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Helping Foster Care Grads Move On to CollegePublished: December 13, 2004by: Cecilia Garcia
For young people in care who successfully complete their high school educations, there is help available to bring college within reach, through a variety of state and federal programs, along with privately funded efforts. A New Source of Tuition Help
In the first year of funding, North Carolina received $737,000 in federal ETV funds. It was part of McAllister’s job to come up with ways to administer the program. In total, $42 million was allocated to the 50 states, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia for fiscal year 2003 (October 1, 2003 – September 30, 2004), the first year for the Chafee ETV program. The program requires each state to come up with a 20 percent match in non-federal funds. “I went to a conference in late 2002 and heard Eileen McCaffery talk about ways to come with the 20 percent match that had not occurred to me,” McAllister said. Eileen McCaffery is the executive director of the Orphan Foundation (OFA). “I immediately tracked her down after that session and talked to her about working with my state to administer the program. I had no staff to help, and I had to ask myself how I would manage this program by myself.” Growing Pains A Good Fit For more than twenty years OFA has been working with foster youth, providing scholarships, mentoring and a special touch of tender, loving care. Every year in the fall, OFA sends care packages to foster youth in college. (Connect for Kids looked at the care package program in Small Things That Mean A Lot) The organization understands the importance of connectedness to young people for whom disconnectedness has been a way of life, and brings that sensibility to its Chafee ETV work.
“It was a learning process for all of us,” McAllister said.” When some of my social workers pointed to case management problems, like checking the status of a particular foster kid’s application, OFA addressed them immediately and improved their process.” Using the Web
Those who are eligible then fill out a “self budget” form that outlines their current expenses and estimates what they will need in order to attend college. That way, funds for tuition and fees can be supplemented with other support, like child care assistance for a young mother. Raheem said that OFA knows from its long experience offering scholarship assistance that these would-be college students have needs not related directly to the costs of a college education, but that must be met for the student to succeed. The form “gives us a much more complete financial picture because it reveals expenses not noted elsewhere.”
North Carolina’s McAllister is confident in the foundation’s ability to continue administering the state’s Chafee ETV program. “OFA has a history of working with scholarship programs, it’s national in scope, which is good for the North Carolina foster youth,” McAllister said. “They have great relations with foster youth, and frankly, they’re able to do it for cheap.” OFA is demonstrating that a smart and strategic use of technology ensures that the funds for the Chafee ETV program are used in the manner for which they are intended – getting more foster youth the education and training they need to make better lives as adults. Joseph Rivers would be proud.
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