fact 2019–2020 book · 2020. 8. 14. · alumni relations a few highlights from alumni this past...
TRANSCRIPT
FACT BOOK
2019
–2020
Transforming Minds.Engaging Culture.
Table of Contents
Board of Trustees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Mission & Vision . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Strategic Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5History of Southeastern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Points of Excellence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Alumni Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Accreditation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12Institutional Memberships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13Organizational Charts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Athletics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24Clubs & Organizations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26Library & Computer Resources . . . . . . .27Missions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28Tuition & Fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30Tuition, Room & Board Comparison . . . 34Financial Aid – New Undergraduates . . . 36Academic Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38Unrestricted Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42Honors Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44Enrollment Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46Enrollment by Major . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48Total Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54Full-Time Equivalency Enrollment . . . 56
Enrollment by Gender . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58Enrollment by Race & Ethnicity . . . . . . 60Enrollment by State/U .S . Territory . . .62International Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64Enrollment by Denomination . . . . . . . . . 66Enrollment by AG District . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68Faculty Division & Rank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70Instructional Faculty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72Instructional Faculty Demographics . .74Student-to-Faculty Ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75Faculty & Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76Applications for Freshman Admission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78SAT, ACT & GPA for Entering Freshmen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80Completions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82Retention Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88Graduation Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89On-Campus Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91Housing Capacity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92Campus Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93
Dr. Andrew H. PermenterVice President, Institutional Research & Effectiveness [email protected]
Dr. Cody J. LloydAssociate Vice President,Information [email protected]
Dr. Kenneth ReavesDirector, Research & Strategic [email protected]
Published in November 2019
© 2019 Southeastern University 1000 Longfellow Blvd.Lakeland, Florida 33801
1
Rev . Terry Raburn | Chairman
Rev . M . Wayne Blackburn | Vice Chairman
Rev . John Jordan | Secretary
Dr . Kent Ingle | University President
Rev . Tommy Barnett | University Chancellor
Rev. Abner Adorno
Rev. Roger Archer
Rev. Luke Barnett
Dr. Mark Batterson
Dr. Jennifer Closshey
Dr. David Docusen
Rev. Kenneth Draughon
Rev. Mark Jakelsky
Rev. John K. Jordan
Rev. Steve Mason
Rev. Ricardo Orsini
Rev. Jeffery Portmann
Mr. Matthew Potter
Rev. Judy Rachels
Dr. Terry Roberts
Mr. Scott Williams
Dr. Doug Witherup
Rev. John Wootton
Board of Trustees
3
Equipping students to discover and develop their
divine design to serve Christ and the world through
Spirit-empowered life, learning and leadership .
Mission Statement
Vision Statement
Southeastern University is anchored by Spirit-empowered education in
a Christ-centered, student-focused learning community. Southeastern’s
global impact is marked by a deep commitment to transforming minds
and engaging culture through the integration of faith, learning and
service. Each student’s divine design is nurtured and unleashed through
the investment of faculty and staff, relationships within the community,
the rigor of scholarship, diverse learning experiences and the discipline
of spiritual formation, which propels students into a lifetime of serving
the world in the Spirit of Christ.
4
Strategic Plan
Our Core Values
1. A university absolutely committed to Christ-like formation
2. A university of educational breadth and depth
3. A university of faculty distinction
4. A university that thinks globally
5. A university committed to serving human needs in our community and in communities around the world
6. A university characterized as a community of grace
7. A university that is student-focused at all times
Our Five-Year Plan
To create a university of curricular and co-curricular excellence with a faculty of distinction, diverse student population, strong financial base and culture of high performance and quality.
5
Southeastern University was founded in 1935 by Alabama District Superintendent
J.C. Thames and other Southeastern District leaders. Originally named the Alabama
Shield of Faith Institute, it was renamed the South-Eastern Bible Institute (SEBI) in
1936. Guy Shields was the first president.
Originally located in a former high school building in New Brockton, Alabama, the
school opened its doors to students on November 4, 1935, under the direction of four
faculty members. Two years later, on May 22, 1937, the first graduation exercises were
held. Seventeen students received diplomas for the two-year academic program.
SEBI continued classes in New Brockton until 1940 when a decision was made to
consolidate the school with Beulah Heights Bible Institute in Atlanta, Georgia. The
school was known from 1940 to 1942 as the Beulah Heights-South-Eastern Bible
Institute. In the fall of 1942, Rev. Ralph Byrd allowed the school to relocate to his
congregation at 301-7 Capital Ave., SW in Atlanta, where it then was once again named
the South-Eastern Bible Institute.
In 1946, the board of directors voted to secure a permanent location for the full
development of the school. A new campus location was purchased later that year in
Lakeland, Florida. The Atlanta campus was sold, and development of the new site
began. From 1946 to 1952, SEBI was located at the Lodwick School of Aeronautics in
Lakeland. In 1952, the school moved to its present location at Longfellow Blvd.
History of Southeastern University
6
Student body growth continued at the new central Florida campus along with the
academic programs. SEBI became South-Eastern Bible College in 1956 when four-
year Bachelor of Arts degree programs began. After adding education degrees, the
college’s board of directors changed the school name to Southeastern College of
the Assemblies of God in 1977.
In 1986, Southeastern was granted regional accreditation by the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges. This accreditation
was reaffirmed in 1991, 2001 and 2011.
In 2005, Southeastern College officially became Southeastern University, began
offering its first master’s degree programs and formed the Colleges of Arts &
Sciences, Business, Christian Ministries & Religion, and Education. Since then,
the university has also formed the Colleges of Behavioral & Social Sciences and
Natural & Health Sciences and, in 2014, began offering doctoral programs.
What began in 1935 as a Bible-training school is now the largest Assemblies of
God educational institution in America, producing future Christian leaders in the
fields of church ministries, education, medicine, law, business, communication,
psychology, social work, literature and music.
7
Campus Growth
In 2017, SEU completed the brand new Buena Vida Complex. This
125,000 square-foot live/learn facility contains student resident halls,
classrooms, faculty offices, a tutoring center, music performance and
education spaces, and a food court consisting of Einstein Bros. Bagels,
Papa John’s Pizza, and Back Yard Burgers.
Campus expansion has continued with the new 30,000 square-foot
Welcome Center. This building is located in the grassy area in front of
the Addison building.
Our School of Unrestricted Education has experienced significant
growth with more than 3,526 students enrolled in online, evening and
extension site programs in more than 140 locations across the U.S.
Enrollment Growth
Southeastern has been recognized by the Chronicle of Higher
Education as one of the nation’s fastest-growing private, non-profit,
master’s institutions. From 2007-2017 enrollment has increased 133%.
New Programs
This academic year has brought in a number of new programs offered
across all delivery methods. A total of 2 associate’s, 6 bachelor’s, 2
master’s degrees, and 15 minors/concentrations have been added.
Points of Excellence
8
Alumni Relations
A few highlights from alumni this past year:
Melony Bell (’08) was elected to the Florida House District 56
seat, receiving 75% of the vote. She is serving Hardee, DeSoto, and
parts of Polk counties. She formerly served on the Fort Meade City
Commission, including four terms as mayor.
Dr. Wilfredo “Choco” De Jesus (’18) was appointed to the
position of General Treasurer of the Assemblies of God by the
General Presbytery at the 2019 General Council. Formerly the
pastor of New Life Covenant, Choco was featured on the front cover
of Time magazine and was named one of the 100 most influential
people in the world by the magazine.
Brett Short (’93) works as the Chief Compliance Officer for the
University of Kentucky’s Medical Center. He also serves on the
Board for the Health Care Compliance Association’s Society of
Corporate Compliance and Ethics.
Aaron Burke (’05) has been leveraging his calling to reach the
unchurched and started a church plant in Tampa, Florida, called
Radiant Church. The church’s humble beginnings in a run-down
movie theater didn’t keep it from thriving. Radiant Church’s
first service had 348 people attend and 30 people came to Christ
following the service. The church now has four campuses in the
surrounding area, and has become the 13th fastest growing church
in America with 3,100 people attending.
Tiffany Hammer (’17) serves as a worship pastor for Elevation
Church’s Uptown Campus in North Carolina. Elevation Worship’s
recent single “With You” features Tiffany as the lead vocalist.
Through the music released and her role as a worship pastor,
Tiffany is able to minister to hundreds of thousands of people
around the world.
Matias Perttula (’13) is the Director of Advocacy at International
Christian Concern in Washington, D.C. In his role, he advocates
on behalf of persecuted religious groups around the world. Matias
informs elected officials on the issues of international religious
freedom and human rights, as he helps fight for justice through
petitions, hearings and legislative influences.
10
Two issues of the Southeastern alumni magazine were produced in
the winter and summer of 2019. These issues highlighted alumni
such as:
n Jill Hardt (’92), Owner of Tristan Oaks Dressage
n Christy Pavilando (’16), Member Experience Specialist for the
Jacksonville Jaguars
n Dan Robinson (’91), Superintendent of Novi Christian Academy
n Tiffany Thenor (’09) and Jessica Zivkovich (’11, ’18), Founders of
WonderHere
n Dave Ternent (’92), Nationally Recognized STEM Leader
n Andrea Hagan (’91), Director of the Community Partnership
Schools in Polk County, Fla.
n Ray and Judy Rachels, AG Southwest Area Executive Presbyter
and SEU Board Member
n Jaymi Yamoah (’07), Founder of Out of Zion
Graduates to Date by College
Arts & Media 1,750
Behavioral & Social Sciences 1,709
Business & Entrepreneurial Leadership 1,657
Education 4,012
Ministry & Theology 4,883
Natural & Health Sciences 348
School of Unrestricted Education 2,043
Total Graduates 16,402
11
Southeastern University is accredited by the Southern Association
of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award associate,
baccalaureate, masters, and doctorate degrees.
Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur,
GA 30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the
accreditation of Southeastern University.
Other discipline-specific accreditations and licensures:
n Council on Social Work Education (CSWE)
n Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP)
n Florida Department of Education (FLDOE) – Southeastern University is approved to grant degrees that meet certification requirements for a Florida teaching credential.
n Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE)
n Association of Theological Schools (ATS)
Accreditation
12
Institutional Memberships
American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO)
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP)
The Alliance for Assemblies of God Higher Education (The Alliance)
Association of American Colleges and Universities (AAC&U)
Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI)
Association of Departments of English
Association for General and Liberal Studies (AGLS)
Association of Institutional Research (AIR)
Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI)
Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU)
Council of Colleges of Arts and Sciences (CCAS)
Council of Independent Colleges (CIC)
Council on Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA)
Florida Association of Colleges for Teacher Education (FACTE)
Florida Association for Institutional Research (FAIR)
Florida League of Christian Schools (FLOCS)
Independent Colleges and Universities of Florida (ICUF)
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletes (NAIA)
National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities (NAICU)
National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA)
National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC)
Polk Arts Alliance
Southern Association for Institutional Research (SAIR)
13
Organizational Charts
Board ofTrustees
PresidentDr. Kent Ingle
Vice President, Finance
Mr. Jeff Spear
ProvostDr. William C. Hackett, Jr.
Chief of StaffMr. Michael Steiner
Vice President,Student
DevelopmentDr. Bethany Thomas
Vice President,Enrollment &
MarketingMr. Roy Rowland
Vice President, Institutional
Research& Effectiveness
Dr. Andrew Permenter
Vice President,Strategic
PartnershipsMr. Justin Lathrop
ExecutiveVice PresidentDr. Chris Owen
Vice President,Unrestricted
EducationMr. Nick Wallsteadt
Board of Trustees & Leadership Team
14
Executive Director of Administrative Planning
Ms. Jill Johnson
Executive Administration
Executive Vice PresidentDr. Chris Owen
Director of CommunicationsMs. Priscilla Burr
Assistant Director of Safety & SecuritySgt. Travis Avery
Director of Facilities Mr. Geoff Ott
Director of Safety & SecurityLt. Dave Bright
Executive Director of Facilities
Mr. Mike Alderman
Associate Vice President for
Community RelationsMs. Sylvia Blackman
Roberts
Project Manager Director
Ms. Molly Bryant
Director of Human ResourcesMs. Betty Kelley
Director of AthleticsMr. Drew Watson
Chief Communications Officer
Ms. Dana Davis
Chief Advancement Officer
Ms. Eunice Hutto
Director of External Relations
Ms. Gwen Allen
Director of Church RelationsMs. Cheryl Roth
Director of Alumni RelationsMr. Joel Johnson
PresidentDr. Kent Ingle
Associate Athletic Director
Ms. Darceé Roberts
Asst. Athletic Director, Facilities & Game
OperationsMr. Mike Vigue
Director, Sports CommunicationsMr. Donnie Smith
15
ProvostDr. William
C. Hackett, Jr.
Dean, Barnett College of Ministry & Theology
Dr. Alan Ehler
Dean, College ofArts & Media
Dr. Craig Collins
Dean, College of Education
Dr. James Anderson
Dean, College of Behavioral &
Social SciencesDr. Erica Sirrine
Dean, College ofNatural &
Health SciencesDr. Debbie Hazelbaker
Dean, School of HonorsDr. Gordon Miller
Director, Library ServicesMs. Amy Beatty
Dean, JannetidesCollege of Business& Entrepreneurial
LeadershipDr. Lyle Bowlin
Organizational Charts
Academic Deans
Associate ProvostDr. Amy Bratten
16
Vice President, Institutional Research
& EffectivenessDr. Andrew Permenter
Associate VicePresident, Information
ManagementDr. Cody Lloyd
Director of Traditional Academic Advising
Ms. Sarah Lloyd
Institutional Research & Effectiveness
Chief TechnologyOfficer
Mr. Jerry Rains
Director, Institutional Effectiveness
Mr. Justin Rose
Executive Director, Student Success
Ms. Jennifer Weekly
Director of Research & Strategic ProjectsDr. Kenneth Reaves
RegistrarMs. Melissa
Maisenbacher
Director, Academic Center
for EnrichmentMs. Rebecca Williamson
Director, Academic & Auxiliary Services
Dr. Laura Brown
17
Vice President,Enrollment & Marketing
Mr. Roy Rowland
Executive Director,Enrollment Marketing
Vacant
Executive Director,Traditional Admission
Ms. Sarah Clark
Director,Student Financial
ServicesMs. Jody Walker
Executive Director,SEU Central
Mr. Jereme Dempsey
Executive Director, Adult & Graduate
EnrollmentMr. Dee McDonald
Executive Director,Student Financial
ServicesMr. Michael Yohe
Director,Traditional Admission
Vacant
Director of MarketingMs. Kendra Kramer
Associate Director, Student Financial
ServicesMs. Yvette Valentin
Assistant Director, Student Financial
ServicesMs. Natalie Wolfe
Assistant Director, Unrestricted Ed.
Student Financial AidMr. Andrew Kelley
Director of Campus Visits & Events
Ms. Alexandra Cheek
Director of International Student EnrollmentMs. Betania Torres
Associate Director of Admission
Ms. Stephanie Sisk
Associate Director of Admission
Mr. JC Hernandez
Associate Director of Admission
Mr. Jesse Nieman
Art DirectorMs. Bonnie Bourgeois
Associate DirectorMs. Sofia Ramos
Director,Adult & Graduate
EnrollmentMr. George Zivkovich
Organizational Charts
Enrollment & Marketing
18
Finance
Vice President, Finance
Mr. Jeffrey Spear
Senior Director of Finance & TreasuryMr. Mark Biddinger
Financial ControllerMs. Maribel Cruz
Payroll SupervisorMs. Laura Waschek
Accounts Receivable Supervisor
Mr. Adrian Herbert
19
Executive Director of Student DevelopmentMs. Stephanie Garrison
Director of Career ServicesMs. Emilee Hill
Director of Student Programming
Ms. Aeriel CookDirector of Residence Life
Mr. Charlie McNulty
Director of Multicultural Affairs
Mr. Ray Allen
Director of Title IX Compliance
Ms. Stephanie Powell
Executive Director of Media Services
Mr. Ian Fritzsche
Director of Student Conduct
Ms. Sarahi Fleming
Executive Director of Student ServicesMr. Darrell Hardt
Director of Campus CommunicationMr. Reed Burr
Executive Director of Spiritual Formation
Ms. Tori Hammer
Director of Campus ServicesMs. Laura Harmon
Director of Student Services
Ms. Sabrina O’Gorman
Bookstore ManagerMs. Rachel Jordan
Senior Director of Food Services
Mr. Kevin Nazzaro
Director of Counseling, Health,
& WellnessDr. Paula Whitaker
Director ofEvent Services
Ms. Brigette Wagner
Worship PastorMr. Daniel Rivera
Director of Discipleship & Engagement Mr. Jared Parks
Director of SEU Missions
Mr. Esdras Santiago Cruz
Vice President,Student DevelopmentDr. Bethany Thomas
Organizational Charts
Student Development
Assistant Director of Media Services
Mr. Austin Quinn
20
Unrestricted Education Vice President,Unrestricted Education
Mr. Nick Wallsteadt
Executive Directorof Strategic Leadership
Dr. John Spurling
Chair Behavioral & Social SciencesDr. Kristine Spinks
Chair, Foundational Core
Dr. Grace Veach
Executive Director, Extension Partnership
EnrollmentDr. Mike Cuckler
Chair, Business & Aviation
Dr. Joe Childs
Director of Extension Site Development and
Strategic GrowthMr. Jeremy McCarter
Chair, Ministry & Theology
Rev. Anthony Roberts
Associate Director ofSite OnboardingMr. Joe Hepler
Compliance Director Ms. Lisa Murphy
Associate Provost and Academic DeanDr. Meghan Griffin
Chair, Design & Communication
Dr. Chad Neuman
Director of Regional & Extension Site
OperationsDr. Shawn Stewart
Chair Human ServicesDr. Kenneth Stephens
Senior Director of Student Experience
Ms. Carla Collins
Director Instructional Design & Technology
Ms. Jacqueline Utz
Assistant Director Instructional Design
& TechnologyMs. Melanie Roberts
Assistant Director Academic AdvisingMs. Tina Gonzalez
Assistant Director of Admission
Ms. Madelyn Cantrell
21
Southeastern University is a member of the National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and competes in The Sun Conference
and the Mid-South Conference.
Varsity Sports Intramural Sports
Men’s Programs Women’s Programs Basketball
Baseball Basketball Flag football
Basketball Cross Country Indoor soccer
Cross Country Golf Powder puff football
Football Soccer Sand volleyball
Golf Softball Soccer
Soccer Tennis Softball
Tennis Track and Field Ultimate frisbee
Track and Field Volleyball
Wrestling
Athletics
24
In baseball, the Fire had the opportunity to take on a Major League Baseball team for the first time in program history against the Detroit Tigers in a Spring Training exhibition at Joker Marchant Stadium in February 2019. Nearly 5,000 fans witnessed Abdel Guadalupe hit an RBI triple in the top of the seventh to tie the game at two. The Tigers used a late rally to come away with a 13-2 victory. The team also won their NAIA National Championship Opening Round bracket for the second consecutive year, going unbeaten in the Macon Bracket to return to Lewiston, Idaho for the NAIA World Series. Following a one-run loss to conference rival St. Thomas in their first game of the World Series, the Fire rattled off back-to-back wins in the elimination bracket.
A total of 96 student-athletes were named to the all-conference teams, with a school-record 19 student-athletes that earned NAIA All-America status in their respective sports. The Fire also had 47 student-athletes qualify for academic all-conference accolades.
Athletic NewsFire Athletics enjoyed one of its most successful seasons since joining the NAIA and The Sun Conference. During the 2018–19 school year, the Fire won eight Sun Conference championships, and claimed the conference’s Commissioner’s Cup for the first time in school history.
For the second consecutive year, the Fire had a team play in an NAIA National Championship game. The SEU Women’s Basketball team advanced to the title game in Sioux City, Iowa, The team also secured the fourth consecutive Sun Conference regular season and tournament championships in program history.
In just the first season of the men’s and women’s Track & Field programs, SEU enjoyed amazing success. The Fire claimed both the men’s and women’s Sun Conference titles, and had five All-American performances.
Fire Wrestling recorded its second straight Top 20 finish at the NAIA National Championship, which included the best individual finish the program has had in its first four seasons. Junior Ethan Owen took third place in the 141-pound bracket. The Fire also won the sportsmanship award during the national championship.
The women’s golf team had a successful showing at the NAIA National Championship, placing 13th and breaking the program record for single-round team score twice during the 72-hole tournament. Junior Ana Uribe was named to the All-American team for the second year in a row.
For more information on Southeastern University athletics, please visit SEUfire.com. 25
Brazilian Student AssociationChristians United for Israel (CUFI)College National Association for
Music EducationCollege RepublicansCreative Writing ClubCredoDAGEnactusEpilepsy WarriorsGamer’s GuildGhostlight TheatreHeart 4 Haiti
HPSS (Human Performance & SportsStudies) Club
International Christian ConcernKappa Delta PiKappa Mu Epsilon (KME)Mu Kappa InternationalPolitical Science Student SocietyPrayer Sisters InternationalPre-Health Service Organization (PHSO)Psi ChiRDGSEU FNSA (Florida Nursing AssociationSEU FPRA (Florida Public Relation
Association Chapter)
SEU LAXSocial Work ClubSoul FoodSpeak ThatStudent Christian Medical and Dental
Association (SCMDA)Student Veterans of AmericaStudents Against Silence & ShameS.W.A.R.M.The Green TeamThe Herodotus SocietyThe Language ClubTrickers Union
Clubs & Organizations
26
Library provides access to:
Books (Print) 79,265
Videos (DVD) 4,616
CDs 2,840
E-books 218,994
Online Videos 1,737
Online Recordings 10,598
Other 272
Total 318,322
Computers
Total number of computersavailable to all students
112
Library & Computer Resources
27
JapanKazakhstanKenyaKyrgyzstanLaosLiechtensteinLuxemburgMacedoniaMalaysiaMexicoMoldovaMonacoMongoliaMoroccoNepalNetherlandsNigeriaNorwayPanamaPapua New GuineaParaguayPeruPhilippines
CubaDenmarkDominican RepublicEcuadorEgyptEstoniaFinlandFranceGeorgiaGermanyGhanaGreeceGuatemalaGuyanaHaitiHondurasIcelandIndiaIndonesiaIsraelItalyIvory Coast
Missions
During the 2018–2019 academic year, Destinations, Southeastern’s missions
department, sent 425+ students on 50 trips all over the world. Covering six
continents, students visited the following locations:
United StatesAppalachian
MountainsHawaiiLakeland
International
AlbaniaArgentinaArmeniaAustriaAzerbaijanBelarusBelgiumBoliviaBrazilBulgariaCambodiaChileChinaColombiaCosta Rica
PolandPortugalRomaniaSingaporeSolomon IslandsSouth AfricaSouth SudanSouth KoreaSpainSurinameSwitzerlandSwedenTanzaniaThailandTunisiaUgandaUkraineUruguayUzbekistanVanuatuVietnam
28
29
Undergraduate Tuition & Fees for 2019–2020
Tuition Semester Year
12–17 Credit Hours $12,810 $25,620
Hourly Tuition (under 12 or over 17 credit hours) $1,068 $1,068
General Student Fee $500 $1,000
Total for Off-Campus $13,310 $26,620
Residence Halls
Traditional Student Housing $2,620 $5,240
Traditional Student Housing (private room) $3,069 $6,138
Other Housing $2,791 $5,582
Other Housing $2,943 $5,886
Other Housing $3,249 $6,498
30
Meal Plans Semester Year
Carte Blanche Meal Plan (includes $150 in Fire Funds) $2,606 $5,212
21-Meals-per-Week Plan (includes $200 in Fire Funds) $2,515 $5,030
14-Meals-per-Week Plan (includes $250 in Fire Funds) $2,395 $4,790
10-Meals-per-Week Plan (includes $275 in Fire Funds) $2,237 $4,474
Commuter Meal Plans:
25-Meals-per-Semester Plan (includes $250 in Fire Funds) $489 $978
15-Meals-per-Semester Plan (includes $150 in Fire Funds) $292 $584
10-Meals-per-Semester Plan (includes $125 in Fire Funds) $221 $442
Room and Meal Plan* $5,015 $10,030
Total for On-Campus* $18,325 $36,650
*Based on 12–17 credit hours; traditional student housing and 14-meal plan
Other Estimated Expenses
Books and Supplies $1,600
Miscellaneous (transportation, laundry, entertainment, etc.) $4,080
31
Graduate Tuition & Fees for 2019–2020
Program Tuition/Hr Credit Hours Total Tuition
Doctor of Education $500 54 $27,000Doctorate in Strategic Leadership $795 60 $47,700
Doctor of Ministry $500 36 $18,000
MA in Ministerial Leadership $495 36 $17,820
MA in Ministerial Leadership – Executive Track $525 36 $19,080
MA in International Community Development $495 36 $17,820
MA in Human Services $495 36 $17,820
MA in Theological Studies $495 36 $17,820
Master of Business Administration (MBA) $525 36 $18,900
MBA (Global Program) N/A 36 $27,000
MBA (Around the World) N/A 36 $45,000
Master of Divinity (MDiv) $495 72 $35,640
MEd in Elementary Education $375 33 $12,375
MEd – All Other Programs $375 36 $13,500
MS in Kinesiology $450 33 $14,850
MS in Professional Counseling $525 60 $31,500
Master of Social Work $515 65 $33,475
MS in Marriage & Family Counseling $525 60 $31,500
PhD in Organizational Leadership $795 60 $47,700
Annual General Student Services Fee $300
32
Tuition, Room & Board Comparison for 2018–2019
School Assemblies of God Annual Cost
Florida Southern College $50,770
Palm Beach Atlantic University $47,856
Vanguard University (AG) $46,950
Northwest University (AG) $42,600
Oral Roberts University $40,812
Liberty University $38,824
Southeastern University (AG) $38,102
Evangel University (AG) $36,186
North Central University (AG) $34,904
University of Valley Forge (AG) $34,287
Southwestern Assemblies of God University (AG) $32,868
Lee University $29,550
34
$0 $5,000 $10,000 $15,000 $20,000 $25,000 $30,000 $35,000 $40,000 $45,000 $50,000
Lee University
Southwestern Assemblies of God University
University of Valley Forge
North Central University
Evangel University
Southeastern University
Liberty University
Oral Roberts University
Northwest University
Vanguard University
Palm Beach Atlantic University
Florida Southern College
35
Financial Aid for New Undergraduate Students
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Percent Receiving Any Financial Aid 94% 90% 89% 89% 98% 90% 97%
Percent Receiving Federal Grants 48% 47% 48% 42% 45% 40% 47%
Average Amount of Federal Grants $4,608 $4,796 $4,707 $4,707 $4,769 $5,139 $5,226
Percent Receiving State/Local Grants 56% 57% 56% 42% 37% 36% 41%
Average Amount of State/Local Grants $3,233 $3,349 $3,302 $3,290 $3,978 $4,303 $3,765
Percent Receiving Institutional Grants 77% 71% 70% 59% 75% 71% 78%
Average Amount of Institutional Grants $9,285 $9,709 $9,944 $10,258 $6,995 $7,196 $8,018
Percent Receiving Student Loans 79% 75% 73% 81% 73% 70% 67%
Average Amount of Student Loans $13,384 $13,364 $13,116 $9,428 $12,833 $12,429 $11,212
36
Percent of Entering Freshmen Receiving Aid
0
20
40
60
80
100Percent Receiving Student Loans
Percent Receiving Institutional Grants
Percent Receiving Any Financial Aid
201920182017201620152014
Percent Receiving Institutional Grants
Percent Receiving Any Financial Aid
Percent Receiving Student Loans
37
Academic Programs
Barnett College of Ministry & TheologyMinistry & Theology
BACHELOR’S
BA Biblical StudiesBA Intercultural StudiesBA Multidisciplinary StudiesBS Children, Youth, and Family MinistriesBS Practical Ministries
School of DivinityMASTER’S
MA Family MinistryMA Ministerial LeadershipMA Theological StudiesMaster of Divinity (MDiv)DOCTORAL
Doctor of Ministry
Worship MinistryBACHELOR’S
BA Worship Ministries
Non-Degree The Academy
College of Arts & MediaCommunication
ASSOCIATE’S
AA Film ProductionBACHELOR’S
BA/BS BroadcastingBA/BS CommunicationBA/BS Digital JournalismBA/BS Film ProductionBA/BS Media MinistryBA/BS Public Relations
HumanitiesBACHELOR’S
BFA Creative WritingBA EnglishBA/BS English & Intercultural StudiesBA/BS History
MusicBACHELOR’S
BA MusicBA Music PerformanceBME Music EducationBS Church MusicBS Music Business
38
Visual ArtsASSOCIATE’S
AA Graphic DesignBACHELOR’S
BA Visual ArtsBA/BS Graphic Design
College of Behavioral & Social SciencesCriminal Justice
BACHELOR’S
BA/BS Criminal Justice
Psychology & CounselingBACHELOR’S
BS PsychologyMASTER’S
MS Marriage & Family CounselingMS Professional Counseling
Social WorkBACHELOR’S
Bachelor of Social Work (BSW)BS Social Work & Criminal JusticeCERTIFICATE (UG)
Child Welfare MASTER’S
Master of Social Work (MSW)
CERTIFICATE (GR)
Child Welfare
College of EducationEducation
ASSOCIATE’S
AA EducationBACHELOR’S
BS Communication Sciences & DisordersBS Early Childhood EducationBS Elementary EducationBS Exceptional Student EducationCERTIFICATE (UG)
Adaptive Physical EducationComp . Post Secondary TransitionDeaf StudiesServing Individuals with DisabilitiesTESOLNON-DEGREE
Teacher Certification
Graduate Studies of Education MASTER’S
MED Exceptional Student EducationMED Educational LeadershipMED Educational Therapy
39
MED Elementary EducationMED Literacy EducationMED Teaching English to Speakers
of Other LanguagesDOCTORAL
Doctor of Education (EdD)CERTIFICATE (GR)
Dyslexia Education
Human Performance & Sport StudiesBACHELOR’S
BS KinesiologyBS Sport ManagementMASTER’S
MS Kinesiology
Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial LeadershipBusiness Administration
ASSOCIATE’S
AA BusinessBACHELOR’S
BS AccountingBS Aviation Management
BS Business StudiesBS FinanceBS International BusinessBS ManagementBS MarketingCERTIFICATE (UG)
Web Design & Development
Entrepreneurial LeadershipASSOCIATE’S
AA Organizational LeadershipBACHELOR’S
BS Organizational LeadershipBS Tourism & Hospitality Management
Graduate Studies & Applied ResearchMASTER’S
Master of Business Administration (MBA)DOCTORAL
Doctorate in Strategic Leadership (DSL)PhD in Organizational Leadership
Legal Studies BACHELOR’S
BS Criminal Justice & Legal Studies
40
BS Legal StudiesBS Political Science
College of Natural & Health SciencesMathematics
BACHELOR’S
BA/BS Mathematics
Natural SciencesBACHELOR’S
BS BiochemistryBS BiologyBS General Biology
NursingBACHELOR’S
BS NursingBS RN–BSN Program
School of Unrestricted EducationBehavioral & Social Sciences
BACHELOR’S
BS Criminal JusticeBS Psychology
Business & LeadershipASSOCIATE’S
AAS Professional PilotBACHELOR’S
Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA)BS Business & Professional Leadership (BPLE) BS BPLE-Professional Pilot TrackBS Organizational LeadershipCERTIFICATE (UG)
Organizational LeadershipMASTER'S
MA LeadershipCERTIFICATE (GR)
Organizational Leadership
Design & CommunicationBACHELOR’S
BS Digital Media & DesignBS Communication & Mass Media
Foundational CoreASSOCIATE’S
AA General Education
41
Human ServicesBACHELOR’S
BS Human ServicesMASTER’S
MA Human ServicesMA International Community Development
Ministry & TheologyASSOCIATE’S
Associate of Christian Ministries (ACM) Associate of Ministerial Leadership (AML)Associate of Worship Ministries (AWM) BACHELOR’S
BS Christian MinistriesBS Ministerial LeadershipBA Worship MinistriesCERTIFICATE (UG)
Children Youth & Family Ministries MASTER’S
MA Ministerial LeadershipMS Pastoral Care
High Impact Sites/Partnerships7 Hills Church - Florence, KYBayside Community Church - Bradenton, FLCalvary Christian Center - Ormond Beach, FLCelebration - Georgetown, TXCelebration Church - Jacksonville, FLCentral Christian - Henderson, NVChrist Fellowship - Palm Beach Gardens, FLChristian Life Center - Ft . Lauderdale, FLChristian Life Church - Columbia, SCChurch of the Harvest - Oklahoma City, OKConcord First Assembly - Concord, NCFaith Assembly of God - Orlando, FLFree Chapel - Gainesville, GAGrace Family Church - Lutz, FLHighlands College - Birmingham, ALMeadowbrook Church - Ocala, FLMosaic - Los Angeles, CAMotion Church - Puyallup, WASeacoast Church - Mt . Pleasant, SCThe Church at Chapelhill - Douglasville, GAThe Gate Church - Oklahoma City, OKThe House Modesto - Modesto, CAThriving Churches, Int’l - Roseville, CAZoe Church - Los Angeles, CA
Statistics 147 Sites
37 States
Unrestricted Education
24 Regional Campuses and High Impact Sites
2,649 Students
Statistics41 High Schools 2,693 Students
Dual Enrollment
42
Extension Sites and Regional CampusesCurrent as of October 2019
Extension Site Regional Campus Ministry Partner
WASHINGTON
NEVADA
CALIFORNIA
ARIZONA
OKLAHOMA
TEXAS
LOUISIANA
MISSISSIPPI
FLORIDA
GEORGIA
SOUTHCAROLINA
NORTHCAROLINA
TENNESSEE
KENTUCKYVIRGINIA
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND
MICHIGAN
HAWAII
WESTVIRGINIA
OHIOILLINOIS
NEW JERSEY
MINNESOTA
MAINE
MASSACHUSETTS
MISSOURI
COLORADO
ALABAMA
WISCONSIN
INDIANA
MONTANA
IOWANEBRASKA
NORTH DAKOTA
SOUTH DAKOTA
UTAH
VERMONT
Extension Sites and Regional CampusesCurrent as of October 2019
Extension Site Regional Campus Ministry Partner
WASHINGTON
NEVADA
CALIFORNIA
ARIZONA
OKLAHOMA
TEXAS
LOUISIANA
MISSISSIPPI
FLORIDA
GEORGIA
SOUTHCAROLINA
NORTHCAROLINA
TENNESSEE
KENTUCKYVIRGINIA
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND
MICHIGAN
HAWAII
WESTVIRGINIA
OHIOILLINOIS
NEW JERSEY
MINNESOTA
MAINE
MASSACHUSETTS
MISSOURI
COLORADO
ALABAMA
WISCONSIN
INDIANA
MONTANA
IOWANEBRASKA
NORTH DAKOTA
SOUTH DAKOTA
UTAH
VERMONT
43
Honors Program
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Spring Fall Spring Fall Spring Fall Spring Fall Spring Fall Spring Fall Spring
3 .85 3 .87 3 .89 3 .89 3 .87 3 .86 3 .85 3 .74 3 .77 3 .82 3 .82 3 .81 3 .79
Semester GPA
44
2013–2014 2014–2015 2015–2016 2016–2017 2017–2018 2018–2019
3 .88 3 .88 3 .86 3 .76 3 .82 3 .80
2013–2014 2014–2015 2015–2016 2016–2017 2017–2018 2018–2019 2019–2020
42 50 58 68 63 72 72
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
71 79 105 183 195 207 217
Yearly GPA
Entrance Enrollment
Total Enrollment
ScholarshipsStarted at $2,000 per yearCurrently at $3,000 per year
Program Graduation Rate 76%
Graduates of the School of Honors have been accepted into numerous graduate schools:
Harvard University, George Washington University, Wake Forest University, West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Virginia Polytechnic State University, Baylor University, Missouri State University, Indiana University, Oklahoma State University, Boston University, Brandeis University, University of South Florida, Florida State University, Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, Brenau University, Southeastern University, Gordon-Cornwell Theological Seminary, and Liberty University College of Osteopathic Medicine.
45
Undergraduate New Returning Total Full-Time Part-Time
SEU Lakeland 845 1,560 2,405 2,354 51
SEU Evening/Hybrid/Online 54 29 83 10 73
UE Online 538 474 1,012 432 580
UE Site Based 1,181 1,333 2,514 2,125 389
HS Dual Enrolled 2,180 513 2,693 43 2,650
Post-Secondary Transition (LINK) 6 4 10 10 0
Total New Freshmen 1,389 0 1,389 1,277 112
Total Undergraduates 4,804 3,913 8,717 4,974 3,743
2019 Fall Enrollment Summary by Delivery
46
Graduate New Returning Total Full-Time Part-TimeCERT Exceptional Student Education 4 4 8 0 8CERT Organizational Leadership 16 6 22 0 22BS/MED Exceptional Student Education 18 55 73 10 63MA Family Ministry 7 5 12 4 8MA Human Services 21 26 47 14 33MA International Community Development (UE) 9 17 26 9 17MA Leadership (UE) 11 0 11 0 11MA Ministerial Leadership 72 77 149 38 111MA Theological Studies 11 24 35 14 21MBA Master of Business Administration 54 102 156 76 80MDiv Master of Divinity 27 51 78 29 49MED Exceptional Student Education 9 23 32 11 21MED Master of Education 23 125 148 37 111MED Reading Education 0 5 5 2 3MS Kinesiology 13 26 39 15 24MS Marriage and Family Counseling 4 12 16 11 5MS Professional Counseling 11 23 34 30 4MSW Master of Social Work 45 9 54 54 0PHD Organizational Leadership 9 22 31 31 0DMin Doctor of Ministry 7 21 28 19 9DSL Strategic Leadership 5 17 22 21 1EDD Doctor of Education 0 143 143 61 82ND Non-Degree Seeking 1 7 8 1 7
Total Graduate 377 800 1,177 487 690Total University Enrollment 5,181 4,713 9,894 5,461 4,433
47
Enrollment by MajorBarnett College of Ministry & TheologyMinistry & Theology
BACHELOR’S
BA Intercultural Studies ..................................................................34BA Ministerial Leadership ................................................................ 2BA Multidisciplinary Studies ......................................................27BA Children, Youth, & Family Ministries .........................58BS Practical Ministries ......................................................................75BA Biblical Studies ...............................................................................27BA Missional Ministry ..............................................................................1
MASTER’S
MA Family Ministry ................................................................................ 12
Worship Ministry
BACHELOR’S
Worship Ministries .................................................................................51
School of Divinity
MASTER’S
Master of Divinity (MDiv) ...............................................................78MA Ministerial Leadership ..........................................................145MA Theological Studies ..................................................................35
DOCTORAL
Doctor of Ministry (DMin) .............................................................28
College of Arts & MediaCommunication
BACHELOR’S
BA/BS Broadcasting ..........................................................................27BA/BS Communication ...................................................................85BA/BS Digital Journalism .............................................................. 17BA/BS Film Production .................................................................. 4948
BA/BS Media Ministry ........................................................................ 13BA/BS Public Relations ....................................................................14
Humanities
BACHELOR’S
BFA Creative Writing ............................................................................11BA English ...................................................................................................... 17BA/BS History ............................................................................................16BA/BS English & Intercultural Studies .............................. 13
Music
BACHELOR’S
BS Church Music ......................................................................................10BS Music Business .................................................................................36BM Music Performance .....................................................................19BA Music........................................................................................................... 17BS Music Education .............................................................................36
Visual Arts
BACHELOR’S
BA/BS Graphic Design ....................................................................57BA Visual Art ...............................................................................................16
College of Behavioral & Social SciencesCriminal Justice
BACHELOR’S
BS Criminal Justice ..............................................................................65
Social Work
BACHELOR’S
Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) .............................................87BS Social Work & Criminal Justice .........................................11
MASTER’S
Master of Social Work (MSW) ..................................................54
Psychology & Counseling
BACHELOR’S
BS Psychology ........................................................................................155
MASTER’S
MS Marriage & Family Counseling ......................................... 15MS Marriage & Family Therapy .....................................................1MS Professional Counseling........................................................32MS School Counseling ......................................................................... 2
College of EducationHuman Performance & Sport Studies
BACHELOR’S
BS Kinesiology ........................................................................................135BS Sport Management .................................................................. 120
MASTER’S
MS Kinesiology .........................................................................................39
49
College of Natural & Health SciencesMathematics
BACHELOR’S
BA/BS Mathematics...............................................................................8
Natural Sciences
BACHELOR’S
BS General Biology ..............................................................................23BS Biology with Concentration .............................................125BS Biochemistry.........................................................................................6
Nursing
BACHELOR’S
BS Nursing ................................................................................................. 201RN–BSN Program .....................................................................................6
Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial LeadershipBusiness Administration
ASSOCIATE’S
AA Business .................................................................................................. 13
BACHELOR’S
BS Accounting ......................................................................................... 46BS Finance ....................................................................................................45BS International Business ...............................................................41
Undergraduate Studies of Education
BACHELOR’S
BS Early Childhood Education ..................................................19BS Elementary Education ..........................................................104BS Communication Sciences & Disorders ....................19BS Secondary Education ..............................................................44
CERTIFICATE (UG)
Comp . Post Secondary Transition .........................................10
Graduate Studies of EducationBACHELOR’S
BS Exceptional Student Education .....................................32MASTER’S
MEd in Exceptional Student Education ..........................70MEd in Literacy Education ...........................................................32MEd in Reading Education .............................................................. 5MEd in Educational Leadership ...............................................71MEd in Elementary Education ................................................. 46MEd in TESOL .............................................................................................31
CERTIFICATE (GR)
Dyslexia Education ..................................................................................8
Doctoral Studies of Education
DOCTORAL
Doctor of Education (EdD) ........................................................143
50
BS Management .....................................................................................90BS Marketing................................................................................................61BS Business Studies .............................................................................16BS Aviation Management .................................................................9
Entrepreneurial Leadership
BACHELOR’S
BS Organizational Leadership.................................................90BS Tourism & Hospitality Management ........................... 13
Legal Studies
BACHELOR’S
BS Criminal Justice & Legal Studies .....................................4BS Legal Studies .................................................................................... 30BS Political Science ..............................................................................19
Graduate Studies & Applied Research
MASTER’S
Master of Business Administration (MBA) ................156 DOCTORAL
PhD Organizational Leadership ...............................................31Doctorate Strategic Leadership .............................................22
School of Unrestricted Education
51
ASSOCIATE’S
AA General Education ...................................................................328
Human Services (UE)
BACHELOR’S
BS Human Services ........................................................................... 102MASTER’S
MA Human Services ............................................................................47MA International Community Development ..................26
Ministry & Theology (UE)
ASSOCIATE’S
Associate of Christian Ministries ..........................................155Associate of Ministerial Leadership ..................................412Associate of Worship Ministries ................................................11CERTIFICATE (UG)
Orange Family Ministry ...................................................................... 2BACHELOR’S
BS Christian Ministries ......................................................................56BS Ministerial Leadership .......................................................... 997BA Worship Ministries .......................................................................67MASTER’S
Ministerial Leadership: Orange Family Ministry ......................................................................4
Behavioral & Social Sciences (UE)
BACHELOR’S
BS Criminal Justice ............................................................................. 49BS Psychology ...................................................................................... 239
Business & Leadership (UE)
ASSOCIATE’S
AAS Professional Pilot ...........................................................................1
BACHELOR’S
Bachelor of Business Administration ..............................142BS Organizational Leadership................................................. 115BS Business & Professional Leadership: Professional Pilot ..................................................... 2BS Business & Professional Leadership ..................... 229MASTER’S
MA Leadership .............................................................................................11CERTIFICATE (GR)
Organizational Leadership ...........................................................22
Design & Communication (UE)
BACHELOR’S
BS Digital Media & Design ..........................................................129BS Communication & Mass Media ........................................56
Foundational Core (UE)
52
Undergraduate Totals:Barnett College of Ministry & Theology ..................................275College of Arts & Media ............................................................... 453College of Behavioral & Social Sciences .............................. 318College of Education .......................................................................471College of Natural & Health Sciences ................................... 369Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial Leadership..............................................478School of Unrestricted Education ....................................... 3,103The Academy ...........................................................................................9Dual Enrolled ...................................................................................2,789Dual Enrolled – Classical Conversations ..............................310Florida League of Christian Schools ......................................... 21Non-Degree Seeking ........................................................................20Post-Secondary Transition (LINK) .............................................10The Learning Series ............................................................................ 21Undeclared .............................................................................................70
Total Undergraduate Students ............................... 8,717
Graduate Totals:Barnett College of Ministry & Theology ...........................298College of Behavioral & Social Sciences ...........................104College of Education ....................................................................448Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial Leadership ..........................................209School of Unrestricted Education .......................................... 110Non-Degree Seeking Graduate ...................................................8
Total Graduate Students .................................................1,177Total University Enrollment ...........................................9,89453
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Undergraduate 2,665 2,510 2,320 2,448 3,083 3,436 3,996 5,054 6,240 7,708 8,717
Graduate 285 269 226 255 351 398 542 750 923 1,051 1,177
Total 2,950 2,779 2,546 2,703 3,434 3,834 4,538 5,804 7,163 8,759 9,894
Total Enrollment, 2009–2019
54
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
20192018201720162015201420132012201120102009
GraduateUndergraduate
55
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Undergraduate 2,494 2,348 2,126 2,220 2,676 2,955 3,455 4,251 4,932 5,833 6,209
Graduate 231 209 132 156 224 260 343 459 567 660 715
Total 2,725 2,557 2,258 2,376 2,901 3,215 3,798 4,710 5,499 6,493 6,924
Full-Time Equivalency Enrollment, 2009–2019
Full-time equivalency: Three part-time students equal one full-time equivalent student.
56
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
20192018201720162015201420132012201120102009
GraduateUndergraduate
57
Enrollment by Gender, 2009–2019
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Males 1,238 1,150 1,118 1,186 1,512 1,677 1,972 2,458 3,078 3,685 4,108
Percentage of Males 42 .0% 41 .4% 43 .9% 43 .9% 44 .3% 44 .2% 43 .5% 42 .5% 43 .2% 42 .1% 41 .5%
Females 1,712 1,629 1,428 1,517 1,898 2,118 2,561 3,324 4,044 5,071 5,786
Percentage of Females 58 .0% 58 .6% 56 .1% 56 .1% 55 .7% 55 .8% 56 .5% 57 .5% 56 .8% 57 .9% 58 .5%
58
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Females
Males
20192018201720162015201420132012201120102009
FemalesMales
59
Racial/Ethnic Group 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Nonresident Alien 21 28 55 72 105 93 106 136
Black or African-American 273 438 527 631 858 971 1,164 1,363
American Indian/Alaska Native 12 12 15 14 23 31 42 48
Asian† 29 46 56 75 92 124 153 185
Hawaiian/Pacific Islander† 5 12 16 21 30 33 37 35
Hispanics of Any Race 349 505 593 754 1,056 1,274 1,787 2,135
White 1,822 2,125 2,251 2,733 3,393 4,301 5,085 5,483
Two or More Races† 19 27 21 12 3 4 131 278
Race/Ethnicity Unknown 173 241 300 226 198 332 254 231
Ethnic Minority Percentage* 27.4% 32.9% 35.3% 35.5% 35.5% 37.1% 39.5% 42.4%
Enrollment by Race & Ethnicity, 2012–2019
† Prior to 2010, race and ethnicity was reported under the old categories which combined Asian and Hawaiian/Pacific Island groups and did not include Two or More Races.*Nonresident Alien and Race/Ethnicity Unknown categories are excluded from this calculation.
60
0
25
50
75
100
20192018201720162015201420132012
Ethnic Minority Percentage
61
State/Territory Enrolled State/Territory Enrolled State/Territory Enrolled
Alabama 215 Louisiana 86 Oklahoma 78Alaska 4 Maine 8 Oregon 15Arizona 65 Maryland 72 Pennsylvania 103Arkansas 27 Massachusetts 38 Puerto Rico 9California 387 Michigan 70 Rhode Island 8Colorado 44 Minnesota 62 South Carolina 123Connecticut 31 Mississippi 30 South Dakota 8Delaware 8 Missouri 47 Tennessee 79District of Columbia 4 Montana 6 Texas 304Florida 6,347 Nebraska 10 Utah 2Georgia 195 Nevada 24 Vermont 16Hawaii 19 New Hampshire 6 Virgin Islands 4Idaho 4 New Jersey 88 Virginia 153Illinois 110 New Mexico 8 Washington 174Indiana 71 New York 71 West Virginia 6Iowa 10 North Carolina 194 Wisconsin 52Kansas 17 North Dakota 8 Wyoming 1Kentucky 50 Ohio 177
Enrollment by State/U .S . Territory
62
1–9
10–29
30–49
50–99
100–199
200+
63
Nation Enrolled Nation Enrolled Nation Enrolled
American Samoa 5 Germany 4 Niger 1
Aruba 1 Ghana 2 Nigeria 4
Australia 3 Guatemala 4 Panama 1
Bahamas 8 Haiti 2 Paraguay 1
Bangladesh 1 Honduras 1 Peru 3
Barbados 1 Hungary 1 Russian Federation 1
Brazil 18 India 2 South Africa 1
Canada 6 Indonesia 1 Spain 3
Chile 1 Ireland 1 Switzerland 1
Colombia 8 Italy 2 Trinidad and Tobago 1
Congo 1 Jamaica 2 Turks And Caicos Islands 2
Cook Islands 1 Japan 2 Uganda 54
Costa Rica 1 Kenya 5 United Arab Emirates 1
Cuba 4 Korea 5 United Kingdom 7
Dominican Republic 1 Macedonia 1 Venezuela 1
Ecuador 1 Malaysia 1
France 1 Mexico 8 Total International 193Gabon 1 Netherlands 2 Percentage of Total 2%Georgia 1 New Zealand 1 Total Countries 53
International Enrollment
64
65
Enrollment by Denomination
2016 2017 2018 2019Denomination Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent
Assemblies of God 1,191 20 .5% 1,265 17 .7% 1,426 16 .3% 1,472 14 .9%
Independent 1,419 24 .4% 1,792 25 .0% 2,248 25 .7% 2,509 25 .4%
Baptist 516 8 .9% 503 7 .0% 584 6 .7% 692 7 .0%
Church of God 109 1 .9% 108 1 .5% 137 1 .6% 143 1 .4%
Foursquare 95 1 .6% 114 1 .6% 106 1 .2% 89 0 .9%
Presbyterian 69 1 .2% 64 0 .9% 66 0 .8% 81 0 .8%
Catholic 94 1 .6% 90 1 .3% 108 1 .2% 211 2 .1%
United Methodist 59 1 .0% 64 0 .9% 74 0 .8% 76 0 .8%
Other 149 2 .6% 166 2 .3% 245 2 .7% 440 4 .4%
Not Listed 2,103 36 .2% 2,997 41 .8% 3,765 43 .0% 4,181 42 .3%
66
Not Listed
Other
United Methodist
Catholic
Presbyterian
Foursquare
Church of God
Baptist
Independent
Assemblies of God
Assemblies of God Independent
Presbyterian
Foursquare
Church of God
Catholic
United Methodist
Other
Baptist Not Listed
67
Enrollment by Assemblies of God District
Sponsoring Districts 2016 2017 2018 2019 Top Five Other Districts 2016 2017 2018 2019
Alabama 30 33 34 23 Northern California/Nevada 91 75 58 36
Appalachian 8 8 2 0 Pennsylvania/Delaware 45 35 35 21
Florida Multicultural 85 56 36 22 New Jersey 25 35 27 17
Georgia 62 70 52 29 Potomac 29 29 16 11
North Carolina 25 44 55 39 New York 38 25 24 12
Peninsular Florida 456 468 429 277
South Carolina 31 47 44 29
Tennessee 11 15 13 7 Other Districts 242 214 589 669
West Florida 13 16 12 9 Total AG Enrollment 1,191 1,181 1,426 1,472
68
1–9
10–19
20–29
30–49
50–99
100+FloridaMulticultural
69
Faculty Division & Rank
Division
Distinguished Professor Professor Associate
ProfessorAssistant Professor Instructor Lecturer Grand Total
Barnett College of Ministry & Theology 1 13 3 4 0 1 21
College of Arts & Media 0 6 16 9 1 0 32
College of Behavioral & Social Sciences 0 4 8 5 0 1 17
College of Education 0 9 9 7 1 0 26
College of Natural & Health Sciences 0 7 5 8 4 0 24
Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial Leadership
1 7 4 5 0 0 17
School of Honors 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
School of Unrestricted Education 0 2 5 2 0 4 9
Steelman Library 0 0 3 2 1 0 6
Administration & Ranked Staff 0 13 2 2 17 0 34
Grand Total 2 61 55 45 24 6 187
70
Division Professor Associate
ProfessorAssistant Professor Instructor Lecturer Total
Instructional Faculty 50 50 41 6 6 153
Percentage of Instructional Faculty 32 .7% 32 .7% 26 .8% 3 .9% 3 .9%
Total Faculty 63 55 45 6 8 177
Percentage of Total Faculty 35.6% 31.1% 25.4% 3.4% 4.5%
Instructional Faculty with Terminal Degrees 50 41 24 0 2 117
Percentage of Instructional Facultywith Terminal Degrees
100 .0% 82 .0% 58 .5% 0 .0% 33 .3% 76 .5%
Total Faculty with Terminal Degrees 62 42 25 0 2 131
Percentage of Total Facultywith Terminal Degrees
98.4% 76.4% 55.6% 0.0% 25.0% 74.0%
Lecturer
Instructor
Assistant Professor
Associate Professor
Professor
Professor Associate Professor Assistant Professor
Instructor Lecturer
71
Instructional Faculty, 2014–2019
College/Department 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Barnett College of Ministry & Theology 22 23 25 26 25 22
College of Arts & Media 28 29 35 32 34 32
College of Behavioral & Social Sciences 14 15 17 17 19 18
College of Education 19 23 24 31 30 26
College of Natural & Health Sciences 16 19 24 25 24 24
Jannetides College of Business& Entrepreneurial Leadership 19 19 19 14 18 17
School of Honors — — — — 1 1
School of Unrestricted Education — — — 15 11 13
Total Instructional Faculty 118 128 142 160 162 153
Instructional Faculty with Terminal Degrees 85 87 90 109 119 117
Percentage of Instructional Facultywith Terminal Degrees
72 .0% 68 .0% 63 .4% 68 .1% 73 .5% 76 .5%
72
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160With Terminal Degrees
Instructional Faculty
2019201820172016201520142013
Instructional Faculty With Terminal Degrees
73
Instructional Faculty Demographics
Age Number Percent Gender Number Percent
Under 30 3 2 .0% Male 87 56 .9%
30–39 32 20 .9% Female 66 43 .1%
40–49 39 25 .5% Ethnicity
50–59 33 21 .6% Black or African-American 13 8 .5%
60–69 38 24 .8% American Indian/Alaska Native 1 0 .7%
70+ 8 5 .2% Asian 2 1 .3%
Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 7 4 .6%
Age Hispanic (Any Race) 7 4 .6%
25th % 42 White 121 79 .1%
Mean Age 51 .5 Two or More Races 1 0 .7%
75th % 62 Race/Ethnicity Unknown 1 0 .7%
Ethnic Minorities: 20.9%
74
Student-to-Faculty Ratio
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
22 .0 to 1 19 .1 to 1 18 .7 to 1 18 .9 to 1 19 .5 to 1 18 .4 to 1 19 .8 to 1 20 .7 to 1 20 .0 to 1 20 .8 to 1 23 .4 to 1
75
Faculty & Staff
Category Total
Instructional Faculty 153
Administration, Library, Ranked Staff 23
Full-Time Staff 399
Administrative Support Workers 100
Craft Workers 10
First/Midlevel Officials/Managers 73
Laborers and Helpers 9
Professionals 149
Sales Workers 3
Service Workers 50
Technicians 5
Total Full-Time Employees 575
Adjunct Faculty (Non-Staff) 310
Part-Time Staff 27
Total Employees 912
76
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450
Part-Time Sta�
Adjunct Faculty (Non-Sta�)
Full-Time Sta�
Administration, Library, Ranked Sta�
Instructional Faculty
77
Applications for Freshman Admission
Applied AdmittedPercent
Admitted EnrolledPercent Admitted
Who Enrolled
Male 1,731 914 52 .8% 496 54 .3%
Female 2,430 1,330 54 .7% 631 47 .4%
Total 4,161 2,244 53.9% 1,127 50.2%
Male 1,768 924 52 .3% 557 60 .3%
Female 2,292 1,245 54 .3% 669 53 .8%
Total 4,060 2,169 51.0% 1,226 56.5%
Male 1,970 1,005 51 .02% 628 62 .49%
Female 3,031 1,405 46 .35% 832 59 .22%
Total 5,001 2,410 48.19% 1,460 60.58%
Male 1,980 1,012 51 .11% 646 63 .83%
Female 3,034 1,403 46 .24% 842 60 .01
Total 5,014 2,415 48.17% 1,488 61.61%
2016
2017
2018
2019
78
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
5000
Enrolled
Admitted
Applied
2019201820172016
Applied Admitted Enrolled
79
SAT, ACT & GPA for Entering Freshman
25th 75th Percentile Percentile
SAT Critical Reading 500 610
SAT Math 460 570
SAT Composite 950 1180
ACT Composite 19 25
Average SAT Composite(Reading and Math Only) 1061
Average ACT Composite 21 .4
High School GPA Percentage
3 .75 and higher 31 .9%
3 .50 to 3 .74 15 .9%
3 .25 to 3 .49 12 .0%
3 .00 to 3 .24 12 .7%
2 .50 to 2 .99 15 .8%
2 .00 to 2 .49 7 .4%
1 .00 to 1 .99 4 .4%
Below 1 .00 0 .0%
Average GPA 3.32
80
High School GPAs
3.75 and higher
3.50 to 3.74
3.25 to 3.49
3.00 to 3.24
2.50 to 2.99
2.00 to 2.49
1.00 to 1.99
Below 1.00
3.75+3.50–3.742.00–2.491.00–1.99 3.00–3.242.50–2.99 3.25–3.49
81
Completions
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Male 262 235 239 207 240 206 234 277 325 412 545
Female 330 361 324 372 296 322 363 376 537 688 883
Total 592 596 563 579 536 528 597 653 862 1,1,100 1,428
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
20192018201720162015201420132012201120102009
82
Completions, 2018–2019
By Gender Certificate (UG)
Associate Bachelor's Master's Certificate(GR)
Doctoral Total Percent
Male 5 72 326 114 14 14 545 38 .2%
Female 20 116 520 203 13 11 883 61 .8%
By Race/Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaskan Native
0 1 1 2 0 0 4 0 .3%
Nonresident Alien 0 0 10 7 12 0 29 2 .0%
Black or African-American 1 18 104 26 1 2 152 10 .6%
Asian 0 1 17 2 0 0 20 1 .4%
Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0 1 7 0 0 0 8 0 .6%
Hispanic (Any Race) 3 27 157 43 1 3 234 16 .4%
White 10 139 537 232 10 17 945 66 .2%
Two or More Races 0 0 1 2 0 0 3 0 .2%
Race/Ethnicity Unknown 11 1 12 3 3 3 33 2 .3%
Total 25 188 846 317 27 25 1,428
83
Completions by College/Department, 2018–2019
Undergraduate Students Percentage
Barnett College of Ministry & Theology 68 4.8%
Ministry & Theology 64 4 .5%
Worship Ministry 4 0 .3%
College of Arts & Media 124 8.7%
Communication 66 4 .6%
Humanities 22 1 .5%
Music 21 1 .5%
Visual Arts 15 1 .1%
College of Behavioral & Social Science 91 6.4%
Criminal Justice 15 1 .1%
Psychology and Counseling 36 2 .5%
Social Work 40 2 .8%
College of Education 137 9.6%
Human Performance & Sport Studies 71 5 .0%
Undergraduate Studies of Education 66 4 .6%
84
Undergraduate Students Percentage
College of Natural & Health Sciences 51 3.6%
Mathematics 4 0 .3%
Natural Sciences 20 1 .4%
Nursing 27 1 .9%
Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial Leadership 93 6.5%
Business Administration 62 4 .3%
Entrepreneurial Leadership 20 1 .4%
Legal Studies 11 0 .8%
School of Unrestricted Education 495 34.7%
Behavioral & Social Sciences (UE) 11 0 .8%
Business & Leadership (UE) 81 5 .7%
Design & Communication (UE) 11 0 .8%
Foundation Core (UE) 54 3 .8%
Human Services (UE) 13 0 .9%
Ministry & Theology (UE) 325 22 .8%
Total 1,059 74.2%
85
Graduate Students Percentage
Barnett College of Ministry & Theology 81 5.7%
School of Divinity 81 5 .7%
College of Behavioral & Social Science 50 3.5%
Psychology and Counseling 15 1 .1%
Social Work 35 2 .5%
College of Education 136 9.5%
Doctoral Studies of Education 19 1 .3%
Graduate Studies of Education 117 8 .2%
Jannetides College of Business & Entrepreneurial Leadership 67 4.7%
Graduate Studies and Applied Research 67 4 .7%
School of Unrestricted Education 35 2.5%
Business & Leadership (UE) 15 1 .1%
Human Services (UE) 20 1 .4%
Total 369 25.8%
Completions by College/Department, 2018–2019
86
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
Graduate
Undergraduate
School ofUnrestrictedEducation
JannetidesCollege ofBusiness &
EntrepreneurialLeadership
College ofNatural &
Health Sciences
Collegeof Education
College ofBehavioral
& Social Sciences
College ofArts & Media
Barnett Collegeof Ministry& Theology
Undergraduate GraduateCompletions by College, 2018–2019
87
Retention Rates
Freshman Cohort Year
Percent ReturnedFollowing Fall
2012 69% 2013
2013 66% 2014
2014 67% 2015
2015 70% 2016
2016 68% 2017
2017 68% 2018
2018 64.4% 2019
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2018–20192017–20182016–20172015–20162014–20152013–20142012–2013
88
Graduation Rates
Freshman Cohort Year
Graduated WithinSix Years
2007 39% 2013
2008 42% 2014
2009 39% 2015
2010 40% 2016
2011 40% 2017
2012 38% 2018
2013 40% 2019
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2019201820172016201520142013
89
On-Campus Enrollment2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Commuters 793 739 974 981 995 1,111 1,133 806
Residents 1,251 1,443 1,550 1,741 1,792 1,637 1,721 1,615
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
Residents
Commuters
20192018201720162015201420132012
Commuters
Residents
91
Housing Capacity
Year Residents Growth Capacity Capacity %
2011 1,243 –7 .7% 1,423 87 .4%
2012 1,251 0 .6% 1,355 92 .3%
2013 1,443 15 .3% 1,474 97 .9%
2014 1,550 7 .4% 1,449 107 .0%
2015 1,729 11 .5% 1,434 120 .6%
2016 1,792 3 .6% 1,843 97 .2%
2017 1,637 -8 .6% 1,842 88 .9%
2018 1,715 4 .8% 1,836 93 .4%
2019 1,615 -5.8% 1,834 88.1%
92
Campus Housing
Residence Hall CapacityReturning Students
NewStudents Total Vacancies
Bauer Hall 199 7 167 174 25Destino Hall 254 200 23 223 31Valencia 0 0 0 0 0Buttercup 19 19 0 19 0South Pointe 98 51 10 61 37Buena Vida West 153 76 64 140 13Bethany Apartments 0 0 0 0 0
Male Totals 723 353 264 617 106
Bethany Hall 180 14 158 172 8South Pointe 31 14 9 23 8Valencia 143 47 69 116 27Esperanza 252 198 27 225 27Buttercup 43 42 0 42 1Aventura Hall 256 194 31 225 31Buena Vida East 206 91 104 195 11Bethany Apartments 0 0 0 0 0
Female Totals 1,111 600 398 998 113
Undergraduate Total 1,834 953 662 1615 219
93
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1,000
Vacancies
New
Returning
Returning Students
New Students
Vacancies
Campus Housing
94
Office of Institutional Effectiveness1000 Longfellow Blvd. | Lakeland, Florida 33801 | 863.667.5408
SEU.edu