AUSTIN, Texas
A bilingual scholarship program that will offer up to $1 million to Spanish-speaking students at accredited graduate social work programs in Texas in the next three years has been approved by the he Hogg Foundation for Mental Health.
Baylor University, in announcing the statewide program, said it the first of its kind in Texas and possibly in the United States.
“This is a bold, forward-thinking program to encourage linguistic and cultural diversity in higher education and attract more interest in social work as a profession” said Dr. Gregory J. Vincent, vice president for diversity and community engagement at the University of Texas at Austin. The foundation is part of the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement.
The university said people of color are under-represented in social work and other mental health professions, resulting in less-effective mental health services that do not meet their cultural and linguistic needs.
“There simply aren’t enough bilingual social workers to serve the growing Spanish-speaking population in Texas,” said Dr. King Davis, outgoing executive director of the foundation. “These scholarships will achieve two important goals: raise public awareness of the need to build the state’s bilingual mental health workforce, and simultaneously begin to meet that need.”
In Texas. Spanish was the primary language spoken at home by 6.2 million people in 2006, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. It also reported in May that the number of Hispanics living in Texas reached 8.6 million, 36 percent of the state’s population, in 2007. Texas’ Hispanic population was the second largest in the U.S. in 2007 and grew faster than any other state from 2006 to 2007, gaining 308,000 people.