Reaching Students Who Believe They're Unreachable

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Ninety-four percent of students from the top socioeconomic quartile obtain a bachelor’s degree, while only 27 percent of adults from low-income backgrounds obtain that level of education. Furthermore, young adults who have experienced the foster care system have a college graduation rate of less than 10 percent. Disheartening statistics like these are the reason that Charlie Johnson, director of the Nina Mason Pulliam Legacy Scholars program at IUPUI (Nina Scholars), has dedicated over a decade of his career to changing them.

Nina Scholars works with first-generation college students, adult students with dependents, those with physical disabilities, and those who have experienced foster care. The program awarded its first scholarships to five students in 2001 with funding from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.

Nina Scholars has since grown to serve 33 students per year, with an average graduation rate of 77 percent, greatly differing from the rate of their peers. Two sister programs, Bowen Scholars and Fostering Success, have also emerged to serve even more students. So, how does a scholarship program begin to make up for the setbacks faced by students in its targeted demographics? According to Johnson, it’s all about "possibility."

Though the scholarships do include financial assistance, all three programs revolve around a "transformative education" model. Johnson explains that this model teaches the scholars of "the possibility that everyone can learn, grow, develop, and contribute." Rather than coming from the traditional one-style-fits-all way of teaching that is common, the three scholarship programs provide individual support for students with consideration of the struggles they have dealt with and continue to face on a daily basis.

Young adults who have experienced the foster care system have a college graduation rate of less than 10 percent.