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Demographic
Research:
Why, Who, When, What,
How and Where
By D. Scott
Looney
Director of Admission & Financial Aid, Cranbrook
Schools
Why?
Independent
school leaders are expected to envision a better future
for their school, and build effective strategic plans to
bring that vision to fruition. Many of the most important
decisions that school heads, admission directors,
development directors, business managers and school
trustees must make should be shaped by the demographic
realities, both local and global, of their particular
school. Having a firm grip on the trends relating to:
population, economy, public opinion, changes in family
structures and changes in public consumer behavior are
essential for effective strategic planning. Reviewing the
current demographic, economic and sociological trends does
not allow us to predict the future, but it does
allow us to predict a variety of potential futures.
Knowing what can be possible in the future allows
us to make decisions in the present that guide us to one
of the possible futures. To build strategic plans, leaders
have to become adept at both local and global trend
analysis.
At first
blush demographic research can seem a bit daunting, and
the idea of demographic trend analysis may appear
downright frightening. Because many educational leaders
may not know where to start or may be intimidated by the
prospect of spending countless hours or thousands of
dollars to produce quality demographic research, they
oftentimes simply rely on anecdotal evidence and their own
intuition. While the instincts and personal experiences of
school leaders are often the hallmark of their success,
that success can only be heightened when solid research
and data also shape their decisions. Hiring a paid
consultant to perform a demographic analysis of a school's
situation can result in valuable information and analysis.
However, much of the information necessary to do quality
research is free, available on the internet; and most of
us working schools already possess the basic skills
necessary to gather the data and interpret meaning from
that data. With the additional focus on demography due to
the 2000 census, the amount and variety of free or low
cost, demographic data and analysis available on the World
Wide Web it is likely to grow exponentially in the next
couple of years.
Who?
Demographic
trend analysis is, in fact, less daunting than it may
seem, since most school administrators have already
acquired many of the necessary skills. In fact, (to borrow
from Robert Fulghum) most of what we need to know about
demographic trend analysis we learned in kindergarten.
Does the patterning exercise ABAB…ring a distant bell?
In kindergarten classrooms children learn to guess that
"A" comes next by recognizing the sequence of
letters which have come before. Forecasting the future,
while more complex, is still largely a patterning problem.
What patterns can be discerned from reviewing the schools
past statistical record in relation to the greater
demographic, economic and sociological trends?
Demographic
research and trend analysis, for the most part, is about
attempting to forecast future developments and
opportunities. The question of who should do the
research and who will benefit most from such
research is best answered by determining who has the
greatest need to predict what the future might hold. The
obvious candidates are those school administrators whose
jobs are immediately effected by developments outside the
school (internal institutional research, by the way, is
probably even more important than external demographic
research) and where forecasting is an essential part
of the planning process. The researcher does not need to
be the upper school math teacher who handles AP
Probability and Statistics.
When?
When do you
need to take the time to conduct demographic research?
When you face situations like these:
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You are
a new admission director of a school and need to
understand where, and to what degree, you should
invest your recruitment budget and staff energies?
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Your
school is considering expanding enrollment and the
question has been posed to you…is this new larger
capacity sustainable?
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You are
adding a significant program to your school (adding a
lower school, an after care program, a summer camp,
etc.).
-
Your
Board is considering changing the tuition in a
significant way.
-
You are
the development director and have been asked by the
board to gear up for a capital campaign.
-
You are
the business manager and have been asked to come up
with an auxiliary services plan which will bring in
additional revenue for the school. Which of the
potential new services will be most appealing to the
marketplace?
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Your
school is launching a strategic plan.
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The
local economy (or demography, or sociography) appears
to be shifting, but you are uncertain as to the extent
or the meaning of this shift?
In trying to
make the case to Cranbrook's decision makers that the
power of demographics and economics were largely
responsible for Cranbrook's recent enrollment history, we
graphed Cranbrook's enrollment versus the Gross Domestic
Product of the U.S. (in constant dollars) and the
population of school age children in the U.S., indexed to
fall within the same range. This comparison helped not
only to demonstrate the likely relation between
demography, economic conditions and enrollment, but also
helped Board members begin to think about the tuition
costs in a more long range way, and in relation to the
prospect of future economic and demographic declines (see
graph titled Cranbrook Schools Enrollment 1988-98 vs.
Gross Domestic Product in 1992 constant dollars and vs.
Population of School Age Children in the U.S.).
What?
The type of
demographic data any school needs to review is dependent
upon the problem or process with which that school is
dealing. In cases where a general strategic planning
process is being launched, then a global and extensive
review of the demographic landscape may be in order.
However, if the problem is to determine if the proposal
for a new summer day camp for pre-school children is
viable, then the search for useful data would be focused
and limited. In this example it might be useful to examine
data like the local population of pre-school aged
children, local family incomes, educational attainment of
the local parents, and number of local competitor camps
available to families with young children.
Just about
any data that is collected anywhere, particularly from
government agencies is available on the Internet. Some of
the most bizarre and obscure data can be located if you
probe patiently and have solid technological skills.
However, the most useful data are also some of the easiest
to access, requiring no experience and little
technological skill. The types of data that are readily
available and generally most useful include:
-
National
Population Trends and Forecasts
-
State
Population Trends and Forecasts
-
Zipcode
specific population trends
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Geographic
Mobility
-
School
Enrollment and Forecasts
-
Educational
Attainment
-
Marital
Status and Living Arrangements
-
Child
Care Arrangements
-
Labor
Force and Occupation
-
Age
Distributions
-
Family
Income
-
The
Black Population
-
The
Hispanic Population
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The
Asian / Pacific Islander Population
-
Property
Ownership
-
Consumer
Spending Habits
-
Wealth
Transfers
How?
In only 27
minutes, searching a user-friendly demographic website (www.easidemographics.com),
I was able to produce a graph (see graph titled:
Average and Median Incomes for Cranbrook's top ten Day
Student Communities vs. the Michigan and U. S. Averages)
that detailed the median and average family incomes for
the top ten communities from which students enrolled at
Cranbrook with a comparison to the Michigan and U.S.
averages. Cranbrook's admission staff was in the process
of trying to increase our socio-economic diversity in our
lower and middle schools, while at the same time trying to
increase the numbers of full paying day student applicants
to our upper school. In regard to our upper school, we
were interested in knowing which areas had the greatest
affluence, while needing to know which areas were less
affluent for our lower and middle school recruitment
efforts. The original search revealed very high levels of
affluence in our most common sending cities, good news for
our upper school efforts. However, since we also wanted to
know where there were more children who were less affluent
and younger, we expanded this demographic research outward
to cities that were still geographically close but did not
necessarily send us many kids. We were successful in
locating several areas that had high numbers of young
school age children and relatively low family incomes.
Then once we targeted the zipcodes which seem to fit our
criteria for our day recruitment goals, we then searched
for specific neighborhoods within those zipcodes
which fit the criteria even more closely. The search for
affluent teenagers and lower income young children in
metro Detroit was remarkably simple to achieve, and this
data was invaluable in helping us target our upper, lower
and middle school day student recruitment efforts.
The best
demographic research is usually gathered in reference to a
specific issue, problem, challenge or opportunity for a
school. Once the data is gathered, it is important to give
the data a context and establish the specific relevance
for the school. Oftentimes the relevance of the data is
determined by the manner in which the data search was
conducted. In the previous Cranbrook example, the data
collected was relevant since we were only examining those
communities which sent a large number of students to the
school, had the proper family incomes and also had notably
numbers of appropriately aged children. If we had simply
stopped the inquiry at family incomes around the Cranbrook
location, the data would have held little usefulness. The
most common misuses of demographic research are either due
to data which are simply too general in nature, or data
which do not have a direct connection to the situation of
the school. Data too broad or without context are not
worth collecting.
Where?
American
Demographics, The
Futurist (published by the World Futures Society) and Revolution:
Business and Marketing in the Digital Economy are just
a few of the excellent magazines with current and useful
summaries of the prevailing demographic trends. They
provide a great overview of salient issues and trends, and
provide forecasts in a host of areas. However, the World
Wide Web provides the fastest, cheapest and easiest means
to search for specific demographic data. Provided below
are my favorite demographic websites.
Top
Demographic Websites
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Website |
Features |
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The U.S.
Census Bureau |
A well designed site with a remarkable
array of data. This site likely to expand greatly with the release of 2000
census data. Includes a variety of demographic projections to the year
2025. Relatively user friendly if you have the right software already
loaded. (May require Adobe Acrobat Reader, Macromedia Shockwave or Win-zip
software to view many of the reports). |
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Fed
Stats |
All of the public statistics from over 70
public agencies. If the government keeps the statistic and makes it
public, you can find it on this site! Similar to the U. S. Census site,
yet even more data, however, less user friendly. |
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University
of Texas - Austin |
List of nearly every possible link of
publicly available demographic data.
A great overall list of demographics
links!
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"The
Right Site" Easi Demographics
|
Offers up to 10 free customized
demographic reports, very user friendly, with detail down to specific
neighborhoods. Strong selection of reports detailing family incomes, race,
property ownership, etc. Searchable by state, city, zipcode, or even down
to the neighborhood level using specific latitude and longitude. Great
site, particularly for beginners! |
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American
Demographics Magazine |
Many of their great articles are
available The "Websites worth knowing
about" has great suggested links.
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EconData |
Links to nearly every government and
academic data source imaginable. Has the best "top ten" links
list anywhere. For highly detailed economic research, this site might be
the place to start. |
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Economic
Information Systems |
Great site for economic data. Very user
friendly with terrific graphs and graphics. Wonderful profiles of major
metro area economic conditions. |
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CASI
Marketing Systems |
Will give a very detailed information
with national comparisons of any zipcode in the U.S. Uses the ACORN System
of neighborhood profiling. A useful and easy to use site. |
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Independent
Schools of the Central States (ISACS) |
Interesting tables and graphs forecasting
demographic trends to 2020. Good income
and race projections.
|
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GeoStat:
Geospatial & Statistical Data Center (University of Virginia Library) |
Incredibly detailed and graphical data,
searchable in nearly every manner you can imagine. This is a great site
for highly specific research, but not for the rookie research or
technology novice. |
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Premier
Insights |
Some great national data free, and will
send other free reports by e-mail or by fax. Can specify down to a 1.5
mile radius of any major road intersection. Good data, not so user
friendly however. |
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Cyberatlas:
The Big Picture Demographics |
A host of terrific articles, projections
and demographic summaries. No searchable raw data however. |
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