Baltimore Sun

Free tuition recipients begin their college journey at BCCC

- By Lauren Lumpkin

Serena Jones was like many high school seniors when she graduated from the Baltimore Leadership School for Young Women earlier this month — stuck at a crossroads between accumulati­ng thousands of dollars in student loan debt to attend college and leaving school altogether.

Now, she is one of more than 500 Baltimore City high school graduates who will attend Baltimore City Community College for free this fall.

Jones, 18, was among the newly arrived BCCC freshmen who packed the school’s gym Monday for the first day of a seven-week orientatio­n course designed to prepare them for the academic and social challenges of college. Some students arrived with tearful parents and others came alone. Those who couldn’t fit into the rows of folding chairs lined the gym’s black-and-red bleachers.

Mayor Catherine E. Pugh launched The Mayor’s Scholars Program in December. The scholarshi­p will waive tuition and fees at BCCC for Baltimore City

public schools graduates — regardless of grade-point average or income. The Mayor’s Scholars, however, include many who are first-generation college students, come from low-income households or have learning disabiliti­es.

The inaugural class will have 542 students, exceeding the mayor’s stated expectatio­ns by nearly 300 applicants.

“What often happens for many of our young people is that parents don’t push us toward college because they can’t afford it,” Pugh said in an address Monday morning to the first-year students.

“Young people don’t reach for college because they can’t think about it or they cant afford it. So there’s no excuse in Baltimore because we want all of our young people to be successful.”

The students will spend their seven weeks enrolled in three courses, as well as boot camps for English and math, in an attempt to combat staggering remediatio­n rates. During the 2015-2016 school year, more than 96 percent of BCCCstuden­ts had to take remedial coursework, according to the most recent data provided by the Maryland Higher Education Commission. The city will pay for students in the Mayor’s Scholars Program to attend remediatio­n courses if they need them, BCCC President Gordon F. May said.

For Jones, the Mayor’s Scholars Program was a difference maker. She was accepted into Coppin State University, and had hoped to attend, but the cost of tuition seemed unmanageab­le. She also wasn’t sure if she was prepared. “I didn’t think I was completely ready for a four-year institutio­n,” said Jones, who plans to study biology and nursing at BCCC so that she can become a labor and delivery nurse. “This is a first step to that.”

Jones applied to BCCC after hearing about the program from one of her peers at the Greater Baltimore Urban League. She’s decided to use BCCC as a “stepping stone” to achieve her dreams.

Mayor’s Scholars can use their scholarshi­ps to pursue one of BCCC’s associate’s degrees, certificat­es or job training programs. Coppin State University has offered to provide two years of free tuition to Mayor’s Scholars who graduate from BCCC as part of its “Finish 4 Free” program.

Baltimore is now one of 200 programs in 40 states in which tuition and fees for community college students are waived, particular­ly for recent graduates, according to the College Promise Campaign, which advocates for the expansion of such programs.

“But weneed to move the conversati­on to completion and support to completion,” said Tisha Edwards, president of BridgeEdu,a Baltimore-based organizati­on that supports first-generation college students. BCCC has enlisted the help of BridgeEdu to match each Mayor’s Scholar with an adviser.

Ja’Nel Stemper, 18, and Devon Aro, 19, are Serena Jones, 18, attends orientatio­n for the Mayor’s Scholars Program at Baltimore City Community College. She plans to become a labor and delivery nurse. both first-generation college students. They just graduated from Baltimore Design School.

“We don’t have to worry about money,” said Aro. “You wonder: ‘Where are we going to come up with this money?’ This is going to help a lot of kids.”

“With this many students, it’s definitely going to have an intergener­ational, positive impact on Baltimore City,” said May, who will retire at the end of this week as BCCC president after a challengin­g tenure that included reaffirmin­g the school’s accreditat­ion after it was placed on warning status in 2015.

Much of community college tuition is already paid for through federal grants. About 92 percent of city community college students already receive some type of federal aid. But the city will front the remaining costs that can be a barrier for students.

Pensie Holman said a series of financial troubles kept her 20-year-old son, Aaron, from starting college.

“It was one thing after another,” said Holman, a nurse who used to care for her brother and mother. “It’s been a long journey for [her son]. I’m excited that he’ll be continuing his education.”

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Students attend Monday’s first day of an orientatio­n course for the Mayor’s Scholars Program, which will provide free education at Baltimore City Community College.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN Students attend Monday’s first day of an orientatio­n course for the Mayor’s Scholars Program, which will provide free education at Baltimore City Community College.
 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ??
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN

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