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Showing posts with label HOPE scholarship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HOPE scholarship. Show all posts

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Military Kids Get Scholarship Boost

Children whose parents are in the military will have an easier time changing Georgia schools under a bill signed into law by Gov. Sonny Perdue. In a visit to Fort Benning on Thursday, Perdue also signed a separate bill that allows children of soldiers stationed in Georgia to qualify for Georgia's HOPE scholarship. The new law waives the one-year HOPE residency requirement for children of active-duty military personnel. The school transfer law is designed to make the transition easier for military children sometimes caught in conflicting mandates as they shuffle from school to school.

(Associated Press)

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

HOPE for Military Kids

The children of military families in Georgia would be eligible for the state's popular HOPE scholarship under legislation that sailed through the Senate. Currently, students in Georgia must have lived in the state for a year to be eligible for HOPE. The bill that passed unanimously on Wednesday would waive that residency requirement for the children of active-duty military personnel. The HOPE scholarship guarantees free in-state public college tuition to any Georgia high school student who graduates high school with a B average or better.


(Associated Press)

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Lawmakers Vote To Protect HOPE Scholarship Funding

Despite declining state revenues, the General Assemby has voted to change award-reductions for the HOPE college scholarship.

When the bill passed the House last month, lawmakers cautioned that demand for the scholarship could bring down the lottery-funded reserves starting in 2011.

Under current law, if those reserves drop by just one dollar, the HOPE scholarship would pay less for books.

State Senator Seth Harp says he wants to make sure the lottery really is in trouble before slashing benefits.

"What we wanna do is make sure the students will not lose benefits until we start seeing some real movement on where the lottery goes."

The Senate passed the bill 47-2 and now goes to the governor's desk for his signature.
Last year Governor Sonny Perdue vetoed a similar measure. But he has not indicated whether he would veto this plan.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Good News For HOPE Scholarship Recipents... For Now

College students who get the HOPE scholarship will have a better chance of having their book fees covered under legislation passed in the state House today.

Under current law, if the lottery-funded reserves drop by even just one dollar, the HOPE scholarship would pay less for books. For this year and next, the reserves are fine.

But Representative Ben Harbin from Evans worries that demand for the scholarship is up while revenues have flattened. He says that could bring down the reserves.
"I think probably 2011 we would've seen the book allowances cut in half the first year, eliminated the second year, and then the student fees gone the third year."
To prevent that, the House unanimously passed a bill that would put percentages to those cuts. Only when the reserves dropped by 8% would book funding be cut in half. At 16%, the scholarship would no longer cover books. And if the reserves took a 25% hit, student fees would be eliminated from funding as well.

The bill now goes to the Senate for consideration.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Study Finds Disparities In Academic Testing and Pass Rates in Georgia High Schools

A new report says high school students in Georgia are failing academic tests each year, but still frequently making good enough grades to pass.

The study raises concerns that students in Georgia are entering college unprepared for the coursework there, and getting state-funded HOPE scholarships even though they may not otherwise qualify for them.

Students must graduate from high school with a B average to qualify for HOPE funding.

"If students are receiving the HOPE scholarship based on inflated grades, they're going to be much more likely to have to give it up," says Christopher Clark, a faculty member at Georgia College and State University who conducted the study. Clark says that based on the study, it appears that school systems are essentially giving passing grades to students who have not mastered the coursework.

"They'll be much more likely lose it, not retain the HOPE scholarship after, say, their first year, and they're much more likely to need to take remedial courses while being funded for the HOPE scholarship," says Clark.

The report compared students' grades and pass/fail rates with their scores on academic testing held at the end of each course in 2007. The tests are supposed to determine if students have mastered the course.

Some examples:

In 11th grade economics classes, about 35.85 percent of students failed testing on the subject matter, but only 5.87 percent failed the course, a gap of about 30 percentage points.

In biology, 41.62 percent of 11th graders failed that test, but only 16.77 percent failed that course, a gap of nearly 25 percentage points.

"The HOPE scholarship places a very, very high economic premium on achieving good grades in high school, and high school teachers themselves are in a situation where it's easier to feel greater pressure than university faculty would feel about the economic consequences of a grade," says Dr. William Bloodworth, the president of Augusta State University.

"Before the HOPE scholarship, there was no particularly direct dollar consequence to a grade, whether the grade was an A or B or C, and now there are such consequences," says Bloodworth. "There's a very strong suspicion that the HOPE scholarship has indeed in one way or another caused the teacher to be a bit more sympathetic to students and, on occasion, give grades that are higher than the grades that might have been given before the HOPE scholarship.

Clark's concern about apparently inflated grades is not new. And the scholarships, funded through the state lottery, have had their share of controversy.

Critics have argued that the scholarships have contributed to lowering Georgia's ranking in the U.S. on SAT scores, and that students who would not normally go to college now do so since it's affordable.

Clark acknowledges that more study needs to be done to determine if school systems are indeed inflating grades. The study only compared the grades and test scores. It provides no qualitative data of what schools are specifically doing in relation to the grades. Nor does it look at scores from previous years, or retention data from the scholarships. Clark also acknowledges that some courses require more subjective grading, which could, in part, explain the disparity.

But in his study, Clark asserts that school systems appear to be inflating the grades. State officials say that's because the coursework and the tests are based on the same performance standards by the state, and that, as a result, both grades and test scores should be consistent. Clark encourages further study on the issue.

The Georgia Association of Educators, however, argues that the coursework and tests don't always match. The association, which represents the state's teachers, also says no empirical data on apparent grade inflation exists and deny that teachers are intentionally misrepresenting student progress.

To see the study on the web, go to www.gaosa.org/research.aspx.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

HOPE Money for Military College?

A powerful Georgia lawmaker wants the HOPE grant to extend to the Georgia Military College. Augusta Republican State Rep. Ben Harbin says that the popular grant does not now extend to the military school, which describes itself as a "public-independent educational institution." The HOPE grant is available to students attending public tech schools or public colleges or universities.

(Associated Press)

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Governor signs bills for Clayton students

Two state-appointed liaisons to the Clayton County Board of Education have told Governor Sonny Perdue that the board is so dysfunctional the county is certain to lose accreditation in September. Students would lose access to the state-funded HOPE scholarship and jeopardizes their college applications. Today the Governor signed two bills designed to help Clayton County students. One would keep HOPE scholarship funds available to high school graduates. The second establishes an ethics commission in the county to investigate and oversee the board.

Monday, April 21, 2008

HOPE scholars receive remediation

A new study reports that one in ten recipients of the HOPE scholarship need remedial help. The study reported in the Macon Telegraph says despite earning B averages in high school, 12 percent of college freshman who got the HOPE scholarship in 2006, received learning support during their first year of college.

An official of the Georgia Department of Education says part of the blame because the old curriculum was too broad and vague. An overhaul to the state’s K through 12 education curriculum emphasizes reading and math- two subjects where students receive remediation.

Another reform is a new graduation requirement that eliminates different diploma tracks, such as college-prep and technology/career prep. Starting this Fall, all incoming ninth graders will be on the same track to receive a diploma with college-prep requirements.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Home-schoolers may get HOPE

The State Senate passed a bill yesterday that would make home-schoolers eligible for HOPE scholarships.

Students taught at home would have to score in the 85th percentile on the SAT or ACT test to qualify for HOPE.

Currently, home-schoolers can get HOPE if they earn a B-average their first year in college.

The House already passed the bill. It now awaits the Governor’s signature.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Lottery breaks sales record

The Georgia lottery has broken a record. The lottery sold almost $1.7 billion worth of tickets in the first half of fiscal year 2008. That tops a record set during the same period last year by almost $133 million. Lottery profits fund Georgia's HOPE scholarship program, which pays in-state tuition for good students. The money also funds pre-kindergarten.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Clayton Co. system investigated second time

The south's regional accrediting agency is investigating the Clayton County school system for financial mismanagement and abuse of power.

It's the second time in five years the school system has been investigated by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The probe puts thousands of students at risk of losing their HOPE scholarships, and makes it difficult for them to be accepted to some universities.

The association says it is investigating allegations that one board member had a football coach fired for not handing-over a game film featuring her son. Another board member apparently spent more than $500 of school money at an Atlanta hotel.

This is the first time in the last 15 years that the group has investigated a Georgia school district twice in such a short period of time. No school district in the state has ever lost accreditation.

The association is considering asking Governor Sonny Perdue to impeach the entire school board.

The Clayton school board chairwoman said the district will fully comply with the probe.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Flap over bonuses for lottery officials

Some top Georgia Republicans have called for a review of bonuses paid to Georgia Lottery officials. Nearly three-million dollars in bonuses were collected this year by Lottery president Margaret DeFrancisco and her employees. Some state legislators are baffled by the amounts, in the wake of tightened requirements for the lottery-funded HOPE scholarship. House Higher Education Committee Chair Bill Hembree has called the bonus figures "insane". Lottery officials say the bonuses are needed to stay competitive and keep employees focused. They also say funding to HOPE has increased.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Help for those with no HOPE

High school seniors who can't make the cut with tougher HOPE scholarship guidelines are getting a boost from one north Georgia college. It's a remedy that could be copied by other state schools.

Reinhardt College in Cherokee County will give two-thousand dollars to incoming freshmen who barely miss getting a HOPE scholarship. The amount represents two-thirds of a typical HOPE payout to students attending a private institution.

Julie Cook is associate dean for enrollment services at the private Christian school in Waleska, which costs nearly 15-thousand dollars to attend. She expects an offer such as this, to take hold at other Georgia institutions.

"If they've not already begun discussing or have in place some similar type of replacement grant I think in both public and private sectors...colleges will have to re-think the financial aid strategy, relating to this group of incoming freshmen".

The new state-system for calculating HOPE grade-point averages makes it tougher for students to achieve required B-averages. Across the state, a third-fewer incoming college students are expected to qualify for HOPE compared to the past two years.

Friday, April 20, 2007

GA lottery touts $9 billion for education

The Georgia Lottery Corporation says it’s raised more than 9-billion dollars for education in Georgia. The Georgia Lottery made the announcement just after this week’s third quarter transfer of funds into the Lottery for Education Account. It was the largest transfer to the lottery for education account in history. All Georgia lottery profits go to pay for specific educational programs including Georgia's HOPE Scholarship Program and Georgia's pre-kindergarten program.

GPB News Team: