TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
The Sallie Mae Fund kicked off its Florida “Paying for College” bus tour this week as part of The Sallie Mae Fund’s new $1 million financial aid awareness campaign aimed at closing the financial-aid information gap that hinders many low-income and minority Floridians from pursuing a college education.
A Mason Dixon poll commissioned by The Sallie Mae Fund found that 95 percent of Hispanics and 80 percent of African-Americans in Florida not currently enrolled in college said they would have been more likely to attend college if they had better information about how to pay for it. And 60 percent of respondents said they would have been better students in high school if they had known that financial aid was available.
The state campaign will consist of radio, print and television programs, college outreach programs and distribution of education materials, among other efforts.
“The new poll results show why we need a united effort to get more minority students to go to college,” says State Senator Al Lawson. “I want to thank The Sallie Mae Fund for its $1 million commitment… I believe this smart investment in our future will return great dividends to our state.”
“Encouraging higher student achievement and increasing readiness for college are high priorities for Florida,” says Dr. David Mosrie, CEO of the Florida Association of District School Superintendents. “If students don’t think attending college is possible because of lack of knowledge about aid options, they lose a strong incentive to succeed academically.”
Five hundred Hispanic and 500 African-American youths ages 18-24 were randomly selected and interviewed by telephone for the survey.