May 7, 2013
Executives
Brian M. Roberts - Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary Brian E.
Mueller - Chief Executive Officer, Director and President of Grand Canyon University Daniel E. Bachus - Chief Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer
Analysts
Sara Gubins - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division Robert L. Craig - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division Jeffrey Y.
Volshteyn - JP Morgan Chase & Co, Research Division Adrienne Colby - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division Jeffrey P. Meuler - Robert W.
Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division Jeffrey M.
Silber - BMO Capital Markets U.S. Timo Connor Trace A.
Urdan - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
Operator
Good afternoon. My name is Hope, and I will be your conference operator today.
At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the First Quarter 2013 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Mr.
Brian Roberts, General Counsel for Grand Canyon Education, you may begin your conference.
Brian M. Roberts
Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today on this conference call to discuss Grand Canyon's 2013 first quarter results.
Speaking on today's call is our President and CEO, Brian Mueller; and our CFO, Dan Bachus. This call is scheduled to last 1 hour.
During the Q&A period, we will try to answer all of your questions, and we apologize in advance if there are questions that we are unable to address due to time constraints. I would like to remind you that many of our comments today will contain forward-looking statements with respect to GCU's future performance that involve risks and uncertainties.
Various factors could cause GCU's actual results to be materially different from any future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These factors are addressed in GCU's SEC filings, including our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2012, our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and our current report on Form 8-K.
We recommend that all investors thoroughly review these reports before taking a financial position in GCU, and we do not undertake any obligation to update anyone with regard to the forward-looking statements made during this conference call. With that, I will turn the call over to Brian.
Brian E. Mueller
Good afternoon. Thank you for joining Grand Canyon University's First Quarter Fiscal Year 2013 Conference Call.
We are pleased with the results of the quarter. Our long-term goals are to grow enrollments 8% to 10% per year, revenues 10% to 12% per year and achieve pretax margins of between 23% and 24%.
As we will discuss in greater detail later in the call, our revised 2013 guidance is for enrollments to grow between 9% and 10.5%; revenues, 13% to 14%; and for pre-tax margins to be 23.5%. We are currently achieving these results in spite of growing much faster than expected in 2012.
In the first quarter of 2013, enrollments grew by 15.7%, revenues by 21.3%, pre-tax margins are at 23.7% and new enrollments were up in the mid-single digits year-over-year. We believe that this success is a result of a differentiated model.
This hybrid model, which combines a traditional campus and an online campus leveraging a common infrastructure, produces high-quality, low-cost education whose brand is rooted in a strong, growing, vibrant, traditional campus. In addition to building the brand of the institution, the traditional campus is providing a strong tailwind from a growth perspective.
The next 3 years, our overall growth rate will be between 8% and 10%. Our traditional ground students, the next 3 years, will grow by approximately 30% in 2013, approximately 23% in 2014 and approximately 20% in 2015.
These students, in spite of very low tuition rates, also have a positive impact on revenue and earnings growth because of their 4-year revenue streams, very high retention rates, low acquisition costs and low bad debt expense. This tailwind allows us to grow our online student body by only 6% to 8% per year, enabling us to stay focused on quality students in the high graduation rate programs.
Last quarter, I listed 5 reasons why we are getting these results, and I want to update you on those today. The first is the growing strength of the traditional campus and its overall impact on the brand of the institution.
We started fall of 2012 with approximately 6,500 students on our campus in Phoenix. We expect to start fall of 2013 with approximately 8,500 students on our ground campus.
Of those registered and fully admitted so far, their average incoming GPAs are approximately 3.5. This year, we raised the minimum GPA requirement for admission to 3.0.
We expect the retention of the traditional ground students between spring of 2013, which we just completed, and fall of 2013 that did not graduate to be 88%. Approximately 50% of our students are studying in the hard sciences.
We expect to extend our reach into STEM education by rolling out degrees in engineering and technology early in 2015. The second reason for the success is the high-quality composition of our online student body.
In our working adult student body, 42.2% are studying at the graduate level. These students have high graduation rates, low default rates and low bad debt expense.
By college, our College of Nursing and Health Sciences students produced the highest retention rates, and they went from 26.7% of our student body last year to 29.7% this year. This year, our College of Education students, who also produced high retention rates, dropped from 43.5% to 40.9% of the total students, but the raw number of those students went up again.
The College of Liberal Arts students remained flat at 15.3% of our working adult student body. The College of Business students decreased from 14.4% to 14.2% of the total.
A great deal of the enrollment success has to do with increasing retention and graduation rates. This continues to be driven by 4 major factors: one, increasing selectivity because of higher admissions requirement; two, continuing to focus on attracting high-quality students; three, an increasing number of our online students being taught by full-time faculty.
In the first quarter of 2012, 19.5% of students in online courses were taught by full-time faculty. This increased to 23% in the first quarter of 2013.
On ground, greater than 53% of our students are taught by full-time faculty, and our goal is that 70% would be taught by full-time faculty in 2 years; the implementation of technology -- four, the implementation of technology which allows us to closely track student attendance, participation and the quality of their academic work. The third reason for the success is our very competitive pricing model.
On our traditional campus, our published tuition rate is $16,500 per year. This fall will be the fourth year we have not raised tuition.
After scholarships, our average student pays approximately $7,800 per year. Most private universities have published rates between $25,000 and $40,000 per year, and our state universities in Arizona are about $11,000 per year, in addition to the tax subsidies that support each instate student.
Those institutions also offer scholarships but our after-scholarship averages are now very competitive with the tax-supported state institutions and well under most private institutions. In addition, our room and board rates for those students living on campus are extremely low.
Most students on our campus are paying about $6,500 for room and board for the entire year. Most universities have rates much higher than that, in fact, some are almost double that amount.
The traditional campus strategy is going so well that we are considering opening a campus in an East Valley city and one in Tucson. These campuses will have the same traditional campus look and feel of our very attractive, modern and vibrant Phoenix campus and will be built for traditional students.
We would expect to grow each campus to be between 5,000 and 7,000 students in a 6- to 7-year time frame. This would add additional strength in years to the overall growth tailwind that already exists.
Our online students have close to the lowest tuition rates in the industry. This year, we are budgeting a 5% increase in new online starts and are not budgeting any increased tuition for our online programs.
We believe demand that exists due to our brand strength and price point would allow us to grow faster and raise our tuition price similar to prior years. But as we have discussed previously, we do not believe this is in the long-term best interest of the university, our students or our investors.
We expect to reach our targeted enrollment, revenue and margin goals because of the continued shift towards higher-quality students that have higher retention rates. The fourth reason for this success is a flat organizational model with very advanced dashboard technology that gives us the ability to manage the progress of our students on a daily basis.
We have invested $90 million in technology advancements over the last 3.5 years. Our academic counseling staff could monitor the attendance and partition rate trends of students, as well as track closely their academic progress.
This allows them to work cooperatively with the faculty to provide any intervention necessary to keep students moving in a positive direction. We're also working hard on the advanced analytics component of our LoudCloud learning management system, which will provide another large amount of data on the academic work of both our students and faculty.
The fifth reason for this success is the growing experience levels of faculty management and staff. Employee retention rate continues to improve through quarter 1 of 2013 for our operations group, our full-time faculty and management, thus increasing the average tenure of our staff and faculty who closely interact with our students.
This improvement is causing the instruction and service of our students -- that our students receive to reach very high levels. The performance areas on campus continue to grow and have an impact on the brand.
Our theater department just concluded the last of its 5 major productions and won numerous awards locally. Our various music groups will continue to perform throughout the Southwest during the summer months.
Our Division II athletics program is currently in third place nationally, and hopes to move to first place based upon the results of the spring sports. The PR surrounding our move to NCAA Division I in all sports was boosted by our hiring of former Phoenix Suns 3-time All-Star and former Suns assistant coach Dan Majerle and bringing on USA Basketball President, Jerry Colangelo as a consultant.
These men are 2 of the most powerful sports icons in Arizona history and have a significant reach into the basketball world internationally. Turning to the results of operations for the first quarter of 2013, net revenues were $142 million in the first quarter of 2013, an increase of $24.9 million or 21.3% from $117.1 million in the prior year period.
Operating margin for quarter 1 2013 was 23.7% compared to 20.7% for the same period in 2012. Net income was $20.9 million for the first quarter of 2013 compared to $14.5 million in the prior year period.
Net income excluding the gain from the note receivable proceeds of $2.2 million was $19.6 million in the first quarter of 2013. After-tax margin was 14.7% compared to 12.4% for the same period in 2012.
It should be noted that the difference between 23.7% operating margin before income taxes and the after-tax margin of 14.7% is primarily money that we pay in taxes that goes back to the taxpayer. Given our relatively low default rates, our relatively low Pell usage and the high amount of tax we pay, we are a net plus to the taxpayer.
Constructional costs and services grew from $50.8 million in the first quarter of 2012 to $60 million in the first quarter of 2013. As a percent of revenue, IC&S decreased 1.2% to 42.2% from 43.4%.
Bad debt expense as a percent of revenue stayed flat between periods at 350 basis points. The key factor is a result of 4 things: one, the increasing quality of our online students; two, the growth of our traditional ground student body; three, the flat organizational structure and innovative dashboard that allows us to manage the progress of each student to a greater extent than we have ever had before; and four, the increased experience level of our staff.
Employee and faculty compensation and related expenses decreased 100 basis points between years primarily due to the ability to leverage our fixed cost structure of our campus-based facilities and employee base across an increasing revenue base, which was partially offset by increased employee benefit costs. Occupancy costs decreased 30 basis points primarily due to our purchase of an on-campus dormitory in the fourth quarter of 2012 that was previously leased.
Admissions advisory and related expenses as a percent of revenue -- net revenue decreased 90 basis points from 17.1% in quarter 1 of 2012 to 16.2% in quarter 1 of 2013. This decrease was primarily due to the ability to leverage our employee costs across an increasing revenue base, which was partially offset by increased employee benefit costs.
Advertising expense as a percent of net revenue decreased 40 basis points from 11.6% to 11.2% in quarter 1 of 2013. Marketing and promotional expenses as a percent of net revenue increased 20 basis points from 0.8% in quarter 1 of 2012 to 1% in quarter 1 of 2013.
General and administrative costs increased from $7.5 million in the first quarter of 2012 to $8.1 million in the first quarter of 2013. As a percentage of revenue, decreased from 6.4% in quarter 1 of '12 to 5.7% in quarter 1 of 2013.
Employee compensation decreased 20 basis points from the prior year. Legal and other miscellaneous expenses decreased 40 basis points from the prior year.
Interest and other income increased $1.7 million over quarter 1 of 2012 as a result of proceeds received on a note receivable, partially offset by an increase in interest expense between periods. As a result of the above, net income increased from $14.5 million in the first quarter of 2012 to $20.9 million in the first quarter of 2013.
With that, I would like to turn it over to Dan Bachus, our CFO, to give a little more color on our 2013 first quarter, talk about changes in the income statement, balance sheet and other items.
Daniel E. Bachus
Thanks, Brian. Effective during the first quarter of 2013, we made changes in our presentation of operating expenses and reclassified prior periods to conform to the current presentation.
We determined that these changes would provide more meaningful information. Additionally, this new presentation better classifies our costs consistently with the operational changes we have made related to the roles and responsibilities of our admissions personnel.
Specifically, we have separated admissions advisory and related expenses from advertising and marketing and promotional expenses as the admissions personnel role has evolved into one in which a substantial amount of their time is spent educating students, not only during the admissions process, but also through matriculation and during their program of study. The admissions advisory and related expense category includes salaries and benefits for admissions advisory personnel and revenue share expense, as well as an allocation of depreciation, amortization, rent and occupancy costs attributable to the admissions advisory personnel.
The marketing and promotional expense category includes salaries, benefits and shared-based compensation for marketing personnel and other promotional expenses. This category also includes an allocation of depreciation, amortization, rent and occupancy costs attributable to marketing and promotional activities.
We have reclassified our operating expenses for prior periods to conform to the above disaggregation and revisions to our presentation. There were no changes to total operating expenses or operating income as a result of these reclassifications.
Scholarships as a percentage of revenue slightly decreased from 16.9% in Q1 2012 to 16.6% in Q1 2013 due primarily to a decrease in scholarships for online students between years. Bad debt expense as a percentage of revenue stayed flat at 3.5% in the first quarter of 2013 and 2012.
Our effective tax rate for the first quarter of 2013 was 40.4% as compared to 39.7% in the first quarter of 2012. The slight increase in the rate between years is primarily due to certain nonrecurring tax items which had the effect of increasing our effective tax rate in the first quarter of 2013 and decreasing the effective tax rate in the first quarter of 2012.
We still anticipate our effective tax rate in 2013 will be 40.5%. We repurchased 215,187 shares of our common stock during the first quarter of 2013 at a cost of $5.1 million and have purchased another 101,900 shares to date in the second quarter of 2013 under 10b5-1 plans that have been put in place.
In addition, our Board of Directors authorized the university to repurchase up to an additional $25 million, which now represents $75 million in total, and also extended the expiration date on the repurchase authorizations to September 30, 2014. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flows.
Total cash, unrestricted and restricted, and short-term investments at March 31, 2013, was $201.4 million. Accounts receivable net of the allowance for doubtful accounts [ph] was $7.7 million at March 31, 2013, which represents 5.2 days sales outstanding, compared to $7.8 million or 6.5 days sales outstanding at the end of the first quarter of 2012.
CapEx in the first quarter of 2013 was approximately $14.7 million or 10.4% of net revenue. CapEx is somewhat seasonal as much of our construction needed to be completed before our fall start for our ground students is done during the spring and summer months.
Thus, CapEx as a percentage of revenue is generally higher in the second and third quarters and lower in the first and fourth quarters. We anticipate that 2013 CapEx will be down slightly approximately $80 million and will include 2 more dorms and an expansion of our student union and library to service the increasing student body.
There was one unusual first quarter 2013 event that I would like to point out to investors. The university purchased a note receivable from a financial institution at fair market value in the fourth quarter of 2012 for $27 million, which was collateralized by real estate, one property of which is adjacent to our campus.
The note bore interest at 11%, which represented the 6% rate of the loan plus the 5% default rate. The principal and most of the interest due on the note was paid in March 2013, resulting in the full return of -- on investment of the note receivable and an additional gain in interest income and other income of $2,187,000 on the loan.
However, the borrower has disputed certain amounts due under the note agreement, including some of the default interest and the late payment penalty. The disputed amount of $2,068,000 is being held in escrow.
As this amount is in dispute and as a result, has been treated as a gain contingency and thus, will not be recorded as receivable or income until resolution is reached. Excluding the gain recognized and the tax effect of that gain, our net income and earnings per share for the first quarter of 2013 would have been $19.7 million and $0.43 per share, respectively.
I would like to touch on one regulatory item. As we discussed on the last quarter's call, our draft 2-year cohort default rate related to students that went into repayment between October 2010 and September 2011 for students whose last day of attendance in the university was between April 1, 2010, and March 31, 2011, is 12.4%, and our draft 3-year cohort default rate related to student loans that went into repayment between October 2009 and September 2010 is 19.9%.
As a reminder, our transition to BBAY occurred during the summer/fall of 2010, which is during these periods. We believe that our cohort default rate in future years will return to much lower levels given the significant change in our student mix that has occurred, and early data from this next cohort suggests that this should be the case.
We want to remind you that currently 88% of students are paying their loans back with interest, which, combined with our tax contribution and net of our growing workforce tax contribution and a high savings of state dollars because in-state students are attending a private university, the net effect on taxpayers of GCU's contribution is very positive. Last, I would like to remind investors of some of the comments we made last quarter regarding our 2013 guidance.
Our revenue guidance continues to assume no net tuition increase for our ground campus and for our online campus. We saw revenue per student growth in the first quarter of 2013, and anticipate growth in the second quarter as well due primarily to retention gains we have experienced over the past couple of quarters, last year's working adult tuition price increase and the increase in ground traditional students as a percentage of the total.
These trends have allowed us to increase our revenue guidance for the second quarter of 2013. As a reminder, we anticipate revenue per student will be down slightly year-over-year in the third quarter due to the ground campus growth and only earning 1 month of revenue in that quarter and the fact that we are anticipating that the year-over-year retention gains we have seen over the past 18 months will level off in the second half of 2013.
Quarter 4, we should see a small gain in revenue per student. On the expense side, bad debt is still projected to be up approximately 50 basis points year-over-year as we do not expect -- or we do not anticipate collecting as much previously written-off receivables as we did in 2012, as the amount of writeoffs decreased significantly over the past year.
The biggest effect of this, we believe, will be seen in the second quarter. As in Q2 2012, our bad debt expense as a percentage of revenue was 3.1%, whereas, we estimate it would have been closer to 4% without these recoveries.
Division I costs include $2 million of onetime payments that are not included in our estimates, as we are still working with our auditors regarding the accounting for these payments. We have also provided updated estimates of diluted weighted average shares outstanding by quarter.
Although, we might repurchase shares during 2013, these estimates do not assume significant repurchases. They do assume increased dilution from stock options and restricted stock granted.
The slight increase in our estimate of shares outstanding is due to the effects of the treasury stock method caused by an increase in our stock price. I will now turn the call over to the moderator so that we can answer questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Sara Gubins, Bank of America.
Sara Gubins - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
I wanted to ask about the pretax margin goal that you've talked about of 23% to 24%. So you'll already be well within that this year, and it seems reasonable to think that you might get to the 24% fairly rapidly as well.
You had talked about reinvesting back into lower tuition at that point. I'm wondering if that's still how you're thinking about it and when you think we might expect to start to see that.
Brian E. Mueller
I think that you're right, that we have gotten to between 23% and 24% sooner than we thought, sooner than we anticipated. We are freezing tuition, room and board on our ground campus this year.
I think that we will -- as it looks today, we'll freeze it next year. And I think you should anticipate that the average amount that our ground student pays remains about the same.
If we lower tuition on the online side, it will be in selected programs, where we can gain a competitive advantage. So it would not be across the board, but it would only be in selected programs where we think we can get a competitive advantage and therefore, get better students.
And so I would tell you that I would expect the margins to be around 24%, and there will be selected programs where we'll probably take a tuition decrease.
Sara Gubins - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
Okay, great. And then, along those lines, Dan you mentioned that scholarships were down a little bit as a percent of revenue because of lower scholarships for online.
Can you talk about how you would expect that to trend?
Daniel E. Bachus
I think it will probably stay about where it is going forward as a percentage of revenue. As you know, we don't do a lot of scholarship-ing online.
But included in our scholarship numbers is the military discount that we give to our military students and then some promotions that might be run during nontraditional start times. And so I just -- I don't see that significantly changing in the future, so I think I would kind of model it about flat from where it is this quarter.
Brian E. Mueller
Especially, Sara, because the military discount -- military students are still less than 5% of our total students and not a significant part of our student body.
Sara Gubins - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
Great. And then just last question, you mentioned mid-single digit new enrollment growth.
Does that -- did that include both on-ground and online? And I'm wondering if you can compare this to the high-single digit number that you talked about last quarter.
Brian E. Mueller
It's online and...
Sara Gubins - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
It's only online? Okay.
Brian E. Mueller
Yes. And that mid-single digits is a very deftly a planned amount of new starts given where we know the new starts are coming so that we can get the total enrollment to between 8% and 10%, including ground.
And so there's a focus on ground and growing that from the 6,500-or-so through 15,000 and then as we open up the other campuses, up to 20,000 and 25,000. And then, we fill in with online students to the amount necessary to get a total overall 8% to 10% growth.
To this point, we've been doing that now for about 12 months, and we are -- we've been able to manage the online student body to increasingly high qualities, and mid-single digits is enough to get us to that 8% to 10% that we're looking for.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Bob Craig with Stifel.
Robert L. Craig - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division
Brian, first question, as far as the timing on any new campus openings, you mentioned East Valley and Tucson. And also any progress in site selection there?
Brian E. Mueller
We are making progress. The cities in the East Valley, Gilbert and Mesa particularly, have some very attractive sites.
However, they're owned by -- they don't own the sites, and so we have to work with both cities to figure out which is the best site and how they're going to help us with getting those sites. And so that's going along well.
We're getting closer. I had another call with Tucson today.
Tucson is very excited. They've got a couple of sites that they actually own, and so it would be different down there.
I would say, right now, it's probably, realistically, more Fall of 2015 versus Fall of 2014 that we'll start students and probably start both campuses at the same time.
Robert L. Craig - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division
Okay, that's very helpful. Secondly, I was wondering your success in attracting California students and just how much effort you're placing there at the moment.
Brian E. Mueller
We're placing significant effort there. We're running a very significant advertising campaign around our traditional ground campus because the UC system -- the CU system is really struggling.
And really good students with 3.6 and 3.7 GPAs are having a difficult time gaining access to programs there, and so they're finding what we are offering at Grand Canyon to be very attractive. And so there's a significant amount of work that we're still doing to get California students for the fall of this year, but it's having an impact on the growth of our online student body in California.
I can't tell you what the number is right now. But in the last 12 months, typically, when our overall growth rate has been 12%, 13%, 14%, our growth rate in California has been closer to 30%.
And so the impact of having a presence there for traditional students is flowing into increasing the number of working adult students that are coming.
Robert L. Craig - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division
That's helpful. Last one and I'll turn it over.
Thank you, folks, for the additional breakout of SG&A, but within admissions, how much is staffing growth? Are you growing the admissions staff for the moment or staying fairly flat?
Brian E. Mueller
It's pretty -- it's staying flat, and that's another very positive sign for us. The brand of the institution is growing, and so we're having -- we're able to keep that staff very stable.
If we increase it at all, it will be 2% or 3%. But right now, we're not having to.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Volshteyn with JP Morgan.
Jeffrey Y. Volshteyn - JP Morgan Chase & Co, Research Division
I wanted to ask you about the guidance for second quarter. It's one of the things where no good deed goes unpunished.
We appreciate the quarterly guidance, but it only went up a little bit on revenues. You didn't really adjust EPS guidance.
Is there an offsetting expense? Or is it just the conservatism on your part?
Daniel E. Bachus
I think part of it's conservatism, part of it is we are comfortable with our margin expectations that we previously set. And when you do the math and you leave the margin where we had but add the additional revenue just from a -- with the weighted average share number, it doesn't change the EPS at all because of rounding.
And so I agree that part of it is a little bit of conservatism, but part of it is we are very comfortable with the margin target that we had previously set and chose not to bring that up. And again, I want to point out, one of the things, on a year-over-year basis, that we have to be very cognizant of is bad debt.
We got almost 100-basis-point margin expansion last second quarter of 2012 because of collections of previously written-off receivables in the second quarter. And so we're hopeful that our bad debt will continue the trends that we've seen and end up lower than where we're guiding it to right now, but we're not prepared at this point to bank on that.
Jeffrey Y. Volshteyn - JP Morgan Chase & Co, Research Division
That makes sense. And on campuses, your expansion in the Southwest area, does that pretty much -- is that going to keep you busy with campus activities?
And is there conversation about sort of other geographic areas? Is that out of the question in the near term?
Brian E. Mueller
In the near term, yes. We're really going to focus on the Southwest.
The markets are very identical in the major cities in the Southwest, major presence of the state university, but not really much in terms of private universities. So that gives us -- it makes sense for us to be there, plus our brand resonates in the Southwest, and there's just plenty of room to grow for many years out just by staying here.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Adrienne Colby with Deutsche Bank.
Adrienne Colby - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
I was wondering if you could update us on how to think about your marketing as you move more into Division I athletics. Are you going to be changing your lead sources or some of the target markets that you go to and how should we be thinking about that into the fall and then into 2014?
Brian E. Mueller
No, it really won't impact anything short term. I think it will give us a lot more visibility.
We're talking about TV contracts right now, mostly regional TV contracts, mostly around our men's basketball program. But we are going to be on the Pac-12 Network because our soccer team is playing Stanford to open the season next year.
So there is going to be, without question, an increasing amount of exposure because of our athletics program. But its impact on our marketing spend right now would be negligible.
We will see how far it goes 3, 4 years out. But right now, it really won't have much of an impact on what we're doing.
Adrienne Colby - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
And I think this time last year, you said you had about 3,600 students registered for the fall class. Could you update us on where you're at this year?
Brian E. Mueller
Yes, we're -- our target for the ground students is 4,000, and we are on track to do that and maybe exceed that some. We actually built 2 dorms instead of 1, and those dormitories will be full.
In fact, there might be a shortage of rooms. And so the ground campus strategy for this year is really going better than expected.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Meuler with RW Baird.
Jeffrey P. Meuler - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
On the overall starts number, I know that this is consistent with what you guys were guiding to, but within the higher-quality programs like health sciences and education, are you seeing deceleration there? And if so, are you also governing that rate to the highest quality students within those 2 verticals?
Or how should we think about that?
Brian E. Mueller
Yes, no deceleration. The -- in fact, in the really important programs, things are accelerating, so our doctoral student number is up.
Our master's and nursing program numbers are up. Most of our master's degree programs are up even as a percentage.
The only one that's down a little bit as a percentage is the master's in education. It's up in terms of the raw number, it's down in terms of percentage.
But that's the one we have been telling people is very competitive. But every place else and even at the baccalaureate level our RN to BSN program is way up both in raw numbers and the percentage.
And those students behave very much like master's degree students from a graduation rate perspective, from a cost to acquire perspective. And so for the most part, our ability to grow the online campus with good students in the programs that we're targeting is going as planned.
Jeffrey P. Meuler - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
Okay. And then, if I heard you correctly, I think that you said that you expect retention gains that you've been making to level off in the back half.
If you're continuing to enroll higher-quality students in the programs with higher retention and you're continuing the shift towards full-time faculty for the online classes, why should that level off? Is there some counterbalancing force that offsets those factors?
Daniel E. Bachus
No, I think you just start to wonder how high it really can get. I mean, we're starting to get into the high-80s, low-90s on a sequential implied retention rate perspective.
And so the question is, where can that go? And so, again from a conservatism standpoint, what we're modeling is that, that levels off in the second half of the year.
Jeffrey P. Meuler - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
Okay. And then just finally, last quarter, you guys had thrown out, I think, closer to a handful of potential cities to open the commuter campuses in.
It sounds like you've narrowed it down to East Valley and Tucson at least to start out. Just wondering if you could give some color on what you made choose East Valley and Tucson at least for round 1.
Brian E. Mueller
Just our presence and the growing strength of our brand in the state, and it's the easiest, safest way to go at the onset. Albuquerque and Las Vegas are actively engaged in working with us, and they really would like us to have a presence in their cities, and so we are continuing to work with them.
And I think eventually, there's a possibility that we'll end up in both of those cities as well. But in the short term, we're going to focus on getting started in the Arizona cities.
And then, once we've gotten that where we want it then probably move forward.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Silber, BMO Capital Markets.
Jeffrey M. Silber - BMO Capital Markets U.S.
I wanted to shift gears a bit and talk about the regulatory environment. I know, luckily, it's not really been an issue for your company.
But if I remember correctly, you were about to make a visit down to D.C. after the last call.
Can you just update us on some of the conversations you had there?
Brian E. Mueller
Yes, it was mainly information. There is -- what we are doing is so different than what is going on in most of the private for-profit education sector that we thought it was important to make sure that we got around and talked to as many people as possible, given that the Higher Ed Reauthorization Act is up, and there's a lot -- there's some discussion forming around it.
Generally speaking, the discussions went well. We've really, really focused on inviting people to visit campus because when they visit our campus, they see our investments in classrooms and in laboratories and technology.
And when they talk to our students and they realize that the average incoming GPA is now 3.5 or a little bit higher, they spend time with our faculty, they begin to realize that the investments that we are making in higher ed are going to have a tremendous impact in the state of Arizona and the Southwest and that there's a way to offer -- people keep saying to me, "Why are you making these investments in buildings and laboratories and classrooms and isn't this thing going the way of technology?" And what I say to them is the residential experience for traditional students is more important than it's ever been.
And if you come down here and visit our campus, you'll realize that. It's just that it's not sustainable at $50,000 a year, but when they come down here and realize that our students are getting this experience at $7,800 a year and $6,500 for room and board, then they begin to understand why it's so important to get behind this.
The governor of the 2 states, senators and all of our local politicians are visiting campus frequently. And they walk around and they see hundreds of Latino students from our immediate neighborhood on our campus going for very, very low tuition rates, and it has an impact on their perception of us as an investment-based or for-profit institution.
So we're trying to get people to understand that this can be a winning proposition for everybody involved, that students can get very low tuition, high-quality education. It can be at no expense to the taxpayer and our investors can get a reasonable return and that, that formula is possible.
And so that was mostly a discussion-based thing, and a lot of questions were answered. And I think it helped people realize that there is a model out there that can work.
Jeffrey M. Silber - BMO Capital Markets U.S.
That's great to hear. You had also discussed earlier about some expansion or moving into degrees around the STEM area.
Are you planning a major investment in that area? And what do you think that will cost?
Brian E. Mueller
There will be some expense from a capital perspective, and we've got that already inserted into our CapEx expenditure plans. We are really spending a lot of time with some very high-quality engineering programs in the high schools in our area, trying to understand the outcomes that they are currently achieving in those programs.
And then, we want to build on those programs in the engineering and technology areas as we develop them at Grand Canyon. We want to develop a program that's very, very meaningful, but is one in which it's integrated with what's going on in the secondary school so that we can get students out, get them educated and get them out in the workforce for as little money and as short a time period as possible.
And so starting with a blank slate, we think we have a chance to do that. There is going to be some CapEx investment, but it's not -- it's already built into what our plans are.
Jeffrey M. Silber - BMO Capital Markets U.S.
All right, great. If I could just sneak in one numbers question.
Dan, just so I understand, the reclassification on the income statement side, you took the old selling and promotional line item and basically broke it out into 3 buckets. Is that correct?
Daniel E. Bachus
That's correct.
Jeffrey M. Silber - BMO Capital Markets U.S.
All right. And are we going to get the quarterly breakout from last year?
Is that -- I haven't had a chance to look at the Q. [indiscernible]
Daniel E. Bachus
. Yes, it's all in the 10-Q already.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Tim Connor with William Blair.
Timo Connor
On the engineering, IT programs, I know you just started to get into it a little bit, but what types of degrees -- what types of specific programs and then the jobs that these graduates would eventually -- so how do you imagine that now?
Brian E. Mueller
We really haven't decided on which programs, particularly in engineering. We are forming an advisory committee that's going to consist of high-level, C-level kinds of people from the major companies -- major industries that exist in the Southwest.
And it's going to be out of that advisory committee, those meetings and what's going on. We're also going to take some people that are in the secondary school system in Arizona and make them part of the advisory committee so that we are making sure that we tie together the efforts of the secondary school system and the efforts of the industries in our local economy.
We want to be in the middle of those 2 and help tie those together. So haven't really decided on the specific programs yet, but I would say within 6 months, we probably will.
Timo Connor
Okay. And then in online, has the mix of lead sources changed recently?
You mentioned being a little bit more selective on the program side. Where is the mix of lead sources right now just broadly?
And then how does that compare with where it was a few years ago?
Brian E. Mueller
Organic searches are really going up. So between -- and that's being driven primarily by the TV ad campaigns and the other outreach efforts on our campus.
And so we -- more and more, we're moving in the direction of traditional media and using the brand of -- the other branded programs that we have on our campus to drive organic searches so that we're less dependent on the lead aggregators. And so we haven't broken that out for people from a resilience standpoint, but it's going in the direction that we want it to.
Operator
Your final question comes from the line of Trace Urdan with Wells Fargo.
Trace A. Urdan - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
I wanted to start asking -- this is following up on Jeff's question about the new programs. Can you give us a sense of what kind of timing we're looking at there?
And are you looking at rolling those programs out both online and on-ground? Or will there be a staged rollout?
Brian E. Mueller
From an engineering standpoint, we're looking at some time in 2015, if everything would go well, and we're looking primarily ground programs. I think there are some IT programs that we could deliver online, but the engineering programs will all be on ground.
Trace A. Urdan - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
Okay. And I know that there was some talk a while back about your religious studies program.
I wondered if it's worth commenting on the growth trends there and whether that, that program has any potential to move online.
Brian E. Mueller
Yes, it does. We have a newly formed college, the College of Theology.
We moved it out of the Liberal Arts school -- out of Liberal Arts College, and we are looking for a dean. And once we've located a dean, we are in the process of building out programs, but that will be accelerated.
In fact, we'll have a Master's of Divinity program here at some point. And so the potential for the College of Theology is much greater than what we are currently experiencing, but it's kind of by plan, we want to get a dean in place and put together a strategy with that person in place and then we'll be a little bit more aggressive about marketing that.
Trace A. Urdan - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
Okay, very good. And then 2 more questions.
Do you guys have any -- or how many international students do you have, if any? And do you do anything from a marketing standpoint to try to attract international students to the ground campus?
Brian E. Mueller
Good question. We've been asked about that a lot.
We don't currently do much from that standpoint. There are certain countries that have large populations of -- a growing Christian population that are looking for Christian universities, South Korea would be one in particular.
And that's something that we'll take a look at. We don't have any strong reason to move in that direction immediately, but from a future perspective, we will probably look at that.
It's a natural for what we're doing, but there's really no need for us to do it in the short term.
Trace A. Urdan - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
Okay. And then I'm pretty sure I know the answer to this question, but I'll ask it anyway.
A bunch of the schools that do have a substantial amount of traditional high school students coming in, I think, are meeting with a fair amount of resistance from high schools at the moment because of the negative publicity that has surrounded the sector. I'm wondering what your experience has been in terms of being able to make presentations or speak to high school students.
Brian E. Mueller
No, that -- most of that is not impacting us at all. We get students on campus, families on campus and we get high school guidance counselors and even associate -- assistant principals and principals on campus, and we give them campus tours and they look at the potential of their graduates coming here and studying in really state-of-the-art brand-new laboratories.
And 50% of the students are studying in the hard sciences. We have the state's largest cadaver lab.
And so when you think -- when they look at the new laboratories, the new classrooms, the brand-new dormitories, the new eating facilities, they get very excited about the potential, especially when they realize that they're going to get all these with an average class size of 20 students for an average of about $7,800 a year. So the word about that is spreading rapidly.
And with all the challenges that are being faced by state university systems, this has become a very attractive option. What we have to do is simply get them on campus because, typically, a middle class family or a lower middle class family will automatically dismiss the potential of being able to go to a private university because it's just not affordable.
When they realize how affordable this is, the word spreads through schools pretty rapidly. We have a school here, Valley Christian High School, who had 90 students in their graduating class last year, and 60 of those students came to Grand Canyon.
And we've got other Christian schools where literally 50% of their graduating classes are coming here. And so we have not experienced much of that at all.
Trace A. Urdan - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
Okay, great. And largest -- the state's largest cadaver lab, I think you guys might want to think about putting that higher in your investor presentation.
Brian E. Mueller
It's interesting, when I give campus tours, I always ask if people would like to stop in, and most of the time, I get a negative response to that. But interestingly enough, we have a Science Day here for high school students, and we get up to 4,000 students that come.
And the biggest reason they come to that science day is because they want to be into that lab. Most undergraduate science programs don't allow students to really have access to a cadaver lab, and we want to get them started with those dead people as early as possible.
Brian M. Roberts
We have reached the end of our first quarter conference call. We appreciate your time and interest in Grand Canyon Education.
If you still have questions, please contact either myself, Dan Bachus or Bill Jenkins. Thank you very much.
Operator
That does conclude today's conference call. You may now disconnect.