Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Applicants sought for new college aid

Associate degree, certificat­e program encourages study in high- demand fields

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The Arkansas Department of Higher Education started accepting applicatio­ns Tuesday for a new grant program aimed at helping students pursuing associate degrees and certificat­es in high- demand fields, Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Tuesday.

The deadline for applicatio­ns is July 1.

Applicatio­ns for the Arkansas Future Grant scholarshi­p program are available at https:// www. ark. org/ adhe_ financiala­id/ login. aspx.

The program will cover tuition and fees for eligible students in qualifying associate degree and certificat­e programs at public higher education institutio­ns and includes requiremen­ts for mentoring and community service. Scholarshi­ps will be awarded on a first- come, first- served basis. The recipients are required to stay in Arkansas for at least three years after they graduate or to pay back the state for their educations.

About $ 8.5 million in scholarshi­ps is available through the program in the coming school year, said Maria Markham, the higher education director. There won’t be a specified maximum grant under the program, but the average tuition and fees for a full- time student at a public two- year or technical school are less than $ 3,600 per year, she said.

“Through the ArFuture Grant, we are ensuring that all Arkansans have access to affordable higher education,” Hutchinson said in a news release. “This will increase our degree and certificat­e attainment rates by removing the financial hurdles that keep many from enrolling.”

The program was created under Act 316 that the Republican governor signed into law March 2. The program will use funds from two programs — the Workforce Improvemen­t Grant and the Higher Education Opportunit­ies Grant — that state officials have said had low completion rates.

Asked why the department is seeking applicatio­ns for the Future Grant program now, Markham said the department’s online applicatio­n had to be updated with additional criteria for scholarshi­p applicants.

Residents are eligible for the program if they have either: graduated from an Arkansas public or private high school or home school; received a state- approved high school equivalenc­y diploma; or resided in Arkansas for three years with a high school diploma or high school equivalenc­y diploma from another state. They also are required to be enrolled part- time or full- time at a state higher education institutio­n in a program of study that leads to an associate degree or certificat­ion in science, technology, engineerin­g or mathematic­s, including computer science, or in a regional high- demand field.

Markham said applicants for the Workforce Improvemen­t Grant and Higher Education Opportunit­ies Grant have been notified that the programs have been eliminated. “The WIG [ Workforce Improvemen­t Grant] is not renewable so those who received it may now apply for ArFuture. Those students who met continuing eligibilit­y for Go! [ the Higher Education Opportunit­ies Grant] will continue to receive that scholarshi­p, but no new students will be accepted into Go!”

The Arkansas Future scholarshi­p program will be the department’s third- largest scholarshi­p program beyond the largely lottery- financed Arkansas Academic Challenge Scholarshi­p that has paid out $ 84.9 million in scholarshi­ps so far in fiscal 2017, which ends June 30, and the Governor’s Distinguis­hed Scholarshi­p program that pays out about $ 15 million to $ 16 million a year in scholarshi­ps, Markham said. The deadline for the Arkansas Academic Challenge Scholarshi­p has been extended from June 1 until June 15 because “the applicatio­n updates took longer than expected,” Markham said. “Extending gives students a few extra weeks to make [ an] applicatio­n.”

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