Administration Summary

This page provides an overview of your survey administration, including details about your population and sample, response rates, representativeness of your respondents, survey customization choices, and recruitment message schedule. This information can be useful for assessing data quality and planning future NSSE administrations.

Population and Respondents

The table at right reports your institution's population sizes, how many students were sampled (whether census-administered or randomly selected), and how many completed the survey.

Submitted population 1,224 1,822
Adjusted populationa 779 1,328
Survey sampleb 776 1,325
Total respondents 291 591
Full completionsc 235 544
Partial completion 45 46
a. Adjusted for ineligible students and those for whom survey requests were returned as undeliverable.
b. Targeted, experimental, and locally administered oversamples were not included.
c. Completed at least one demographic question after the core engagement items on the survey.

Response Rate and Sampling Errora

The table below summarizes response rates and sampling errors for your institution and comparison groups. For more information see NSSE’s Response Rate FAQ.

First-year Senior
NSSEville State GLC Peers Carnegie Peers NSSE 2015 & 2016 NSSEville State GLC Peers Carnegie Peers NSSE 2015 & 2016
Response Rate 38% 27% 19% 22% 45% 29% 22% 24%
Sampling Errorb +/-4.3% +/-0.6% +/-0.5% +/-0.2% +/-2.8% +/-0.6% +/-0.4% +/-0.2%
a. Comparison group response rate and sampling error are computed at the student level (i.e., they are not institution averages).
b. Also called “margin of error,” sampling error is an estimate of the amount the true score on a given item could differ from the estimate based on a sample. For example, if the sampling error is +/- 5.0% and 40% of your students reply "Very often" to a particular item, then the true population value is most likely between 35% and 45%.

Representativeness and Weighting

The first table at right reports on variables submitted in your population file. Respondent and population percentages are listed side by side as a convenience to see how well the characteristics of your respondents reflect your first-year and senior populations.

Because women and full-time students are consistently overrepresented among respondents, NSSE weights results by sex and enrollment status so institutional estimates reflect the population with respect to these characteristics. The second table at right provides the respondent and population proportions used to calculate your 2016 weights.

Representiveness First-Year Senior
Respondent % Population % Respondent % Population %
Female 64 61 68 61
Full-time 96 100 94 92
First-time, first-year 91 92 N/A N/A
Race/ethnicitya
Am. Indian or Alaska Native 0 0 0 0
Asian 7 5 6 6
Black or African American 7 7 5 6
Hispanic or Latino 12 13 9 10
Native Hawaiian/Other Pac. Isl. 1 0 0 0
White 68 70 76 74
Other 0 0 0 0
Foreign or nonresident alien 0 0 0 0
Two or more races/ethicities 1 3 2 2
Unknown 1 1 1 1
a. Based on the IPEDS categories (not available for Canadian institutions) submitted in the population file. Results not reported for institutions without full (at least 90%) race/ethnicity information in the population file.

Weighting First-Year Senior
Respondent % Population % Respondent % Population %
Full-time, female 64 61 64 57
Full-time, male 32 39 30 36
Part-time, female 0 4 4
Part-time, male 2 3

Administration Options

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