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DWU awarded $1.5 million grant to support first-generation, low-income and students with disabilities through TRIO Student Support Services

Photo: Metro Services


MITCHELL — The U.S. Department of Education has awarded Dakota Wesleyan University a federal TRIO Student Support Services (SSS) grant totaling more than $1.5 million to improve college retention and graduation rates among low-income, first-generation students, and students with disabilities.  The grant will serve DWU’s program through 2030.

This award marks the continuation of 46 years of TRIO SSS services on the DWU campus. Since 1979, the program has served nearly 7,400 students, helping them stay in school, earn degrees and build meaningful careers.

Through individualized services including academic tutoring, financial aid, scholarship guidance, career exploration, personal and academic counseling and mentoring, TRIO SSS empowers students to overcome barriers to success. These comprehensive supports make it significantly more likely that students will complete their degree or successfully transfer, with the lowest possible debt.

“This grant allows Dakota Wesleyan to deepen our commitment to ensuring that all students—regardless of background—can thrive academically and personally,” said DWU president Dan Kittle. “Student Support Services helps level the playing field and equips our students with the tools and confidence to graduate and lead.  Through the good work of former director Dr. Kyle Hobbs, new director Jodi Wilson, their colleagues in TRIO, and others across campus, we are delighted to continue this important work at DWU.”

Nationally, the SSS program has a proven track record. According to a rigorous 2019 evaluation by the U.S. Department of Education, students in SSS at two-year institutions were 48% more likely to earn an associate’s degree or transfer to a four-year school, and students at four-year institutions were 18% more likely to earn a bachelor’s degree compared to similar peers not in the program.

“TRIO programs generally and TRIO SSS, in particular, transforms students from the least resourced backgrounds into college graduates,” said Kimberly Jones, president of the Council for Opportunity in Education in Washington, D.C. “This vital program makes all the difference for nearly a million students each year across the country.”

SSS is one of eight federal TRIO programs funded under the Higher Education Act of 1965 to remove social, academic, and cultural barriers to higher education. Since its inception in 1968, SSS has helped millions of low-income, first-generation students graduate from college and contribute to their communities and the economy. Notable alumni of the TRIO Student Support Services program include Michael Cashman, Town Supervisor of Plattsburgh, NY; former NASA astronaut José Hernández and Cheryl Johnson, 36th Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives.

For more information about TRIO Student Support Services at DWU, visit https://www.dwu.edu/trio-student-support-services or contact Director of TRIO Jodi Wilson at jodi.wilson@dwu.edu.

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About the Federal TRIO Programs

TRIO programs (Talent Search, Upward Bound, Upward Bound Math-Science, Veterans Upward Bound, Student Support Services, Educational Opportunity Centers, and the Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program) help students overcome academic, economic, and social barriers to higher education. TRIO services include assistance in choosing a college and tutoring; personal, financial, and career counseling; assistance in applying to college; workplace and college visits; special instruction in reading, writing, study skills, and mathematics; assistance in applying for financial aid; and academic assistance in high school or assistance to reenter high school or college.

 

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