YOU ARE DOWNLOADING DOCUMENT

Please tick the box to continue:

Transcript
Page 1: Innovative Scholarship Models

Innovative Scholarship Models:

How Florida Philanthropy is Addressing the Needs of Today’s

Students

Page 2: Innovative Scholarship Models

Paul Perrault

Vice President & Director of Research & Evaluation

Helios Education Foundation

Page 3: Innovative Scholarship Models

Panel

Malaina MoteScholarships Coordinator Southwest Florida Community Foundation

Ray LarsenVice President for Collective Impact

Heart of FL United Way

Chuck TiernanDirector, Community Impact & Director, LEAP NetworkCommunity Foundation of Tampa Bay

Page 4: Innovative Scholarship Models

DESTINATION: GRADUATIONCentral Florida CAN Persistence Program

Ray Larsen

Page 5: Innovative Scholarship Models

The Central Florida CAN

Page 6: Innovative Scholarship Models

“To help at-risk students overcome nonacademic barriers in order to stay in school and complete their degree”

Our Mission

Page 7: Innovative Scholarship Models

The Model

Page 8: Innovative Scholarship Models

Why Do Students Ask for Help?

Metrics

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Reasons for EmergecyAssistance Requests

Page 9: Innovative Scholarship Models

Housing37%

Tuition Costs17%

Internet & Utilities

17%

Transportation13%

Textbooks12%

Testing2%

Childcare1%

Other1%

Types of Needs & Requests

Metrics

Page 10: Innovative Scholarship Models

10

Achieving Results

798 students assisted

83% persistence rate

Compared to:

➢ 71% of all Seminole State College students

➢ 68% of all low-income students

➢ 61% of low-income students in crisis

Page 11: Innovative Scholarship Models

11

Impacting Lives

GIVE. ADVOCATE. VOLUNTEER. LIVE UNITED

Page 12: Innovative Scholarship Models

Moving Forward

Page 13: Innovative Scholarship Models

Thank You!

Page 14: Innovative Scholarship Models

Panel

Malaina MoteScholarships Coordinator Southwest Florida Community Foundation

Ray LarsenVice President for Collective Impact

Heart of FL United Way

Chuck TiernanDirector, Community Impact & Director, LEAP NetworkCommunity Foundation of Tampa Bay

Page 15: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation

A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

Page 16: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation:A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

Our Goal:

Make our scholarship process as accessible and equitable as possible

Page 17: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation:A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

• Our idea of today’s Student

• Access vs. Attainment

• Reality of inequities in attainment

• Prioritization of personal demands

• Single parent homes

• First generation students

• Immigrant parents

• Parent’s who refuse to help

Page 18: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation:A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

• Outreach!

✓Engage

✓Prepare

✓Encourage

Share tips, pointers and resources with students to ensure they are most prepared for the scholarship application.

Page 19: Innovative Scholarship Models

Scholarship Applications

• One Online Application– Application Requirements

• At least one Letter of Recommendation

• High School Transcript

• 500-word Personal Essay

• FAFSA Form

• ACT or SAT Score Report

• Application and uploads are submitted online.

• Using technology to filter out scholarships a student is eligible for.

• Provide an online tutorial that includes helpful instructions.

Page 20: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation:A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

FutureMaker’s FAFSA first! Campaignwww.futuremakerscoalition.com/fafsafirst

Page 21: Innovative Scholarship Models

White

52%

Hispanic

19%

Black

14%

Asian

2%

Mixed Race

12%

Did not Say

1%

White Hispanic Black

2018 Applicants: Race Reported on Student’s

Application

Basic Demographics:

Page 22: Innovative Scholarship Models

Basic Demographics:

White

62%

Hispanic

15%

Black

17%

Asian

5%

Did Not

Say

1%

White Hispanic Black

Asian Did Not Say

2015 Recipient: Race Reported on Student’s

Application

2018 Recipient: Race Reported on Student’s

Application

White

51%

Black

18%

Hispanic

14%

Asian

2%

Mixed

Race

13%

Did Not

Say

2%

White Black Hispanic

Asian Mixed Race Did Not Say

Page 23: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation:A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

• Scholarship Reviewer Recruitment

• Training

• Quality over Criteria

• Three Scores per applicant

Review

Process

Page 24: Innovative Scholarship Models

Southwest Florida Community Foundation:A Scholarship Model Focused on Equity & Access

Page 25: Innovative Scholarship Models

Contact Me

Malaina Mote

Southwest Florida Community Foundation

Scholarship Coordinator

239-274-5900

[email protected]

Page 26: Innovative Scholarship Models

Panel

Malaina MoteScholarships Coordinator Southwest Florida Community Foundation

Ray LarsenVice President for Collective Impact

Heart of FL United Way

Chuck TiernanDirector, Community Impact & Director, LEAP NetworkCommunity Foundation of Tampa Bay

Page 27: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE Scholarship

Paving a Pathway to Success

Page 28: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: The Program

USF + 8 State Colleges

Seamless Pathway into the Major at USF

Co-Advising

Access to USF facilities, events, activities every year

Page 29: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: The Partners

Page 30: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: The Benefits

Clear View of Coursework Necessary

No lost time & money on unnecessary classes

Easier to tell that student is staying on track

Page 31: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: The ScholarshipUpdates within LEAP Tampa Bay led to focused

discussion – Vision was transparent

FUSE Program was already set up for students to complete efficiently – attractive to funding partners

Collaboration was already happening – now collaborate with $$ on table

Page 32: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: The Scholarship Process

HCC & USF sketched out how to best help students -then discussed how the pieces fit

Scholarship distribution - embodying the spirit of FUSE

Multi-Institutional future required neutral “convener” -Community Foundation of Tampa Bay

Page 33: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: The Scholarship “Spirit”

Scholarships to PELL eligible students with 20 credits completed “on path”

FUSE emphasizes staying on path – distributions based on credit attainment

State/Comm. Coll. - $500 at 20 credits – then $500 for every 10 = $2,500

USF - $1,500 at 30 credits, then $1,500 again with next 30 credits

$5,500 available total – can be used for “costs of attendance”

Page 34: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: Bringing the Vision HomeTransparency via LCAN brought funding partners to the table

from the start

Short-term: Pilot at the “founding” schools – work out the kinks

Long-term: Broaden with the process in place – new partner schools will support sustainability through collaborative fund development

Page 35: Innovative Scholarship Models

FUSE: Scholarship To DateFirst donors – USAmeriBank Foundation & Helios Education

Foundation – committed $1.5 million with another $1 million in matching available

Raised another $110,000 before we’ve even finished our collaterals, including our first individual donor

Just granted our first 10 scholarships –expect 50+ more in Summer

Page 36: Innovative Scholarship Models

Questions

Page 37: Innovative Scholarship Models

Innovative Scholarship Models:

How Florida Philanthropy is Addressing the Needs of Today’s

Students


Related Documents