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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Larranaga
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/24/07
HB 681
SHORT TITLE Payment of Remedial Courses at Colleges
SB
ANALYST McOlash
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Department of Finance & Administration – Office of Education Accountability (OEA)
Public Education Department (PED)
Higher Education Department (HED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 681 amends the Public School Code to require school districts to pay the costs of
post-secondary remedial or developmental courses for graduates who do not meet academic ad-
missions standards at public two-year post-secondary institutions.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NFI
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
A 2006 study Ready for College. - a joint effort by the Department of Finance/Office of Educa-
tion Accountability, NMHED and PED - found that almost half (49%) of New Mexico public
high school graduates took college developmental courses in numeracy and/or literacy. The data
pg_0002
House Bill 681 – Page
2
included 43,784 unduplicated students enrolled in a New Mexico college or university in Fall
Semester for years 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004. Of the total, 35,654 were students who gradu-
ated from New Mexico’s public high schools. New Mexico’s public high schools varied in the
percentages of their graduates who took numeracy and/or literacy courses in college; from a low
of 16% to a high of 83%.
The percentage of public high school graduates who took college developmental courses in nu-
meracy and/or literacy varied by the ethnicity of the student:
• American Indian or Alaskan Native – 66%
• Asian or Pacific Islander – 38%
• Black, non-Hispanic – 55%
• Hispanic – 58%
• White, non-Hispanic - 36%
Based on the number of New Mexico graduates (35,654), approximately 17,500 students en-
rolled in remediation courses in Fall Semesters with an annual average of 3,494 per year for five
years. Although the study did not provide data on individual institutions, total remedial courses
at two-year institutions equaled 9,123 (95.1%) of the 9,597 courses offered at all institutions at
any one time.
Cost Estimates
Total cost estimates are difficult with the limitations in data. The calculations presented below
include the various steps to illustrate the rationale. However, they imply a precision that does not
exist.
At the two-year institution remediation course rate (95.1%), an estimated annual average of
3,323 students would be enrolled in remedial courses at these institutions. According to the OEA
analysis
. . . the Higher Education Department (HED) indicates that the average cost of
a remedial course about $45 a credit hour and remedial courses are usually 3
credit hours. These estimates also include a $40 registration fee for each se-
mester.
Presumably, a three credit hour remedial course will cost $175 (3 credit hours X $45
plus $40). It follows that the cost for 3,323 students enrolled in a Fall Semester
$581,525 and, if these same students enroll again in the Spring Semester, the annual
cost would equal approximately $1.2 million.
The Ready for College. report does not include sufficient information to estimate costs at any of
19 two-year institutions or for any of the 89 school districts. However, in the five years (2000
through 2004) the Vaughn district had 13 students that were included in the dataset. Four
(30.8%) of those students reportedly took remedial literacy and/or numeracy Classes in 2000 –
2004. At a rate of less than one student per semester, the annual cost to the Vaughn district
should not exceed $350. For Albuquerque, the 930 remedial course takers in each of five semes-
ters would cost $162,750 or $325,500 per year.
.
pg_0003
House Bill 681 – Page
3
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
House Bill 681 does not identify an administrative entity to calculate, collect, and transfer fees
from public schools to post-secondary institutions.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
OEA Analysis
First, institutions of higher education must carefully define which classes are
categorized as remedial or developmental. Some courses are clearly remedial
in nature, for example those that teach basic math or basic reading. Other
courses are labeled developmental but are appropriate for most college stu-
dents, for example those that deal with career exploration. This finding is im-
portant for HB-681, because PED and HED would need a clearer definition of
which courses are truly remedial and thus eligible for reimbursement.
Second, the “Ready For College" study found that different higher education
institutions use different placement tests or different scores on the same place-
ment test to determine if students need to be placed in remedial courses. This
finding is important for HB-681 because PED and HED would need to ensure
that methods for determining which students were placed in remedial courses
were valid and consistent from institution to institution.
BM/mt