Wayne Co. High School Receives National Recognition For College Readiness

Spring Valley High School in Wayne County has been named a 2023 School of Excellence by ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning

Spring Valley High School in Wayne County has been named a 2023 School of Excellence by ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning’s American College Application Campaign (ACAC). 

ACAC is a national effort to increase the number of first-generation college students and students from low-income families pursuing a college degree or other higher education credential. 

Spring Valley is one of 27 schools from across the country to be recognized for its College Application and Exploration Week and its work with West Virginia GEAR UP to remove many of the common obstacles in applying to college.

Debra Asbury, school counselor and GEARUP coordinator at Spring Valley, said that means providing every chance for students to learn about different careers.

“It’s our job…to provide them with opportunities to meet with admissions counselors, FAFSA coordinator, anything that’s getting them ready for post secondary, whether that is for a trade school, beauty school, or whether that’s to go to Harvard,” she said.

The application process can be confusing and daunting, and Asbury said exposing students to opportunities after graduation and helping them fill out forms is key to their future success.

“They need to break the cycle for some of these kids because they’re from areas where their parents didn’t graduate or they didn’t go on to school, and they’ve got to know their goals are achievable,” she said.

Lindsay Ellis is also a school counselor and GEARUP coordinator at Spring Valley. She said the recognition was an honor, especially after doing the same work for several years.

“These are things that we’ve always done as school counselors, but it really means a lot to get recognized for that,” she said. “I feel that all school counselors, especially the ones that we come in contact with, everybody is deserving.“

Asbury and Ellis believe that Spring Valley stood out in part because of a FAFSA completion rate of 62.5 percent, the highest in recent school history, as well as a strong social media presence.

“Show the community, show parents what we’re doing,” Ellis said. “Keep everybody in the loop, which is very important.”

Both counselors recognize the importance of the school-wide investment, from administrators to students, that was needed to receive the ACAC’s attention.

‘Gear Up’ Program Gets High Schoolers Ready For Careers

West Virginia colleges and universities are working to face enrollment challenges head on. One element in that effort is the statewide “Gear Up” program, encouraging high school seniors to get ready for college and careers.

West Virginia colleges and universities are working to face enrollment challenges head on. One element in that effort is the statewide “Gear Up” program, encouraging high school seniors to get ready for college and careers.  

Marshall University president Brad Smith welcomed about 200 seniors to the school’s Joan C. Edwards Performing Arts Center stage. Mason County Hannan High School’s Samantha Henken said she was looking forward to graduation, but not the day after that.

“I’m scared. I’m really nervous,” Henken said. “To be honest, it’s scary. It has a lot to do with adulthood. You’re no longer in high school around a bunch of kids and you don’t have as much college support as you would in high school.”

Seniors from Hannan, Point Pleasant, Tolsia and Lincoln County High Schools were all bussed to Marshall to hear from academic program leaders, fraternity and sorority life coordinators, student body leaders, have lunch and get a campus tour.     

Mallory Carpenter is the regional program director for the West Virginia Gear Up program. She said Gear Up’s federally-funded goal is simply to get students interested in any kind of education or training after high school.

“Whether that’s for year to year, trade, school, military certificate programs, apprenticeships, the whole gamut,” Carpenter said. “We just want students to go on and do something after high school.” 

Developing that post-secondary school interest is Point Pleasant High English teacher and Gear Up site coordinator Carla Grady’s job as well, no matter what the student’s socio-economic status may be. 

“We have students who come from overcoming many obstacles, broken families and near poverty conditions,” Grady said. “Then, we have students who have great support systems at home and can afford to do some different options as well. Coming to Marshall University’s campus gives them an opportunity to envision themselves living a life here on campus and getting exposure to all their career options.”  

Point Pleasant senior Luke Pyles said his career options may include  something along the lines of technology or media. 

“I know Marshall has a new cybersecurity program that I’m really looking forward to looking into,” Pyles said. “That’s one of the reasons why I came on this trip today. But I’m still not 100 percent nailed down or tied to anything.”

President Smith said he hopes Gear Up days at Marshall inspires students to see all the possibilities they have before them. 

“It helps them understand what’s available at college, what’s available at trade schools and community college, what’s available in the military,” Smith said. “We want them to be lifelong learners and realize that any and all of these options are wonderful ways for them to create the future they want.”

Marshall is one of many universities across the state and nation that are retooling their curriculum to meet the changing workforce demands of today and tomorrow. Smith said that’s happening at Marshall without breaking any academic traditions.

“We are not forsaking liberal arts at all,” Smith said. “We need to have individuals to be great citizens to be great contributors to their community, but also have the career skills to participate in the 21st century. Those things are not ‘ors’, they are ‘ands’, and at Marshall University we’re embracing an ‘all of the above’ education strategy.”

Fears not withstanding, and having a goal in mind, Samantha Henken said she wants to be an EMT, and the collegiate medical path may be her way forward.

“The universities here in West Virginia are gearing up a lot more toward workforce development,” Henken said. “The world today is turning into more hands-on stuff. It’s going to be a lot harder to find jobs like construction and medical if you don’t go to college for it, because those involve taking care of people and it puts a lot towards your community.”

That’s why Samantha and hundreds more West Virginia high school seniors are getting “Geared Up.”

‘Gear Up’ Tackles College Enrollment Challenges And State Smoking Rates Lag Behind Nation, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, lung cancer and smoking rates in the state lag behind the rest of the country and aren’t showing any signs of improvement, according to a new report.

On this West Virginia Morning, lung cancer and smoking rates in the state lag behind the rest of the country and aren’t showing any signs of improvement, according to a new report. Emily Rice has more.

Also, in this show, colleges and universities in the state are working to face enrollment challenges head on. One element in that effort is the statewide “Gear Up” program, encouraging high school seniors to get ready for college and careers. Randy Yohe has more.

And Tuesday marked the 53rd anniversary of the Marshall University plane crash. Seventy-five people, football team players, coaches, staff, supporters and the flight crew perished returning from an away game at East Carolina. Every year, on this day, Marshall remembers the 75. Randy Yohe has our story.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

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.

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