Texting is Helping W.Va. Students Get Ahead in Higher Ed

 

High school seniors in West Virginia who sign-up to receive text message reminders for college preparedness are doing better in their first-year of college, according to a recent study. And findings show this prep tactic is even more effective in rural areas. West Virginia Public Broadcasting explored why and brings you this report.

Five years ago, select schools in West Virginia’s GEAR UP program, or “Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs,” participated in a national text message initiative to get high school seniors more prepared for college. That initiative spread statewide to all West Virginia high schools almost two years ago.

 

A University of Virginia study found that high school seniors in West Virginia who received these text reminders were almost 7 percent more likely to persist through their first-year of college. But among students from rural areas, that number jumps to 8 percent. Why?

 

“The magnitude of the effect is larger for rural students than it is for students overall,” said Katharine Meyer, a graduate student in Education Policy from the University of Virginia who helped author the study. She spoke with West Virginia Public Broadcasting via Skype.

 

“Particularly, rural students are coming from an area where we know from other studies, they may be the first person from their community to attend an individual college, because they’re coming from smaller high schools,” she noted, “and so we saw these messages as sort of, sending students messages of support, messages of belonging, and helping them feel like they were supported and welcome in the new community.”

 

The University of Virginia founded the national text message project. West Virginia was one of the first states to help pilot the project when it began five years ago.

 

West Virginia’s text message service is called “Txt 4 Success,” and it’s spearheaded here by the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission.

 

Students who opt into the program receive reminders throughout the year about things like financial aid deadlines and information about declaring a major. Most of these texts are automated, but if a student texts back with a question or concern, they’ll more than likely hear from a real person from either the West Virginia HEPC or a counselor at one of the program’s eight college partners.

 

20-year-old Concord junior Chelsea Goins is a first-generation college student and comes from a rural area. She commutes to Concord from Princeton and she’s involved in a lot of activities…

 

“I currently work in Concord University’s president’s office, admissions office, and campus bookstore,” Goins said, “I’ve cheered since my freshman year for our football and basketball teams. I also teach dance classes at Princeton Dance Studio and Princeton Health and Fitness Center.”

 

A lot… Goins says a big part of why she’s been able to stay organized and on top of all these activities while also doing well in school is “Txt 4 Success.”

 

“The text messages provide informational links and deadlines for orientations, FAFSA, enrollment checklists, sending transcripts, payment plans, and a lot more,” she explained, “It definitely helped me as a high school senior, because the texting service provided information I had never heard of.”

 

Goins says she found the program most helpful when it came to filling out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid.

“In high school deadlines are kind of negotiable. If you’re late, it’s okay, but with FAFSA, if you’re late, it’s over,” she noted, “you have to file it. And so, that was a hard thing to understand, that there was a deadline.”

 

Goins says she thinks the service has also been helpful overall for her age-group, because texting is how she and her peers communicate most frequently.

 

It was for that reason West Virginia HEPC Chancellor Paul Hill says he wanted West Virginia to help pioneer this program – because it’s an efficient way to communicate with young people and because it helps those first-generation students.

 

“We have found some mechanisms to reach student populations that we have not reached traditionally in the past; that through increased communication, we can have an impact on students by providing them with the types of information that they need to get, so I think it’s opening up a channel of direct communication to reach those students who need it most,” he said.

 

Hill says there are more than 22,000 students registered in the state’s texting service. All high schools in West Virginia are involved in the program, as well as Bluefield, Marshall, Shepherd, Concord, Fairmont, and West Virginia State universities, and Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College and West Virginia Northern Community College.

 

Hill says the HEPC’s focus now is on pushing more college prep in elementary and middle schools.

Community Colleges Are Changing the Way We Develop Our Workforce

In his State of the State Address, Governor Jim Justice made clear his intention to make West Virginia’s community and technical colleges free for in-state students. A bill to accomplish that was introduced shortly after this year’s state Legislative session began.

 

The main goal of the bill is to cultivate a strong workforce in West Virginia by making education at community and technical colleges more accessible. West Virginia Public Broadcasting took a closer look at CTCs and their focus on workforce training.

 

We first heard rumblings about a bill to make community and technical colleges free to everyone in West Virginia in December, when Senate President Mitch Carmichael announced he was drafting a proposal with that focus in mind for the 2018 state Legislative session.

 

And in Governor Jim Justice’s State of State Address, we heard more to that effect.

It was only five days after the governor’s address that a bill to make CTCs free or more affordable was introduced in the state Legislature — Senate Bill 284.

 

 

In its current form, Senate Bill 284 would create a grant program of $7 million for tuition and fees at a community and technical college for students to use after all other forms of financial aid have been exhausted. A prospective student would need to be at least 18-years-old with a high school diploma, or equivalent, and agree to remain in the state as a taxpayer for at least two years and fulfill some community service.

 

Credit John Hale / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Blue Ridge Community and Technical College located in Martinsburg, Berkeley County.

Located here in the Eastern Panhandle – in Martinsburg, Berkeley County – Blue Ridge Community and Technical College is one of nine public CTCs in West Virginia that could feel the effects of Senate Bill 284.

West Virginia’s 9 CTCs Include:

  1. Blue Ridge Community & Technical College
  2. BridgeValley Community & Technical College
  3. Eastern WV Community & Technical College
  4. Mountwest Community & Technical College
  5. New River Community & Technical College
  6. Pierpont Community & Technical College
  7. Southern WV Community & Technical College
  8. West Virginia Northern Community College
  9. West Virginia University at Parkersburg

Leslie See is Vice President of Enrollment Management. She says community and technical colleges fill a role in producing an educated workforce with the skills needed for today’sjobs.
 

Credit John Hale / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Leslie See, Vice President of Enrollment Management at Blue Ridge CTC.

“The cycle of education, when you look at it historically, is that there was a divide between what skills were needed for labor positions and the baccalaureate degree, so community college really fill that gap now,” See noted, “because the workforce now has automation, it has robotics, it has a new level of technology, even if you don’t stay current with even using a computer, you could get behind very quickly. So, the education a community college provides is giving those technical, tangible skills.”

 

West Virginia’s CTCs work closely with local employers to help fill demand in each geographic region. In the Eastern Panhandle, Blue Ridge provides training for careers in cyber security, software development, manufacturing and health care.

“Really, we have a little bit of everything, whether it’s short term, whether it’s an associates degree, certification, really, we have over 70 degrees and certificates to choose from,” See said.

 

According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, jobs in manufacturing, IT, and health care are all in demand in the state – and to be qualified for those jobs, several only need a degree or certification from a CTC.

 

Musselman High School senior Alexandria Cox wants to be a nurse. She’s looking to get her associate’s degree from Blue Ridge.

 

“I’m a big heart, like, I’m a giver, I’m a people-pleaser. I just like seeing people smile and get better,” Cox said.

 

Cox just turned 18 and would like to eventually take her nursing degree into the military.

Credit John Hale / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Alexandria Cox, Musselman High School Senior. She plans to pursue an Associate’s Degree in Nursing at Blue Ridge CTC.

 

There are several industry partnerships at Blue Ridge, and the oldest is its nursing program. Cox will get “real-world” training while she studies at Blue Ridge in the form of clinical rotations at Berkeley Medical Center – which is part of WVU Medicine.

 

Cox says she’s excited about the idea of training at Berkeley Medical Center and notes she has a friend who’s already in the program.

“She goes here, and she does do her clinical trials, and she says she loves it, so it makes me even more excited, because that’s someone who goes here and she does her clinical trials, and she says it’s great, you meet new people, you get insight on what your occupation’s gonna be, what her career’s gonna look forward too,” Cox explained.

 

At Berkeley and Jefferson Medical Centers, Samantha Richards is the Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer for Patient Care Services. She oversees the nursing staff and is also in charge of the nurse trainees who come in from Blue Ridge.

 

Credit John Hale / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Samantha Richards (standing), Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer for Patient Care Services, Berkeley and Jefferson Medical Centers chatting with two nurses.

“Being able to have a partnership with Blue Ridge allows us to expand our services and to have nurses who can come into our workforce,” Richards noted, “so when we do new services, for example, opening a NICU or a CATH lab, and so forth, we need additional personnel to do that, and without having Blue Ridge as a technical school to be able to graduate nurses in a two-year program, that allows us to meet the needs of the continued growth and development, which is great for our community.”

 

Richards says Berkeley and Jefferson Medical Centers don’t differentiate between a bachelor’s degree and an associate’s degree in nursing.

 

“Starting out as a brand-new nurse, usually starting out, you can make about $37,000 to $42,000 a year, as a nurse,” Richards said, “so for somebody who went to a two-year program, it’s really a nice starting point for a salary.”

 

Community and technical colleges can provide an affordable first step for many prospective students, and Leslie See at Blue Ridge hopes Senate Bill 284 will help more people see the potential CTCs bring to the table.

 

“Let community colleges not be a second choice, or a second chance, which they can be a second chance, but also let it be a first consideration,” See said, “because there are so many opportunities at your community college that really, people need to explore.”

 

Senate Bill 284 passed out of the Senate chamber and is now being considered in the House.

WVU Responds to Wrongful Death Lawsuit from Hazing Death

West Virginia University’s governing board has responded to a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the family of a student who died following a hazing for a fraternity that had its charter revoked.

In response to the lawsuit, the WVU’s Board of Governors argues it did not sanction any events that led to Nolan Burch’s death in November 2014, according to the Dominion Post. It cited a number of other reasons.

Burch died two days after binge drinking while pledging for Kappa Sigma fraternity. The cause was alcohol poisoning.

The Burch family filed the lawsuit in n Monongalia County Circuit Court against WVU and the national chapter, among others. The suit alleges negligence.

WVU filed its response this week.

Burch was from the Buffalo, New York, area.

Mentoring Program Helps W.Va. Students Prepare for College

A project that mentors high school students in McDowell County is seeing success.

Eighteen students from Mount View High in Welch and River View High in Bradshaw were chosen a year ago to participate.

Nearly all of them took their first plane trip last summer to Washington, D.C., where they visited college campuses, job sites and met members of Congress. Each student was assigned a mentor to regularly discuss school, life issues and choices.

Seventeen seniors in the program will graduate with their classmates. The other participant is a junior.

Some have had rough lives in broken homes. Most will be the first in their families to go to college.

They’re the first wave in the three-year Broader Horizons mentoring program funded by a $300,000 grant from AT&T, one of more than 120 partners in Reconnecting McDowell.

That project led by the American Federation of Teachers aims to improve opportunities in the county.

Text Your Way Into College

West Virginia’s Text Messaging Support Project, launched this month by the state’s Higher Education Policy Commission, provides a pilot group of high school seniors personalized college counseling by text message.
 

The initiative to increase the college-going rates of high school students was highlighted at a White House conference Thursday hosted by the President and First Lady.

Bluefield State College, Concord University, Marshall University and Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College have signed on as partners.

In March, students planning to attend one of these institutions will begin receiving personalized text messages directly from that campus, and they’ll continue through the end of their freshman year.

The average college-going rate among West Virginia high school students is less than 50 percent.

Commission Chancellor Paul Hill said in a statement that the project was about developing a lasting source of counseling and support for these students, that all student messages will be answered, and that counselors will guide students through the application process, and their transition into higher education.

Many W.Va. Students Don't Earn Degrees in Six Years

Many in-state students at West Virginia's public higher education institutions don't earn a degree after six years. An annual graduation report shows…

Many in-state students at West Virginia’s public higher education institutions don’t earn a degree after six years.
 
     An annual graduation report shows fewer than half of in-state freshmen enrolled in fall 2005 earned their degrees six years later.
 
     West Virginia University was the exception. The university’s 2012 six-year graduation rate was 56 percent.
 
     Marshall University’s six-year graduation rate was 44 percent, followed by Shepherd University, 43 percent; and West Liberty University, 41 percent.
 
     Other schools’ rates were: Concord University, 38 percent; Fairmont State University, 34 percent, Glenville State College, 30 percent; Bluefield State College, 25 percent; WVU Tech, 24 percent; and West Virginia State University, 21 percent.
 
     The Charleston Gazette reports that higher education officials presented the report Monday to an interim legislative committee.
 

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