Location (Main Campus): 800 West University Parkway Orem, President: Dr. Matthew S. Holland Board of Trustees Chair: Elaine S. Dalton

Fall 2017 Student Headcount: 37,282 Fall 2017 Student FTE: 25,037 Fall 2017 Faculty/Staff: 5,486 Degree Offerings: Master's - 8 Graduate Certificates - 3 Bachelor's - 87 Associate's - 64 Certificates and Diplomas - 51 2016-2017 Graduates: 5,024

Athletics: NCAA Division I Western Athletic Conference (WAC) Basic Carnegie Classification: Master's Colleges & Universities: Small Programs Elective Classification: Community Engagement

Accredited by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities

FACT BOOK 2017

Institutional Research & Information University

800 West University Parkway Suite BA-205 Orem, UT 84058-5999

Telephone: (801) 863-7923 Facsimile: (801) 863-7924 Email: [email protected] URL: www.uvu.edu/iri

Preface

The Fact Book is an annual publication of Institutional Research & Information (IRI) at . The purpose of the Fact Book is to translate accumulated data into useful information for those within and outside the university.

It should be noted that data extraction methods used for this Fact Book are consistent with those used in previous years. The most current information will be reflected in the online Fact Book as improved means of obtaining accurate information are developed.

Every effort has been made to include within this publication the data most often requested; however, of necessity, the information presented herein is limited. You can find additional information and a complete listing of our research online at www.uvu.edu/iri. We invite the users of this book to freely comment on what information they would like to have included in future editions of the Fact Book. Please contact our office at (801) 863-7923 or email us at [email protected], with your suggestions.

IRI wishes to thank the individuals and departments who have contributed to this publication.

All information is provided by IRI unless otherwise noted. Summer information is based on end-of-term data. Fall and Spring information is based on data captured on the 15th day of instruction, typically called “Thirdweek”.

Contents Fast Facts ...... 1 State of Origin ...... 26 UVU Presidents and Past Institutional Names . 55 Fall 2017 Enrollment and Other Information ..... 1 Country of Origin ...... 27 Board of Trustees ...... 56 Applicant Information, ACT Scores, Tuition and Main Feeder High Schools ...... 28 Finance ...... 57 Financial Aid ...... 2 Off-Campus Locations ...... 29 Appropriated Education and General Operating Remedial/Developmental Needs ...... 3 Alternative Delivery ...... 31 Funds ...... 57 Retention/Graduation ...... 4 College/School ...... 33 History of State Tax Fund Expenditures per Fall Historical Enrollment ...... 5 Primary Major ...... 34 FTE ...... 59 Spring Historical Enrollment ...... 6 Number of Degrees Awarded ...... 38 Facilities ...... 60 Summer Historical Enrollment ...... 7 Graduation Rates ...... 38 Current Facilities and Acreage ...... 60 Enrollment Summary ...... 8 Retention Rates ...... 39 Physical Facilities of Other Institutions ...... 61 Student Information ...... 10 Athletics Final Records ...... 40 Appendix ...... 62 Fall Headcount and FTE History ...... 10 Faculty and Staff ...... 41 Student Body Presidents ...... 62 Spring Headcount and FTE History ...... 11 Employee Summary, IPEDS data...... 41 UVU Honorary Degree Recipients ...... 63 Summer Headcount and FTE History ...... 12 Employee Summary by Classification, Gender, Tuition and Fees ...... 64 Fall Headcount and FTE History since 1945 ..... 13 Ethnicity ...... 42 Total Scholarships, Tuition Waivers, Financial Enrollment Comparisons of Utah Universities Full-Time Faculty History ...... 43 Aid 2016-17 Academic Year ...... 65 and College ...... 15 Faculty Rank by Department ...... 44 Federal Grants and Contracts, 2016-17 ...... 66 Gender ...... 16 Universities Represented by Doctorates of State and Private Grants and Contracts, IPEDS Ethnicity...... 18 Contract Faculty ...... 45 2016-17 ...... 68 Full-time/Part-time ...... 19 General Information...... 47 Faculty Senate Presidents ...... 69 Average Attempted Hours ...... 19 University Mission Statement, Core Themes, Professional Association of College Employees Class Level ...... 20 and Administrative Imperatives ...... 47 (PACE) Presidents ...... 69 Residency ...... 21 History of the University ...... 50 UVU Foundation Board ...... 70 Registration Type ...... 22 Masters and Bachelor’s Degrees Awarded ...... 51 UVU Alumni Association Board of Directors .... 70 Age Group ...... 23 Associate’s Degrees Awarded...... 52 UVU Alumni Association President’s Club ...... 70 ACT Scores and Benchmarks ...... 24 Certificates and Diplomas Awarded ...... 53 Further References ...... 71 County of Origin ...... 25 Utah Valley Population Projections ...... 54

1 Fast Facts Fall 2017 Enrollment and Other Information Table of Contents

Exhibit 1 A1B2 Including High School Students # % Excluding High School Students # % Headcount 37,282 Headcount 28,545 FTE 25,037 FTE 21,602 Freshman 17,864 47.9% Freshman 9,335 32.7% Sophomore 6,485 17.4% Sophomore 6,279 22.0% Junior 5,202 14.0% Junior 5,201 18.2% Senior 7,317 19.6% Senior 7,316 25.6% Graduate1 414 1.1% Graduate1 414 1.5% Non-residents 3,852 10.3% Non-residents 3,852 13.5% Female 17,328 46.5% Female 12,852 45.0% Multicultural (IPEDS ethnicity) 6,607 17.7% Multicultural (IPEDS ethnicity) 5,140 18.0% Full-time 18,543 49.7% Full-time 17,824 62.4% Average Age 22.6 Average Age 24.5 Student to Advisor ratio 406:1 Student to Faculty ratio 25:1 High School Students 8,737 23.4% IPEDS Race/Ethnicity IPEDS Race/Ethnicity: Excluding High School Students American Indian/Alaskan Native 215 0.6% American Indian/Alaskan Native 182 0.6% Asian 459 1.2% Asian 347 1.2% Black 303 0.8% Black 267 0.9% Hispanic 4,112 11.0% Hispanic 3,168 11.1% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 310 0.8% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 263 0.9% White 29,333 78.7% White 22,210 77.8% Unreported 557 1.5% Unreported 411 1.4% Two or more 1,208 3.2% Two or more 913 3.2% Non-resident Alien2 785 2.1% Non-resident Alien2 784 2.7%

1 Includes Post-Baccalaureate students 2 This represents the number of international students enrolled for Fall but does not equal the total number of international students on campus. 2 Applicant Information, ACT Scores, Tuition and Financial Aid Table of Contents

Exhibit 2 New College Students 2017-18 Annual Full-Time Tuition and Fees2 Tuition Fees Applicants admitted (first-time college students) 10,375 Resident $4,962 $690 Total number who enrolled 4,330 Non-resident $15,376 $690 Percent of admitted who enrolled 41.7% Room & Board (Off-campus) $5,960 Median high school percentile 57 Percent of first-time students in top 25% of HS class 28% Undergraduate Student Financial Aid: (degree seeking) Full Time Part Time Employment Facts % of students who applied for need-based financial aid 67% 55% Students who work 21+ hrs/wk while in school1 50% % of students awarded any financial aid 56% 43% Student Preparation % of students awarded any need-based scholarship or 45% 32% Students needing 1+ remedial course3,4 1,541 grant Students needing 1+ remedial/developmental course3,5 2,041 % of students awarded any need-based self-help aid 54% 41% Total students who submitted ACT score 3,669 % of financial need met of students awarded any need- 64% 55% ACT Composite average score 21.7 based aid ACT English average score 21.4 Average need-based scholarship and grant awarded $5,187 $4,622 ACT Math average score 21.3 Average need-based self-help award $2,958 $2,945 ACT Reading average score 22.6 ACT Science Reasoning average score 22.0 % are based on total degree seeking Undergraduates a1b2c3d4e5

1 Fall 2017 Student Omnibus Survey 2 UVU Financial Aid Office 3 Needs do not equate to Placement in a college-level course. This needs assessment for Fall 2017 is based on tests and classes completed any time prior to entry, while Placement is based on tests and coursework within a specific time-frame (2 years for Math, 3 years for English). Note that this number only considers enrolled, degree-seeking, first-time college students. 4 A remedial course in this context is defined as Math or English < 1000. 5 A remedial/developmental course in this context is defined as Math < 1020 or English < 1000. 3 Remedial/Developmental Needs of New College Students Table of Contents

Exhibit 3 Remedial/Developmental Needs of First-Time Degree-Seeking College Students Fall 2012 Fall 2013 Fall 2014 Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 6-yr Avg1 6-yr Avg2 Total New College 3,588 3,207 3,713 4,160 4,094 4,070 3,805.3 Reading 14.0% 12.9% 13.7% 14.7% 14.1% 15.0% 14.1% 14.1% English 20.8% 19.7% 21.2% 24.0% 24.9% 25.7% 22.9% 22.7% Math (Remedial) 25.5% 26.6% 24.9% 21.4% 19.8% 26.1% 23.9% 24.1% Math (Developmental) 23.0% 22.7% 21.5% 21.5% 17.4% 16.0% 20.2% 20.4% Math (Remedial or Developmental) 48.5% 49.3% 46.5% 42.9% 37.2% 42.1% 44.1% 44.4% 1 (Remedial) 17.8% 19.3% 17.7% 18.4% 16.1% 18.2% 17.9% 17.9% 2 (Remedial) 9.0% 9.3% 9.7% 10.5% 11.6% 10.4% 10.2% 10.1% 3 (Remedial) 8.1% 7.1% 7.6% 6.9% 6.5% 9.3% 7.6% 7.6% 1+ (Remedial) 35.0% 35.7% 34.9% 35.8% 34.2% 37.9% 35.6% 35.6% 1 (Remedial or Developmental) 32.2% 33.1% 30.5% 27.0% 24.9% 28.0% 29.1% 29.3% 2 (Remedial or Developmental) 9.0% 10.5% 10.5% 12.8% 13.1% 11.5% 11.3% 11.2% 3 (Remedial or Developmental) 11.0% 9.2% 9.9% 9.7% 8.4% 10.6% 9.8% 9.8% 1+ (Remedial or Developmental) 52.2% 52.9% 50.9% 49.5% 46.4% 50.1% 50.2% 50.3%

NOTE: Completion of Remedial/Developmental Needs do not equate to Placement in a college-level course. This needs assessment (updated this year with the most current calculations) is based on tests and classes completed any time prior to entry, while Placement is based on tests and coursework within a specific time-frame (2 years for Math, 3 years for English).

a1b2

1 Weighted Average (i.e. combining all students in the 6 years) 2 Unweighted Average (i.e. average of the yearly %) 4 Retention/Graduation Information Table of Contents

Exhibit 4 Retention and Graduation Academic Degree Programs1 Full-time, Bachelor's-seeking 2016 retention rate 66% Number of Master's degrees 8 Part-time, Bachelor's-seeking 2016 retention rate 42% Number of Graduate Certificates 3 Fall 2011 cohort, Bachelor's-seeking 6-yr graduation rate 26% Number of Bachelor's degrees 87 Fall 2011 cohort, overall graduation rate (150% of time) 30% Number of Associate's degrees 64 Number of Certificates/Diplomas 51

Degrees granted in 2016-17 academic year Bachelor's degrees 2,940 Associate's degrees 1,784 Certificates 192 Diplomas 6 Master's degrees 96 Graduate Certificates 6 Total 5,024 a1

1 Academic Quality Assurance 5 Fall Historical Enrollment Information Table of Contents

Exhibit 5 a1 b2 Fall 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 IPEDS Race/Ethnicity 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Headcount 30,564 31,332 33,211 34,978 37,282 American Indian/Native Alaskan 0.8% 0.7% 0.6% 0.6% 0.6% Headcount less High School students 24,829 25,188 26,523 27,448 28,545 Asian 1.0% 1.0% 1.1% 1.1% 1.2% FTE 20,697 21,335 22,591 23,706 25,037 Black 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% Registration Type Hispanic 9.7% 9.9% 10.0% 10.8% 11.0% Undergraduate 99.4% 99.5% 99.4% 99.2% 98.9% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% 0.8% High School students 18.8% 19.6% 20.1% 21.5% 23.4% White 72.8% 69.5% 76.7% 78.1% 78.7% Continuing 55.7% 53.0% 53.6% 53.7% 50.8% Unknown 10.0% 13.0% 5.1% 2.3% 1.5% New to College 10.5% 11.6% 12.5% 11.6% 11.6% 2 or more 2.0% 1.9% 2.6% 3.0% 3.2% Readmitted 8.5% 8.6% 7.0% 7.3% 7.9% Non-resident Alien2 1.9% 2.3% 2.3% 2.3% 2.1% Transfer 5.9% 6.6% 6.2% 5.0% 5.1% Graduate 0.6% 0.5% 0.6% 0.8% 1.1%

Class Level1 Other Characteristics Freshmen 40.8% 42.8% 45.5% 46.5% 47.9% Non-resident 9.6% 10.3% 11.2% 11.0% 10.3% Sophomore 18.4% 17.8% 17.6% 17.6% 17.4% Female 44.4% 44.6% 45.4% 46.2% 46.5% Junior 16.4% 15.8% 15.0% 14.4% 14.0% Full-time 51.5% 52.0% 51.8% 51.1% 49.7% Senior 23.8% 23.1% 21.4% 20.8% 19.6% Average Age 24.3 23.9 23.4 23.1 22.6 Graduate 0.6% 0.5% 0.6% 0.8% 1.1%

1 Includes High School students 2 This represents the number of international students enrolled for Fall but does not equal the total number of international students on campus. 6 Spring Historical Enrollment Information Table of Contents

Exhibit 6 a1b2 Spring 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 IPEDS Race/Ethnicity 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Headcount 27,562 26,248 26,933 28,762 30,647 American Indian/Native Alaskan 0.9% 0.9% 0.7% 0.7% 0.6% Headcount less High School Students 24,633 23,429 24,041 25,261 26,263 Asian 1.1% 1.1% 1.0% 1.1% 1.2% FTE 19,078 18,431 18,950 20,191 21,149 Black 0.9% 0.8% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% Registration Type Hispanic 9.2% 9.6% 9.7% 10.0% 10.5% Undergraduate 99.2% 99.1% 99.3% 99.2% 99.0% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0.9% 0.8% 0.9% 0.8% 0.7% High School Students 10.6% 10.7% 10.7% 12.2% 14.3% White 76.2% 75.0% 72.6% 77.4% 78.5% Continuing 71.2% 71.1% 74.6% 73.9% 72.0% Unknown 6.8% 7.2% 9.5% 3.8% 1.9% New to College 4.0% 4.3% 4.4% 4.2% 3.6% 2 or more 2.0% 2.1% 2.1% 2.6% 3.0% Readmitted 9.5% 9.2% 5.7% 5.9% 6.2% Non-resident Alien2 2.0% 2.5% 2.7% 2.6% 2.7% Transfer 3.8% 3.7% 3.9% 3.2% 2.9% Graduate 0.8% 0.9% 0.7% 0.8% 1.0%

Class Level1 Other Characteristics Freshman 31.1% 30.9% 32.6% 35.3% 37.1% Non-resident 9.5% 10.5% 11.4% 12.0% 11.6% Sophomore 22.0% 20.7% 20.6% 20.4% 20.5% Female 42.5% 42.8% 43.8% 44.0% 44.8% Junior 18.2% 18.5% 18.1% 17.3% 16.4% Full-time 53.7% 54.7% 54.7% 54.7% 53.0% Senior 27.8% 29.0% 28.0% 26.2% 25.1% Average Age 25.0 24.9 24.5 24.0 23.9 Graduate 0.8% 0.9% 0.6% 0.8% 0.9%

1 Includes High School Students 2 This represents the number of international students enrolled for Spring but does not equal the total number of international students on campus. 7 Summer Historical Enrollment Information Table of Contents

Exhibit 7 Summer 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Primary Race/Ethnicity 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Headcount 10,084 9,792 10,147 9,762 10,370 American Indian/Native Alaskan 0.7% 0.7% 0.7% 0.6% 0.5% Headcount less High School Students 9,791 9,557 9,926 9,529 10,141 Asian 1.4% 1.2% 1.2% 1.4% 1.6% FTE 5,029 4,983 5,196 5,125 5,352 Black 1.1% 0.9% 1.1% 1.1% 1.1% Registration Type Hispanic 9.4% 10.2% 9.9% 10.6% 10.9% Undergraduate 98.3% 97.5% 98.4% 97.9% 96.9% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0.8% 0.8% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% High School Students 2.9% 2.4% 2.2% 2.4% 2.2% White 74.9% 72.8% 72.6% 73.2% 73.0% Continuing 68.2% 67.7% 75.1% 76.8% 77.6% Unknown 4.2% 5.2% 5.3% 2.8% 2.2% New to College 5.2% 5.3% 4.5% 4.4% 3.9% 2 or more 2.3% 2.0% 2.2% 2.6% 2.7% 2 Readmitted 13.6% 13.7% 8.9% 10.1% 9.8% Non-resident Alien 5.3% 6.2% 6.0% 6.8% 7.2% Transfer 5.0% 5.5% 4.5% 4.2% 3.4% Continuing Education 3.3% 2.9% 3.2% 0.02% 0.00% Graduate 1.7% 2.5% 1.6% 2.1% 3.1% Other Characteristics Class Level1 Non-resident 18.8% 18.3% 22.0% 21.9% 21.7% Continuing Education 3.2% 2.4% 3.0% 0.02% 0.00% Female 41.6% 41.6% 42.9% 43.9% 44.1% Freshman 13.5% 15.1% 16.8% 20.2% 19.2% Full-time 20.8% 23.0% 23.8% 24.2% 23.5% Sophomore 12.7% 13.9% 16.3% 19.1% 18.5% Average Age 27.7 27.5 27.0 26.7 26.5 Junior 14.9% 15.4% 16.3% 19.0% 19.8% Senior 53.6% 50.7% 45.7% 39.6% 39.4% Graduate 2.2% 2.5% 1.9% 2.1% 3.1% a1b2

1 Includes High School Students 2 This represents the number of international students enrolled for Summer but does not equal the total number of international students on campus. 8 Enrollment Summary Table of Contents

Exhibit 8 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Fall Total Headcount 31,556 30,564 31,332 33,211 34,978 37,282 Headcount without High School 26,372 24,829 25,188 26,523 27,448 28,545 Budget Related Headcount 26,175 24,588 24,991 26,356 27,479 28,614 High School Headcount 5,184 5,735 6,144 6,688 7,530 8,737 Budget Related FTE 19,117 17,952 18,560 19,689 20,470 21,317 FTE 21,616 20,697 21,335 22,591 23,706 25,037 Undergraduate FTE 21,542 20,631 21,226 22,468 23,518 24,727 Graduate FTE 74 66 110 123 188 310

Spring Total Headcount 29,584 27,562 26,248 26,933 28,762 30,647 Headcount without High School 26,306 24,633 23,429 24,041 25,261 26,263 Budget Related Headcount 26,402 24,206 23,155 23,744 25,091 26,098 High School Headcount 3,278 2,929 2,819 2,892 3,501 4,384 Budget Related FTE 18,714 17,408 16,887 17,447 18,610 19,320 FTE 20,414 19,078 18,431 18,950 20,191 21,149 Undergraduate FTE 20,336 19,004 18,365 18,838 20,054 20,943 Graduate FTE 78 74 66 112 137 206

9 Enrollment Summary, continued Table of Contents

Exhibit 9 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Summer Total Headcount 11,703 10,084 9,792 10,147 9,762 10,370 Headcount without High School 11,224 9,791 9,557 9,926 9,529 10,141 Budget Related Headcount 9,475 8,593 8,528 8,804 8,855 9,326 High School Headcount 479 293 235 221 233 229 Budget Related FTE 4,826 4,326 4,397 4,602 4,617 4,791 FTE 5,817 5,029 4,983 5,196 5,125 5,352 Undergraduate FTE 5,746 4,965 4,915 5,075 4,978 5,104 Graduate FTE 71 64 68 120 146 248

10 Student Information Fall Headcount and FTE History Table of Contents

Exhibit 10 Exhibit 11

High School Student Headcount High School Student FTE Fall Headcount Fall FTE Non High School Student Headcount Non High School Student FTE 40,000 37,282 40,000 34,978 35,000 33,211 35,000 30,564 31,332 8,737 7,530 30,000 6,688 30,000 6,144 5,735 25,037 23,706 25,000 25,000 22,591 21,335 3,435 20,697 2,940 2,534 20,000 20,000 2,184 2,309

15,000 15,000 27,448 28,545 24,829 25,188 26,523 10,000 10,000 20,766 21,602 18,513 19,027 20,057

5,000 5,000

0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

11 Spring Headcount and FTE History Table of Contents

Exhibit 12 Exhibit 13 High School Student Headcount High School Student FTE Spring Headcount Spring FTE Non High School Student Headcount Non High School Student FTE 40,000 40,000

35,000 35,000 30,647 28,762 30,000 27,562 30,000 26,248 26,933 4,384 3,501 2,929 25,000 2,892 2,819 25,000 20,191 21,149 19,078 18,431 18,950 1,224 1,466 20,000 20,000 1,092 1,044 1,053

15,000 15,000 25,261 26,263 24,633 23,429 24,041 10,000 10,000 19,683 17,986 17,387 17,897 18,968

5,000 5,000

0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

12 Summer Headcount and FTE History Table of Contents

Exhibit 14 Exhibit 15 High School Student Headcount High School Student FTE Summer Headcount Summer FTE Non-High School Student Headcount Non-High School Student FTE 16,000 16,000

14,000 14,000

12,000 10,147 10,370 12,000 10,084 9,792 9,762 293 221 229 235 233 10,000 10,000

8,000 8,000 5,029 4,983 5,196 5,125 5,352 6,000 6,000 78 94 78 78 79 9,791 9,557 9,926 9,529 10,141 4,000 4,000

4,935 4,905 5,118 5,046 5,274 2,000 2,000

0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

13 Fall Headcount and FTE History since 1945 Table of Contents

Exhibit 16 Headcount 8,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975

Year Headcount Year Headcount Year Headcount Year Headcount 1945 566 1953 1,069 1961 2,576 1969 5,421 1946 764 1954 1,030 1962 2,591 1970 5,161 1947 745 1955 1,224 1963 4,267 1971 5,681 1948 913 1956 1,295 1964 4,818 1972 5,697 1949 1,100 1957 1,388 1965 3,746 1973 6,242 1950 1,137 1958 1,684 1966 4,697 1974 6,849 1951 1,221 1959 1,726 1967 4,692 1975 7,141 1952 1,069 1960 1,896 1968 5,236

14 Fall Headcount and FTE History since 1945 continued… Table of Contents

Exhibit 171 a1

Headcount FTE 40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

Year Headcount FTE Year Headcount FTE Year Headcount FTE Year Headcount FTE 1976 3,881 2,981 1987 6,968 5,419 1997 15,994 10,485 2008 26,696 17,910 1977 3,793 2,896 1988 6,833 5,319 1998 18,174 11,869 2009 28,765 19,670 1978 3,990 2,869 1989 7,758 5,987 1999 20,062 12,770 2010 32,670 21,825 1979 4,130 3,212 1990 7,886 5,225 2000 20,946 13,504 2011 33,395 22,448 1980 4,481 3,678 1991 8,777 5,936 2001 22,609 15,163 2012 31,556 21,616 1981 4,941 4,126 1992 9,623 6,586 2002 23,609 16,261 2013 30,564 20,697 1982 5,593 5,768 1993 10,510 7,181 2003 23,803 16,312 2014 31,332 21,335 1983 6,093 5,240 1994 11,382 7,689 2004 24,149 16,339 2015 33,211 22,591 1984 5,818 4,840 1995 14,041 9,125 2005 24,487 16,081 2016 34,978 23,706 1985 6,013 4,886 1995 14,041 9,125 2006 23,305 15,668 2017 37,282 25,037 1986 6,492 5,418 1996 14,756 9,784 2007 23,840 16,135

1 There was a name change of the Institution in 1987 (Utah Valley Community College), a change from quarters to semesters between 1989 and 1990, another name change in 1993 (Utah Valley State College). University status was granted in 2008 as well as a name change to Utah Valley University. 15 Enrollment Comparisons of Utah Universities and Colleges Table of Contents

Exhibit 181 a1 b2 Total Headcount Budget-related FTE USHE Institution 2016 2017 Change %Change 2016 2017 Change %Change 32,061 32,800 739 2.30% 31,252 31,965 713 2.28% Utah State University2 28,118 27,679 -439 -1.56% 25,778 25,339 -439 -1.70% 26,809 27,949 1,140 4.25% 18,418 18,808 390 2.12% 8,955 9,468 513 5.73% 8,152 8,479 327 4.01% 5,350 5,563 213 3.98% 4,822 4,906 84 1.74% Dixie State College 8,993 9,673 680 7.56% 7,753 8,242 489 6.31% Utah Valley University 34,978 37,282 2,304 6.59% 27,479 28,614 1,135 4.13% Salt Lake Community College 29,901 29,620 -281 -0.94% 23,335 22,999 -336 -1.44% USHE 175,165 180,034 4,869 2.78% 146,989 149,352 2,363 1.61%

1 USHE 2 Includes USU-Eastern headcount enrollments and FTE 16 Headcount by Gender, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 19 Exhibit 20 Headcount by Gender New to College Headcount by Gender Female % Male % Female % Male % 2013 13,580 44.4% 16,984 55.6% 30564.00 2013 1,710 53.4% 1,492 46.6% 3,202 2014 13,973 44.6% 17,359 55.4% 31332.00 2014 1,981 54.3% 1,668 45.7% 3,649 2015 15,076 45.4% 18,135 54.6% 33211.00 2015 2,145 51.6% 2,009 48.4% 4,154 2016 16,147 46.2% 18,831 53.8% 34978.00 2016 2,222 54.6% 1,846 45.4% 4,068 2017 17,328 46.5% 19,954 53.5% 37282.00 2017 2,397 55.4% 1,933 44.6% 4,330 40,000 5,000 Male Female Male Female 35,000 4,000 30,000 19,954 1,933 18,831 2,009 1,846 25,000 18,135 3,000 1,668 16,984 17,359 20,000 1,492 2,000 15,000

2,397 10,000 2,145 2,222 16,147 17,328 1,000 1,981 13,580 13,973 15,076 1,710 5,000

0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

17 Headcount by Gender, Fall continued… Table of Contents

Exhibit 21 Exhibit 22 Headcount Without High School Students by Gender High School Students by Gender Female % Male % Female % Male % 2013 10,664 42.9% 14,165 57.1% 24,829 2013 2,916 50.8% 2,819 49% ## 2014 10,909 43.3% 14,279 56.7% 25,188 2014 3,064 49.9% 3,080 50% ## 2015 11,777 44.4% 14,746 55.6% 26,523 2015 3,299 49.3% 3,389 51% ## 2016 12,261 44.7% 15,187 55.3% 27,448 2016 3,886 51.6% 3,644 48% ## 2017 12,852 45.0% 15,693 55.0% 28,545 2017 4,476 51.2% 4,261 49% ## 35,000 10,000 Male Female 9,000 Male Female 30,000 8,000 25,000 7,000 4,261 15,693 6,000 20,000 14,746 15,187 3,644 14,165 14,279 5,000 3,389 2,819 3,080 15,000 4,000 10,000 3,000 4,476 12,261 12,852 2,000 3,886 5,000 10,664 10,909 11,777 2,916 3,064 3,299 1,000 0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

18 Headcount by IPEDS Ethnicity, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 231 a1b2 All Students 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 7,000 American Indian/Native Alaskan 248 226 215 220 215 Asian 312 313 355 396 459 6,000 Black 249 240 280 277 303 5,000 2 or more Hispanic 2,979 3,108 3,332 3,777 4,112 Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 4,000 Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 259 253 255 291 310 Hispanic 2 or more 623 607 857 1,054 1,208 3,000 Black Total Minorities 4,670 4,747 5,294 6,015 6,607 White 22,259 21,769 25,472 27,326 29,333 2,000 Asian Unknown/Unreported 3,063 4,083 1,687 816 557 American Indian/Native Alaskan 1,000 Non-resident Alien2 572 733 758 821 785 Total 30,564 31,332 33,211 34,978 37,282 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

7,000 Without HS Students 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 American Indian/Native Alaskan 229 208 195 200 182 6,000 Asian 259 269 278 299 347 5,000 2 or more Black 228 230 255 240 267 Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander Hispanic 2,415 2,573 2,689 2,988 3,168 4,000 Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 235 232 226 232 263 Hispanic 2 or more 531 510 668 823 913 3,000 Black Total Minorities 3,897 4,022 4,311 4,782 5,140 2,000 Asian White 19,079 18,698 20,365 21,232 22,210 American Indian/Native Alaskan Unknown/Unreported 1,286 1,738 1,092 613 411 1,000 2 Non-resident Alien 567 730 755 821 784 0 Total 24,829 25,188 26,523 27,448 28,545 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

1 Primary Ethnicity is no longer reported in the Fact Book. For more information on ethnicity, please contact the IR Office. 2 This represents the number of international students enrolled for Fall but does not equal the total number of international students on campus. 19 Headcount by Full-time/Part-time, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 24 Full-time Part-time Full-time % Part-time % 2013 15,755 52% 14,809 48% 35,000 2014 16,296 52% 15,036 48% 30,000 18,543 2015 17,214 52% 15,997 48% 17,879 25,000 17,214 2016 17,879 51% 17,099 49% 15,755 16,296 20,000 2017 18,543 50% 18,739 50% 15,000

10,000 18,739 14,809 15,036 15,997 17,099 5,000 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

Average Attempted Hours, Fall

Exhibit 25

Full-time Part-time Full-time Part-time 25.0 2013 13.9 6.2 20.0 2014 13.9 6.2 2015 13.9 6.2 13.9 13.9 13.9 13.9 14.0 Average15.0 Attempted Hours 2016 13.9 6.2 2017 14.0 6.1 10.0 6.2 6.2 6.2 6.2 6.1 5.0

0.0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 20 Headcount by Class Level, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 261 a1

Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior 20,000 18,000 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Headcount Percentages of Headcount 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Freshman 12,481 13,403 15,108 16,271 17,864 Freshman 40.8% 42.8% 45.5% 46.5% 47.9% Sophomore 5,610 5,562 5,829 6,151 6,485 Sophomore 18.4% 17.8% 17.6% 17.6% 17.4% Junior 5,002 4,945 4,986 5,022 5,202 Junior 16.4% 15.8% 15.0% 14.4% 14.0% Senior 7,277 7,253 7,103 7,266 7,317 Senior 23.8% 23.1% 21.4% 20.8% 19.6% Graduate 194 169 185 268 414 Graduate 0.6% 0.5% 0.6% 0.8% 1.1% Total 30,564 31,332 33,211 34,978 37,282

1 Graph includes High School students. Graduate students not shown in graph due to the small number 21 Headcount by Residency, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 27

All Students Without High School Students 40,000 35,000 Non-resident Resident 35,000 3,852 Non-resident Resident 3,834 30,000 3,715 30,000 3,231 3,852 2,931 25,000 3,715 3,832 25,000 2,928 3,227 20,000 20,000 31,144 33,430 15,000 15,000 27,633 28,101 29,496 24,693 21,901 21,961 22,808 23,616 10,000 10,000 5,000 5,000 0 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

Resident % Non-resident % Resident % Non-resident % 2013 27,633 90% 2,931 10% 30,564 2013 21,901 88% 2,928 12% 2014 28,101 90% 3,231 10% 31,332 2014 21,961 87% 3,227 13% 2015 29,496 89% 3,715 11% 33,211 2015 22,808 86% 3,715 14% 2016 31,144 89% 3,834 11% 34,978 2016 23,616 86% 3,832 14% 2017 33,430 90% 3,852 10% 37,282 2017 24,693 87% 3,852 13%

22 Headcount by Registration Type, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 281 a1 20,000 Headcount 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Continuing Students 17,017 16,606 17,821 18,784 18,952 18,000 New to College (> 1yr since HS) 1,198 1,331 1,676 1,434 1,407 New to College (< 1yr since HS) 2,004 2,318 2,478 2,634 2,923 16,000 Total New to College 3,202 3,649 4,154 4,068 4,330 14,000 Readmitted Students 2,605 2,705 2,314 2,569 2,942 High School Students 5,735 6,144 6,688 7,530 8,737 12,000 Transfer Students 1,811 2,059 2,049 1,759 1,907 Graduate Students 194 169 185 268 414 10,000 Total 30,564 31,332 33,211 34,978 37,282 8,000 Percentages of Headcount 6,000 Continuing Students 55.7% 53.0% 53.6% 53.7% 50.8% New to College (> 1yr since HS) 3.9% 4.2% 5.0% 4.1% 3.8% 4,000 New to College (< 1yr since HS) 6.6% 7.4% 7.5% 7.5% 7.8% 2,000 Total New to College 10.5% 11.6% 12.5% 11.6% 11.6% Readmitted Students 8.5% 8.6% 7.0% 7.3% 7.9% 0 High School Students 18.8% 19.6% 20.1% 21.5% 23.4% 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Transfer Students 5.9% 6.6% 6.2% 5.0% 5.1% Continuing Students New to College (< 1yr since HS) Graduate Students 0.6% 0.5% 0.6% 0.8% 1.1% New to College (> 1yr since HS) Readmitted Students High School Students Transfer Students

1 Graduate students not shown due to the small number 23 Headcount by Age Group, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 29 2017 40,000 2013 2014 2015 2016 Over 39 years All Students F M Total 35,000 Under 18 years 5,538 5,994 6,546 7,328 4,401 4,074 8,475 35-39 years 30,000 18-19 years 3,794 4,317 4,684 5,113 3,546 1,976 5,522 30-34 years 20-21 years 3,956 4,037 5,242 5,668 3,055 3,009 6,064 25,000 22-24 years 6,385 6,715 6,865 7,438 3,011 4,919 7,930 25-29 years 20,000 25-29 years 5,644 5,420 5,293 5,110 1,493 3,711 5,204 22-24 years 30-34 years 2,276 2,101 1,882 1,757 520 1,117 1,637 15,000 35-39 years 1,229 1,140 1,146 1,055 445 533 978 20-21 years 10,000 Over 39 years 1,742 1,608 1,553 1,509 857 615 1,472 18-19 years Total Headcount 30,564 31,332 33,211 34,978 17,328 19,954 37,282 5,000 Mean Age 24.3 23.9 23.4 23.1 22.1 23.1 22.6 Under 18 years 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 40,000 Excluding High 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Over 39 years School Students F M Total 35,000 Under 18 years 89 122 151 157 85 47 132 35-39 years 30,000 18-19 years 3,508 4,045 4,391 4,755 3,386 1,742 5,128 30-34 years 20-21 years 3,956 4,037 5,242 5,667 3,055 3,009 6,064 25,000 25-29 years 22-24 years 6,385 6,715 6,865 7,438 3,011 4,919 7,930 20,000 25-29 years 5,644 5,420 5,293 5,110 1,493 3,711 5,204 15,000 22-24 years 30-34 years 2,276 2,101 1,882 1,757 520 1,117 1,637 35-39 years 1,229 1,140 1,146 1,055 445 533 978 10,000 20-21 years Over 39 years 1,742 1,608 1,553 1,509 857 615 1,472 5,000 18-19 years Total Headcount 24,829 25,188 26,523 27,448 12,852 15,693 28,545 Under 18 years Mean Age 25.2 24.8 24.3 24.0 24.0 24.9 24.5 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

24 Average ACT Scores and Benchmarks, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 30 a1 New to College ACT Submitters New to College ACT Submitters, continued New to College ACT Submitters, continued New to Number Who New to Number Who New to Number Who Term College Submitted ACT % Term College Submitted ACT % Term College Submitted ACT % 2012 3,537 3,105 88% 2014 3,649 2,922 80% 2016 4,068 3,447 85% 2013 3,202 2,535 79% 2015 4,154 3,467 83% 2017 4,330 3,669 85%

Exhibit 31 Average ACT Scores of New to College Average ACT Scores of New to College, continued Number Who Science Number Who Science Term Submitted ACT English Math Reading Reasoning Composite Term Submitted ACT English Math Reading Reasoning Composite 2012 3,105 20.7 20.7 22.0 21.4 21.1 2015 3,467 21.6 21.1 22.6 21.9 21.6 2013 2,535 20.7 20.7 22.1 21.5 21.2 2016 3,447 21.4 21.3 22.8 21.9 21.6 2014 2,922 21.1 20.8 22.2 21.6 21.3 2016 3,669 21.4 21.3 22.6 22.0 21.7

Exhibit 32 ACT Benchmark Profile Test Component Benchmark % of UVU students who met benchmark 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Utah US Utah US Utah US Utah US Utah US Utah US English 19 18 65.3% 71.0% 66.7% 71.9% 67.8% 73.7% 71.4% 75.8% 69.5% 74.4% Mathematics 23 22 35.4% 42.1% 37.8% 44.4% 39.5% 44.8% 43.9% 49.7% 43.7% 48.3% Reading 21 221 60.4% 60.4% 59.3% 49.3% 58.8% 52.0% 66.4% 56.2% 63.5% 56.2% Science Reasoning 24 231 29.2% 29.2% 29.9% 39.4% 31.9% 42.0% 38.0% 45.4% 36.9% 47.0%

1 Benchmark revised 2013 25 Headcount by County, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 33a1 County Students % w/o High School % County Students % w/o High School % Beaver 21 0.1% 21 0.1% San Juan 38 0.1% 38 0.1% Box Elder 85 0.2% 85 0.3% Sanpete 119 0.3% 118 0.4% Cache 160 0.4% 160 0.6% Sevier 105 0.3% 70 0.2% Carbon 41 0.1% 41 0.1% Summit 559 1.5% 197 0.7% Daggett 6 0.02% 6 0.02% Tooele 173 0.5% 171 0.6% Davis 1,173 3.1% 1,010 3.5% Uintah 112 0.3% 112 0.4% Duchesne 67 0.2% 67 0.2% Utah 22,335 59.9% 15,027 52.6% Emery 24 0.1% 24 0.1% Wasatch 926 2.5% 476 1.7% Garfield 21 0.1% 19 0.1% Washington 462 1.2% 450 1.6% Grand 11 0.03% 11 0.04% Wayne 4 0.01% 4 0.01% Iron 90 0.2% 70 0.2% Weber 236 0.6% 228 0.8% Juab 154 0.4% 153 0.5% Total Service Region1 23,820 63.9% 15,700 55.0% Kane 25 0.1% 25 0.1% Total Utah State 31,829 85.4% 23,183 81.2% Millard 114 0.3% 114 0.4% Out of state/in US 4,304 11.5% 4,299 15.1% Morgan 42 0.1% 42 0.1% US Territories/Armed Forces 15 0.04% 15 0.05% Piute 3 0.01% 2 0.01% Foreign Country 744 2.0% 736 2.6% Rich 22 0.1% 10 0.04% Not Reported 390 1.0% 312 1.1% Salt Lake 4,701 12.6% 4,432 15.5% Total 37,282 28,545

1 Utah, Wasatch, and Summit counties 26 Headcount by State, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 34 State Headcount State Headcount State Headcount Alabama 14 Maryland 29 South Carolina 22 Alaska 32 Massachusetts 27 South Dakota 5 Arizona 456 Michigan 32 Tennessee 25 Arkansas 21 Minnesota 31 Texas 269 California 1,009 Mississippi 13 Utah 31,829 Colorado 191 Missouri 51 Vermont 4 Connecticut 24 Montana 39 Virginia 70 Delaware 3 Nebraska 10 Washington 288 District of Columbia 2 Nevada 250 West Virginia 6 Florida 96 New Hampshire 8 Wisconsin 37 Georgia 71 New Jersey 27 Wyoming 28 Hawaii 103 New Mexico 54 Unreported State 21 Idaho 359 New York 53 Total (50 states and DC) 36,133 Illinois 64 North Carolina 68 US Territories/Armed Forces 15 Indiana 26 North Dakota 9 Total US 36,148 Iowa 22 Ohio 36 Kansas 21 Oklahoma 21 Foreign Countries 744 Kentucky 17 Oregon 166 Unreported 390 Louisiana 12 Pennsylvania 53 Total Student Body 37,282 Maine 8 Rhode Island 1

27 Headcount by Country, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 35 Country Headcount Country Headcount Country Headcount Country Headcount Afghanistan 1 El Salvador 3 Madagascar 3 Thailand 3 Angola 1 Ethiopia 1 Malaysia 2 Togo 1 Antigua and Barbuda 1 Fiji 2 Mali 1 Tonga 6 Argentina 4 Finland 2 Mexico 31 Turkey 1 Armenia 1 France 4 Mongolia 5 Uganda 3 Australia 8 French Polynesia 1 Nepal 1 Ukraine 16 Bahamas 1 Germany 7 New Caledonia 1 United Kingdom 9 Bermuda 1 Ghana 4 New Zealand 1 Uruguay 1 Bolivia 8 Guatemala 6 Nigeria 14 Venezuela 9 Brazil 23 Haiti 2 Norway 4 Vietnam 3 Cambodia (Kampuchea) 2 Honduras 1 Other 1 Unreported (Foreign) Country 7 Cameroon 1 Hong Kong 18 Pakistan 2 Total Foreign Country 744 Canada 18 India 2 Panama 1 Cayman Islands 2 Indonesia 1 Peru 22 US Students 36,133 Chile 14 Italy 2 Portugal 3 US Territories/Armed Forces 15 China 81 Jamaica 4 Russia 3 Total US Students 36,148 Colombia 7 Japan 30 Samoa 1 Congo (Brazzaville) 1 Jordan 1 Saudi Arabia 148 Unreported (any ) Country 390 Congo (Kinshasa) 19 Kazakhstan 1 Serbia 1 Czech Republic 3 Kenya 9 South Sudan 1 Denmark 2 Korea-Republic (South Korea) 91 Spain 5 Total Foreign Countries 82 Dominican Republic 4 Kuwait 4 Swaziland 1 Ecuador 1 Kyrgyzstan 3 Sweden 2 Egypt 3 Lao People Democratic Republic 2 Taiwan 23

28 Top 20 Main Feeder High Schools, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 36 Count Rank All Students Count Rank Without High School Students Count Rank New to College 1,616 1 1,054 1 Lone Peak High School 175 1 Lone Peak High School 1,503 2 American Fork High School 1,003 2 American Fork High School 155 2 American Fork High School 1,415 3 Pleasant Grove High School 932 3 Mountain View High School 144 3 Westlake High School 1,209 4 Westlake High School 894 4 Pleasant Grove High School 122 4 1,175 5 Spanish Fork High School 813 5 121 5 Pleasant Grove High School 1,129 6 Lehi High School 719 6 Timpanogos High School 120 6 Mountain View High School 1,123 7 Mountain View High School 711 7 112 7 Lehi High School 1,022 8 Timpanogos High School 657 8 108 8 Maple Mountain High School 1,016 9 Maple Mountain High School 642 9 Timpview High School 95 9 Spanish Fork High School 1,008 10 Provo High School 613 10 Springville High School 91 10 Provo High School 970 11 Springville High School 572 11 Spanish Fork High School 91 11 Timpview High School 962 12 Salem Hills High School 569 12 Alta High School 84 12 Orem High School 877 13 Orem High School 527 13 Maple Mountain High School 83 13 Springville High School 872 14 Timpview High School 488 14 Bingham High School 73 14 Wasatch High School 854 15 Payson High School 480 15 Payson High School 72 15 Salem Hills High School 812 16 Wasatch High School 475 16 Westlake High School 71 16 Bingham High School 638 17 UCAS-Utah County Acad Sciences 440 17 Riverton High School 61 17 Payson High School 572 18 Alta High School 423 18 Salem Hills High School 52 18 Alta High School 491 19 Bingham High School 349 19 Wasatch High School 49 19 Riverton High School 448 20 Riverton High School 237 20 UCAS-Utah County Acad Sciences 47 20 UCAS-Utah County Acad Sciences

29 Off-Campus Locations, All Students, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 371 a1 % of West Campus/ North South Total Off- Campus Evening Main Campus Wasatch National Guard Valley Valley Campus Total Weekend School Campus Total

Headcount 2013 261 1,444 370 1,104 3,127 10.2% 1,674 8,795 24,621 30,564 2014 269 1,537 352 1,296 3,389 10.8% 1,703 8,882 24,884 31,332 2015 230 1,124 310 1,441 3,054 9.2% 1,566 9,378 26,111 33,211 2016 227 1,294 318 1,560 3,333 9.5% 1,470 9,419 27,004 34,978 2017 244 1,425 1,148 1,791 4,539 12.2% 1,355 9,548 27,971 37,282

FTE 2013 145.5 491.8 103.0 350.7 1,091.1 5.3% 346.3 2,528.9 17,723.6 20,697 2014 136.6 480.6 96.7 401.5 1,115.5 5.2% 360.1 2,513.8 18,236.3 21,335 2015 109.7 395.9 95.8 467.5 1,068.9 4.7% 328.5 2,651.3 19,314.2 22,591 2016 105.3 410.5 96.9 520.7 1,133.4 4.8% 303.9 2,650.8 19,753.2 23,706 2017 125.4 437.5 383.5 674.8 1,621.2 6.5% 283.5 2,654.4 20,574.3 25,037

Course Enrollments 2013 745 2,807 476 2,010 6,038 5.6% 1,882 12,791 91,370 107,098 2014 695 2,741 464 2,126 6,026 5.5% 1,941 12,692 93,602 110,106 2015 541 2,374 466 2,457 5,838 5.0% 1,760 13,450 99,377 116,612 2016 508 2,542 447 2,705 6,202 5.1% 1,633 13,561 102,247 122,676 2017 628 2,760 1,789 3,420 8,597 6.6% 1,522 13,608 107,192 130,381 Previous Year % Headcount 7.5% 10.1% 261.0% 14.8% 36.2% -7.8% 1.4% 3.6% 6.6% change FTE 19.1% 6.6% 295.8% 29.6% 43.0% -6.7% 0.1% 4.2% 5.6% Enrollments 23.6% 8.6% 300.2% 26.4% 38.6% -6.8% 0.3% 4.8% 6.3%

1 Beginning Fall 2017, off-campus locations are no longer determined by Extended Education but by class location. 30 Off-Campus Locations, Excluding High School Students, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 381 a1

% of West Campus/ North South Total Off- Campus Evening Main Campus Wasatch National Guard Valley Valley Campus Total Weekend School Campus Total

Headcount 2013 258 1,426 296 503 2,433 9.8% 1,666 8,776 24,340 24,829 2014 267 1,529 264 485 2,480 9.8% 1,699 8,869 24,703 25,188 2015 225 1,119 203 518 2,015 7.6% 1,558 9,361 25,904 26,523 2016 226 1,293 224 570 2,247 8.2% 1,468 9,408 26,814 27,448 2017 242 1,423 409 524 2,529 8.9% 1,354 9,533 27,784 28,545

FTE 2013 144.0 488.8 71.2 132.7 836.7 4.5% 344.9 2,524.8 17,585.4 18,512.9 2014 136.1 479.0 62.2 131.1 808.4 4.2% 359.5 2,511.5 18,124.0 19,026.7 2015 108.5 395.2 47.7 135.1 686.5 3.4% 327.1 2,647.9 19,197.7 20,056.9 2016 105.1 410.3 60.6 146.3 722.4 3.5% 303.5 2,647.7 19,647.3 20,773.2 2017 124.9 437.1 128.0 129.1 819.1 3.8% 283.3 2,651.0 20,470.8 21,602.2

Course Enrollments 2013 737 2,787 321 615 4,460 4.7% 1,873 12,769 90,649 95,787 2014 693 2,731 292 615 4,331 4.4% 1,937 12,679 93,023 98,078 2015 535 2,369 226 648 3,778 3.6% 1,752 13,433 98,764 103,559 2016 507 2,541 264 705 4,017 3.7% 1,631 13,546 101,694 107,812 2017 625 2,758 527 630 4,540 4.0% 1,520 13,592 106,668 112,933 Previous Year % Headcount 7.1% 10.1% 82.6% -8.1% 12.6% -7.8% 1.3% 3.6% 4.0% change FTE 18.8% 6.5% 111.2% -11.8% 13.4% -6.7% 0.1% 4.2% 4.0% Enrollments 23.3% 8.5% 99.6% -10.6% 13.0% -6.8% 0.3% 4.9% 4.7%

1 Beginning Fall 2017, off-campus locations are no longer determined by Extended Education but by class location. 31 Alternative Delivery, All Students, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 391 a1 Distance Education Technology Enhanced Live Interactive- Live Interactive- Blended Hot Bunk Total Alt % of Campus Internet Television Received Broadcast Hybrid Hybrid Delivery Total Total

Headcount 2013 7,556 145 1,293 1,463 1374 1,382 11,980 39.2% 30,564 2014 7,893 83 1,331 1,541 1597 2,404 13,350 42.6% 31,332 2015 8,492 23 1,269 1,669 1,576 2,764 14,220 42.8% 33,211 2016 9,310 0 1,321 1,309 1,826 3,353 15,273 43.7% 34,978 2017 10,144 0 1,329 1,298 1,949 3,921 16,425 44.1% 37,282

FTE 2013 2,806.7 31.4 447.2 312.8 406.86667 310 4,314.7 20.8% 20,697 2014 2,903.7 19.1 438.6 333.3 459.7 573.9 4,728.3 22.2% 21,335 2015 3,054.6 6.1 437.0 354.7 451.3 656.1 4,959.8 22.0% 22,591 2016 3,218.3 0.0 428.9 278.7 517.9 820.0 5,263.8 22.2% 23,706 2017 3,527.9 0.0 437.5 275.7 591.5 986.4 5,819.0 23.2% 25,037

Course Enrollments 2013 14,205 147 2,209 1,584 1508 1,506 21,159 19.8% 107,098 2014 14,583 84 2,173 1,696 1684 3,246 23,466 21.3% 110,106 2015 15,233 23 2,169 1,771 1,629 3,592 24,417 20.9% 116,612 2016 16,239 0 2,147 1,388 1,886 4,511 26,171 21.3% 122,676 2017 17,795 0 2,188 1,392 2,155 5,269 28,799 22.1% 130,381 Previous Year % Headcount 9.0% 0.6% -0.8% 6.7% 16.9% 7.5% 6.6% change FTE 9.6% 2.0% -1.1% 14.2% 20.3% 10.5% 5.6% Enrollments 9.6% 1.9% 0.3% 14.3% 16.8% 10.0% 6.3%

1 The headcount total column reflects standard semester totals; however, since students are sometimes enrolled in more than one location/delivery-type, they may be double-counted in other columns. The “Total” column for headcount does not show the total for all preceding columns as is portrayed elsewhere in the table. 32

Alternative Delivery, Excluding High School Students, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 401 Distance Education Technology Enhanced Live Interactive- Live Interactive- Blended Hot Bunk Total Alt % of Campus Internet Television Received Broadcast Hybrid Hybrid Delivery Total Total

Headcount 2013 7,537 145 417 1,452 1366 1,231 10,964 44.2% 24,829 2014 7,883 83 514 1,536 1,589 1,505 11,666 46.3% 25,188 2015 8,482 23 441 1,665 1,575 2,017 12,661 47.7% 26,523 2016 9,300 0 472 1,302 1,826 2,421 13,528 49.3% 27,448 2017 10,135 0 476 1,293 1,947 2,846 14,615 51.2% 28,545

FTE 2013 2,802.6 31.4 99.0 310.6 405 275 3,923.1 21.2% 18,513 2014 2,900.9 19.1 122.9 332.3 458.1 337 4,169.9 21.9% 19,027 2015 3,051.1 6.1 106.8 353.8 451.0 459 4,428.0 22.1% 20,057 2016 3,215.3 0.0 111.2 277.3 517.9 574 4,695.2 22.6% 20,773 2017 3,525.1 0.0 118.5 274.7 591.0 732 5,240.8 24.3% 21,602

Course Enrollments 2013 14,184 147 485 1,573 1500 1,314 19,203 20.0% 95,787 2014 14,569 84 611 1,691 1,676 1,630 20,261 20.7% 98,078 2015 15,216 23 522 1,766 1,628 2,176 21,331 20.6% 103,559 2016 16,223 0 553 1,380 1,886 2,716 22,758 21.1% 107,812 2017 17,782 0 593 1,387 2,153 3,417 25,332 22.4% 112,933 Previous Year % Headcount 9.0% 0.8% -0.7% 6.6% 17.6% 8.0% 4.0% change FTE 9.6% 6.6% -0.9% 14.1% 27.5% 11.6% 4.0% Enrollments 9.6% 7.2% 0.5% 14.2% 25.8% 11.3% 4.7%

1 The headcount total column reflects standard semester totals; however, since students are sometimes enrolled in more than one location/delivery-type, they may be double-counted in other columns. The “Total” column for headcount does not show the total for all preceding columns as is portrayed elsewhere in the table. 33 Headcount by College/School and Gender, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 41 College/School Male Female Headcount School of Education 111 1,299 1,410 School of the Arts 589 1,244 1,833 College of Science 1,707 1,047 2,754 College of Health & Public Services 1,964 1,140 3,104 University College 1,764 2,725 4,489 College of Technology & Computing 4,019 728 4,747 College of Humanities & Social Sciences 1,738 3,152 4,890 Woodbury School of Business 3,801 1,517 5,318 Academic Affairs 4,261 4,476 8,737 Grand Total 19,954 17,328 37,282

111 Male Female School of Education 1,299 1,410 School of the Arts 589 1,244 1,833 College of Science 1,707 1,047 2,754 College of Health & Public Services 1,964 1,140 3,104 University College 1,764 2,725 4,489 College of Technology & Computing 4,019 728 4,747 College of Humanities & Social Sciences 1,738 3,152 4,890 Woodbury School of Business 3,801 1,517 5,318 Academic Affairs 4,261 4,476 8,737

0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000

34 Primary Major, Fall Table of Contents

Exhibit 42 College/ Head- College/ Head- College/ Head- School Major Approved count School Major Approved count School Major Approved count School of the Arts School of the Arts, continued Woodbury School of Business, continued Bachelors Certificate/Diploma Associates Art and Design (BFA) 2004 554 Art and Design 1996 4 Accounting 1982 17 Art and Design 2004 285 Music Technology 2015 3 Associate in Science in Business (ASB) 2000 41 Art Education 2010 43 7 Business 2000 78 Art History 2015 28 School of the Arts Total 1,833 Business Management (AAS) 1978 6 Commercial Music (BM) 2013 106 Woodbury School of Business Hospitality Management (AAS) 1977 9 Dance (BFA) 2005 45 Graduate Hospitality Management 1988 6 Dance 2005 17 Accounting (MAC) 30 Legal Studies (AAS) 1982 4 Dance Education 2005 24 Master of Business Administration (MBA) 2006 206 Legal Studies 1999 24 Music 2006 93 236 185 Music Education 2006 59 Bachelors Certificate/Diploma Performance (BM) 2012 52 Accounting 1999 669 Accounting 1970 2 Theatre Arts (BFA) 2015 55 Business Management 1993 2,021 Business Management 1978 2 Theatre Arts 2006 166 Digital Marketing 2016 169 Entrepreneurship 2015 1 Theatre Arts Education 2006 39 Economics 2007 93 Financial Planning 2016 3 1,566 Entrepreneurship 2015 184 Legal Studies 2011 6 Associates Finance 2009 457 Operations Management 2014 1 Art and Design (AAS) 1996 86 Hospitality Management 1997 195 15 Art and Design 1989 37 Human Resource Management 2016 117 Woodbury School of Business Total 5,318 Dance 1995 118 Legal Studies 1999 69 School of Education Music 1987 5 Marketing 2011 603 Graduate Theatre Arts 1986 14 Personal Financial Planning 2011 305 Curriculum and Instruction (MED) 2008 50 260 4,882

35 Primary Major, Fall continued… Table of Contents

College/ Head- College/ Head- College/ Head- School Major Approved count School Major Approved count School Major Approved count School of Education, continued College of Health & Public Service, continued College of Health & Public Service, continued Bachelors Bachelors Certificate/Diploma Elementary Education 1996 858 Aviation Science 1999 631 Firefighter Recruit Candidate 2002 18 Special Education 2016 147 Aviation Science (Global) 1999 402 National Security Studies 1 1,005 Community Health 2005 395 Paramedic 2001 11 Associates Criminal Justice 1999 487 30 Early Childhood Education 1990 78 Dental Hygiene 2008 19 College of Health & Public Service Total 3,104 Pre-Elementary Education 1999 6 Emergency Services Administration 1998 371 College of Humanities & Social Sciences 84 Forensic Science 2006 152 Graduate Certificate/Diploma Nursing 2001 162 Social Work (MSW) 2016 30 Autism Studies 2014 4 School Health Education 2005 70 Early Care and Education 1997 5 2,689 Bachelors 9 Associates ASL and Deaf Studies Education 2007 38 Non-degree program Aviation Science (AAS) 1995 25 Behavioral Science 1999 1,322 Endorsement in Education 250 Aviation Science 1990 4 Communication 2006 849 Post Baq Education 12 Aviation Science (Global-AAS) 1995 24 Deaf Studies 2007 208 262 Aviation Science (Global) 1990 3 English 2000 401 School of Education Total 1,410 Community Health 1998 5 English Education 2001 167 College of Health & Public Service Criminal Justice 1999 16 History 2001 123 Graduate Dental Hygiene (AAS) 1997 28 History and Social Science Education 2002 183 Nursing (MSN) 2008 12 Emergency Services (AAS) 2008 100 Humanities 2016 13 Public Service (MPS) 2016 30 Emergency Services 2008 12 Integrated Studies 1998 81 42 Nursing (ASN) 1989 122 Philosophy 2001 92 Wildland Fire Management (AAS) 2010 4 343

36 Primary Major, Fall continued… Table of Contents

College/ Head- College/ Head- College/ Head- School Major Approved count School Major Approved count School Major Approved count College of Humanities & Social Sciences, continued College of Science, continued College of Science, continued Bachelors, continued Bachelors, continued Non-degree program Political Science 2006 250 Botany 2010 36 Post Baccalaureate in Math 4 Psychology 2016 545 Chemistry 2001 220 College of Science Total 2,754 Social Work (BSW) 2010 114 Chemistry Education 2013 6 Spanish 2005 91 Earth Science 2000 1 College of Technology & Computing Spanish Education 2005 30 Earth Science Education 2001 14 Graduate 4,507 Environmental Science and Management 2011 53 Computer Science 2016 16 Associates Exercise Science and Outdoor Recreation 2005 899 Cybersecurity (GC) 2014 2 Behavioral Science 1989 268 Geology 2011 78 Cybersecurity (MS) 2016 22 Communication 1990 3 Mathematics 2001 87 40 English 1998 12 Mathematics Education 2002 80 Bachelors History And Political Science 2003 5 Physical Education Teacher Education 2005 62 Animation and Game Development 2015 209 Humanities 1981 9 Physics 2001 113 Business/Marketing Education 2002 24 Integrated Studies 2002 55 Physics Education 2013 8 Computer Engineering 2012 213 352 Statistics 2013 37 Computer Science 1992 980 Certificate/Diploma 2,729 Construction Management 2009 256 Advanced Substance Use Disorder Counseling 2014 1 Associates Digital Audio 2015 107 College of Humanities & Social Sciences Total 4,890 Biology 1990 17 Digital Cinema 2015 288 College of Science Exercise Science and Outdoor Recreation 1999 1 Digital Media 2015 34 Bachelors Mathematics 1989 2 Geomatics 2010 30 Biology 1999 823 20 Information Management 2015 15 Biology Education 2001 53 Certificate/Diploma Information Systems 2006 225 Biotechnology 2007 159 Water and Wastewater Operations 2007 1 Information Technology 2001 387

37 Primary Major, Fall continued… Table of Contents

College/ Head- College/ Head- College/ Head- School Major Approved count School Major Approved count School Major Approved count College of Technology & Computing, continued College of Technology & Computing, continued Academic Affairs Bachelors, continued Associates, continued Non-degree program Mechatronics Engineering Technology 2015 131 Information Systems and Technology (AAS) 2006 32 High School Concurrent Enrollment 8,737 Software Engineering 2007 128 Information Systems and Technology 2006 14 Academic Affairs Total 8,737 Technology Management 1993 221 Mechatronics Engineering Technology (AAS) 2007 12 Web Design and Development 2015 218 Pre-Engineering 1986 416 University College 3,466 Technology (AAS) 2008 21 Bachelors Associates 1,196 Undeclared 29 Administrative Information Management 2004 3 Certificate/Diploma University Studies 28 Administrative Information Support (AAS) 2004 2 Administrative Support 2004 1 57 Associate in Pre-Engineering 2004 10 Architectural Design Technology 2014 9 Associates Automotive Technology (AAS) 1985 88 Automotive Technology 1990 9 Pre-Professional 1,880 Building Inspection Technology (AAS) 1992 4 Automotive Technology (DIP) 1986 2 University Studies 2,099 Cabinetry and Architectural Woodwork (AAS) 1975 29 Collision Repair Technology 1993 1 3,979 Collision Repair Technology (AAS) 1970 30 Collision Repair Technology (DIP) 1986 1 Non-degree program Computer Science (AAS) 2006 25 Construction Management 2015 2 Intensive English 172 Computer Science 1990 9 Data Analytics 2016 1 Non-Degree Seeking 146 Construction Management (AAS) 2008 11 Diesel Mechanics Technology (DIP) 1989 1 Personal Interest 135 Culinary Arts (AAS) 1990 175 Digital Cinema 2013 1 453 Diesel Mechanics Technology (AAS) 1989 39 Information Technology 2013 6 University College Total 4,489 Digital Communication Technology (AAS) 2007 37 Mechanical Design Techology 2014 3 Electrical Automation and Robotics Technology (AAS) 1970 91 Network Administration 2006 2 Total Headcount 37,282 Electrical Automation and Robotics Technology 1970 2 Programmer 2002 4 Engineering Design Technology (AAS) 1970 60 Structural Design Technology 2014 2 Engineering Design Technology 1968 68 45 Facilities Management (AAS) 1988 15 College of Technology & Computing Total 4,747 Geomatics 2010 3

38 Number of Degrees Awarded Table of Contents

Exhibit 43a1b2c3d4 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 F M Total F M Total F M Total F M Total F M Total F M Total Certificates 1 13 77 90 7 26 33 17 63 80 30 76 106 31 127 158 31 161 192 Diploma 2 2 2 2 5 5 3 3 1 12 13 6 6 Associate in Applied Science 42 256 298 61 251 312 61 272 333 76 199 275 74 205 279 71 185 256 Associate in Arts 44 44 88 47 34 81 45 58 103 54 38 92 42 24 66 54 24 78 Associate in Science2 771 674 1,445 763 612 1,375 931 913 1,844 856 773 1,629 868 716 1,584 804 646 1,450 Bachelor of Arts 97 91 188 106 121 227 99 111 210 108 106 214 92 107 199 108 94 202 Bachelor of Fine Arts/Music 44 14 58 35 16 51 29 23 52 39 26 65 73 24 97 48 18 66 Bachelor of Science3 986 1,380 2,366 1,018 1,443 2,461 1,064 1,499 2,563 1,121 1,515 2,636 1,119 1,488 2,607 1,138 1,534 2,672 Graduate Certificate 2 2 4 2 5 7 1 5 6 Masters 16 8 24 29 40 69 17 35 52 16 42 58 26 71 97 30 66 96 Total 2,013 2,546 4,559 2,066 2,545 4,611 2,263 2,979 5,242 2,302 2,780 5,082 2,328 2,779 5,107 2,285 2,739 5,024

Graduation Rates Exhibit 444 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Cohort Cohort Cohort cohort Cohort Cohort 4-year graduation rate 9% 7% 11% 13% 11% 10% 6-year graduation rate 17% 22% 25% 30% 25% 26% 8-year graduation rate 28% 31% 35% 40% Available Available in 2019 in 2020

1 Includes C1Y, CC, CP1, CP2, CP3 2 Includes AS, APE, ASN, ASB 3 Includes BS, BSW 4 First-year, first-time, Bachelor’s seeking students earning a Bachelor’s degree 39 Retention Rates Table of Contents

Exhibit 45 All Degree Types Bachelor's Degree Seeking 70% PT FT All PT FT All 65% Fall 2012 41% 58% 53% 43% 62% 57% 60% Fall 2013 45% 59% 55% 44% 59% 55% Fall 2014 42% 61% 56% 42% 63% 58% 55% Fall 2015 45% 62% 58% 46% 63% 59% 50% Fall 2016 42% 64% 58% 42% 66% 60% 45% 40%

Full-time Bachelor's Seeking Full-time Any Degree FT and PT Any Degree FT and PT Bachelor's Seeking

40 Athletics Final Records and Conference Finishes Table of Contents

Exhibit 461 a1b2c3d#e4f5g6h7i* 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 Women Basketball #10-22 (4th3) 8-21 (4th3) 15-15 (2nd3) 15-15 (1st3) 7-23 (8th4) 11-19 (6th4) 16-15 (4th4) 9-22 (7th4) Cross Country (1st3) (8th2) (1st3) (10th2) (1st3) (17th2) (1st3) (9th2) (5th3) (18th2) (2nd4) (20th2) (1st4) (11th2) (1st4) (17th2) Golf (3rd3) (5th3) (2nd3) (2nd3) (6th4) (5th4) (3rd4) (5thd4) Soccer 11-7-1 (1st3) 9-10-1 (1st3) 12-8-1 (1st3) 9-11-1 (1st3) 9-10-1 (3rd3) 13-7-2 (3rd4) *14-7-1 (3rd4) 10-8-2 (5th4) Softball 16-27 (2nd5) 28-31 (3rd5) #20-30 (2nd5) 33-26-1 (3rd5) *18-42 (6th4) 18-41 (6th4) 9-43 (6th4) 16-24 (3rd4) Track & Field (Indoor/Outdoor) (2nd3/1st3) (2nd3/1st3) (1st3/1st3) (2nd3/1st3) (4th4/3rd4) (3rd4/3rd4) (4th4/2nd4) (4th4/3rd4) Volleyball 22-10 (2nd3) 21-11 (2nd3) 23-9 (1st3) 23-9 (1st3) # 18-9 (1st3) 14-18 (5th4) 14-14 (4th4) 16-14 (2nd4) Men Baseball #42-17 (1st3) #34-22 (1st3) #47-12 (1st3) 24-30 (4th3) 28-30 (4th4) 19-35 (6th4) * 37-23 (3rd4) 18-36 (5th4) Basketball 12-19 (4th3) 19-11 (1st3) 20-13 (1st3) 14-18 (3rd3) 20-12 (1st4) 11-19 (6th4) 12-18 (5th4) 17-17 (5th4) Cross Country (1st3) (10th2) (1st3) (11th2) (1st3) (14th2) (1st3) (7th2) (1st3) (13th2) (1st4) (13th2) (1st4) (14th2) (2nd4) (16th2) Golf (8th8) (5th8) (4th8) (3rd8) (3rd4) (4th4) (3rd4) (2nd4) Soccer N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 9-7-2 (4th4) 14-6-2 (2nd4) 15-4-1 (1st4) Track & Field (Indoor/Outdoor) (2nd3/1st3) (2nd3/1st3) (1st3/1st3) (2nd3/1st3) (3rd4/2nd4) (1st4/1st4) (2nd4/2nd4) (3rd4/2nd4) Wrestling (4th6) (5th6) (5th6) (3rd6) (4th6) (4th6) (8th7) (9th7)

Athletics joined the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) on July 1, 2013. UVU also 1 Includes USU-Eastern headcount enrollments and FTE became an official member of NCAA Division I on July 8, 2009 after six years of 2 UVU Athletics Departments provisional status at the NCAA D-1 level. All sports with the exception of wrestling, which 3 competes in the Big 12 Conference, are members of the WAC. Since joining the # Great West Conference Tournament Champions 4 WAC conference, UVU has won 12 team WAC Championships with teams securing four NCAA 5 Pacific Coast Softball Conference Tournament berths. Prior to joining the WAC, UVU was a member of the Great West 6 Western Wresting Conference Conference from 2008-12. 7 Big 12 Wrestling Championships * WAC Tournament Champions 41

Faculty and Staff Employee Summary, IPEDS data Table of Contents

Exhibit 471 a1b2c3

Primary Function/Occupational Activity Full-Time Part-Time Total Instructional Staff 696 934 1,630 Public Service Staff2 224 224 Librarians, Curators, and Archivists 26 6 32 Student and Academic Affairs and Other Education Services Occupations 203 210 413 Management Occupations 384 36 420 Business And Financial Operations Occupations 56 33 89 Computer, Engineering, and Science Occupations 153 113 266 Community, Social Service, Legal, Arts, Design, Entertainment, Sports and Media Occupations 79 52 131 Healthcare Practitioners and Technical Occupations 8 2 10 Service Occupations 128 74 202 Sales and Related Occupations 0 25 25 Office and Administrative Support Occupations 195 192 387 Natural Resources, Construction, and Maintenance Occupations 58 6 64 Production, Transportation, and Material Moving Occupations 12 36 48 Total Number of Factuly/Staff 1,998 1,943 3,941 Early Retiree, Temporary Agreement, Workstudy, and Student employees3 18 1,527 1,545 Grand Total UVU Employees 2,016 3,470 5,486

1 UVU Human Resources 2 Fire Science and Police Academy instructors were moved from "Instructional Staff" to "Public Service Staff" 3 Early Retiree, Stipend or Temporary Agreement, Student, and Work Study Student not included in IPEDS Numbers. 42 Employee Summary by Classification, Gender, Ethnicity Table of Contents

Exhibit 481 a1 Employee Classification Male Female Total Fall 2017 Instructional Credits Hours delivered by: Full-Time Salaried faculty 56.7% Executives 23 7 30 Overload faculty 0.5% Exempt Salaried Staff 391 315 706 Adjunct faculty 42.8% Faculty 459 237 696 Nonexempt Salaried Staff 245 321 566 Early Retiree 9 9 18 Total Full-Time 1,127 889 2,016

Part-Time Adjunct/Overload Teaching 516 418 934 Part-Time Staff 350 435 785 Student 661 655 1,316 Work Study Student 75 128 203 Stipend Or Temporary Agreement 3 5 8 Public Service/Fee Instructors 1 187 37 224 Total Hourly 1,792 1,678 3,470 Grand Total 2,919 2,567 5,486 Exhibit 491 Full-Time Employees Race/Ethnicity Male Female Total Asian 32 2.8% 24 2.7% 56 2.8% Hispanic 38 3.4% 64 7.2% 102 5.1% Other Minorities 48 4.3% 31 3.5% 79 3.9% White Non-Hispanic 994 88.2% 760 85.5% 1,754 87.0% Unspecified 15 1.3% 10 1.1% 25 1.2% Total 1,127 889 2,016

1 Moved Fire Science and Police Academy to Public Service category from Adjunct 43 Full-Time Faculty History Table of Contents

Exhibit 501 a1 Total Full-Time Faculty 800

690 700 672 642

582 576 590 600 553 519 481 476 500 453 407 409 379 389 400 365 328 298 290 300 267 237 219 228 228 229 196 188 200 174

100

0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

1 There was a name change of the Institution in 1987 (Utah Valley Community College), a change from quarters to semesters between 1989 and 1990, another name change in 1993 (Utah Valley State College), and University status was granted in 2008 as well as a name change (Utah Valley University). 44 Faculty Rank by Department Table of Contents

Exhibit 511 a1 Assistant Associate Total Assistant Associate Total Department Professor Professor Professor Lecturer 2017 Department Professor Professor Professor Lecturer 2017 Accounting 5 3 7 3 18 English Language Learning 1 2 3 6 Allied Health 5 1 6 Exercise Science & Outdoor Recreation 2 2 6 3 13 Art & Visual Communications 3 12 7 3 25 Finance & Economics 3 5 5 5 18 Automotive Technology 1 2 7 2 12 History & Political Science 3 9 4 6 22 Aviation Science 1 1 3 2 7 Honors 1 1 Basic Composition 2 3 3 1 9 Information Systems & Technology 4 5 5 3 17 Behavioral Science 6 14 6 3 29 Integrated Studies 3 2 5 Biology 12 3 7 9 31 Languages & Cultures 2 5 6 8 21 Chemistry 7 8 2 17 Management 4 5 10 6 25 Communication 1 5 4 4 14 Marketing 1 3 6 12 22 Computer Science 4 3 7 6 20 Mathematics 10 6 8 3 27 Construction Technologies 7 7 Mathematics - Developmental 1 6 15 2 24 Criminal Justice/Law Enforcement 7 4 1 12 Music 1 9 4 3 17 Culinary Arts Institute 2 5 1 8 Nursing 4 9 8 1 22 Dance 2 5 4 2 13 Organizational Leadership 1 2 2 5 Digital Media 1 6 9 2 18 Philosophy & Humanities 8 5 3 2 18 Earth Science 6 6 2 14 Physics 5 5 2 4 16 Education 1 3 1 5 Public & Community Health 1 3 5 2 11 Elementary Education 3 3 7 3 16 Secondary Education 2 4 3 9 Emergency Services 2 4 3 1 10 Student Leadership & Success Studies 4 8 1 13 Engineering Graphics & Design Tech 3 3 4 10 Technology Management 5 1 3 9 Engineering Technology 6 2 2 10 Theatrical Arts for Stage & Screen 1 6 4 3 14 English & Literature 12 10 13 9 44 Total 114 209 233 134 690

1 Total faculty here may not match IPEDS due to the different reporting requirements. 45 Universities Represented by Doctorates of Contract Faculty Table of Contents

Exhibit 521 a1 Doctorate-Issuing Institution Faculty Doctorate-Issuing Institution Faculty Doctorate-Issuing Institution Faculty Aalto University, Finland 1 Grand Canyon University's College of Doctoral Studies 1 Princeton University 2 Arizona State University 12 Hofstra University 1 Purdue University 9 Autonomous University of Barcelona - Barcelona, Spain 1 Idaho State University 1 Rice Univeresity 1 Ball State University 1 Indiana State University 3 Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions 1 Binghampton University 1 Institute of Electronics, Academy of Sciences of Belarus 1 S.J. Quinney College of Law 1 Boston University 1 Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen 1 Saybrook University 1 Bowling Green State University 4 Lamar University 1 Simon Fraser University 1 - Provo 54 Loma Linda University 1 Southern Illinois University - Carbondale 1 California Western School of Law 1 Loyola University 1 Stanford University 1 Capella University 1 Miami University 1 State University of New York 1 Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada 1 Michigan State University 7 State University of New York - Albany 1 Claremont Graduate University 1 Michigan Technological University 2 State University of New York - Buffalo 3 Clemson University 1 Mokpo National University 1 SUNY at Stony Brook 1 Cleveland State University 1 Montana State University - Bozeman 1 Syracuse University 1 College of Saint Mary 1 New England Conservatory 2 Temple University 2 College of William and Mary 1 New Jersey Institute of Technology 1 Texas A&M University 5 Colorado State University 1 New Mexico State University 3 Texas State University 2 Columbia University 1 New York University 1 Texas Tech University 11 Cornell University 2 North Dakota State University 2 The City University of New York - Graduate Center 1 Cranfield University 1 Northcentral University 1 The University of Houston 1 Creighton University 1 Northeastern University 2 The 1 Duke University 1 Northeastern University School of Law 1 The University of Texas-Pan American 1 East Carolina University 1 Nova Southeastern University 3 The University of Western Australia 1 Eastern Michigan University 1 Ohio State University 4 Tulane University 1 Emory University 1 Ohio University 3 Tuskegee University 1 Fielding Graduate University 1 Oklahoma City University School of Law 1 Universitat Bielefeld 1 Florida State University 4 Oregon State University 2 University at Albany/SUNY 2 George Washington University 2 Penn State 1 University of Alabama 2

1 UVU Office of Academic Affairs

46 Universities Represented by Doctorates of Contract Faculty, continued Table of Contents

Doctorate-Issuing Institution Faculty Doctorate-Issuing Institution Faculty Doctorate-Issuing Institution Faculty University of Alabama - Tuscaloosa 1 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 4 University of Phoenix 1 University of Albany 1 University of Iowa 2 University of Pittsburgh 2 University of Alberta 2 University of Kansas 3 University of Rochester 1 University of Arizona 8 University of Kansas - Lawrence 1 University of South Carolina 4 University of Arkansas 1 University of Kentucky 1 University of South Florida 1 University of Calgary, Alberta 1 University of La Verne College of Law 1 University of Southern California 1 University of California - Berkeley 1 University of Louisiana - Lafayette 1 University of Southern California, Los Angeles 3 University of California - Davis 3 University of Louisville 1 University of Tennessee - Knoxville 2 University of California - Irvine 2 University of Maryland - College Park 1 University of Texas - Arlington 1 University of California - Los Angeles 1 University of Michigan 3 University of Texas - Austin 6 University of California - Riverside 1 University of Memphis 1 University of Toronto 1 University of California, Irvine 1 University of Miami 1 University of Utah 42 University of California, Santa Barbara 1 University of Minnesota 4 University of Virginia 2 University of Cambridge 1 University of Mississippi 1 University of Washington 2 University of Chicago 1 University of Nebraska-Lincoln 3 University of Wisconsin - Madison 5 University of Cincinnati 3 University of Nevada - Las Vegas 3 University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee 2 University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music 1 University of Nevada - Reno 1 University of Wisconsin/University of Connecticut 1 University of Colorado - Boulder 7 University of New Mexico 2 2 University of Colorado - Denver 1 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1 Unversity of Northern Colorado 1 University of Connecticut 1 University of North Texas 2 17 University of Florida 3 University of Northern Colorado 3 Villanova University 2 University of Geneva 1 University of Notre Dame 1 Virginia Commonwealth University 1 University of Georgia 4 University of Oklahoma 5 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 1 University of Groningen - Netherlands 1 University of Oregon 5 Virginia Tech 1 University of Hawaii 2 University of Otago 1 Walden University 1 University of Houston 1 University of Oxford 1 Washington State University 2 University of Idaho 1 University of Oxford (Magdalen College) 1 Washington University 1 University of Illinois 1 University of Pennsylvania 1 West Virginia University 2 University of Illinois at Chicago 3 University of Pennsylvania Law School 1 William Woods University 1 Total 428

47 General Information University Mission Statement, Core Themes, and Administrative Imperatives Table of Contents Mission Utah Valley University is a teaching institution which provides opportunity, promotes student success, and meets regional educational needs. UVU builds on a foundation of substantive scholarly and creative work to foster engaged learning. The university prepares professionally competent people of integrity who, as lifelong learners and leaders, serve as stewards of a globally interdependent community. Core Themes Student Success UVU supports students in achieving their educational, professional, and personal goals.

SS.1: UVU supports students’ preparation and achievement of academic success at the University. SS.2: UVU provides a meaningful and well-rounded university experience. SS.3: UVU prepares students for success in their subsequent academic, professional, and lifelong learning pursuits, including serving as leaders, people of integrity, and stewards of their communities.

Inclusive UVU provides opportunity for individuals from a wide variety of backgrounds and perspectives and meets regional educational needs.

I.1: UVU provides accessible and equitable educational opportunities and resources for all students. I.2: UVU provides opportunities to improve intercultural competence in an increasingly complex, diverse, and globalized society. I.3: UVU provides an inviting, safe, and supportive environment for people from diverse backgrounds and perspectives. I.4: UVU offers an array of courses, programs, and delivery methods designed to reflect students’ goals and the region’s educational needs.

48 University Mission, Statement, Core Themes, and Administrative Imperatives, continued Table of Contents

Engaged UVU engages its communities in mutually beneficial collaboration and emphasizes engaged learning.

E.1: UVU faculty and staff engage students using real-world contexts within the curriculum and activities outside the classroom to increase professional competence and confidence. E.2: UVU fosters partnerships and outreach opportunities that enhance regional, national, and global communities. E.3: UVU serves as a portal of civic engagement and an engine of regional economic and business development.

Serious UVU fosters a culture of academic rigor and professional excellence.

S.1: UVU champions learning through outstanding teaching in an academically rigorous environment. S.2: UVU supports a culture of scholarship and creative work and promotes accomplishment in cultural, academic, and co-curricular/extramural endeavors. S.3: UVU attracts, develops, and retains high-achieving students and highly qualified faculty, staff, and administrators. S.4: UVU is recognized for high-quality, efficient, and effective programs and services. Administrative Imperatives UVU's Administrative Imperatives - Operate Ethically and Effectively, Manage Growth, and Secure Resources - are key practices and principles critical for sustained fulfillment of the University’s mission and core themes. Operate Ethically and Effectively: UVU operates responsibly through ethical conduct and best practices in planning, decision making, and resource management.

 UVU upholds an environment of ethical behavior and expects honesty, integrity, legal compliance, financial stewardship, and accountability in the performance of employees’ UVU-related responsibilities.

49 University Mission, Statement, Core Themes, and Administrative Imperatives, continued Table of Contents

 UVU fosters a culture of strategic planning, assessment, continuous improvement, and accountability.  UVU strategically allocates resources to achieve institutional objectives.

 UVU utilizes transparent and collaborative decision-making processes.

Manage Growth: UVU anticipates and appropriately responds to the region's higher education needs.  UVU anticipates and plans for future regional educational needs.  UVU adapts to meet student and community needs consistent with its educational mission.

Secure Resources: UVU seeks and obtains public and private resources to fulfill its mission.  UVU communicates its resource requirements and secures appropriate state tax fund support to fulfill its role within the Utah System of Higher Education.  UVU establishes tuition and fees consistent with the economic environment and its mission.  UVU strategically pursues and acquires private and public resources beyond state appropriations.

Roles

As a regional state university, Utah Valley University:

Provides quality academic learning opportunities for students through programs at the certificate, associate, baccalaureate, and graduate levels. To encourage responsible citizenship, emphasis is placed on engaged teaching and learning as well as scholarly work, research, creative achievements, career and technical education, and community and professional engagement.

Provides access to higher education and offers a broad range of opportunities from developmental education through honors programs. The institution provides services designed to meet the educational and personal needs of students, to foster student success, to prepare students for meaningful lifework, and to provide access through a variety of modalities, including satellite campuses and the use of technology.

Promotes economic and cultural development to contribute to the quality of life of the region and state. The institution fosters economic development and provides a talent-force to meet the needs of a dynamic economy by offering credit and non-credit programs and services for individuals and organizations. UVU provides cultural experiences that enrich the community and offer significant and varied opportunities for continuous learning.

50 History of the University Table of Contents

Utah Valley University was established in 1941 as Central Utah Vocational School (CUVS) with the function of providing war production training. CUVS was part of the Provo School District located in south Provo. The institution received a state appropriation in March 1945 of $50,000 to operate for the 1945-1947 biennium. In 1947, the school received funding as a permanent state institution. A new site for the school was acquired on University Avenue in Provo in 1948; in the 1952, the state appropriated funding for the first construction on that site. As enrollments grew, the state acquired over 185 acres in southwest Orem and the first building was completed in 1977. Today, the University’s facilities consist of a combined total of 422 acres with 50 buildings with campuses in Orem, Provo, and Heber City and property in Vineyard and at Thanksgiving Point in Lehi. In 1963, the school’s name changed to Utah Trade Technical Institute to reflect its growing role in technical training. The name again changed in 1967 to Utah Technical College at Provo. The institution was approved in 1966 to grant Associate of Applied Science degrees, in 1967 to offer general education courses, in 1971 to grant Associate of Science degrees (discontinued in 1974 and reinstated in 1981), and in 1987 to grant Associate of Arts degrees. With its expanded degree offerings, the institution’s name changed again to Utah Valley Community College in 1987. In 1993, the institution’s name changed to Utah Valley State College and the mission was expanded to include the offering of bachelor’s degrees. On July 1, 2008, the institution underwent another mission and name change to Utah Valley University and began offering master degree programs.1 Throughout its history, UVU has responded to its service region’s (Utah, Wasatch and Summit counties) population changes and business/industry needs. This responsiveness is evidenced in its mission, program offering, degree level, and enrollment changes. Current Number of Degrees Offered 8 Master’s 3 Graduate Certificates 87 Bachelor’s 64 Associate’s 51 Certificates/Diplomas

1 Sources: A Miracle in Utah Valley—The Story of Utah Technical College 1941-1982, Wilson W. Sorensen Utah Valley University Self-study Report, 2010 Previous UVU Fact Books 51 Masters and Bachelor’s Degrees Awarded: 2016-17 Table of Contents

Exhibit 53 2016-17 2016-17 2016-17 Approved Approved Approved Master's Degrees Grads Master's Degrees Grads Master's Degrees Grads Curriculum and Instruction 2008 19 Master of Business Administration 2009 76 Nursing 2008 1 Total Masters 96

2016-17 2016-17 2016-17 Approved Approved Approved Bachelor's Degrees Grads Bachelor's Degrees Grads Bachelor's Degrees Grads Accounting 1999 107 Dance Education 2005 6 Legal Studies 1999 13 Animation and Game Development 2015 3 Deaf Studies 2007 25 Marketing 2011 82 Art and Design 2004 46 Dental Hygiene 2008 14 Mathematics 2001 11 Art and Design (BFA) 2004 40 Digital Audio 2015 5 Mathematics Education 2002 12 Art Education 2010 11 Digital Cinema 2015 6 Mechatronics Engineering Technology 2015 8 Art History 2015 1 Digital Media 2015 55 Music 2006 5 ASL and Deaf Studies Education 2007 3 Earth Science 2000 1 Music Education 2006 5 Aviation Science 1999 84 Earth Science Education 2001 1 Nursing 2001 73 Aviation Science (Global) 1999 132 Economics 2007 6 Performance 2012 8 Behavioral Science 1999 284 Elementary Education 1996 119 Personal Financial Planning 2011 33 Biology 1999 83 Emergency Services Administration 1998 101 Philosophy 2001 11 Biology Education 2001 6 English 2000 82 Physical Education Teacher Education 2005 9 Biotechnology 2007 22 English Education 2001 24 Physics 2001 9 Botany 2010 3 Entrepreneurship 2015 5 Physics Education 2013 3 Business Management 1994 256 Environmental Science and Management 2011 6 Political Science 2006 42 Business/Marketing Education 2002 1 Exercise Science and Outdoor Recreation 2005 110 School Health Education 2005 17 Chemistry 2001 13 Finance 2009 61 Social Work 2010 52 Commercial Music 2013 7 Forensic Science 2006 8 Software Engineering 2007 19 Communication 2006 180 Geology 2000 6 Spanish 2005 25 Community Health 2005 111 History 2001 21 Statistics 2013 2 Computer Engineering 2012 5 History and Social Science Education 2002 20 Technology Management 1993 51 Computer Science 1992 69 Hospitality Management 1997 35 Theatre Arts 2006 14 Construction Management 2009 29 Human Resource Management 2016 1 Theatre Arts Education 2006 4 Criminal Justice 1999 73 Information Systems 2006 36 University Studies 2014 28 Dance (BFA) 2005 11 Information Technology 2001 33 Web Design and Development 2015 6 Dance (BS) 2005 1 Integrated Studies 1998 30 Total Bachelor's 2,940 52 Associate’s Degrees Awarded: 2016-17 Table of Contents

Exhibit 54 2016-17 2016-17 2016-17 Approved Approved Approved Associate's Degrees Grads Associate's Degrees Grads Associate's Degrees Grads Accounting 1982 25 Cabinetry and Architectural Woodwork (AS) 2000 1 Geomatics 2010 4 Administrative Information Management 2004 1 Collision Repair Technology 1970 10 History And Political Science 2003 10 Administrative Information Support 2004 1 Communication 1990 1 Hospitality Management (AAS) 1977 1 Art and Design (AS) 1989 1 Community Health 1998 1 Hospitality Management (AS) 1988 1 Art and Design (AAS) 1996 9 Computer Science (AAS) 2006 9 Information Systems and Technology 2006 53 Art and Design (AS) 1989 12 Computer Science (AS) 1990 13 Integrated Studies 2002 75 Associate in Pre-Engineering 2004 1 Criminal Justice 1999 22 Legal Studies (AS) 1999 6 Associate in Science in Business 2000 8 Culinary Arts 1990 41 Mathematics 1989 8 Automotive Technology (AAS) 1985 13 Dance 1995 2 Mechatronics Engineering Technology 2007 4 Automotive Technology (AS) 2002 3 Dental Hygiene 1997 10 Music 1987 3 Aviation Science (AAS) 1995 6 Diesel Mechanics Technology 1989 10 Nursing 1989 80 Aviation Science (AS) 1990 8 Digital Communication Technology 2007 11 Pre-Elementary Education 1999 48 Aviation Science (AAS-Global) 1995 7 Early Childhood Education 1990 20 Pre-Engineering 1986 20 Aviation Science (AS-Global) 1990 4 Electrical Automation and Robotics Tech (AAS) 1970 19 Pre-Professional 2010 125 Behavioral Science 1989 67 Electrical Automation and Robotics Tech (AS) 1968 1 Technology 2008 6 Biology 1990 12 Emergency Services 2008 71 Theatre Arts (AS) 1986 1 Building Inspection Technology 1992 1 Engineering Design Technology (AAS) 1970 12 Theatre for Children and Youth 2013 1 Business 2000 76 Engineering Design Technology (AS) 1968 6 University Studies 2009 798 Business Management 1978 1 English 1998 7 Wildland Fire Management 2010 8 Cabinetry and Architectural Woodwork (AAS) 1975 3 Facilities Management 1998 6 Total Associate's 1,784

53 Certificates and Diplomas Awarded: 2016-17 Table of Contents

Exhibit 55 2016-17 2016-17 2016-17 Approved Approved Approved Certificates Grads Diplomas Grads Graduate Certificates Grads Administrative Support 2004 2 Automotive Technology 1986 1 Cybersecurity 2014 5 Architectural Design Technology 2014 4 Collision Repair Technology 1986 2 Regulatory Affairs for Life Sciences 2014 1 Art and Design 1996 3 Diesel Mechanics Technology 1989 3 Total Graduate Certificates 6 Autism Studies 2014 1 Total Diplomas 6 Automotive Technology 1990 2 Civil Design Technology 2014 1 Collision Repair Technology 1993 1 Total 2016-2017 Degrees Awarded: 5,024 Diesel Mechanics Technology 1989 1 Digital Cinema 2013 3 Early Care and Education 1977 8 Financial Planning 2016 2 Firefighter Recruit Candidate 2002 24 Information Technology 2013 40 Law Enforcement 2013 43 Legal Studies 2011 1 Mechanical Design Techology 2014 1 Music Technology 2016 3 Network Administration 2006 21 Operations Management 2014 4 Paramedic 2001 8 Professional Sales 2016 1 Programmer 2002 9 Structural Design Technology 2014 4 Substance Use Disorder Counseling 2010 4 Water and Wastewater Operations 2007 1 Total Certificates 192

54 Utah Valley Population Projections Table of Contents

Exhibit 561 a1 Area 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 Alpine 9,555 10,670 11,667 12,851 13,400 13,700 American Fork 26,263 32,566 39,635 47,678 54,000 58,900 Cedar Fort 368 961 2,757 4,503 6,900 9,000 Cedar Hills 9,796 10,733 10,884 11,689 11,800 11,900 Draper 1,742 2,520 3,303 3,977 5,100 6,200 Eagle Mountain 21,415 34,152 54,095 76,469 114,400 152,500 Elk Ridge 2,436 3,898 4,696 5,888 7,100 8,500 Fairfield 119 599 955 2,148 3,900 5,300 Genola 1,370 3,789 4,370 6,499 8,600 10,800 Goshen 921 1,146 1,220 1,419 1,700 1,800 Highland 15,523 17,792 20,712 24,073 27,100 29,500 Lehi 47,407 62,154 82,589 103,610 120,000 133,800 Lindon 10,070 11,753 12,459 13,721 14,600 15,900 Mapleton 7,979 10,762 13,752 16,901 19,500 21,300 Orem 88,328 99,227 103,321 112,288 118,900 123,600 Pa ys on 18,294 22,832 41,144 49,496 58,500 67,200 Pleasant Grove 33,509 40,034 42,062 47,053 51,200 54,500 Provo 112,488 126,377 131,068 151,877 170,600 189,400 Salem 6,423 11,363 27,102 33,649 40,100 45,200 Santaquin 9,128 17,594 32,075 39,774 46,700 52,900 Saratoga Springs 17,781 33,514 58,496 78,987 107,900 134,000 Spanish Fork 34,691 44,623 54,143 64,607 72,300 78,300 Springville 29,466 37,094 45,078 51,971 57,500 61,600 Vineyard 139 2,065 8,415 15,938 20,000 20,900 Woodland Hills 1,344 1,943 3,001 3,764 4,700 5,300 Balance of Utah County 10,009 28,404 24,101 38,998 60,195 86,074 Utah County 516,564 668,564 833,101 1,019,828 1,216,695 1,398,074

1 Governor’s Office of Planning & Budget, www.governor.utah.gov/DEA/popprojections.html 55 UVU Presidents and Past Institutional Names Table of Contents

Exhibit 57 UVU Presidents Institution Name Changes Dr. Matthew S. Holland July 1, 2009 - Present 2008 Utah Valley University Dr. Elizabeth Hitch (Interim President) 2008-2009 1993 Utah Valley State College Dr. William A. Sederburg 2003-2008 1987 Utah Valley Community College Dr. Lucille T. Stoddard (Interim President) 2002-2003 1967 Utah Technical College at Provo Dr. Kerry D. Romesburg 1988-2003 1963 Utah Trade Technical Institute Dr. Lucille T. Stoddard (Interim President) 1987-1988 1941 Central Utah Vocational School Dr. J. Marvin Higbee 1982-1988 Mr. Wilson W. Sorensen 1945-1982 Mr. Hyrum E. Johnson 1941-1945

56 Board of Trustees Table of Contents

Exhibit 581 a1b2c3 Exhibit 591 Board of Trustees Term Expires Trustees Chairs Elected Karen L. Acerson Jun-19 Elaine Dalton Jul-13 James Clarke (Foundation Chair) Jun-19 Steven J. Lund Jun-13 Elaine Dalton (Chair)2 Jun-21 Greg S. Butterfield Jul-11 John Gappmayer May-18 Steven J. Lund Aug-09 Rick Nielsen Jun-21 Jun-07 Rob Smith (Student Body President) May-18 Daniel W. Campbell Aug-05 Jack W. Sunderlage (2nd Vice Chair)2,3 Jun-19 John H. Zenger (Jack) Aug-03 Jill Taylor Jun-19 Wilford W. Clyde Aug-01 Paul Thompson3 Jun-21 Douglas W. Morrison Aug-99 R. Duff Thompson (1st Vice Chair)2,3 Jun-21 Paul Sybrowsky Aug-97 Beth Tolbert Aug-95 Alan Ashton Sep-93 Ray Harding Sep-91 DeLance Squire Jul-89 Mary Anne Wood Sep-85 Howard Pace Jul-82 Charles Bates Jul-80

1 UVU Office of the President 2 Executive Committee 3 Audit Committee 57 Finance Appropriated Education and General Operating Funds Table of Contents

Exhibit 601 a1 Exhibit 611

Budgeted Expenditures by Natural Classification, 2017-18 Budgeted Expenditures by Functional Classification, 2017-18 1.1% 0.2% 1.5% 1.1% 0.5% Instruction Salaries/Wages 8.7% Public Service 13.4% Employee Benefits Academic Support Current Expense 19.1% Library Travel 49.0% Student Services Capital Equipment Athletics 25.5% 57.8% 1.6% Fuel & Power 7.9% Institutional Support Scholarship O&M Plant 11.0% 1.7% Scholarships 0.1%

1 UVU Office of Planning and Budget 58 Appropriated Education and General Operating Funds, continued Table of Contents

Exhibit 621 a1 Exhibit 631 History of Appropriated Education & General Operating Funds State Tax Funds Appropriated Education & General Revenue Sources Percent of Total 2017-18 Budget Year Total Budget State Tax Funds Budgeted Revenue 2017-18 $235,193,300 $106,864,000 45.4% 2016-17 $220,012,600 $100,891,200 45.9% 2015-16 $204,102,500 $96,401,700 47.2% 2014-15 $192,606,000 $92,907,800 48.2% 2013-14 $164,806,300 $67,694,800 41.1% 2012-13 $162,749,300 $62,082,300 38.2% 2011-12 $152,784,800 $58,546,800 38.3% Dedicated Credits 45.4% 2010-11 $140,983,300 $59,862,300 42.5% State Tax Funds 2009-10 $124,925,600 $56,827,600 45.5% 54.6% 2008-09 $126,912,000 $68,410,100 53.9% 2007-08 $116,404,200 $62,465,300 53.7% 2006-07 $99,866,000 $49,766,900 49.8% 2005-06 $98,381,100 $47,633,700 48.4% 2004-05 $89,242,000 $41,569,600 46.6% 2003-04 $82,700,000 $40,217,200 48.6% 2002-03 $76,735,000 $39,967,000 52.1% 2001-02 $69,100,000 $41,202,900 59.6%

1 UVU Office of Planning and Budget 59 History of State Tax Fund Expenditures per FTE Table of Contents

Exhibit 641 a1

Annualized FTE Students (Budget Related only) State Tax Funds per FTE Student 25,000 $5,000 $4,728 22,490 22,601 $4,571 $4,477 $4,486 21,594 21,535 20,850 20,703 20,326 $4,138 19,033 19,642 20,000 $4,000 $3,772 16,747 $3,446 15,215 $3,161 $2,871 $2,999 15,000 $3,000 $2,711

10,000 $2,000

5,000 $1,000

0 $0

1 UVU Office of Planning and Budget 60 Facilities Current Facilities and Acreage Table of Contents

Exhibit 651 a1 Building Gross Square Feet Building Gross Square Feet Building Gross Square Feet Advancement Data Building 2,026 Kern House (1138 South Home) 1,540 Wasatch Automotive 3,403 Alumni Center 12,447 Liberal Arts 154,592 Web Development 3,189 Baseball Stadium 48,990 Library 198,025 Wee Care Center 13,946 Browning Administration 81,645 Losee Center 93,012 Wolverine Service Center 38,235 Business Resource Center 24,598 McKay Education 46,952 Woodbury Business 78,724 Canyon Park Building L 38,603 Noorda Children's Theater (included in GT footage) Central Plant 14,882 Parking Structure 164,366 Leased Space Gross Square Feet Child Care 4,899 Physical Education 105,485 National Guard Building 9,345 Classroom Building 256,749 Pope Science 81,389 Woodbury Art Gallery (formerly Art Gallery) 13,732 Computer Science 163,047 ROTC (1112 South Home) 4,516 Capitol Reef Field Station 6,370 Continuing Education 5,500 Science Building 179,409 Total Gross Square Feet 3,020,992 Continuing Education #2 (on 400 West) 3,036 SCUP (723 South Home) 3,496 Development Center 6,508 Sign Shop 620 Campus Acreage Acres Education Trailer 1,439 Sorensen Center 157,832 Main Campus (including HP and NG buildings 247.00 Environmental Technology 7,163 Sparks Automotive 100,723 Airport/UFRA 0 Events Center 179,112 Student Life & Wellness Center 194,240 Business Resource Center 2.50 Extended Education 47,176 TRIO 4,491 Canyon Park Building L 0.00 Facilities Complex 33,356 UCAS 12,695 Thanksgiving Point 0.00 Faculty Annex 7,977 UCAS Classroom Trailer #1 1,410 Vineyard 225.00 Fire Science Academy 51,374 UCAS Classroom Trailer #2 1,420 Wasatch Campus 50.00 Gear Up 4,041 UCAS Multipurpose 7,118 Total Acreage 524.50 Gunther Technology 156,647 University Residence 6,235 Hangar A 17,063 Health Professions 59,353 Hangar B 36,490 Wasatch Campus 70,361 Total Gross Square Feet 3,020,992

1 UVU Facilities 61 Physical Facilities of Other Institutions Table of Contents

Exhibit 661 a1b2 Selected Space Designations All Space Designations Classrooms Laboratories Study Facilities Total Square Sq Feet Per Sq Feet Per Square Sq Feet Per Sq Feet Per Square Sq Feet Per Sq Feet Per Square Sq Feet Per Sq Feet Per 2 2 Institution FTE HC Feet FTE HC Feet FTE HC Feet FTE HC Feet FTE HC University of Utah 27,536 31,965 422,830 15.4 13.23 452,366 16.4 14.15 372,123 13.5 11.64 14,216,165 516.3 444.74 Utah State University 20,524 25,339 338,119 16.5 13.34 461,192 22.5 18.20 217,161 10.6 8.57 7,930,581 386.4 312.98 Weber State University 13,179 18,808 199,214 15.1 10.59 293,650 22.3 15.61 124,163 9.4 6.60 2,621,548 198.9 139.38 Southern Utah University 7,284 8,479 71,504 9.8 8.43 144,368 19.8 17.03 60,770 8.3 7.17 1,428,194 196.1 168.44 Snow College 3,744 4,906 88,308 23.6 18.00 173,434 46.3 35.35 32,352 8.6 6.59 1,169,758 312.4 238.43 6,765 8,242 114,146 16.9 13.85 93,443 13.8 11.34 61,188 9.0 7.42 1,078,562 159.4 130.86 Utah Valley University 21,317 28,614 227,434 10.7 7.95 404,942 19.0 14.15 106,543 5.0 3.72 3,063,154 143.7 107.05 Salt Lake Community College 13,308 22,999 267,354 20.1 11.62 437,799 32.9 19.04 49,482 3.7 2.15 2,292,542 172.3 99.68 Total 113,657 149,352 1,728,909 15.2 11.58 2,461,194 21.7 16.48 1,023,782 9.0 6.85 33,800,504 297.4 226.31

1 Utah System of Higher Education 2 Budget related 62 Appendix Student Body Presidents Table of Contents

Exhibit 671 a1 Rob Smith Orem, UT 2017-2018 Paul Von Strahl Orem, Utah 1992-1993 Doug Wright Provo, Utah 1969-1970 Birch Eve Louisville, KY 2016-2017 Ken Patey Orem, Utah 1991-1992 Bruce Smith Orem, Utah 1968-1969 Dylan Swarts Las Vegas, NV 2015-2016 Kelly Bitters Orem, Utah 1990-1991 Gary Houser Orem, Utah 1967-1968 Tyler Brklacich North Salt Lake, Utah 2014-2015 Deryn Young Alton, Utah 1989-1990 Jim Tilson Spanish Fork, Utah 1966-1967 Jono Andrews Kayesville, Utah 2013-2014 Jim Woods Provo, Utah 1988-1989 Donald P. Fordham Pleasant Grove, Utah 1965-1966 Chad Workman Provo, Utah 2012-2013 Ben Gould Orem, Utah 1987-1988 Chuck Goodyear Indianapolis, Indiana 1964-1965 Chris Loumeau Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 2011-2012 George Marshall Orem, Utah 1986-1987 Glen LaVar Cox Hinckley, Utah 1963-1964 Richard Portwood Park City, Utah 2010-2011 Bobby Thomas California 1985-1986 Robert Button Provo, Utah 1962-1963 Trevor Tooke Spanish Fork, Utah 2009-2010 Jay Deuel Tucson, Arizona 1984-1985 Paul Hart Orem, Utah 1961-1962 Joseph Watkins Heber, Arizona 2008-2009 Gordon Wilson Lehi, Utah 1983-1984 Duane Johnson Showlow, Arizona 1960-1961 Kris Coles Sandy, Utah 2007-2008 Scott Banasky Green River, Utah 1982-1983 Duane Johnson Showlow, Arizona 1959-1960 Andrew Stone Dixon, California 2006-2007 Kerry Graves Mapleton, Utah 1981-1982 William Nuttall Provo, Utah 1958-1959 Jared Sumsion Springville, Utah 2005-2006 Mark Fisher Lanham, Maryland 1980-1981 James G. Goodman Roy, Utah 1957-1958 Jim Bassi Cypress, Texas 2004-2005 Lee Barrus Othello, Washington 1979-1980 Lynn Powell Nephi, Utah 1956-1957 Swen Swenson Cedar Hills, Utah 2003-2004 Bruce Burnett Provo, Utah 1978-1979 Blane Elton Santaquin, Utah 1955-1956 Ryan Vogel Springville, Utah 2002-2003 Blake Buhler American Fork, Utah 1977-1978 Clark Jolley Pleasant Grove, Utah 1954-1955 Khay Douangdara Sandy, Utah 2001-2002 William Reese Vernal, Utah 1976-1977 Calvin Davies Panguitch, Utah 1953-1954 Jared Finch Mapleton, Utah 2000-2001 Mel Poulsen Richfield, Utah 1975-1976 William H. White Goshen, Utah 1952-1953 Baron Rohbock Lindon, Utah 1999-2000 LaVerl Crosby Provo, Utah 1974-1975 Mark Anderson Provo, Utah 1951-1952 Dave Nabrotzky Corona, California 1998-1999 Randy Kidman Ogden, Utah 1973-1974 Bill Hales Pocatello, Idaho 1950-1951 J. Steven Beck Provo, Utah 1997-1998 Terry K. Holt Brigham City, Utah 1972-1973 Thomas Donald Forsyth Provo, Utah 1949-1950 Phil L. Clegg Kamas, Utah 1996-1997 Ken Law Springville, Utah 1971-1972 Lee Russell Cardall Salt Lake City, Utah 1948-1949 Terry Ann Harward Provo, Utah 1995-1996 Norm Thorson Provo, Utah 1970-1971 Mark H. Nilsen Provo, Utah 1947-1948 Shad Sorenson Oakley, Utah 1994-1995 Richard L. Evans Orem, Utah 1970-1971 Don A. Taylor Spanish Fork, Utah 1946-1947 Stephen Hatch American Fork, Utah 1993-1994

1 UVU Student Government 63 UVU Honorary Degree Recipients Table of Contents

Exhibit 681 a1 2017 Henry B. Eyring 2009 Thomas S. Monson 2000 Nadine Gillmor 1986 Bill Anderson Keith Nellesen Frances Monson Ibrahim Kamel 1985 James R. Moss Shirlee Silversmith Phyllis Christensen 1999 Kurt Bestor 1984 Don E. James Brent Wood 2008 Bill Hulterstrom 1998 Bill Pope Charles E. Peterson 2016 Christine Durham Lane Beattie Margaret Pope 1983 Hyrum E. Johnson Todd Pedersen Gov. Jon Huntsman, Jr. 1997 Dr. Steven R. Covey Wilson W. Sorensen John Valentine 2007 Jeff Alexander Karen Ashton 1978 James S. Clark 2015 Melanie Bastian Dr. Wm. Rolfe Kerr Theron J. Luke Pamela Atkinson Ira Fulton 1996 Honorable Michael O. Leavitt Helen B. Ure Rebecca D. Lockhart Mary Lou Fulton Marlon O. Snow 1977 Sylvia C. Anderson 2014 Barbara Barrington Jones 2006 Jon M. Huntsman 1995 Ronald A. Rasband Calvin L. Rampton Noelle Pikus-Pace Karen Haight Huntsman Shunji Aoki 1975 J.C. Moffitt Chris Fogt Jack Zenger Honorable LeRay L. McAllister ElRoy Nelson 2013 Anousheh Ansari Holly Zenger 1994 Larry H. Miller Glen R. Swenson Doris Buffett 2005 Steve Young Janine Pease-Windy Boy 1974 Seth P. Billins Janette Hales Beckham Boyd Smith Neal Savage Frank S. Dain David G. Neeleman Jill Smith 1993 DeLance W. Squire 1973 Richard DeJong 2012 Erin Gruwell 2004 Senator Bob Bennett 1992 Alan Ashton Jack C. Higbee William H. Child Wallace Richards Woodbury Lavorn Sparks Richard S. Prows Linda Curley Christensen Orin Richards Woodbury 1991 Joe Cannon 1971 Edmund M. Evans Lewena (Tye) Noorda 2003 Larry King Veonne Howlett Von C. Robertson 2011 Robert C. Gay Shawn King 1990 Donald Holbrook Edna C. Hatch Baker Joan Dixon 2002 Dr. Lucille T. Stoddard Orville Gunther 1967 Birk Petersen Hal Wing Dr. Gordon Christensen 1989 Roy Despain Ralph Pitts 2010 Larry Echo Hawk Dr. Rella Christensen Florence Ragan Robert Brickey Miles Morris 2001 Gordon B. Hinckley 1988 Raymond J. Norda Mary Morris Marjorie Pay Hinckley 1987 Grant Burgeon Linda P. Walton Paul Rogers

1 UVU University Marketing/Communications 64 Undergraduate Tuition and Fees per Semester Table of Contents

Exhibit 691 a1 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-2012 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 Resident 5 Credit Hours: $ 882 $ 939 $ 1,006 $ 1,066 $ 1,138 $ 1,186 $ 1,265 $ 1,306 $ 1,258 $ 1,293 $ 1,319 10 Credit Hours: $ 1,532 $ 1,630 $ 1,756 $ 1,860 $ 1,988 $ 2,075 $ 2,207 $ 2,285 $ 2,333 $ 2,393 $ 2,444 12-18 Credit Hours: $ 1,764 $ 1,876 $ 2,024 $ 2,144 $ 2,292 $ 2,393 $ 2,543 $ 2,635 $ 2,693 $ 2,765 $ 2,826 Non-resident 5 Credit Hours: $ 2,602 $ 2,727 $ 2,819 $ 2,903 $ 3,062 $ 3,193 $ 3,372 $ 3,489 $ 3,506 $ 3,615 $ 3,698 10 Credit Hours: $ 4,702 $ 4,913 $ 5,074 $ 5,227 $ 5,522 $ 5,767 $ 6,084 $ 6,313 $ 6,481 $ 6,685 $ 6,843 12-18 Credit Hours: $ 5,514 $ 5,757 $ 5,944 $ 6,123 $ 6,470 $ 6,759 $ 7,128 $ 7,401 $ 7,601 $ 7,845 $ 8,033

1 UVU Catalog 65 Total Scholarships, Tuition Waivers, Financial Aid 2016-17 Academic Year Table of Contents

Exhibit 701 a1 Numer of Financial Assistance Type Awards Paid Amount Loans - Federal 14,624 $58,582,633 Loans - Institutional 0 $0 Loans - Other 573 $3,503,221 Grants - Federal 14,029 $45,459,333 Grants - State 612 $493,264 Grants - Institutional 676 $1,416,906 Grants - Other 0 $0 Scholarships - State 1,180 $5,261,569 Scholarships - Institutional 7,249 $21,416,328 Scholarships - Other 1,297 $2,833,714 Work-study 201 $659,934 Total 40,441 139,626,902

Waivers 1,391 $3,685,601

1 UVU Financial Aid Office 66 Federal Grants and Contracts, 2016-17 Table of Contents

Exhibit 711 a1 Expended Expended Agency Title 2016-17 Agency Title 2016-17 US Dept of Education U.S. Department of Labor Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant $ 629,796.00 Employment and Training Administration Work Study $ 861,928.00 TAACCCT - CyberSecurity $ 69,512.00 Pell Grant $ 44,172,585.00 National Science Foundation Pell Administration $ 148,000.00 Pro STEM $ 70,832.00 Perkins Loan Program - P&I Cancellations $ 52,625.00 LEAP $ 126,052.00 Student Support Services $ 246,530.00 EAGER US Ignite $ 14,793.00 Talent Search $ 51,381.00 EAGER Phylogeny of Mayflies $ 88,128.00 Upward Bound $ 355,476.00 Cultivating Capitol Reef FS $ 14,952.00 Gear-Up Scholarships $ 316,952.00 CC*DNI Networking $ 1,547.00 Iraq and Afghanistan Service Grant $ 5,413.00 Noyce Professional Engagement II $ 168,992.00 Gear-Up $ 3,998,035.00 Includes Utah Prep $ 21,884.00 Title III - Strengthening Institutions $ 498,862.00 Advanced Nanotechnology $ 11,404.00 Educational Opportunity Center $ 160,047.00 U.S. Department of Agriculture Americorps U.S. Forest Service Individual Student Awards $ 106,655.00 Astragalus Holmgreniorum $ 10,185.00 U.S. Department of Homeland Security Astragalus Holmgreniorum $ 17,837.00 NFA State Fire Training Program $ 14,555.00 Flow Through Funding Assistance to Firefighters $ - State Agencies US Dept of the Interior Utah State Office of Education Bureau of Land Management US Dept of Ed - Vocational Education - Formula $ 931,454.00 BLM Field Study Engangered Species $ 2,581.00 US Dept of Ed - Vocational Education - Formula Reserve $ 1,506.00 Mojove Flora Checklist $ 1,941.00 IDEA Autism Behavior Collaboration $ 51,032.00 US Geologic Survey Math Science Partnership $ 17,686.00 Timing Ruptures Wasatch Fault $ 29,417.00

1 UVU Business Office 67 Federal Grants and Contracts, 2016-17, continued Table of Contents

Expended Expended Agency Title 2016-17 Agency Title 2016-17 Flow Through Funding, continued Non-State Agencies Utah Dept of Workforce Services Arizona State University US Dept of Health Human Services - Child Care Resource & Referral $ 576,602.00 WAESO $ 238.00 US Dept of Health Human Services - Child Care Resource & Referral $ 5,432.00 Space Telescope Science Institute Stemlink Afterschool $ 122,371.00 Homogeneous Dist - supermassive black holes $ 2,002.00 Summer Youth $ 68,261.00 Constraining Dust Hazes at the L/T Trans via Var $ 14,469.00 University of Utah Vertical Cloud Structure $ - NASA Rocky Mtn Space Consortium $ 10,970.00 Silver Linings Using Cloud Maps $ 27,725.00 Utah State University Dash Mapping of IC348 $ 7,790.00 Small Business Development Center $ 117,600.00 A Second Ladder: Testing for Bias $ 18,799.00 NSF iUTAH EPSCoR $ 63,203.00 California Inst of Tech Utah State University Research Foundation JPL - Constraining Dust Haze $ 1,262.00 CP0030416 $ 19,911.00 Commission on Criminal & Juvenile Justice Total Federal Grants $ 54,337,071.00 JAG $ 4,108.00 Utah Dept of Public Safety Emergency Management $ 3,427.00 State of Utah Upward Bound Summer Food $ 2,326.00

68 State and Private Grants and Contracts, 2016-17 Table of Contents

Exhibit 721 a1 Expended Expended Agency - Title 2016-17 Agency - Title 2016-17 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - SEOG Federal Match 209,932 NCAA Summer Bridge 266,079 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - Work Study Federal Match 171,284 NCTA IRTA Grant 2,450 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - UHEAA Grants 19,400 YOUTHINK AlcoholEdu for College 3,950 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - TAL Scholarships 27,031 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - New Century Scholarships 136,250 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - Regent's Scholarships 873,900 Total Private Grants 272,479 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - UECSP 4,711 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - HESSP 476,800 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - Minority Scholarships 3,306 Utah Higher Education Assistance Authority - Vet Gap 6,273 Governer's Office of Economic Development - UMEP 93,780 Governer's Office of Economic Development - BR 17,000 Governer's Office of Economic Development - HV 5,000 Utah State Library - Lendor Support 7,000 UCAP Career Tech Training 199,978 WTC UCAP Utah Girl STEM 14,940 GOED STEM Action Center 3,143 GOED Math Adventure 2,500 GOED Lego EV3 13,929 STEM Evaluation Grant 52,660 DWS Women in Economy 5,000 PTAC 301 State of Utah - Utah Fire and Rescue 4,051,195 Utah Regents - Positions 264,924 DWS Marriage Relationships 76,783 Veterans Student Support Center 4,846 USTAR UTAG Ultrasonic Microprobe 2,354

Total State Grants 6,744,220

1 UVU Business Office 69 Faculty Senate Presidents Table of Contents

Exhibit 731 a1b2 Term President Term President Term President 2017- Craig Thulin 1996-97 Ernie L. Carey 1986-87 F. Dennis Farnsworth 2014-17 Mark Bracken 1995-96 Larry Holt 1985-86 Larry B. Marsing 2012-14 David R. Connelly 1994-95 Hugh Rode 1984-85 Kenneth M. Foster 2010-12 John Balden 1993-94 D. J. Rowley 1983-84 Wesley M. Bitters 2008-10 Chuck Allison 1992-93 Douglas Bradley 1982-83 J. D. Davidson 2006-08 Steven Clark 1991-92 Del Shumway 1981-82 Kenneth M. Foster 2004-06 Ellen Hall-Loveland 1990-91 Bonnie G. Henrie 1980-81 Robert F. Steele 2002-04 Mike Shively 1989-90 J. D. Davidson 1979-80 Russell C. Black 2000-02 Ron Hammond 1988-89 Orrin A. Nelson 1978-79 Douglas E. Warner 1998-00 Grant Richards 1987-88 Barbra Ann Hoge 1977-78 Stephen L. Adams 1997-98 Gaya Carlton

Professional Association of College Employees (PACE) Presidents

Exhibit 742 Term Ace/Pace President Term Ace/Pace President Term Ace/Pace President 2017-18 PACE Shalece Nuttal 2002-03 PACE Vickie Walker 1992-93 PACE Michael L. Jones 2015-17 PACE Sherry Harward 2001-02 PACE Phil Clegg 1991-92 PACE Leah J. Holt 2013-15 PACE Brett McKeachnie 2000-01 PACE Merrill Oyler 1990-91 PACE Michael V. Jacobsen 2011-13 PACE Alexis Palmer 1999-00 PACE Gary Griffin 1989-90 PACE Noel C. Lyman 2009-11 PACE Mark Wiesenberg 1998-99 PACE Jeanette Hall 1988-89 PACE Thomas R. Rasmussen 2007-09 PACE Clint Moser 1996-98 PACE Robert Rasmussen 1987-88 PACE Evan A. Frampton 2005-07 PACE Louise Bridge 1995-96 PACE Nancy Bartlett 1986-87 ACE Linda L. Makin 2004-05 PACE Candace Marks 1994-95 PACE Marilyn Mansfield 1985-86 ACE Lucile M. Steele 2003-04 PACE Shad Sorenson 1993-94 PACE Tara Yates 1984-85 ACE Duane Jacobs

1 UVU Faculty Senate 2 UVU PACE 70 UVU Foundation Board, 2017 Table of Contents

Exhibit 751 a1 Lance Black Gerald Garrett Duane Madsen Clark Turner Curtis Blair Cameron Gunter (1st Vice-Chair) Kris McFarland (2nd Vice-Chair) Neal Williams James Clarke (Chair) Lindsay Hadley Jefferson Moss (COO) Taylor Woodbury Scott Cooksey (CEO) Matthew Holland (President) Paul Rogers Darin Zwick Mary Crafts - Homer Nathan Jones Kara Schneck John Gappmayer (Alumni President) Barbara Jones Barrington Rob Smith (Student Body President) Rob Gardner Shawn Lindquist Heidi Thorn

UVU Alumni Association Board of Directors

Exhibit 761 Curtis B. Blair Emily Gappmayer Rowley Rodrigo Silva Roger B. Woolstenhulme Nick Crump - Student Alumni President John R. Gappmayer - President Rob C. Smith - Student Body President Kirk Cullimore, Jr. Ezequiel Guzman Kevin R. Walkenhorst Tammie Dearing Dru A. Huffaker Isaac Westwood Akwasi Frimpong Kara North Ian Wilson

UVU Alumni Association President’s Club

Exhibit 771 2016-2018 John R. Gappmayer 2004-2006 B.J. Wright 1993-1994 Bill A. Brown 2012-2016 Curtis B. Blair 2002-2004 Tom Heal 1992-1993 Greg S. Nelson 2011-2012 Curtis J. Morley 2000-2002 Barbara A. Smith 1991-1992 David D. Halladay 2009-2011 Terry L. Fund, Jr. (TJ) 1997-2000 Dave F. Adams 1990-1991 Brent J. DeMille 2008-2009 Scott Jenkins 1995-1997 Jeffrey S. Kahn 1989-1990 Jon W. Startup 2006-2008 Thomas C. Powell 1994-1995 Geri S. Clements

1 UVU Alumni Association. The Foundation Board has changed structure which now includes CEO, chair, and 2 vice chairs. 71 Further References Table of Contents

College Calendars (Fall, Spring, Summer) https://www.uvu.edu/asc/calendars.html Faculty Senate https://www.uvu.edu/facsenate/ PACE https://www.uvu.edu/pace/ Foundation Board https://www.uvu.edu/supportuvu/about-us/ Alumni Board of Directors https://www.uvualumni.org/ Utah System of Higher Education http://www.higheredutah.org/ Utah State Board of Regents http://higheredutah.org/about-the-board Utah State Board of Regents Chairs and Utah Commissioners of Higher Education http://higheredutah.org/boardmembers Utah Employment Projections by Major Industry http://gomb.utah.gov/budget-policy/demographic-economic-analysis/ Office of Institutional Research & Information http://www.uvu.edu/iri UVU Strategic and Master Plan http://www.uvu.edu/insteffect/ HEA Consumer Information https://www.uvu.edu/compliance/heastudentconsumer.html