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TCC
SELECTED FOR NATIONAL INITIATIVE TO INCREASE STUDENT SUCCESS
New
program – Achieving the Dream – launches this fall at 27 U.S.
community colleges
HAMPTON
ROADS, Va. – (Aug. 26, 2004) – Tidewater Community College has
been selected with 27 community colleges in five states to participate
in Achieving the Dream: Community Colleges Count, a
new initiative to enhance the academic success of low-income and
minority students.
TCC received
a $50,000 investment grant to develop plans for addressing this
challenge, and will be eligible for additional funding for implementation.
Quintin Bullock, provost of TCC’s Norfolk Campus, and Terry Jones,
acting provost for the Portsmouth Campus, head the initiative
for the college.
“Community
colleges are central to the success of this population; our charge
is to offer students the means to reach their dreams, whether
that’s securing good-paying employment or furthering their education,”
says TCC President Deborah DiCroce. “The selection of TCC for
this important initiative points to our leadership in this arena,
while giving us the opportunity to research and re-think how to
raise the bar on student persistence rates.”
Achieving the Dream is
a multi-year initiative funded by
Lumina Foundation for Education and involving several national
partner organizations. The first phase of the initiative will
directly involve the chosen colleges in Florida, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Texas and Virginia. In future years, the initiative
will expand to involve eligible community colleges in additional
states.
“We look
forward to finding and implementing new and innovative ways to
connect our students to the college community, to open more paths
to graduation, good jobs and careers,” says Bullock. “We are taking
up the challenge to create a ‘culture of evidence’ as we examine
statistics and devise data-collection systems.” Recent retention-based
initiatives at TCC include the college’s Title III grant, Creating
the Conditions for Successful Student Achievement: Improving and
Linking Developmental Programs and Student Services; Student Support
TRIO program; the college’s Women’s Center; Bridges Learning Systems
project; and “Beating the Odds,” a mentoring program for male
students.
A team
of national reviewers selected the 27 participating institutions
from among 60 community colleges that submitted proposals. Eligible
colleges are regionally accredited, public, associate degree-granting
institutions. Each college is required to have an enrollment of
at least 33 percent minority students or
50 percent
students who receive government-supported financial aid.
According
to the reviewers, the colleges selected are those that most effectively
demonstrated their commitment to increasing student success and
best communicated their vision for accomplishing this at their
institutions.
TCC and the other participating community colleges
will be supported in their work by initiative partners with significant
expertise in this field, including the American Association of
Community Colleges; Community College Leadership Program at the
University of Texas-Austin; Community College Research Center,
Teacher’s College, Columbia University; Futures Project, Brown
University; Jobs for the Future; MDRC and Public Agenda. These
organizations, along with the initiative’s managing partner, MDC,
Inc., will help colleges identify and adapt practices and policies
to achieve their goals.
Tidewater Community College
is the second largest of the 23 community colleges in the Commonwealth
of Virginia, enrolling more than 34,000 students annually. The 37th
largest in the nation’s 1,600 community-college network, TCC ranks
among the 50 fastest-growing large community colleges. Founded in
1968 as a part of the Virginia Community College System, the college
serves the South Hampton Roads region with campuses in Chesapeake,
Norfolk, Portsmouth and Virginia Beach as well as the TCC Jeanne
and George Roper Performing Arts Center in the theater district
in downtown Norfolk, the Visual Arts Center in Olde Towne Portsmouth
and a regional Advanced Technology Center in Virginia Beach. Forty-three
percent of the region’s residents attending a college or university
in Virginia last fall were enrolled at TCC.