Las Vegas Review-Journal

Arizona universiti­es to offer free tuition

- By Alison Steinbach

PHOENIX — Thousands of Arizona high school students can now get free college tuition thanks to a new statewide scholarshi­p program.

The Arizona Promise Program will provide scholarshi­ps for eligible low-income students to fully cover their tuition and fees if they enroll at one of the three state universiti­es — Arizona State University, the University of Arizona or Northern Arizona University.

The goal is to make higher education more accessible for students from low-income families, a necessary step for a strong future economy in the state.

The Arizona Legislatur­e approved the new program this year.

“The universiti­es for years have had lots of financial aid, but what we’ve done here is passed a state law that requires it,” said John Arnold, executive director of the Arizona Board of Regents, which is overseeing the scholarshi­p.

“So it’s not a decision, there’s not a pool of money, it’s not first come first served — it is state law that if you do your part, you graduate from high school, you meet the admission requiremen­ts for the university, if you are a low-income family, you go without tuition and fees. I think it’s a really powerful message,” Arnold added.

Last year only 28 percent of Arizona public high school graduates enrolled in a fouryear college, and the rate was even lower for low-income students, per an analysis from the Board of Regents.

At the current pace, only about 17 percent of Arizona’s current ninth-graders will have a four-year degree by 2029.

The scholarshi­p will cover all eligible students who enroll at a state university. Students who meet the qualificat­ions will automatica­lly get the funding through their university.

An estimated 3,800 students currently enrolled at the three universiti­es are expected to be eligible for the program and funded this spring, according to data from the Board of Regents.

The total universe of eligible Arizona high school students is not clear, but last year about 12,400 Arizona students who filled out the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid would have financiall­y qualified, according to the board.

Likely even more students are eligible for the promise program but did not fill out the financial aid form in anticipati­on of applying to college.

State lawmakers funded the program with an initial $7.5 million this year, and the board is pushing for over $30 million next session.

The hope is that this state scholarshi­p will help increase Arizona’s relatively low level of college completion and also incentiviz­e high school students to be college-ready and graduate so they can have access to free tuition.

Who is eligible for free college?

Students who qualify get a guarantee that their tuition and fees will be covered, according to the board. The scholarshi­p fills any gaps for students in tuition and fees after their Pell Grant and any other aid they may receive.

“This is a promise. It’s a guarantee,” Arnold said. “If you meet all of those criteria, you receive the scholarshi­p.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States