Tuesday, December 6, 2022

DACC Notes: October 2022 -- Making College Affordable

 

When I graduated from Purdue University in 1989, my bill for tuition, fees, room, and board was between $5,000 and $6,000 per year. My family was distinctly “underprivileged,” so I received maximum state and federal financial aid benefits that covered the entire bill, without a loan. I was eligible for work study, and my 20-hour per week on-campus job paid my incidentals and bought my books. I got an internship my senior year and didn’t work, so I took one loan for $5,000 and had it paid off within three years. Good times!

Unfortunately, prices have gone up, financial aid benefits have changed very little, and student loans have skyrocketed. No matter how you feel about student loan forgiveness, everyone must agree that we have a crushing financial crisis that our younger citizens can’t pull themselves out by their bootstraps.

That’s where Danville Area Community College and the DACC Foundation can be the most effective.


 



 

On September 16th more than 600 people gathered with the DACC Foundation to celebrate scholarship donors and recipients at the Annual Honors Program in Mary Miller Gym. The brief program featured remarks by Dr. Carl Bridges, Vice President of Academic Affairs, and a testimonial by Hailey Hill, a nursing student who received one of 11 Lowell and Florence Crawford scholarships. The Crawford Scholarship provides full tuition, fees, and books for one full academic year. It is the largest financial scholarship awarded by the DACC Foundation.

 

At the DACC Board of Trustees meeting the following week, Tonya Hill, Executive Director of the Foundation, informed the Board that the Foundation awarded 658 scholarships worth $945,450 for this academic year. Also, 100% of qualified applicants who were attending DACC received a scholarship this year...the second year in a row for that phenomenon.

 

She declared that her goal is to reach $1 million for scholarships next year. “I know we can do it,” she asserted, “this community is the most generous and involved anyone could hope for.”

 

Ms. Hill was accompanied by two Presidential Scholars. Presidential Scholarships are awarded to students in the top 15 percent of their high school graduating class. Each scholarship provides full tuition for two years at DACC. This scholarship is the highest academic scholarship honor awarded.





First-year Presidential Scholar Naomi Dolan told the Trustees that attending DACC had been her dream since she first enrolled in College for Kids in 2012. Naomi, who is the reigning Vermilion County Fair Queen, is a member of the DACC Pep Band and the All Star Jaguars. Though the Presidential Scholarship is typically a two-year award, Naomi earned 29 dual credits in high school so she is planning to be at DACC only one year. “I want to make the most of it while I’m here,” she stated.   

 




Second-year Presidential Scholar Autumn Lange told the Board that she had earned enough dual credit in high school to complete her degree in one year, also. She was very excited to learn that she could use the second year of her scholarship while taking courses toward a bachelor’s degree through DACC’S 3 + 1 program. Autumn received her Associate degree in May and now is taking a third year of DACC courses before finishing her bachelor’s degree in business online through Franklin University. Between dual credit, her scholarships, and the money she will save on her bachelor’s degree, she will graduate in three years with no student debt.

 

Registration for spring classes began October 31st. The scholarship application will open online for the next year on January 3rd, and the FAFSA is available online right now. Let DACC help you make sound financial decisions for your future.

 

DACC Notes: November 2022 -- Find Gratitude

Though gratitude is something we should show all year, many of us wait until November to express it. I’m guilty of this oversight, but I’d like to list my work-related gratitude for you here.

First and foremost, I’m thankful for my co-workers. The past two years have been rough, personally and professionally, for many people, but the faculty and staff at Danville Area Community College have been supportive and understanding of students and co-workers alike. I appreciate that I get to come to a workplace filled with people I genuinely like to see on a daily basis and who seem genuinely happy to see me. I understand this is a rare gift. 

I’m relieved – as are many others, I’m sure – that our campus is fully open, our halls and classrooms are full, and we’re holding events again. Basketball season is in full swing and we welcome everyone to the Mary Miller Gym to take in a Men’s or Women’s game. 

We had a special event on campus today, the Fall Flair Art Show and Sale. Our Art students had their work on display for enjoyment and to hopefully fulfill a few holiday shopping lists. The Phi Theta Kappa Honor students hosted a Bake Sale table full of delicious, homemade goodies, Dr. Jonathon Wade opened his Coffee Cart, and in true Coffee House fashion there was music provided by the talented duo Fletcher and Baird. 






I’m grateful for our students. Since becoming the sponsor of the All Star Jaguars I’ve been much more involved in student life and I thoroughly enjoy it. My group of students is diverse, clever, creative, bright, and entertaining. It is a privilege to interact with them and to know that they aren’t unique among the student body. They simply offer me a glimpse into the lives of all our students. 

I’m thankful for an administration and Board of Trustees who see that economic times are tight for our community and are willing to offer an enrollment incentive to current and prospective students to alleviate the sting of education expenses. Anyone who enrolls for a full-time schedule for spring prior to December 23rd will receive a $600 break on their tuition cost. 

Another incentive is in place for anyone who lives outside of our college district – say for instance, in Indiana – but works full time within the district. These folks, along with all dependents in their households, qualify for in-district tuition. That represents a significant savings over out-of-district and/or out-of-state tuition. 

Finally, area high school students can take advantage of dual credit opportunities for reduced – or sometimes $0 – tuition and get a head start on their college education. Dual credit makes so much more sense than Advanced Placement classes because every dual credit student who passes a class will receive college credit for that class. Only 35 percent of students who enroll in an AP class will ever take the test, and then only 61 percent of those who take the test will pass it with a score sufficient to earn college credit – and that test isn’t cheap! 

Thank you to the Commercial News for the opportunity to bring you information about DACC each month, and thank you, Dear Readers, for giving me five or ten minutes of your attention. Happy Thanksgiving to you all.

DACC Launches Online Application

https://daccallstarjags.blogspot.com/2022/11/dacclaunches-online-application.html

Giving Tuesday at DACC

https://daccallstarjags.blogspot.com/2022/12/giving-tuesday-at-dacc.html

Enroll Now for Winter Term at DACC

https://daccallstarjags.blogspot.com/2022/12/winter-term-at-dacc-begins-december-19.html

DACC Middle College Graduates 14 Students in December

In March 2009, Danville Area Community College premiered a new program for “at risk” high school students called Middle College. Middle Coll...