[Vision2020] Idaho Gets 'D' in Enrollment

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Tue Nov 13 06:39:25 PST 2007


>From today's (November 12, 2007) Spokesman Review -

"A dearth of state-funded financial aid appears to be one reason Idaho
students often stop their education after high school . . . "

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Idaho gets 'D' in enrollment 
35 percent chance students will go to college
Associated Press 
November 13, 2007

BOISE - Idaho gets a "D" grade for the number of its students going to
college, a rank that puts the state alongside Georgia, Mississippi and South
Carolina.

There's only a 35 percent chance that a student in Idaho who is 19 or
younger will go to college, according to the National Center for Public
Policy and Higher Education, a San Jose, Calif., nonprofit research group
that studies education in all 50 states. That's down from 40 percent in
1992, the group said.

Just 26 percent of the state's 18- to 24-year-olds are enrolled at a college
or university, compared with 42 percent in states like Michigan and
Connecticut, which rank at the top of the group's list.

A dearth of state-funded financial aid appears to be one reason Idaho
students often stop their education after high school, according to the
California group. In 2006, Idaho ranked 46th in the nation for its state
contribution to low-income students' tuition, according to Iowa-based
education policy analyst Tom Mortenson.

"Idaho does very little in terms of providing financial aid to needy
students," Joni Finney, vice president of the group, told the Idaho
Statesman.

Idaho has been trying to address that, with the 2007 Legislature setting
aside $10 million for scholarships to help low-income residents.

Many students are held back by low expectations, said Boise State University
President Bob Kustra, who in 2005 and 2006 lobbied the Legislature
successfully to strengthen high school graduation requirements so more
students would be ready for college.

There's also a perception in many families that college isn't worth the
cost, or that it's too expensive, he said.

"We must roll up our sleeves to create a mind-set among our young people,
their parents and their elected officials that higher education is the key
to a prosperous future for us all no matter where the students enroll,"
Kustra said.

In the 2008 Legislature that starts in January, state Superintendent of
Public Instruction Tom Luna hopes to get lawmakers to sign off on more money
so students can take college classes in their junior and senior years of
high school.

"Maybe some of those students who don't believe they're college-ready would
have that experience and see that they are college material, and would be
encouraged to go on," said Luna's spokeswoman, Melissa McGrath.

In addition, state education officials are still hoping to secure money from
private foundations to help it qualify for the state and federally funded
"Gear Up" program that could help about 7,000 low-income students statewide
get ready for college. The state Board of Education spent the last two
months securing $3.2 million for the program, but still needs an additional
$1.3 million over the next five years, it has said.

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Vote "Yes" today, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"I think one of the best ways to support education is to make successful
private schools like Logos prosper through tax exemption."

- Donovan Arnold (July 11, 2005)





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