A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets

This study was designed to contribute to the development of internal allocation models by selecting basic concepts from external allocation models and examining for the presence of these concepts in the actual internal allocation activity of public two-year colleges. First, this study examined whet...

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Main Author: James, Glenn W.
Other Authors: Community College Education
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39775
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10122005-134434/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-397752021-04-21T05:26:15Z A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets James, Glenn W. Community College Education Creamer, Donald G. Montgomery, James R. Salmon, Richard G. Morgan, Samuel D. McLaughlin, Gerald W. LD5655.V856 1991.J362 Community colleges -- United States -- Finance Junior colleges -- United States -- Finance This study was designed to contribute to the development of internal allocation models by selecting basic concepts from external allocation models and examining for the presence of these concepts in the actual internal allocation activity of public two-year colleges. First, this study examined whether there was a significant difference in the way that public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets apportioned their funds in each of six major expenditure categories during the period of 1977-78 through 1985-86. The six major expenditure categories are instruction, academic support, libraries, student services, institutional support, and operation and maintenance of plant. The source of institutional data was the Higher Education General Information Survey conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics. The 460 colleges in the sample were assigned to groups according to budget change: growth, stasis, or decline. The following dependent variables were identified for each of the six major expenditure categories: (a) category expenditures (b) percentage of educational and general (E&G) expenditures apportioned to the category, and (c) category expenditures per full-time-equivalent student (FTES). A two-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA) with repeated measures on one factor was used to test for differences in the mean expenditure measures among budget groups, across years, and for the interaction of group and year. Concepts derived from external allocation models then were used to explore the results of the data analysis. Application of these concepts suggested that, regardless of budget group, funds were allocated to both instruction and academic support through use of a model incorporating a percentage of E&G expenditures for variable cost. Student services and operation and maintenance of plant appeared to be operating under a model with a per-FTES component for variable cost. Libraries and institutional support, however, appeared to be operating under models that were not examined in this study or for which techniques used herein were not adequate. Ed. D. 2014-03-14T21:20:52Z 2014-03-14T21:20:52Z 1991-09-12 2005-10-12 2005-10-12 2005-10-12 Dissertation Text etd-10122005-134434 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39775 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10122005-134434/ en OCLC# 25120765 LD5655.V856_1991.J362.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xiv, 139 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1991.J362
Community colleges -- United States -- Finance
Junior colleges -- United States -- Finance
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1991.J362
Community colleges -- United States -- Finance
Junior colleges -- United States -- Finance
James, Glenn W.
A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
description This study was designed to contribute to the development of internal allocation models by selecting basic concepts from external allocation models and examining for the presence of these concepts in the actual internal allocation activity of public two-year colleges. First, this study examined whether there was a significant difference in the way that public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets apportioned their funds in each of six major expenditure categories during the period of 1977-78 through 1985-86. The six major expenditure categories are instruction, academic support, libraries, student services, institutional support, and operation and maintenance of plant. The source of institutional data was the Higher Education General Information Survey conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics. The 460 colleges in the sample were assigned to groups according to budget change: growth, stasis, or decline. The following dependent variables were identified for each of the six major expenditure categories: (a) category expenditures (b) percentage of educational and general (E&G) expenditures apportioned to the category, and (c) category expenditures per full-time-equivalent student (FTES). A two-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA) with repeated measures on one factor was used to test for differences in the mean expenditure measures among budget groups, across years, and for the interaction of group and year. Concepts derived from external allocation models then were used to explore the results of the data analysis. Application of these concepts suggested that, regardless of budget group, funds were allocated to both instruction and academic support through use of a model incorporating a percentage of E&G expenditures for variable cost. Student services and operation and maintenance of plant appeared to be operating under a model with a per-FTES component for variable cost. Libraries and institutional support, however, appeared to be operating under models that were not examined in this study or for which techniques used herein were not adequate. === Ed. D.
author2 Community College Education
author_facet Community College Education
James, Glenn W.
author James, Glenn W.
author_sort James, Glenn W.
title A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
title_short A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
title_full A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
title_fullStr A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
title_sort comparison of expenditure patterns in public two-year colleges with declining, steady, or increasing budgets
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39775
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10122005-134434/
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