Higher Education Mentoring Initiative Awarded $23,000 in Academic Scholarships to Foster Youth
The Higher Education Mentoring Initiative (HEMI), an initiative to encourage foster youth to pursue post-secondary education through mentoring, announced 11 recipients of $23,000 in academic scholarships on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2013.
(HEMI) is a partnership represented by UCs Partnership for Achieving School Success (PASS), Cincinnati State Technical and Community College, Great Oaks Institute of Technology and Career Development, Hamilton County Job and Family Services and the Hamilton County Board of Commissioners.The awarded high school and enrolled college students are participants in the HEMI program and are foster youth in Hamilton Countys care.
These scholarships are another tool to help further HEMIs mission of encouraging and supporting foster youth in their pursuit of a college degree or job training, said Commissioner Greg Hartmann, a founding partner of HEMI. Nationally, only 2 percent of foster youth complete a bachelors degree in four years, but HEMI is working to affect positive change as these students continue on the path to adulthood.
Five high school seniors and six students currently enrolled in post-secondary institutions received scholarships at Thursdays dinner. Funding for the scholarships was raised privately by Commissioner Hartmann through the annual HEMI Run for the Roses Kentucky Derby fundraiser, as well as a $10,000 grant by AT&T.
By pairing foster youth with mentors, HEMI is improving the safety net available to these students after they turn 18 and emancipate from the countys care, said Moira Weir, director of Hamilton County Job and Family Services and another founding partner of HEMI. The community support we've received from organizations like AT&T helps HEMI continue to produce successful results.
HEMI currently serves 51 students who are matched with 51 long-term academic mentors. Sixteen HEMI students are in high school, and 20 are enrolled in higher education. HEMI students have a 100 percent high school graduation rate and five students in HEMIs first cohort of students will graduate college in 2014.
ABOUT THE HIGHER EDUCATION MENTORING INITIATIVE (HEMI):
HEMI is a partnership that provides Hamilton Countys youth a long term-academic mentoring relationship that begins in high school and continues throughout the duration of post-secondary education. The goal of the program is to increase the number of Hamilton County foster youth who apply to and pursue higher education beyond high school while emancipating from the foster
care system.
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