PHOTO & STORY COURTESY OF CMSD NEWS BUREAU
Cleveland has been become the fourth chapter of Say Yes to Education, a historic development that will bring college scholarships to CMSD students while also providing services designed to keep them on track to graduation.
For a city with the nation’s second highest rate of child poverty and a low percentage of college graduates, the move promises to be a game changer. Besides opening doors for students who may have once dismissed post-secondary education as unaffordable, creating Say Yes Cleveland has the potential to attract new residents and spur economic growth.
Philanthropist George Weiss, who founded the national nonprofit Say Yes organization 31 years ago, announced Cleveland’s selection Jan. 18 at the John Marshall Campus. Students who packed the gym stood and cheered, while others saw the event live-streamed in an overflow area and high schools across the District.
“Say Yes to Education is the right thing at the right time for the Cleveland schools, for the city of Cleveland and for you,” said Mayor Frank G. Jackson, who joined other community leaders in applauding the news.
How the scholarship plan works
Starting this spring, students can receive scholarship for up to the full value of tuition, minus federal and state aid, for any public two-year college, four-year college or Pell-eligible technical program in Ohio.
Scholarships also can be used at the more than 100 private colleges and universities that belong to the National Higher Education Compact. The names of 12 new compact members were announced Jan. 18, including local institutions Case Western Reserve, John Carroll, Baldwin Wallace and Notre Dame.
The scholarships can be used only for tuition, not for expenses such as housing, books and meals.
Recipients must live in the District and attend CMSD or partnering charter high schools. Current high school students who maintain residency can qualify, but starting with the Class of 2023, recipients must have been enrolled continuously from ninth grade through graduation.
Students entering the gym did not know why they had been called together; seniors Lynnae Howard and Jasmin Diaz were unaware even as they took the stage to extend greetings to dozens of community leaders and other adults in attendance.
“People are in debt because of college,” said Lynnae, who plans to attend Ashland University, another new compact member, to study forensic science or prepare for a career in the sports industry. “It’s amazing we don’t have to worry about that.”
“I think it’s going to change lives,” said Jasmin, who intends to study social work at Ohio State University. “A lot of people don’t have this kind of opportunity.”
CMSD, Say Yes hope to reverse trend
Under The Cleveland Plan, CMSD has seen its graduation rate reach a series of record highs, and fewer of those graduates have required remediation in college.
But the number of District graduates who enroll in college within a year has gone down, with the most recent data available, for the Class of 2016, showing it at less than 50 percent.
District CEO Eric Gordon and others believe the trend is related to cost. Gordon notes that Buffalo, another Say Yes chapter, has seen college enrollment rise.
“Our families don’t have conversations about going to college,” Gordon said. “Parents don’t want to promise their kids something they can’t give them.”
Say Yes Cleveland is a community effort. Besides the District, partners include Cuyahoga County, the City of Cleveland, Cleveland Public Library, Cleveland Teachers Union Local 279 and the Cleveland Council of Administrators and Supervisors, an association of District officials. Foundations and other entities provided strong support.
“When there’s a challenge, we find a way to come together and make a difference,” Cuyahoga County Executive Armond Budish told the students in the audience Jan. 18. “We’re here for you, and we will not let you down.”
The community is raising enough money for an endowment that will fund scholarships for 25 years – two generations of students. So far, more than 40 foundations, corporations, families and individuals have contributed nearly $90 million, or $15 million more than the national Say Yes organization had required to launch the chapter.
The number needs to reach $125 million. Say Yes Cleveland will seek to raise the balance over the next five years, and leaders are confident they will reach their goal.
Say Yes Cleveland is trying to create a culture around going to college or enrolling in other post-secondary training. They say the mindset is critical to keeping the region competitive in an ever-changing economy.
“Have tenacity and dare to dream big,” KeyBank Chairman and CEO Beth E. Mooney, another speaker, told the students at John Marshall. “When you’re done, there’s a place for you in our companies.”
To read the full story, visit ClevelandMetroSchools.org/news.