Monitoring the Status of the Force

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Transcript Monitoring the Status of the Force

Department of Defense
Implementation of the
Principles of Excellence
(EO 13607)
Carolyn Baker
Chief Voluntary Education Programs
1
Voluntary Education
Vision
Life-Long Learning for Service Members and Adult Family Members
Mission
Advocate Life-Long Learning for the DoD Community by Providing Policy, Program Guidance, and Resource
Oversight
Educational Programs
High School Completion /Diploma; Military Tuition Assistance (TA); Postsecondary Degree Programs;
Independent Study and Distance Learning Programs; College Credit Examination Program; Academic Skills
Program; and Certification and Licensure Programs
Authorization
Sections 2005 and 2007 of Title 10, United States Code
PB2012 Voluntary Education Programs: $660.5M (Tuition Assistance
and Operational
Costs)
Education Sites World Wide: 204 to include Afghanistan
In FY12
• 538,546 Individuals Participated in Vol Ed Programs
• 286,665 Troops Enrolled in Postsecondary Courses
•
48,712 Troops Degrees from College
•
1,785 Certification / Licensures Awarded
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Source: FY2012 Voluntary Education Report
DoD Policy
DoD Instruction (DODI) 1322.25
Voluntary Education Programs
December 6, 2012
The DoDI establishes Voluntary Education policy
States institution eligibility criteria for tuition assistance (TA)
Requires a signed memorandum of understanding (MOU)
with DoD by an educational institution providing educational
programs through the DoD TA program
DoDI 1322.25, Encl 3, 1.o. “To receive TA the institutions
home campus must be a signatory of the DoD Voluntary
Education Partnership MOU and the MOU must be posted on
the DoD website.”
7/18/2015
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DoD MOU Update Report
February 25, 2013
Total number of schools with existing DoD MOU's (in Participating Institution status): 2,635
Total number of Sub-campuses of above schools: 3,674
Total number of above schools being SOC Members: 859
Total number of above schools with National Accreditation: 749
Total number of above schools with Regional Accreditation: 1,886
Total number of above schools selected Public School Type: 1,208
Total number of above schools selected Private for-profit School Type: 683
Total number of above schools selected Private not-for-profit School Type: 744
Total numbers of Degree Types offered by above schools:
- Career Training: 1,409
- Associate Degrees:1,725
- Bachelor Degrees: 1,299
- Master Degrees: 1,072
- Doctorate Degrees: 556
Method of Delivery
: - Distance Learning: 1,888
- Classroom Learning: 2,561
- Correspondence Learning: 250
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Presidents Executive Order 13607
signed April 27, 2012
• Requires institutions to provide information, support, and
protections to Federal education beneficiaries
• Strengthens oversight, enforcement and accountability activities
within educational benefit programs
• Establishes Principles of Excellence as guidelines for
educational institutions receiving Federal funding
• Expands student data collection efforts to better understand
educational outcomes
• Requires development of a Centralized Complaint System for
students
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DoD Focus - PEO Requirements
DoD Requirements:
1. Require Schools to:
a. Provide Students with an Education Plan
b. Provide students with a personalized, standardized form with costs, financial aid and outcome
measures
c. Inform students of the availability and eligibility Federal financial aid before arranging private
student loans
d. End fraudulent and unduly recruitment on military installations
e. Obtain approval of institution accrediting agency for new course or program offerings before
enrolling students
f. Allow service members and reservists to be readmitted to a program if they are temporarily unable
to attend class or have to suspend their studies due to service requirements
g. Have a refund policy that is aligned with the refund of unearned student aid rules applicable to
Federal student aid
h. Designate a point of contact for academic and financial advising
2. Provide military students, prior to using their benefits, streamlined tools to compare educational
institutions using key measures for affordability and value through the VA’s eBenifits portal
3. Create an interagency Centralized Complaint System
4. Establish new uniform rules and strengthen existing procedures for access to military installations by
education institutions
5. Establish procedures for targeted risk-based program reviews of institutions to ensure compliance with
the principles
Currently in the MOU to be released:
•
•
Full requirement 1. a, c, d, h.
Partial requirement: 1. g.
What needs to be included/additional verbiage in the MOU: 1. b, e, f, g.
Tasks to be performed: 2, 3, 4, and 5.
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Readmission
f.
Allow service members and reservists to be readmitted to a
program if they are temporarily unable to attend class or have to
suspend their studies due to service requirements
DoD will be implementing:
Department of Education 34 CFR 668.18 - Readmission requirements for
Service members
(a) General. (1) An institution may not deny readmission to a person who is a
member of, applies to be a member of, performs, has performed, applies to
perform, or has an obligation to perform, service in the uniformed services
on the basis of that membership, application for membership, performance
of service, application for service, or obligation to perform service.
(2) (i) An institution must promptly readmit to the institution a person
described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section with the same academic status
as the student had when the student last attended the institution…
(iv) (A) If the institution determines that the student is not prepared to
resume…
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Information to Inform Choice
• Provide prospective veteran and service member students with
a personalized and standardized form to help understand the
total cost of the educational program including:
• tuition and fees;
• the amount of that cost that will be covered by Federal
educational benefits;
• the type and amount of financial aid they may qualify for;
their estimated student loan debt upon graduation;
• information about student outcomes; and
• other information to facilitate comparison of aid packages
offered by different educational institutions;
• Inform veteran and service member students about the
availability of Federal financial aid and have in place policies to
alert those students of their potential eligibility for that aid
before packaging or arranging private student loans or
alternative financing programs.
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Information to Inform Choice
Standardized Forms
b. Provide students with a personalized, standardized form with costs,
financial aid, and outcome measures
DoD recommends schools use:
Department of Education
College Scorecard
and
Financial Aid
Shopping Sheet
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Complaint System
3. Create an interagency Centralized Complaint System
DoD, Department of Justice, Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau, Department of Education, and Veterans Affairs are
creating a centralized school complaint system
The system will:
• Receive school complaints/concerns from all Agencies
• Process complaints
• Refer matters for civil or criminal enforcement
The pilot system will be operational spring of 2013.
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Military Base Access
4. Establish new uniform rules and strengthen existing procedures
for access to military installations by education institutions
DoD is implementing the following policies in the spring of 2013:
•
Institutions may access military bases to provide education, guidance, and
training opportunities ONLY
• Marketing firms or companies that own and operate higher-learning
institutions
• will not have access to the bases
• May have access to military bases to provide education guidance to their
students:
• Access only through the base education officer via a written proposal
(a) Have a signed MOU with DoD;
(b) Be chartered or licensed by the State government in which the services will be
rendered;
(c) Be State approved for the use of veteran’s education benefits;
(d) Participants in Title IV programs ;
(e) Course offering must be provided by postsecondary institution accredited by a
national or regional accrediting body recognized by the U.S. Department of Education;
and
(f) Have an on base student population of at least 20 active duty military students
BACK UP SLIDES
12
Military Tuition Assistance
Avg Cost Per Enrollment
Service’s Executed
Undergraduate
Graduate
FY02
$276.79
$461.70
FY03
$421.76
$687.34
$568.2M
FY04
$500.18
$696.97
FY12
FY05
$498.31
$715.06
FY06
$512.52
$728.90
$562.3M
FY07
$545.62
$746.63
FY11
FY08
$536.31
$743.03
FY09
$547.49
$750.00
FY10
$644.26
$750.00
FY11
$634.54
$750.00
FY12
$638.06
$750.00
COST
$224.7M
$89.5M
$114.9M
$197.6M
$42.6M
$67.2M
$18.5M
$56.3M
FY 02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10 11
12
FY12 Avg Cost Per Course: $649.99 (FY11 $648.76)
COURSES
874.1K
FY12
235,018
380,169
866.8K
Courses Taken
FY11
134,452
190,299
282,300
217,759
77,164
61,974
FY02
03
04
05
Marines
06
07
Air Force
08
Navy
*Does not include NCPACE
Source: FY2012 Voluntary Education Report
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10 11
12
FY06
FY07
FY08
FY09
FY10
FY11
FY12
Army
277,419
275,171
306,809
321,494
365,703
377,175
380,169
Navy
208,598
186,200
153,354
161,971
144,687
136,917
134,452
AF
269,581
276,310
284,365
278,716
270,570
273,932
282,300
MC
74,605
67,734
71,213
72,411
76,827
78,764
77,164
DoD
Total
830,203
805,415
815,741
857,786
866,788
874,094
834,592
Army
FY12: 286,665 Service members Participated in TA
DELIVERY
Traditional 24% & Distance 76%*
UG & Grad Courses Taken
874,094
Traditional Classroom
209,712
Distance Learning
664,382
Undergraduate Courses
Graduate Courses
45,000
40,000
35,000
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
300,000
250,000
200,000
150,000
100,000
50,000
0
MC
Navy
Air Force
Army
MC
Navy
Traditional
*FY11 Traditional
Air Force
Army
Distance Learning
25% & Distance 75%
FY 10 Traditional 29% & Distance 71%
Source: FY2012Voluntary Education Report
Active Duty
Diplomas/Degrees/Certifications Awarded
Masters 5,782
Doctorates 27
Certificates/Licensures 1,785
HS/GED 8
Bachelors 9,591
Associate Degrees
33,304
50,497 Degrees/Diplomas/Certificates
Earned (FY 12)
Source: FY2012 Voluntary Education Report