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News & Events
SAC
Receives $300,000 Grant to Implement Gateway to College©
Dropout Recovery Program
For
Immediate Release
November 10, 2006
Contact: Deborah Martin, San Antonio College, Public
Relations
(210) 733-2149
dmartin@accd.edu

Pictured here during SAC’s
news conference announcing the $300,000 grant from
Portland Community College to implement the Gateway
to College©
dropout recovery program are: (l-r) Kevin Brown, director
of personnel and public information, Alamo Heights
ISD; Dr. Thomas B. Baynum, vice president of academic
affairs, Palo Alto College, which also hosts a Gateway
to College© program; Dr. Robert E. Zeigler, San
Antonio College president ; Laurel Dukehart, director,
Gateway to College© National Network, Portland
Community College; Sylvia Reyna, an associate superintendent
for San Antonio ISD; and Dr. Daniel R. Derrico, vice
chancellor for administration, Alamo Community College
District.

During SAC’s news conference
announcing the $300,000 grant from Portland Community
College to implement the Gateway to College©
dropout recovery program, Laurel Dukehart (left),
director, Gateway to College© National Network,
Portland Community College welcomes Dr. Robert E.
Zeigler, San Antonio College president, to the network
with a gift of Gateway to College umbrellas, indicating
the rainy seasons to be encountered when attending
training sessions in Portland.
Photos
by Leonard Ziegler
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
San
Antonio College today announced a $300,000 grant to
implement the Gateway to College© program, a
national model developed by Portland Community College.
The dropout recovery program at San Antonio College
will work in partnership with five participating school
districts – Alamo Heights ISD, Comal ISD, Northeast
ISD, Northside ISD and San Antonio ISD.
Gateway
to College© is designed for young adults ages
16 to 20 who dropped out of high school. The program
enables them to earn a high school diploma while simultaneously
earning college credits toward an associate degree
or certificate, and pays for student tuition and books.
A generous three-year grant of $300,000 from Portland
Community College (PCC) will help SAC with the planning
and startup costs of Gateway to College©.
PCC is a national intermediary in the Early College
High School Initiative (ECHSI) that is funded by The
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Funding partners
include the Carnegie Corporation of New York, The
Ford Foundation and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. The
ECHSI provides traditionally underserved students
with a rigorous, college-level curriculum and the
opportunity to earn significant college credit. Gateway
to College, the only recovery initiative for out-of-school
youth, expects to launch 17 programs by the fall of
2007.
“Gateway
to College helps recapture students who have dropped
out. It brings them back to finish high school with
the bonus of earning college credit,” said Dr.
Robert Zeigler, San Antonio College president. “Many
students who thought their only choice was to drop
out will now have a chance to come back with more
opportunities to succeed."
SAC’s
Gateway to College© program is scheduled to begin
in fall 2007, with approximately 50 students from
the five participating school districts. Because this
is a population at high risk for dropout, students
will be grouped as a learning community during their
first semester, called the Foundation Term. The learning
community structure will allow them to be enrolled
in courses with their high school peers as they build
their academic and personal skills and prepare for
college courses. After successfully completing the
Foundation Term, students will transition to classes
with the regular college population. Program supervisors
at SAC anticipate the program to grow to 300 students
by fall 2009.
Though
classes will be held at SAC, the students will be
enrolled in their home school districts, which will
receive state funding for the students. The schools
will in turn give a part of their allocation per student
to SAC, making the program self-supporting, costing
the school districts what it would have cost them
to have the students on their campuses.
“Gateway
to College falls in line with our college mission
and goals as a community college, specifically related
to under-served populations,” Zeigler said.
“This is an opportunity for SAC to contribute
in that way.”
The Gateway
to College© model developed by PCC promotes student
success and readiness for an adult learning environment.
The program offers intensive literacy development
and maintains rigorous academic standards while also
providing individualized support in an educational
setting on a college campus. A team of caring teachers
and resource specialists who have experience and interest
in helping at-risk youth will provide guidance and
instruction.
For more
information about the Gateway to College© program
at San Antonio College, contact Ruben Flores, dean
of Evening, Weekend and Distance Education, (210)
733-2475, or visit www.gatewaytocollege.org. For information
on the ECHSI, visit www.earlycolleges.org.
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