University of Oregon Pathway Oregon 2021 Report

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PathwayOregon 2021 Report


“As someone who benefitted personally from scholarships, the PathwayOregon program is especially meaningful to me. PathwayOregon not only opens doors for students, it provides holistic academic support. I am grateful to all of the generous donors who continue to help our students experience the rewards of earning a college education.”

—Michael H. Schill, President of the University of Oregon and Professor of Law


Fellow Ducks, I cannot express how critical the PathwayOregon program was for some of our students this past year, more so than ever before. With the COVID-19 pandemic crippling the world, we faced a lot of uncertainty this year. For many, jobs were lost, rent was difficult to pay, and the prospects of attending or continuing to attend college became questionable. However, PathwayOregon helped take away some of that uncertainty for some of our brightest, lower-income Oregonians. In fall 2020, nearly 2,400 students were part of the PathwayOregon program. Despite learning remotely this year, our Pathway students showed resilience, attending and achieving in their classes during this new reality. While the full coverage of tuition and fees helped alleviate the financial burden for many, the continued personal, individualized advising also brought a human element to their experience away from school. To date, more than 7,200 students have been PathwayOregon recipients, with almost $50 million distributed since the program’s inception in 2008. As the state’s flagship university, we have a responsibility for making high-quality education accessible to all of our state’s students. PathwayOregon accomplishes that for our brightest, Pelleligible students who would otherwise find the financial costs of higher education too much to overcome. All in thanks to the generous contributions of our donors, the stress of that financial burden is greatly eased, and our talented students can focus on exploring their creativity, making the next scientific breakthrough, or leading the charge on correcting today’s social issues. While the world’s focus right now is on defeating this pandemic—and I know we will—the need from low-income Oregonians who desire higher education will still continue on. We must not lose sight of that, or we risk defeating ourselves as being great stewards of education to all the communities across our state. With the contributions from our donors from across the years and new ones in the future, you continue to strengthen the PathwayOregon program, helping us attract the best and brightest around Oregon and giving us the opportunity to find new ways to help our students be successful. The support you are giving is making dreams come true and the future of Oregon even brighter. With gratitude,

Roger J. Thompson Vice President for Student Services and Enrollment Management University of Oregon Alumni Association Lifetime Member


Student Profile PATHWAYOREGON NEW FRESHMAN STUDENTS

7,200

GENEROUS GIFT FROM CONNIE, BS ’84, AND STEVE BALLMER

MORE THAN

PROGRAM RESTRUCTURED

900

STUDENTS SERVED SINCE PROGRAM’S INCEPTION

523

542

FALL 2013

FALL 2014

844 712

706 646

FALL 2015

FALL 2016

FALL 2017

619

FALL 2018

FALL 2019

581

FALL 2020

PATHWAYOREGON AWARDS TO FRESHMAN STUDENTS 2,250,000

1,750,000 1,500,000 1,250,000 1,000,000

PROGRAM RESTRUCTURED

2,000,000

$1,146,945

$1,239,417

750,000 500,000

GENEROUS GIFT FROM CONNIE, BS ’84, AND STEVE BALLMER

$2,560,353 2,500,000

$2,325,007

$2,238,377

$2,213,194 $1,894,919 $1,508,799

250,000 0 FALL 2013

FIRST-GENERATION STUDENTS

FALL 2014

FALL 2015

FALL 2016

FALL 2017

FALL 2018

FALL 2019

FALL 2020

STUDENTS FROM RURAL COUNTIES 16% 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0%

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020


GEOGRAPHIC BREAKDOWN OF PATHWAYOREGON STUDENTS BY COUNTY COLUMBIA

CLATSOP

HOOD RIVER MULTNOMAH UMATILLA

WASHINGTON TILLAMOOK

SHERMAN

UNION

CLACKAMAS

YAMHILL

GILLIAM

WASCO POLK

WALLOWA

MORROW

MARION WHEELER

BAKER

JEFFERSON

LINCOLN

LINN

GRANT

BENTON CROOK DESCHUTES

LANE

50 OR MORE 10 TO 49 0 TO 9 COOS

DOUGLAS

LAKE

HARNEY

MALHEUR

CURRY JOSEPHINE

JACKSON

KLAMATH

PATHWAYOREGON STUDENTS BY SCHOOL OR COLLEGE

PATHWAYOREGON STUDENTS BY RACE–ETHNICITY WHITE

HISPANIC O R LATINO ASIAN

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES: HUMANITIES

49% 25%

10%

TWO OR MORE RACES

149 615 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES: SOCIAL SCIENCES 417 LUNDQUIST COLLEGE OF BUSINESS 310 COLLEGE OF DESIGN 167 COLLEGE OF EDUCATION 146 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES: NATURAL SCIENCES

9%

4% RACE AND E THNICITY UNKNOWN 1% BLACK OR AFRICAN AMERICAN

AMERICAN INDIAN OR ALASKAN NATIVE

<1% NATIVE HAWAIIAN OR OTHER PACIFIC ISLANDER <1%

SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AND COMMUNICATION

256 SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DANCE 61 EXPLORING 272

“The PathwayOregon staff members helped me navigate requirements, set up my class schedule, and check all the boxes I needed to. It’s a support system I can rely on.” —ANGEL ESCOCIA-NUÑEZ MAJOR: FAMILY AND HUMAN SERVICES


Student Retention PathwayOregon freshmen, sophomores, and juniors have consistently persisted at rates on par with their higher-income peers.

FRESHMAN RETENTION RATES 89%

90% 87%

86%

88% 87%

87%

89%

88%

87%

87%

87%

87%

86%

88% 87%

85%

85%

80%

75%

70%

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

RETAINED TO SECOND YEAR

Minding the Gap PathwayOregon is a promise that tuition and fees will be covered for four years, as long as students remain eligible and meet academic requirements. However, the amount the UO provides varies according to each student’s needs, enabling us to leverage state and federal funds.

2020–21 TOTAL TUITION AND FEES: $13,857 Example 1: Expected family contribution of $0

$3,600 $2,862

Example 2: Expected family contribution of $2,500

$3,600

Example 3: Expected family contribution of $5,000

$3,795

$12,562

$7,395 $6,462 $1,295

FEDERAL GRANT

STATE GRANT

UO GRANT

Expected family contribution is determined by the federal government when students apply for financial aid. It is calculated with a formula that uses income, assets, benefits, and family size.


Graduation Rates The four-year graduation rates of

Just one year later, the first cohort of

PathwayOregon students greatly exceed

Pathway students entered the UO—a cohort

historical rates for low-income Oregonians.

that graduated at a rate of 43 percent.

In 2007, the year before the Pathway

Now, 12 years after the inception of the

program was launched, the average four-

Pathway program, an incredible 59 percent

year graduation rate for Federal Pell Grant

of Pathway students that entered the UO in

recipients attending the UO was 31 percent,

2016 graduated last year.

slightly better than the rate at other Oregon public universities.

FOUR-YEAR GRADUATION RATES 61%

61% 56%

56%

56%

57%

63% 59%

53% 47%

50%

2011 GRADUATED BY 2015

50%

2012 GRADUATED BY 2016

2013 GRADUATED BY 2017

2014 GRADUATED BY 2018

2015 GRADUATED BY 2019

2016 GRADUATED BY 2020

“Being part of the PathwayOregon community comes with a really wonderful support system. Both my family and I benefit from the scholarship, so we can focus on our lives and not worry about financially burdening ourselves. Knowing how the expenses of books and housing can add up, having the entirety of my tuition covered feels like weight being lifted off my shoulders.” —DARINA MIROEDOVA MAJOR: ART AND TECHNOLOGY MINORS: MEDIA STUDIES, MUSIC TECHNOLOGY An equal-opportunity, affirmative-action institution committed to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. This publication will be made available in accessible formats upon request. ©2021 University of Oregon SSEM0521



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