Eastern Eye (UK)

Bursary to benefit BAME students

JPMORGAN SUPPORT WILL HELP RECIPIENTS WITH WORK EXPERIENCE AND JOBS

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A LEADING City firm has launched a £4.8 million bursary fund for university students, with 60 per cent of the support going to ethnic minorities.

JPMorgan Chase and the Sutton Trust announced last week an endowment fund to improve access to jobs for “underserve­d, low income and BAME university students” in the UK. It will provide students with bursaries to help them access “critical enrichment opportunit­ies” and improve their employabil­ity, a spokespers­on said.

The bursaries will help pay for internship­s, study abroad programmes, volunteeri­ng experience­s, additional courses or training, and essential living costs – including accommodat­ion, subsistenc­e and study materials.

It was confirmed around 60 per cent of the bursaries will be targeted at ethnic minority students, to reflect the additional barriers that these communitie­s face.

Viswas Raghavan, CEO of JP Morgan in EMEA, highlighte­d the structural barriers further exacerbate­d by the Covid-19 pandemic, affecting young people from low income and ethnic minority groups. “Good jobs are key to social mobility and improving the employabil­ity of disadvanta­ged students is an important first step towards a promising, sustainabl­e and well paid career,” Raghavan said.

According to research, the number of students not taking part in work experience or studying abroad was up by more than half, from 23 per cent pre-pandemic to 37 per cent. Almost twothirds of students from workingcla­ss background­s said they were living at home this term – meaning they have lost out on a “full university experience and all the enrichment and growth opportunit­ies it presents”.

The applicatio­n process for the bursaries will start this summer and cover students’ participat­ion in a range of activities and events beyond their core academic course. It was confirmed bursaries would be offered in every academic year.

Sir Peter Lampl, founder and chairman of the Sutton Trust and chairman of the Education Endowment Foundation, said he was “delighted” with the new partnershi­p.

“We will be able to offer support to hundreds of Sutton Trust alumni in the decade to come,” he said. “This will enable them to take part in truly life-changing experience­s which will build important skills such as communicat­ion, resilience, confidence, motivation and leadership; skills which previous Sutton Trust research has shown are highly valued by employers.”

Previously, JPMorgan supported ethnic minority students and leaders through efforts such as the Advancing Black Pathways and New Skills at Work programmes.

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PORTUNITIE Some 0 per cent the JPMorgan ursaries ill be argeted at thnic minority dents; (inset left) iswas Raghavan
©TolgaAkmen/AFP/GettyImage­s PORTUNITIE Some 0 per cent the JPMorgan ursaries ill be argeted at thnic minority dents; (inset left) iswas Raghavan

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