[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 141 (Monday, September 19, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5879-S5880]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GEAR UP HAWAII
Mr. SCHATZ. Mr. President, today, September 19, marks the beginning
of National Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate
Programs, GEAR UP, Week, and I would like to recognize the meaningful
work of GEAR UP in Hawaii.
Since 1998, GEAR UP has provided support and resources to low-income
students across the country to inform them about, prepare for, and
succeed in college. GEAR UP helps these students, many who are first-
generation college students, overcome the challenges they face in their
communities.
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GEAR UP Hawaii serves over 16,000 students each year from low-income
and underserved communities throughout the State in grades 7 through 12
and in their first year in college. The program equips students with
the tools they need to succeed in college and their careers. GEAR UP
delivers a number of services to students, including supporting early
college-level academic preparation in high school, providing
opportunities for early college options, increasing college access and
financial aid information to students and families, and advising
students during their first year of college to increase first-year
completion. GEAR UP Hawaii has gained national recognition for its
success in closing the achievement gap among groups traditionally
underrepresented in higher education and helping low-income students
prepare for college.
Through its collaborative partnerships between Hawaii's State
Department of Education, K-12 schools, the University of Hawaii, local
businesses, and community organizations, GEAR UP Hawaii inspires
students to see postsecondary education as something they can achieve.
The early outreach GEAR UP Hawaii performs is key to improving access
to postsecondary education for students from low-income families in our
State.
The program's results demonstrate that GEAR UP Hawaii is making
significant strides towards increasing the number of low-income
students who are prepared for and enroll in college. For example, 20
percent of Step Up Scholars, a GEAR UP Hawaii program, graduated from
high school in June 2015 with the Board of Education Recognition
Diploma, BOERD, compared to 14 percent of students statewide. The BOERD
is an honors diploma that requires students to earn a minimum
cumulative grade point average of 3.0 and complete a senior project.
Additionally, GEAR UP has increased the availability of High School
Based Running Start, HBRS, courses, which allow high school students to
attend University of Hawaii classes to earn both high school and
college credits. For the Hawaii class of 2014, 83 percent of students
who took at least one HBRS course enrolled in college the semester
after graduation compared to the statewide average of 56 percent.
Thanks to these programs, thousands of Hawaii's students graduate from
high school every year better prepared for college and for their
futures.
A college education is a path of opportunity for our students. GEAR
UP Hawaii has been and will continue to be critical in supporting the
State's goal of having 55 percent of working-age adults in the State
earn a college degree by 2025. I commend GEAR UP Hawaii for the vital
role it plays in helping Hawaii's students access and excel in their
higher education.
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