Schools

MCC Gets Grant Designed To Help Students On Academic Probation

MCC has been awared a state "Promoting Academically Successful Students" grant.

MANCHESTER, CT – Manchester Community College has been awarded a grant totaling $37,500 to operate a program known as PASS, or Promoting Academically Successful Students.

The state grant, supported by the PASS Program in the Office of Higher Education, is designed specifically to fund "strategic initiatives to address the needs of qualifying students on academic probation who may need additional support to improve their standings."

The concept includes "high-touch" programs that combine student support with student accountability, providing a "foundation for at-risk students to realize their academic goals."

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"We are pleased to receive this additional funding, which adds to the wrap-around services we provide to help ensure student success," said Peter Harris, MCC's interim dean of student affairs and enrollment management.

He said the PASS program has room for 25 students in the Spring 2019 semester to work with faculty and staff to develop "sustainable college acumen skills, get themselves removed from academic probation and remain on track to achieve their educational goals."

Find out what's happening in Manchesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

MCC students who earn fewer than 50 percent of their registered credits are placed on academic probation. The primary consequence is credit limits in the following semester. That, in turn, leads to some 1,000 credit students being put on “progress probation,” which not only delays completion but also can affect financial aid, MCC officials said.

The PASS program is designed to enable students to make progress towards their academic goals and get back into good academic standing at the end of the Spring 2019 semester, MCC officials said. It is expected that all PASS students will achieve an overall GPA of 2.0 to be removed from probation, they added.

As participants in the program, qualifying students must agree to meet with advisers, and receive academic counseling. In addition, program components include a credit class focused on student skills, an academic coaching program, a mentoring program, dedicated tutors, co-curricular events and early interventions.

Photo Credit: MCC

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