| Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system takes additional steps to recruit more underrepresented students |
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| Monday, 23 February 2009 22:17 | |||
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In light of Minnesota’s rapidly diversifying population, the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system is taking additional steps to encourage more students of color and low-income students to attend college. A new brochure, Make college a part of your future, a related wall poster and Web site, yesyoucan.mnscu.edu, are intended to answer common questions about college. The materials and Web site are available in English and eight other languages - Dakota, French, Hmong, Ojibwe, Russian, Somali, Spanish and Vietnamese. “We cannot afford to leave anyone on the sidelines,” said Chancellor James H. McCormick. “We must raise the educational attainment of groups that traditionally have not attended college in large numbers. Many of them are new immigrants whose families haven’t fully mastered the English language. Minnesota’s employers - even with the current economic downturn - must have a skilled workforce when the economy rebounds here and abroad.” School counselors are being encouraged to distribute brochures and hang posters to attract attention. And advertisements featuring Minnesota State Colleges and Universities students are being posted in buses and light rail cars in the Twin Cities metropolitan area and in various news outlets. The materials and Web site are intended primarily to help students in 8th through 10th grades, along with their parents and mentors, learn more about the benefits of attending college and encourage them to prepare for college. Students from non-English speaking backgrounds often are uncertain about whether they can afford college and will fit into college life because they are the first in their families to go to college in this country, said Whitney Harris, the system’s executive director of diversity and multiculturalism. He noted that up to 70 different languages are spoken on some campuses.
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