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Displaying Press Release archive for 2005
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Sixteen Community Colleges Selected for National Initiative (October 22, 2005)
Breaking Through Aims to Make Higher Education Possible for Many Adults Who Are Now Poorly Prepared for Postsecondary Programs or Good Jobs 

Sixteen community colleges have been selected to participate in a multi-year national initiative to increase the number of low-skilled adults who enter and complete occupational and technical degree programs in community and technical colleges.

Breaking Through: Helping Low-Skilled Adults Enter and Succeed in College and Careers will be managed by the National Council for Workforce Education and Jobs for the Future. The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation made a $751,000 grant to JFF this year in support of the initiative, which is designed to use community colleges as a vehicle to help low-income people advance in the labor market and to enhance their income.
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Groundbreaking Forum Explores the Fate of the American Dream (September 28, 2005)
Business and Government Leaders Gathering to Find Solutions for Education and Workforce Crisis
 
On September 19-20, top corporate, education, and workforce policymakers came together to address the failure to prepare the nation for the demands of the knowledge-based, global economy of the 21st century. Through a dynamic, interactive forum, town hall-style gatherings, and addresses by prominent policymakers, 100 business and government leaders discussed how we can restore the “American Dream.” Participants emerged with concrete strategies and resources to help provide more young people and adults with a better education and better careers.
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Making a Difference Awards Honor Four (September 19, 2005)
Presentation Opens Two-Day Gathering of Business and Government Leaders to Find Solutions for Education and Workforce Crisis
 
On Monday, September 19, the first Arthur H. White Making a Difference Awards will recognize four extraordinary individuals—from organizations in Los Angeles, San Jose, Hartford, and Boston—who have improved the lives of people in their communities.
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Report: High Growth Occupations Within Reach for Many Low-Skilled U.S. Workers (September 15, 2005)
 
Report Identifies Workforce Development Strategies for Job Growth, Especially Among Minorities, Immigrants and Low-Income Americans
 
For too many of America’s citizens, the goal of earning a paycheck to support a family, the key to the American Dream, has slipped out of reach. In response to this national crisis, Jobs for the Future has published The Right Jobs: Identifying Career Advancement Opportunities for Low-Skilled Workers, a landmark new report that pinpoints 16 specific occupations that have the promise to lift thousands of Americans out of poverty into the middle class. Written by researchers Susan Goldberger, Newell Lessell and Radha Roy Biswas, the report discusses six of the occupations in detail, providing such crucial information as growth estimates, earning potential and educational requirements. The report also offers comprehensive public policy strategies that, if implemented, will make these jobs more accessible to the workers who need them.
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Region Exploring Strategy to Improve College Access for Low-Income and Minority Youth (June 28, 2005)

Nineteen New England Programs Cited as Excellent Models

A new report, Head Start on College, released today by Jobs for the Future (JFF) as part of its Double the Numbers initiative and commissioned by the Nellie Mae Education Foundation, explores the potential of dual enrollment programs as a way of expanding the pipeline of traditionally underserved students who enter higher education institutions in New England.

Each year, more and more high school students reduce their college costs and get a head start on college through programs that enable them to earn up to two year’s worth of tuition-free college credit. But while New England high schools lead the nation in providing advanced placement, an option that benefits students headed for selective colleges, they lag behind schools from other regions in implementing an approach that is more likely to serve lower-income and minority students.

“Policymakers and educators concerned with improving the access of underrepresented students to postsecondary education are beginning to consider dual enrollment as a strategy to introduce higher education to a ‘second population’: young people who may not consider themselves college bound,” explains JFF’s Nancy Hoffman, who co-authored the report with Amy Robins.

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Community Colleges Solicited for Excellence Award (April 8, 2005)
MetLife Foundation to Recognize Innovation in Helping Youth and Adults Succeed in College April 8, 2005 Community colleges from across the nation are invited to apply for the 2006 MetLife Foundation Community College Excellence Award. Two community colleges will be honored for their institution-wide commitment to helping diverse students enter and succeed in postsecondary education. The winning colleges will each receive a $30,000 award and national recognition. “Across the country, community colleges are responding to the achallenges their students face through innovative strategies and programs,” notes Sibyl Jacobson, president and CEO of MetLife Foundation. “This award recognizes their important work.” Administered by Jobs for the Future, the MetLife Foundation Community College Excellence Award celebrates and highlights the accomplishments of colleges that are helping less-advantaged youth and adults succeed and advance in college and careers.
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Community Colleges Where Everyone Wins (April 6, 2005)
 “It’s education that makes you special,” says Mei Yen Huang, a 41-year-old community college student. “Each hour is precious now and I want them all.” This 41-year-old, who came to the United States from Taiwan ten years ago with her son, is a student at City College of San Francisco. CCSF and Community College of Denver are featured in Walking the Talk, a publication from Jobs for the Future and Next Generation Press presenting compelling stories of college leaders, faculty, and staff working together to help students like her succeed.
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Five Cities Receive Grants for Innovative Partnerships (January 12, 2005)
American high schools are revealing serious leaks in the “pipeline” that should take young people through school and into economically productive adulthood. Nationally, more than 30% of students do not complete high school in a timely way. In some inner-city neighborhoods, the odds of high school graduation are only fifty-fifty. In response to this alarming trend, several funders have come together to support efforts in selected cities to improve educational options and outcomes for the growing numbers of struggling and out-of-school youth. The Youth Transition Funders Group, a group of local, regional, and national philanthropies, today announced grants to enable five cities to strengthen their strategies for reducing the numbers of young people who drop out and reconnecting those who have left school.
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