation Impact |
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| Maintain the Normalized Citation Impact above 1.5 The Category Normalized Citation Impact allows one to SAFELY make comparisons between two things that are actually different. For instance, comparing a review article on Alzheimer's disease with a primary article on free speech would be inappropriate. These articles are from different research fields and represent different types (review vs. article) of scholarship. If we want to fairly compare the impact of these two documents, we need to "normalize" them. The CNCI metric executes normalization for you, so you can compare different things on level playing field. The CNCI answers this question: what was the impact (i.e., citation #) of this specific article in relation to all the other articles published in the same time frame (1-year), in the same research area, and of the same document type? The CNCI number will always be be greater than 0. If a CNCI of 1 is reported, it means that an article has performed "on par" with the other articles in its peer group. If the article has a CNCI <1, it has under-performed. And if the CNCI is >1, it has outperformed its peer group. Source: Clarivate Analytics - InCites (InCites) |
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| The percentage of undergraduate classes, excluding class subsections, with fewer than 20 students enrolled during the fall term as reported in the U.S. News & World Report rankings. Source: U.S. News & World Report (USNWR) |
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