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APRIL 2004 UPDATE
NOTE: Jermale Eddie (left) has been hired to run the new Tapestry program
at Calvin College. Contact him at 526-7061 or jde5@calvin.edu
Calvin College
is taking a collaborative approach to retaining minority students on
its campus, aided by a three-year, $61,000 grant from the State of Michigan.
Tapestry - a new Calvin program
funded by a grant from Michigan’s Select Student Support Services
(4-S) Program - weaves together mentoring, goal-setting, academic assistance
and leadership development from several college divisions to create
a strong fabric of support for the college’s minority students.
The new program is tailored
to the support and retention of both academically and economically disadvantaged
students. Students will be invited to take part in Tapestry based on
financial need, admissions standards and high-school GPA.
“Administration
has continually identified this as a need of the college. Our strategic
plan includes efforts toward attracting and retaining these students,”
says Claudia Beversluis, Calvin’s dean for instruction, who will
oversee the program in its infancy.
The goal of Tapestry is not
only to keep students at Calvin, but to help them to thrive there -
academically, socially, vocationally and in leadership.
Tapestry brings together
several Calvin programs that are already successful at attracting and
supporting minority students. The grant will also enable Calvin to hire
a project coordinator, who will connect the Tapestry’s many threads.
There are five main elements
to Tapestry: Entrada Early Start, the customized portfolio, the Nexus
Mentorship Program, the Tapestry leadership seminars, and the Tapestry
awards ceremony.
Entrada Early Start will
allow Tapestry to begin its mentoring of minority students before they
even attend college. The early start program is a new component of Calvin’s
well-established Entrada Scholars Program, an intensive summer course
for high-achieving ethnic minority high school students. Not only do
a large number of Entrada alumni choose to study at Calvin, they are
also much more likely to graduate than other ethnic minority students
at Calvin, a fact that emerged during a scrutiny of graduation rates
by the offices of admissions and pre-college programs.
The early start
program will allow high school students, identified through Tapestry,
who do not maintain the 3.0 GPA required for Entrada admission to participate
in the program.
“Entrada
is very rigorous,” says Rhae-Ann Booker, Calvin’s director
of pre-college programs. It’s a 14-week semester course in three-and-a-half
weeks.”
Booker believes
the pilot program will demonstrate that students who bring lower than
a 3.0 will be successful in that summer course, and it will positively
affect them at Calvin.
Anissa Adkins,
a 2000 Entrada graduate and now a Calvin junior double majoring in Spanish
and social work, is the kind of student Calvin hopes to reach and retain
with Entrada Early Start.
“In my experience
Entrada is the only thing that made me interested in Calvin at all,”
says Adkins, who is of Native American, African American and Caucasian
descent. “It was nice that it wasn’t a simulated college
experience-because I think those programs do exist-but you knew it was
an actual college course you were taking part in.”
And, she said,
Entrada supplies help along with the academic challenge.
“Even things
we concentrated on beside the class - note taking and strategies and
time management - were really helpful. I think they try to give you
those habits that make you successful as a freshman.”
Adkins, who met
her current roommate at Entrada, is such a fan of the program that she
served as a resident advisor in last summer’s Entrada session.
The Tapestry program will
work to keep its students, both those who come through Entrada Early
Start and other qualified ethnic minority students, thoroughly engaged
with all aspects of college life.
Tapestry students will compile
customized portfolios, outlining their academic, vocational and leadership
goals and plans. Through the Nexus Mentorship Program, (a onetime Calvin
effort which will be revived and revised for Tapestry) they will be
paired with upperclass students, faculty and staff members and other
mentors. They will attend Tapestry seminars, sponsored by various college
offices and organizations and geared to goal-setting, career strategies
and leadership development. In their third year of participation, they
will attend the Tapestry awards ceremony as a validation of their progress
in the program and a transition to their graduation years.
Tapestry’s
cross-divisional approach was necessary for building a strong minority
presence on Calvin’s campus, says Shirley Hoogstra, Calvin’s
Vice President for Student Life.
“No one person
is in charge of all student needs,” she says.
When Barbara Omolade,
Calvin’s newly-hired dean for multicultural affairs, arrives in
February, the Tapestry Program and its project coordinator will operate
under her supervision.
The 4-S grant is
renewable for three years, during which time Calvin will work to institutionalize
the Tapestry Program.
“Calvin has
had a very long history of 4-S grants,” says Beversluis.
The state program,
which aims to increase the graduation rate of academically and economically
disadvantaged minority students currently enrolled in either a public
or private four-year university, provides seed money to foster institutional
change.
“It’s
been terrific the way that the state’s interest in supporting
the retention of minority students has dovetailed with Calvin’s
strategic interests,” Beversluis says.
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