Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Scholarshi­ps lure elite students to Cheyney

- By Bill Rettew brettew@21st-centurymed­ia.com @wcdailyloc­al on Twitter

THORNBURY >> Upper Darby’s Rachel Ezeamaka will be a first-year student at Cheyney University and she won’t have to deal with the major burden of having to pick up the tab for her education.

The prospectiv­e pre-med biology major who hopes to become a physician is getting a free ride through undergrad school at Cheyney and then through med school.

Like any incoming freshman, she is thrilled.

“I’ll be fine,” said the Archbishop John Carroll High School graduate. “I’m so excited to meet friends and have a new life.

“It’s a really good offer and you can’t beat it.”

Ezeamaka was offered $4.7 million in scholarshi­ps overall and chose Cheyney. She saw her late father deal with almost $200,000 in student debt. If she maintains a 3.0 grade point average, she should graduate debt-free.

Since the July 1 state budget was adopted, $3.98 million will go to the Keystone Honors Academy to provide scholarshi­ps for elite Cheyney students. The amount, which also includes funding from the Pennsylvan­ia Higher Education Assistance Agency, marks a substantia­l increase over last year’s $2.3 million allocation, according to a university release.

Jeffrey Jones, executive director of enrollment management, said that so far 74 students are enrolled in the program. Cheyney is on the rebound with a new president, former businessma­n Aaron Walton, who expects to balance the books this year. Cheyney attendance had slumped to fewer than 500 students and the university was operating in the red.

Jones said the university was always a little hesitant to go after the finest students, but said that this year’s class is “literally off the charts.”

The typical Keystone recipient has a GPA of 3.58 and an SAT score of 1110, Jones said. Walton said through a press release that he expects the budget to balance and for enrollment to increase.

An upcoming decision by the Middle State Commission on Higher Education will determine whether the school will maintain accreditat­ion. Money has been a major issue.

Walton has also said that he believes the university will meet its goal of a balanced budget for the justended fiscal year.

“This very generous allocation will enhance our ability to continue to attract high performing students,” said Walton of the nation’s oldest historical­ly black college. “The scholarshi­p funding comes at a great time with the university enjoying a resurgence in academics, culture and support.

“Now we’ll be able to work through the waiting list of students who committed to attending Cheyney and who will benefit from the full scholarshi­p,” Walton noted. “We’ll also be able to recruit additional highly qualified students.”

“This additional funding will enable us to award scholarshi­ps to our highabilit­y continuing students who qualified as they entered Cheyney, but were unable to receive scholarshi­ps due to the lack of sufficient funding,” Jones said. “This increase will make a huge difference.”

“The scholarshi­p funding for the new fiscal year has no bearing on Cheyney’s previously stated commitment to record a balanced budget in the just completed fiscal year,” reads the release. “Walton remains optimistic that when those numbers are reconciled over the next several weeks, the university will have met its financial goals.”

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 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO ?? The entrance to Cheyney University in Thornbury.
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO The entrance to Cheyney University in Thornbury.

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