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Lorain to get more money to improve grad rates

Filed by July 8th, 2008 in Local and State.
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Federal funds marked for Project GRAD

LORAIN — Starting next year, the Lorain School District hope more seniors will be walking across a graduation stage and preparing to go to college in the fall.

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown announced Monday an additional $100,000 in funding for the Project GRAD (Graduation Really Achieves Dreams) program in Ohio. Project GRAD serves 11 cities across the country and seeks to improve graduation and college attendance rates.

Ohio is a national leader in the program, according to Brown. It is the only state to have more than one Project GRAD site, with programs in Cincinnati, Akron and Lorain.

Lorain, in its fifth year of the program, currently has Project GRAD in six schools: Southview High School and its feeder schools, Helen Steiner Rice, Lowell, Larkmoor, Palm, and Whittier. In these schools every student has access to Campus Family Support, a social service program that addresses student concerns outside of the classroom.

“Social workers in the schools help with issues that creep into academia,” said Latoya Caver-Jackson, the new executive director of Project GRAD in Lorain.

Southview High School offers help to students in finding grants and scholarships to pay for college. Project GRAD also provides a $1,000 a year scholarship to students who graduate from high school in four years with a 2.5 GPA and who have attended two summer institutes through the program.

“We know Project GRAD has been successful,” Brown said.

With the federal money, Lorain will be able to add Project GRAD to Admiral King High School and its feeder schools.

“We definitely want to expand as soon as possible,” said Lorain Schools Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson.

The funding also will allow the schools to implement three other aspects of Project GRAD — a literacy program, a math program and classroom management and discipline.

“We can take our program from good to great like we’ve taken the school district from good to great,” Atkinson said.

Contact Alison Dietz at 329-7155 or metro@chroniclet.com.

 



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3 Responses to “Lorain to get more money to improve grad rates”

  1. johnbear says:

    From Good to Great?? Is there another Lorain school district we don’t know about? What is she talking about?

    (Report comment)

  2. Randy says:

    While teachers deserve the utmost respect, school administrators deserve none. In the nebulus world of professional educators where truth, logic, and forthrightness do not exist, statements like this become possible.

    (Report comment)

  3. Dan S. says:

    “U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown announced Monday an additional $100,000 in funding for the Project GRAD (Graduation Really Achieves Dreams) program in Ohio. Project GRAD serves 11 cities across the country and seeks to improve graduation and college attendance rates.”

    Is this some sort of sick joke?

    $100,000 spread out over 11 cities that probably have two high schools?

    OK, let’s say that no city has more than 2 high schools, and a couple cities only have one high school…

    …that comes out to $5,000 per high school, which is enough to print up some really nice posters, and maybe some colorful pins the kids can wear during a rally and then stab each other with, afterwards!

    Thanks a lot Mr. Bush!

    To put things in perspective, for every single dollar each high school is getting, your federal tax dollars have sent ONE MILLION dollars to Pakistan, that hasn’t been accounted for!!!

    That’s right, while we do without, $5 BILLION of our federal tax dollars have gone to Pakistan, and when we ask what they’ve done with the money, they basically say, “Oh, this and that.”

    Before we send money to Iraq and Pakistan where we count it out by the ton, we should maybe see if they have some sort of accounting system set up to give us a hint as to where our money went!

    (Report comment)

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