EDUCATION Anonymous donors offer scholarships
The program will allow many students to attend Michigan colleges for free.
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) -- In one of the biggest and boldest such programs in the nation, an anonymous group of benefactors is offering college scholarships for at least the next 13 years to nearly all of Kalamazoo's high school graduates.
The scholarships will be good at any of Michigan's public universities or community colleges, and the amounts will depend on how long the student has been in the Kalamazoo school system. Those who enrolled in kindergarten would get a free ride.
"This is truly a way for dreams to come true," city School Superintendent Janice Brown said Friday.
Civic leaders were delighted by the program, called The Kalamazoo Promise, and said it could transform this largely middle-class city of 77,000 by attracting businesses and drawing home buyers with children.
How it works
Starting with the class of 2006, the four-year scholarships will be available to all students who entered the school system in the ninth grade or earlier. The scholarships will cover between 65 percent and 100 percent of tuition and fees.
For students at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, such a program would be worth more than $7,000 this school year.
Brown would not give any details on the donors or disclose how much money they put up, but said the program was quietly in the works for three or four years. It will run for at least 13 years but may continue well after that, said district spokesman Alex Lee.
Brown said she is unaware of any other districtwide scholarship program in the nation.
"What a tremendous act of generosity on the part of the donors who made this possible, and what a tremendous opportunity for all these children in Kalamazoo public schools," Gov. Jennifer Granholm said.
Kalamazoo is a racially diverse community about 130 miles west of Detroit. The district's 10,300 students attend 16 elementary schools, three middle schools, two high schools and one alternative high school. About 500 students graduated in 2005 from high school, and about 85 percent of them applied to college, Brown said.
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