Good afternoon, and thank you for joining Grand Canyon Education’s First Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Conference Call. GCE had a very good quarter, exceeding enrollment expectations, exceeding consensus revenue estimates at mid $0.06 producing a $0.04 beat in adjusted diluted earnings per share to consensus. Given how most of higher education is coming out of COVID years, these are excellent results. Most importantly, GCU online produced significant new enrollment growth for the third consecutive quarter over prior year, and that momentum is expected to continue into the second quarter of 2023. I want to begin again by taking a step back and explaining why this is happening and briefly over review what has happened since the GCE-GCU transaction took place almost 5 years ago. I’ve often said that the past [indiscernible] small in Elite has won a day in higher education, especially areas like U.S. News & World Report rankings. In the future, it will be institutions who are large, scalable and flexible in how they offer higher education. We expect to impact adults across the life span using technology to build platforms that take into account the life situation of the student and the nature of the content deals that need to be learned. GCE has invested approximately $300 million, producing its old learning management and administrative system that allows it and its partners to manage our 7,000 old-time and adjunct factory numbers 112,600 students and over 320 academic programs, emphases and certificates across 4 delivery platforms. This system has automated processes including admissions, transport collection and evaluation schedule building, financial aid processing at the recruit fatty assignment and payroll content acquisition, assessing learning outcomes, student teacher placement, counseling and social work internships and the list goes on. The administrative capability of the system allows a institutes to focus on the learning, which is still in a small group, instructor-led process that is highly interpersonal, collaborative, focused on writing, critical thinking and problem solving and produces outstanding outcomes. GCE currently employs approximately 4,000 full-time professionals and approximately 1,500 new workers as it continues to build out its capabilities to grow probity students, programs and delivery platforms for its university partners. Leveraging his infrastructure has allowed GCE’s partners to expand programs that are critical to the economy, maintain tuition levels in the period of rapid tuition increases across the country and make ad test a higher education of portable to all socioeconomic classes of markets without any burden on the taxpayer. In the almost 5 years since GCE has become a service provider, it is health is partners accomplish the following: in that time, GCA’s Grand Canyon University graduate 130,276 students. 35,815 in education, including 16,537 first-time teachers at a time teacher shortages have created a national crisis. 37,685 in nursing and health care professions including 1,767 pre-licensure nurses at a time when there is a huge shortage of nurses. 44,863 in College of Humanities and social sciences, including thousands in counseling and social work, where there are also huge shortages. Intelligence business has become one of the largest business schools in America and has produced 22,151 graduates. The College of Science, Engineering and Technology has grown by 183% and provided 4,539 graduates. The [indiscernible] College and college of Theology also continued to grow. The numbers that I have just cited have all happened in the almost 5 years since GCU has become a nonprofit institution and GCE has become an education service provider. Our partnership with GCU has given us the ability to invest $576 million additional in academic and residential life infrastructure for its ground traditional campus, bringing a total investment to almost $2 billion. Currently, the Kansas is ranked 16 in the country by niche.com. Very importantly, GCE has assisted GCU opening 138 new academic programs and the seasoned certificates during the almost 5 years. 12.9% of the new students enrolled in the first quarter enrolled in these new programs. During this time, GCU has not raised tuition on its ground traditional campus with only nominal increases in certain programs online. As a result, GCU schemes take out less debt than the average state university student. GCU students take out only 50% in parent loan amounts compared to students at our 3 state universities. GCU students have a 1.5% cohort default rate on student loans compared to the almost recently released national average of 2.3% and has a 90/10 calculation of 66.2% for GCU’s hard financials. In addition, GCU accumulated over $400 million in cash and investment reserves while going through with annual salary increases every year for all faculty and staff compared to the declining enrollments and negative financial trends in higher ed across the country that accelerated during cover this model has produced significant revolver results for GCU, the state of Arizona and countries. Grand Canyon University was also ranked as the third best employer in Arizona in the 2022 Forbes America’s Best Employers by state report. During this same time period, GC has established 25th additional university partnerships. These partnerships, along with our partnerships with GCU have created 36 locations to produce health care professionals, especially [indiscernible] prepared nurses. This is extremely important work since the country is expected to need 1.3 million additional versus in the next 5 years alone. A number of existing new existing and new partners will eventually lead to 80 migrations across the country. Since January 2019, 93,018 students have graduated from our other university partners, ABS and OTA programs. I wanted to include this brief summary because there is currently a lot of discussion about the future of higher education. Regardless of political or ideological positions, the discussion focused on where the economy is going and where the new jobs and careers are going to be. Models that can scale and offer opportunities for access to all socioeconomic plus a new market at no expense to the taxpayer should be supportive. Critics point to the revenue share model of bad to Universities. The past few years have proven among and we expect in the next year, this will become even more apparent, inflationary periods like the 1 we are currently experiencing or when demand declined as it has, GCE as a service provider absorbs the majority of the financial risk and our expertise, technology and processes have a lot of our university partners to continue to back during challenging times. Now I will review the 4 pillars of delivery platforms as Grand Canyon Education. First, GCU’s traditional campus saw an increase of 8.9% in new students in the fall 2022 over prior year, an increase of 8% in total ground traditional enrollment and an increase of 10.5% in residential enrollment. Approximately 70% of ground traditional students live on campus. The average income in GPA for the 2022, ‘23 class flow is 3.6 and the prestigious [indiscernible] has grown 8.3% year-over-year with average incoming GPAs of 4.1. Traditional campus spring enrollment was slightly better than expected due to better-than-expected fall to spring retention. These are remarkable results given the fact that undergraduate enrollment declined by 4.2% nationally between fall 2020 and fall 2022, where during the same period of GCU’s ground traditional enrollment increased by 18.3%. We expect fall 2023 new enrollments to be between 10,000 and 11,000. The quality and the relevancy of GCU’s academic programs, below class sizes in support of this fact that has left a 6% turnover rate, the quality of counseling services to 20 advisory Board of over 500 companies represented who are creating internships to employing the opportunities for GCU students in a very affordable tuition, which hasn’t been raised in 15 years are all important contributing factors. I also want to mention unlike national trend over 2,600 of the 9,300 fall to 2022 new students this year were first-gen college steer. The average incoming GPAs of these first gen is 3.55 or almost identical to the incoming class overhaul. These students are largely from lower socioeconomic strata, but they’re enrolling at the university because of carry forward tuition rate is going directly against the national trend, and it’s a very positive part with GCU, GCE story. As I said before, in the fall of 2023, we are anticipating between 10,000 and 11,000 new students. We are under construction on 2 new residence halls that will increase the number of bedtime campus by 1,500. The number of new students will ultimately depend on the retention of continuing students and their desire to remain on campus and the competitive environment given the trends we have discussed previously, less high school graduates and thus graduates directly going to college. Pillar 2 working in all cows attending GCU on long, as with traditional students attending universities across the country, 2021 saw a downturn in working in all students sitting online. Unlike with traditional students attending GCU’s campus, we experienced a downturning online students as well. D.C. has worked with 2 main strategies to advance the downturn, and we are now seeing positive growth again. Number one, we have invested in B2B strategies and are well timed for this post-COVID period. The supply and demand, at least in the short run for educated labor has split since the country has reopened. We are working with over 26,850 industry partner locations in K12 education, health care financial services, social service agencies, technology and engineering companies, military bases, et cetera, developing custom strategic initiatives that are helping organizations grow their path for midsize. The number of new students that started through these strategies grew 24% over the prior year in the first quarter. Number two, GCE continues to work with GCU to roll out new and relevant programs. Since the transition almost 5 years ago, GCU has rolled out 13 programs and the season certificate, 12.9% of new students enrolled in these programs in this latest quarter. This has resulted in the first quarter new online enrollments growing in the low teens over the prior year, and we are currently projecting new enrollment growth in the second quarter of 2023 to be similar high single digit to low teens. Based on these trends, we returned to total online growth this quarter. It is important to note that this return to positive growth is going to accomplish with no loss of spread in the quality online student body and as a result, no degradation of the quality metrics, including good graduation rates, low cohort default rates and continued low debt amount student their accounts. We anticipate new enrollment growth to again be in the high single digit, low teens in the second quarter, and then we’ll begin to return to our long-term objective of mid-single-digit growth in the back half of the year as times get much tougher. This should allow us to grow total enrollment on a year-over-year basis in the low to mid-single digits by the end of the year. I would like to Discuss GCE’s third pillar of health care partnerships. Short term, COVID has had a negative impact. Hospitals were extremely busy preoccupied with COVID patients in many clinical placement opportunities for cancer. Despite these very significant challenges, many instructional assignments required one-on-one clinical interaction in the hospital were replaced by simulations. Some of our university partners requested that we reduced the cohort sizes due to concerns about the lack of clinical capacity in some of the new sites that we hope to open, especially in large markets, have been pushed back to the fall of 2023 or ‘24. Although positive signs are emerging on this front, the tight labor market has had a significant impact on the FIFO students interested in record into nursing. When we acquired Orbis in 2019, their partnership, we’re predominantly focused on post-factoring students, those that have already completed Bachelor’s program and having a complete vascular degree was a requirement to start in the ABSN program. Students that did not have a bachelor’s degree were turned away. Today, the majority of the students interested in recurring into nursing has not completed a bachelor’s degree. Thus, we have been working with our partners and their state nursing boards to adjust these programs to allow students with 60-plus college credits to gain admits into the ABSN program. In addition, in partnership with GCU, we have created a much less expensive and more efficient way for these students or students that did not have bachelor’s vascular degree but don’t have the science degree to complete the course what necessary to start in the ABSN program. These challenges have in the short run caused some of our mature locations that we’re at capacity to shrink in some of our newer locations do not grow as fast as we would have expected, while other mature locations remain at or near capacity, and some newer locations are meeting our new enrollment expectations. We believe that these strategies will reaccelerate growth. As we work through this, we will be much more selective in the new locations that we opened. We planned to open 2 new sites with GCU in the Venice area, in the fall of 2023 and our hope for that we will be opening a new site with a new partner in Southern California in the fall as well, although permitting issues continue to hold up our ability to start construction on that site. We also plan to open a couple of smaller sites with new partners that were committed to previously. I’m very pleased to announce that the GCU locations grew 27.2% year-over-year from 283 to 360 students. This is extremely important because GC would ultimately like 40 of our 80 locations to be GCU locations. This relationship is good financially for GCU, but it is also good for GCE giants cash footprint and brand recognition. The essence discussing program and its proven ability to scale. As with GCU’s traditional campus the long-term environment is very positive for these GCE health care partnerships for the following reasons: number one, the country need 1.3 million additional versus the next 5 years alone. Nursing programs are very expensive to operate and given the financial pressures facing many universities, they will be unable to invest the dollars we will take to scale the program. Number two, GCE has the capital to invest in the continued build-out to eventually 80 locations. Number three, in addition to the runway of 8 locations, up from 36 locations currently our enrollment budget for the coming year is only 50% of the actual spots that exist today. 50% short haul this was largely due to the lack of efficient and highly supportive prerequisite course environment. Regulatory issues, creating slowdowns in opening plant locations and the lack of clinical placements to COVID issues. Most important, there are now over 1,200 students in GCU’s accelerated online science courses, preparing to earn spot in 1 of our 36 locations. These are 8-week courses taught mainly by full-time fast members and provide tremendous academic support services. There are multiple start opportunities on an every month basis. We expect a 100 number to continue to grow and be a leading indicator of our ability to reestablish growth on the hybrid campuses. GCE is working hard in investing in new enrollment, simulation, virtual reality and prerequisite strategies to be in future fill all the spots that are available. This is a transitional year for the health care partnerships. However, there is a 10-year runway that is very promising. It creates a winning scenario for students that want into a promising career, health care providers desperately needing professional nurses and universities who want a low-risk way to help solve the nursing shortage, while at the same time creating additional revenue streams. Last, we continue to see good results in our fourth pillar certificate program. We are extremely excited because these programs are desperately need in higher education today. This past September, we launched a certificate program in partnership with GCU’s newly formed Institute for workforce development. This certificate is referring to students for a professional electricians apprenticeship program. This is a 16 credit hour one semester program heavily focused on the mathematical concepts necessary to prepare for our career and an electrician. This program has been designed with a major industry partner who is offering apprenticeship to the student successfully completing this program. This part needs 1,000 electricians for their business in Arizona alone. This partner also indicates that the country is short a minimum 100,000 electricians necessarily complete in building traffic currently underway. Last fall, 300 students apply for this program, we accepted 40 into the program. 39 of 40 students of that program completed their program successfully and the feedback that we have received from our industry partners has been very positive. The additional 200 submitted applications for the spring semester and we accepted another 40 in the spring. 35 of those students completed their program successfully. Once the concept is proven, there is a potential to scale this program in a significant way. We have had many additional industry partners who have expressed interest in participation. Service revenue was $250.1 million for the first quarter of 2023, an increase of $6 million or 2.5% as compared to $244.1 million for the first quarter of 2022. The increase year-over-year in service revenue was primarily due to an increase in GCU traditional campus enrollments and an increase in revenue pushed year-over-year, partially offset by a decrease in hybrid enrollments, primarily students, universities, partners, Occupational Therapy as systems program. Operating income for the 3 months ended March 31, 2023, was $74.5 million, a decrease of $3 million as compared to $77.5 million for the same period of 2022 as we continue to invest to meet our clients’ enrollment goals. The operating margin for the 3 months ended March 31, 2023, was 29.8% and compared to 31.7% for the same period in 2022. Net income increased 2.6% to $59.6 million for the first quarter of 2023, and compared to $58.1 million for the same period in 2022. GAAP diluted income per share for the 3 months ended March 31, 2023, is $1.94. And adjusted, non-GAAP diluted income per share for the 3 months ended March 31, 2023, is $2.04 over consensus estimates. With that, I would like to turn it over to Dan Bachus, our CFO, to give a little more color on 2023, 1st quarter, talk about changes in the income statement, balance sheet and other items as well as to discuss the updated 2023 guidance.