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Published November 23, 2009 11:21 am -

College prep programs have longevity in Edgecombe


KIMBERLY BELLAMY
Staff Writer

Each year students in Edgecombe have gained academic assistance on the weekends or over the summer from Educational Talent Search (ETS) and Upward Bound since 1970 and 1987, respectively.

The program director Antonio Stephens recently shared some of the highlights of the programs with Edgecombe County School Board members.

ETS served 300 students in grades 6-12 during 2008-09, and 23 students were served at the high schools in Upward Bound during the same time span.

Both programs have a focus on educating students, and prepping them for secondary education.

ETS targets students that belong to families with neither parent having a college degree, and an income under $33,000.

Upward Bound allows students to receive instruction in subjects such as math, literature, composition and science on a college campus on the weekends during the summer. The main location that students attend classes is at St. Augustine’s College in Raleigh.

“We don’t recruit for St. Augustine’s. The students can go anywhere they would like to go,” Stephens said.

The time has recently been split between a community college and four year college during the summer portion.

“This year we had two weeks at Edgecombe Community College so they can get a feel for a community college setting, and a non-residential setting,” Stephens said.

The students still spent three weeks on campus at St. Augustine’s.

“We want them to be acclimated to a college setting,” Stephens said.

Devine Eatmon, senior at North Edgecombe, has been involved in Upward Bound since his freshman year and said the program has better prepared him for his high school coursework as well as college.

“When I get back to school, we’ve already taken those courses so it puts us ahead,” Eatmon said about the summer instructional help.

“It really gives you a picture of how your college life will look in the future.”

Eatmon’s mother, Wanda Eatmon, 39, didn’t complete her undergraduate education at St. Augustine’s, the college she began after high school, but did cite the benefits of the program.



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