KALAMAZOO--A five-year, $500,000 grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation will help boost the college success rate of former foster care youth who are enrolled in a groundbreaking program launched last fall at Western Michigan University.
The grant, announced at today's WMU Board of Trustees meeting, will support WMU's Foster Care Initiative in Higher Education/Seita Scholars Program, which is designed to combat historically low rates of college attendance and graduation rates among young people who have aged out of the foster care system. Such young people often have no family or support system to help them transition to college.
WMU's foster care initiative
The WMU program, which was originally conceived to serve about 15 to 20 students, began with seed money from the University in fall 2008 and attracted more than 50 students who qualified for admission. Designed as a model for other colleges and universities to emulate, the WMU program has become the nation's largest and most inclusive higher education outreach to former foster care youth.
"We are grateful for the Kellogg Foundation's support, which will allow us to continue our work and be even more effective as we bring this underserved population of young people into the University setting," says WMU President John M. Dunn. "As an institution, we've made a commitment to nurture these students, ensure they have the opportunity to realize their tremendous potential and allow our state and nation to benefit from their talents."
Grant to support student success
The Kellogg Foundation funding will allow the program to hire a full-time, dedicated program director for a five-year period. That person will assume responsibility for the initiative's most critical needs going forward, including:
- Outreach and recruitment
- Assisting students in the college entry process
- Ensuring well-being and retention of admitted students
- Assisting students as they succeed and transition to career placement