Good afternoon, and thank you for joining Grand Canyon Education's second quarter 2024 conference call. GCE had another strong quarter, producing online enrollment growth of 7.5% and hybrid growth of 12.1% and also continuing to produce strong retention rates, exceeding revenue guidance estimates at midpoint by $4.5 million, producing a $0.17 beat in adjusted diluted earnings per share to consensus while continuing to invest heavily in initiatives for our university partners. Grand Canyon Education and its largest partner, Grand Canyon University as well as GCE's 21 other partners continue to grow enrollments in the midst of declining enrollments at many universities across the country. I want to start by reviewing the reasons that this is happening. There is a vast amount of untapped potential in the American labor force today. The lack of created delivery models by universities is the reason for the untapped potential. The best examples are the huge shortages that exist in nursing, teaching, technology, engineering and cyber security, just to name a few. Expecting every student who has potential in these areas to attend an on-campus setting seriously reduces the size of the potential market. Our success is the result of understanding that people across the lifespan, have unique living situations and the nature of what it is they need to learn varies by academic area. The combination of creative delivery models and relevant programs is driving the interest in what we are doing. We currently deliver 340-plus academic programs, emphases and certificates across five creative delivery platforms. Number one, GCU's traditional ground campus is designed around the needs of 18-year-old high school graduates, who are able to spend three or four years on a college campus, preparing for life and work as adults. Their learning is primarily in physical brick-and-mortar classrooms, in other on-campus venues and in internships in organizations throughout the Greater Phoenix area. Second, GCU's online campus is designed for working adult students who enter the academic programs whose content can be learned totally in an online environment. Third. The third platform is for students who also can't spend three or four years on a college campus, but what they are studying can't be learned totally online. The 80 hybrid locations we are building across the country are for students entering programs where some of the content can be learned online, while a significant part must be learned in a brick-and-mortar laboratory setting. Currently, it is health care programs, specifically nursing and occupational therapy that are offered in those settings, but eventually, we will add additional programs that fit the hybrid technology -- methodology. Our total investment in these settings will exceed $240 million and allow us to teach approximately 50,000 students. The fourth platform is for students who want access to the rapidly expanding trade professions. These are shorter programs in a physical brick-and-mortar setting that combine the real-world work experience with classroom learning. These students after gaining employment can finish their bachelor's degree online. We are developing a fifth platform for students who are 18-year-old high school graduates who want a three or four year college experience, but want to do it in a distance. The reality is higher education needs to move way past the simple dichotomy of either learning on a campus or doing it online. There are vast shortages in areas like teaching and nursing because we lack creative models of delivery, that take into account the student's life situation and the nature of what it is they need to learn. However, to teach these programs at scale and in certain cases at a distance, take significant investment in facilities, technology and personnel. Investments we have made and will continue to make. With that, I'd like to review the results of the four current delivery platforms at Grand Canyon Education. First, the online campus at Grand Canyon University. New starts were up again in the second quarter of 2024, and total enrollment growth continues to be higher than our long-term objectives, up 7.5% over the prior year. The new start growth rate in the low single-digits in the second quarter was an expected deceleration from previous quarters as the year-over-year comp was tough and June had one less undergraduate start than the year prior. Although we expect June enrollments to come in slightly higher than they did. We expected June enrollments to come in slightly higher. July new enrollments were in line with our higher expectations. We still anticipate starts for the third and fourth quarters to be up in the mid- to high single-digits even with the challenging comps. There are many reasons for this strong performance, but I want to highlight four. One, we have stayed hyper focused on opportunities that exist in today's labor market. And since the beginning of the pandemic, GCU has rolled out 148 new programs, emphases and certificates across the 10 colleges. These programs are tied directly to labor market opportunities for students. One of the responses of universities to declining enrollments is to reduce the number of programs they offer. Two, we continue to work with employers directly to address their workforce shortages. This effort is focused on the industries of education, health care, technology, public safety and the military. In the second quarter, new starts from this work increased in the low teens year-over-year. Three, the retention of students in the second quarter went up 50 basis points, which we believe continues to improve because of the relevancy of the programs that students are entering and they're direct tied to the student's career aspirations. Four, GCU has resisted responding to the slower growth during the pandemic by raising tuition significantly, which many institutions have done. Our online net tuition increases since 2018 have averaged approximately 1% per year. Second, the GCU ground campus for traditional students. We currently anticipate new and total traditional campus enrollments to be close to flat year-over-year, in line with the low end of our original expectations. Although this would be a disappointing result given the significant increase year-over-year in Discover GCU visits, this will be much better than what is occurring nationwide. The Department of Education's FAFSA issues in which processing problems in glitches caused major delays in universities receiving the FAFSA data from eligible students. And once they did, millions of forms were found to have errors and needed to be reprocessed, forced almost all universities to push back deadlines. As a result of these delays, the number of FAFSA completions among high school seniors is down significantly, including at GCU. Many are predicting that this will cause overall new enrollment at universities to be down as much as 10% year-over-year. As of today, GCU is up year-over-year as was expected in applications and registrations with students that did not complete a FAFSA, but is down in applications and registrations with students that completed the FAFSA. We continue to register students for the Fall semester, but we anticipate new and total enrollments to be close to flat year-over-year. I want to add some additional color to the traditional campus results. There is a significant change taking place in the attitude of Americans regarding higher education, especially spending four to six years on a college campus. Increasing costs, high debt levels, outdated degree programs and the extreme political unrest on college campuses are all contributing factors. We believe American's value learning and preparing for prosperous careers more than they ever have. Enrollment on campus will be close to flat year-over-year, but total enrollments across all platforms are up. We are doing well and will continue to do well because we are adjusting to the flexibility students will continue to demand from universities. The flexibility we provide through our five platforms will cause total enrollment to continue to rise. Ground campus enrollments have been impacted this year by the FAFSA site problems affecting lower class students and inflationary pressures faced by middle-class students. We anticipate the FAFSA site issues will be resolved for next year's students and are hopeful that inflation will come down. Those two changes, combined with the other marketplace advantages we have, such as the very low price point, very low average debt levels, percent of students completed in less than four years. the relevancy of GCU's expanding academic programs and a $2 billion investment in creating one of the top campus in the country will reaccelerate our growth towards 50,000 students. The new enrollment goal for the ground campus will be up over 15% over new enrollments this year. Third, Grand Canyon Education's hybrid campus had an increase in enrollment year-over-year of 12.1% in the second quarter. New summer enrollments were up approximately 30% year-over-year. The new student growth rate in the Fall for the hybrid pillar will be moderate to high single-digit, excluding closed locations. This is due to much more difficult comps as Fall 2023 is when we started to see significant acceleration of new start growth and due to some of the GCU locations already being at capacity. No growth year-over-year is possible at those locations where significant growth at these locations occurred in previous quarters. There are two main reasons for this strong performance: one, almost all of our active ABSN partners have responded to the younger students interested in ABSN programs by admitting advanced standing students or are in the process of making that change. Students with partially completed degrees haven't accumulated a great deal of debt and are very interested in nursing careers, but didn't have an efficient way to earn the prerequisite science course work. GCU created the science courses and some other Gen Ed courses, they could be delivered online in eight weeks. Students can access those courses from anywhere in the world. There are start opportunities almost every week. These courses have been made very affordable, are taught by experienced faculty, class sizes are low, and there's a tremendous amount of academic support, including an artificial intelligence project that went live in October 2023, which provides students 24/7 access to tutoring. Since implementing these courses, we have already enrolled approximately 9,689 students. We have a waterfall report that allows us to know how students are progressing through their prerequisite courses and when they will be eligible to start at one of our ABSN sites. The success rate of students who successfully entered the ABSN programs is above 90% and the first-time pass rate on the NCLEX exam is approximately 90%. We now have an extremely efficient way to get students academically eligible and prepared to enter the program. The positive results we saw in the fall, spring and summer semesters, we anticipate will continue. There has never been greater interest among potential students for entering the health care professions and specifically nursing. Because of the lower employment rate, the interest has shifted to these younger students who haven't accumulated a great deal of debt completing the Bachelor's degree in another area and are underemployed. Nearly all of our partners have responded positively to the changes needed to serve the advanced standing students. Our goal is still to have 80 locations with our partners with 40 of the locations being GCU locations. Fourth, the Center for Workplace Development at Grand Canyon University. In the 2022-'23 school year, we started 80 students in GCU's electricians pre-apprenticeship program in partnership with companies that are experiencing labor shortages in that area and are excited about hiring GCU's graduates. The program consists of four full credit courses and it runs one semester. 74 students successfully completed the program in the first year. This past school year, we started 233 students in the program, 123 students completed this program in the fall and 82 in the spring of 2024. GCU also has plans to begin offering this program at one of our locations outside of Arizona in the fall of 2024. This past fall, GCU also started 19 students in manufacturing certificate program. GCU is running a small parts manufacturing business on campus that is doing work for some of the major companies in Arizona. These students are attending school for 20 hours a week and then working in the facility as a paid employee for 20 hours. At the end of the semester, they received a manufacturing certificate and became eligible for employment in Arizona's fast-growing manufacturing industry. GCU's growing college of engineering also has students assisting with this project. Once this concept has been successfully proved out, we expect to work with GCU to scale the program and then add others. I started out talking about the relevant programs and creative delivery models that GCE has implemented with its 24 -- 21 partner institutions. In the six years since GCE has become a service provider, it has helped its partners accomplish the following: in that time, GCE has helped Grand Canyon University graduate 169,521 students. 46,251 in education, including 22,465 first-time teachers at a time when teacher shortages have created a national crisis. 46,209 in nursing and health care professions including 2,443 pre-licensure nurses at a time when there is a huge shortage of nurses. 33,689 in the college of humanities and social sciences, including thousands in counseling and social work, where there are also huge shortages. The College of Business has become one of the largest business schools in America, and has produced 29,493 graduates. The College of Science, Engineering and Technology has grown by 225% and provided 6,880 graduates. The Doctoral College, Honors College and College of Theology also continued to grow. In addition, GCE has helped its other partners graduate 17,443 pre-licensure nurses and occupational therapists assistance. The numbers that I have cited all have happened in the past six years since the GCU, GCE transaction and since GCE has become an education services provider. Service revenue was $227.5 million for the second quarter of 2024, an increase of $16.9 million or 8% as compared to the $210.6 million for the second quarter of 2023. The increase year-over-year in service revenue was primarily due to an increase in GCU enrollments of 7%, an increase in university partner enrollments at our off-campus classroom and laboratory sites of 12.1% and an increase in revenue per student year-over-year. Operating income for the three months ended June 30, 2024, was $42.7 million, an increase of $7.3 million as compared to $35.4 million for the same period in 2023. The operating margin for the three months ended June 30, 2024 was 18.8% compared to 16.8% for the three months ended June 30, 2023. Net income increased 20.4% to $34.9 million for the second quarter of 2024 compared to $29 million for the same period in 2023. GAAP diluted income per share for the three months ended June 30, 2024, is $1.19. As adjusted, non-GAAP diluted income per share for the three months ended June 30th is $1.27. With that, I would like to turn it over to Dan Bachus, our CFO, to give a little more color on our 2024 second quarter, talk about changes in the income statements, balance sheet, and other items as well as to discuss the updated 2024 guidance.