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Thursday
Feb172005
Thursday, February 17, 2005 at 01:21AM
For nearly 30 years, thousands of low-income students who aspire to
being the first in their family to attend college have made their way
to San Jose State University for help through Upward Bound. Now,
President Bush's proposal to eliminate federal funding in 2006 for
Upward Bound and other key college outreach programs has educators
worried that some of those students will miss out on a college
opportunity. Upward Bound works through universities, including
Stanford and National Hispanic universities, and community agencies. It
assists students in schools with high poverty rates who are low-income
or who would be the first in their family to go to college.
"These programs are critical because school districts like East Side
are cutting counseling and library services, so a lot of our outreach
personnel are being reduced due to the current budget crisis," said Art
Darin, chief academic officer for the East Side Union High School
District. Darin said loss of the federal programs would mean the
students who need help the most may not get the information about or
access to college they need. Upward Bound was created as part of
President Johnson's "War on Poverty." It provides students with
intensive college preparation. At San Jose State, Upward Bound serves
150 students a year from six East Side high schools. Most of the
students are Latino, African-American and Asian-American. [more]