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Colleges Volunteer Financial Aid for Returning Soldiers
Amanda Paulson, Christian Science Monitor
April 17, 2006
CHICAGO - When the University of Illinois announced last month it would
offer 110 full MBA scholarships to military veterans, worth $74,000
each, the news flew across the state's National Guard e-mail network.
That same night, 1st Sgt. Michael Purvis e-mailed the program's
director. Within days, he learned he'd be joining the school's
executive MBA program in Chicago this fall.
For Sergeant Purvis, who had just returned to his job as a systems
analyst for a communication firm after a year's deployment in Iraq with
an Army National Guard unit, the news offered a ray of hope. Leaving
the hyper-alert mode of combat duty and returning to a job where he
felt he had to relearn everything has been difficult, he says. "But
then to have an opportunity like this - with somebody offering to help
out - it really brightens your future quite a bit."
The university - which is partnering with the Illinois Veteran Grant
Program to give the scholarships - has one of the more generous
programs out there. But in ways large and small, a number of
institutions are offering a host of opportunities for the largest
combat force returning to the US since Vietnam War days.
Proponents of such programs say there's a pressing need not just to
thank members of the military for the service they've given their
country, but also to offer education, training, or jobs to a group
whose transition to civilian life can be challenging.
"You've got a flood of people who have served the country coming back -
that doesn't happen all that often," says Robert van der Hooning,
assistant dean of the University of Illinois's College of Business.
"There are a lot of military people who have had their careers
interrupted from Tour 1, Tour 2, Tour 3. A lot view this opportunity as
a way to put the burners onto their career, to focus on earning back
some of income they lost all those years serving their country or the
promotions they lost."
The country already provides substantial help to veterans and service
members through the Montgomery GI Bill, through which an active-duty
member of the military can get about $1,000 a month toward 36 months of
education. Similar benefits are available to reservists and members of
the National Guard. A transition assistance program alerts those
leaving the service to the range of benefits available.
But with such a large force starting to return home, some say that's
not enough. The GI bill often falls short of students' needs, with some
exhausting its benefits before they're done with school.
More disturbing, statistics from the US Senate Committee on Veterans'
Affairs show an unemployment rate of more than 15 percent among
veterans ages 20 to 24 - nearly twice that of their nonveteran peers.
International College in Florida decided to create a scholarship
program for veterans when the school realized how many members of the
military were choosing to attend the school because of its emphasis on
applied learning - and it also realized that a number of these students
had trouble with their expenses.
"What we're trying to have is an incentive scholarship to fill the gap
between what the GI bill provides and what tuition is," says Lou
Traina, vice president for institutional advancement. It would cover
the cost of one credit, $1,600, each semester. The school has raised
about $350,000 so far and hopes to reach $1 million by December.
"I remember when I came back from overseas and was starting a family
and trying to go to college, and it was very, very difficult," says
Peter Thomas, a World War II veteran who is on the fund's board.
Currently, at least 160 of the school's 1,800 students are veterans,
says Mr. Traina. "What we're hearing from students is that the college
experience and getting a degree and moving into the career they want
has been a vehicle for transition to civilian life," he says.
The Horatio Alger Association, a provider of need-based scholarships,
recently awarded nearly 700 $5,000 scholarships to veterans of Iraq and
Afghanistan trying to get a bachelor's degree. It is the first
scholarship designed specifically for veterans of the current conflicts.
At the University of Illinois, meanwhile, Mr. van der Hooning came up
with the idea for the scholarships after reading about the Welcome Home
GI Bill that Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D) of Illinois had introduced. The
bill, which hasn't left committee, included education benefits. "I
thought, why are we waiting? Why does it have to go into a political
process?" says van der Hooning.
He worked with Representative Emanuel and Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn to craft a
program that used the state's existing veteran fund and picked up the
shortfall to cover remaining expenses, including books, a computer, and
travel to China, where part of the academic program takes place.
The response, he says, has been overwhelming. Since last month, he's
talked to some 250 vets and awarded scholarships to about 30. Another
50 are in the pipeline. Some calls have been from younger soldiers who
don't qualify for the executive MBA program - designed for mid-career
candidates - so van der Hooning plans to make a similar program for
younger professionals available next year.
Most of the feedback has simply convinced him how much this is needed.
"The morning after we announced this, I got a call on my cellphone at
home from a soldier in Iraq who had just gotten back from his nighttime
run," says van der Hooning. The man said his commander had told the
unit about the scholarship before they went out, and they had talked
about it all night. He submitted his résumé later that
night and was admitted a few days later.
"He told me we have no idea what this does to their psyche, to their
sense of looking forward to coming home after the third tour," says van
der Hooning.
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