$50,000 Walmart-CIC Grant Benefits First-Generation Students
5/21/2010
Lebanon, Ill. — A $50,000 Walmart College Success Award enables McKendree University
to expand its programs and support significantly for first-generation college students
at its Lebanon campus and beyond.
The Council of Independent Colleges (CIC) and the Walmart Foundation awarded substantial
grants this week to 30 non-profit private institutions that represent a wide range
of approaches to working with first-generation students. McKendree is one of 10 CIC
member institutions that received $50,000 awards for projects that are smaller or
more experimental in nature. Twenty other institutions received $100,000 grants. All
award winners have undergraduate enrollments of at least 30 percent first-generation
students among their most recent freshman classes.
“McKendree Firsts,” a two-year project to begin in July, combines academic, personal
and financial support in a holistic approach to educating and supporting first-generation
students. It strengthens and formalizes tutoring and online services available to
traditional students and extends them to non-traditional adult learners, particularly
those in rural communities and on military bases. “McKendree Firsts” will also create
10 new scholarships.
The university hopes to build on the impressive accomplishments of its Student Success
Initiative to improve retention and graduation rates among first-generation students.
“Two key areas of success that have led to our rise in retention rates are increased
faculty interaction and greater financial assistance,” said Dr. Brenda Boudreau, professor
of English and project director. “This project will allow us to target additional
tutoring and scholarship support to first-generation students who often need just
a little extra boost to succeed.”
All McKendree students currently have access to highly qualified tutors, both in person
and online. Through “McKendree Firsts,” the university will expand its Academic Support
Center by hiring more faculty and qualified student tutors—particularly those who
were first-generation students themselves. It will also fully fund the expansion of
its Writing Center by adding a new Coordinator of First-Generation Student Success.
While many of the university’s first-generation students traditionally come from high-need
secondary schools, others are non-traditional adult learners who live in rural Southern
Illinois communities. The Accelerated Instruction with McKendree (AiM) program offers
the opportunity to earn a bachelor’s degree in business administration in five rural
communities: Flora, Kaskaskia, Mt. Vernon, Carterville and Red Bud. Degree programs
are also offered to active and veteran military service members at Scott Air Force
Base and the Radcliff, Ky., campus near Fort Knox; and to adults through e-learning
programs.
To better accommodate these students, the university will expand its academic support
services into an online tutoring environment by creating a “McKendree Firsts” web
site and network. The purchase of additional software will increase capabilities for
web conferencing, teleconferencing, videoconferencingand social networking.
Finally, McKendree will award ten new $1,000 “Walmart and the Council of Independent
Colleges’ McKendree Firsts Scholarships” to first-generation students based upon academic
merit and financial need.
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