San Antonio College
is one of nine community colleges in the nation, and the only community
college in Texas, selected to establish a pilot program to support
low-income, underrepresented students to attain high-tech degrees.
The colleges are part of a 2004 initiative launched by MESA USA,
an award-winning education program, and Hewlett-Packard (HP).
"We are honored to be selected for this program," said
Dr. Robert E. Zeigler, President of San Antonio College. He added, "This
will fit well with our on-going efforts to attract and retain more
students in our engineering, math and science programs.
"It is a great accomplishment to be the first college from
Texas accepted to participate in this national program," said
Dr. Dan Dimitriu, Coordinator of Engineering, noting that the MESA
Program supports educationally disadvantaged students throughout
the education pipeline to excel in math and science and go on to
attain degrees in engineering, science and math fields. He added, "It
will provide our students with a wealth of information and guidance
to help them achieve their goals."
The selected community colleges will establish pilot programs based
on the successful MESA Community College Program, with support from
HP through its 2004 Diversity in Engineering Grant initiative. The
purpose of the program is to increase recruitment, retention and
transfer of underrepresented community college students from urban
and rural communities throughout the country.
MESA, which stands for Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement,
is a national program that supports educationally disadvantaged students
to excel in math and science and to attain degrees in engineering,
science and math fields. The program is currently active on 30 community
college campuses.
In 2001, Innovations In American Government, an initiative of the
Ford Foundation and the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University,
named MESA one of the top five innovative public programs in the
nation. In 2000, the White House honored MESA for outstanding mentorship
of underrepresented students in math, engineering and science.
San Antonio College has several on-going programs to encourage students
to pursue engineering and science-related higher education. These
include transfer agreements for engineering students to continue
their studies at Texas A&M University-Kingsville (TAMUK) or University
of Texas in San Antonio, new junior-level engineering courses taught
at SAC in conjunction with TAMUK, a summer EDGE Program to prepare
10th, 11th, and 12th grade high school students for college-level
work, and a $2,000 META scholarship funded by the National Science
Foundation for qualified students majoring in engineering, math,
science and technology.
For more information, contact Dr. Dan Dimitriu at 785-6049.
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