Funding Gap Forces Suspension Of Teacher Scholarship

A competitive scholarship to encourage high schoolers to become teachers isn’t accepting applications due to a lack of funding. 

A competitive scholarship to encourage high schoolers to become teachers isn’t accepting applications due to a lack of funding. 

Members of the Joint Standing Committee on Education learned about the suspended Underwood-Smith scholarship program during their interim meeting at Wheeling Park High School Monday.

The Underwood-Smith Teaching Scholars Program is a competitive scholarship for recent high school graduates wanting to become teachers, particularly in an area of critical need like math, science, elementary education or special education.

But Sarah Tucker, chancellor of the Higher Education Policy Commission (HEPC), told lawmakers the scholarship is not accepting new applicants.

“The idea was that you would step in each cohort,” she said. “We didn’t need the total fiscal note for all four cohort years in year one, because we only have the freshmen. You funded the freshmen in year one. And year two, you funded the freshmen and the sophomores, and year three, you were going to fund the freshmen, the sophomores and the juniors, but that third year didn’t get funded.”

Tucker said students who have already received the scholarships will not be affected by the funding issues.

“I can get us through the group of students that we have, but I can’t add on any additional students,” she said.

W.Va. Lawmakers Addressing Child Sex Abuse

Some West Virginia lawmakers say they’ll introduce legislation intended to better protect children from sex abuse following a task force report indicating one in 10 are victims before they turn 18.

The group’s recommendations include training all public school personnel to recognize and respond to suspected abuse and clarifying the state’s mandatory reporting laws.

Others are strengthening screening for child-service professionals, coordinating various resources and strengthening schools’ capacity to provide prevention education in grades K-12.

House Education Committee Chairman Paul Espinosa and Senate Education Committee Chairman Kenny Mann say they’re working to draft related legislation and get it enacted this year.

They co-chair the task force established in 2015.

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