How the Rising Scholars Program at Kent State helps promising students from low socioeconomic backgrounds get on track for a productive future.
By Jan Senn and Julie Miller, BS ā87
On a morning in July, a group of seventh graders, attending a weeklong summer workshop through Kent Stateās Rising Scholars Program, are taking a tour of Coldwell Tree Farm. The farm, which includes 620 acres of certified woodlands in southern Columbiana County, is owned and managed by Dave and Lisa Coldwell and their three grown sons.
The Coldwell family intensively manages their tree farm for a combination of timber production, wildlife habitat, forestry consulting services, salvaged lumber and live edge wood slab sales, education and community outreach.
Tour leader Jed Coldwell shows the students how to use a tree scale stick to measure the diameter and height of standing trees. Measuring tree girth is a common educational technique that enables students to learn about their local environment in a practical manner. Woodland owners and foresters take such measurements periodically to monitor tree growth and make management decisions.
Tree farming is not about a quick sale; it takes patience and planning. The Coldwell family currently plants more than 3,000 trees a yearābut what they plant this year wonāt be ready to harvest for 80 years. Itās a slow process, but they do it to protect the land, to watch something grow and to plan for future generations.
In that sense, the process of tree farming is an apt metaphor for Kent Stateās Rising Scholars Program, which supports underserved students in grades 7ā12 who have been identified by their middle schools as having the potential to be the first in their families to complete a four-year degreeāan outcome that would be life changing for future generations.
Putting a tree scale stick into studentsā hands and showing them how to use it passes a baton to the next generation. Itās a tangible means of emphasizing the importance of basic math skills and encouraging students to care for their local environments.
And, just as woodland managers take measurements to monitor growth and make decisions, Rising Scholars managers use an evidence-based approach to measure the programās growth, evaluate its effectiveness and make a case for its continued expansion (see chart below).
The program, known as Rural Scholars when David Dees, PhD ā00, dean and chief administrative officer of the Columbiana County campuses, created it at the Kent State Salem campus in 2011, was renamed Rising Scholars when rolling it out to the other Kent State regional campuses.
In the program, eligible middle school students are nominated by their teachers and guidance counselors at the end of the sixth grade to take part in the program, which combines mentoring with community and corporate assistance to create a support system that prepares the young adults for life after high school.
Beginning in the seventh grade and continuing through high school, students in the program receive a combination of individual mentoring, career and college-knowledge workshops and structured program guidance as they work toward specified program outcomes.
The five core outcomes are listed as being: successful students, engaged learners, workforce ready, socially savvy and committed to community.
Program participants who attend Ā鶹“«Ć½ may receive scholarships and work in the program as mentors, receiving support on their college journey while also giving back by becoming role models to younger students in the program.
The program specifically addresses the workforce ready and brain drain issues that many Ohio communities face. Program activities are designed to teach young adults the skills necessary to succeed in life after high school, and the program promotes a commitment to community service.
The hope is that students who have gone through Rising Scholars will attend Kent State, but the program is designed to help each student find a suitable vocation or career. At the end of the program, the goal is for students to enroll in college or technical school, enlist in the military or enter the workforce.
Based on the programās success at the Columbiana County campuses, Kent State decided to implement Rising Scholars at all regional campuses, beginning in fall 2019. āWhen fully implemented, the collective impact of the Rising Scholars Program over Northeast Ohio will be significant,ā says Nathan Ritchey, PhD, vice president for Kent State System Integration. āOur regional campuses are small, but together our resources, talent and footprint are quite impressive.ā
Ritchey is convinced the timing is right for this program to expand across the Kent State system. āWhen we look at educational attainment in our region, we see that there are many gaps that affect economic development, personal stability and the overall health of the communities we serve,ā Ritchey says. āThrough the success of the Rural Scholars Program at our Columbiana County campuses, we are confident that we can begin to address these important societal issues.ā
When it comes to finances, Dees says providing a free education for qualified Rising Scholars is not as expensive as it may sound. āMany of these students, because of their background, qualify for a lot of financial aidāPell Grants and things like that,ā says Dees. āWhen I first started the program, I thought the secret was to get the college paid for. But eight years later, looking back, I see the most important thing is the mentors. The mentors are the secret sauce; those are the individuals who keep the students on the right path all the way.ā
At the end of the program, the goal is for students to enroll in college or technical school, enlist in the military, or enter the workforce.
In addition to mentors, support from community members is essential. āThe importance of private support cannot be overstated,ā says Stephen Sokany, vice president of Institutional Advancement. āWe have been successful raising initial funds for the Columbiana County program and are looking forward to this program being elevated to a cross-university priority.
āThanks to the performance-based results from the existing Columbiana County program, we have a great narrative to show the communities surrounding our other regional campuses. Itās easy to see how this program can change lives and lift up the community.
āI believe each campus is eager to roll this outāand we need philanthropic support to make that happen.ā
When the program is fully implemented, Kent State will have the capacity to assist nearly 1,000 underserved students from seventh grade through bachelorās degrees, Ritchey says. āWe are reaching students long before they enter college with a program that ensures they are ready for college in terms of academic preparation, finances and confidence. This program is a game changer.ā
Scholar and Mentor
Morgan Briand was beginning seventh grade when she was called to the principalās office at David Anderson Junior/Senior High School in Lisbon, Ohio. āI was a little scared because I didnāt know if I was in trouble or if there was a problem of some sort,ā recalls Briand, who had just moved to Lisbon from Leetonia.
There wasnāt a problemāthere was a promise. She had been selected by teachers at her school to be part of the Rural Scholars Program, whose purpose is to identify underserved students with potential and help them find a path toward higher education and careers.
After six years of participating in the program, Briand graduated high school in 2018 and enrolled at the Ā鶹“«Ć½ at Salem campus, where she is mentoring new scholars in the program and majoring in business managementāa path she chose after talking with agents at an insurance agency she visited with other scholars during one of the programās career exploration workshops. She will transfer to the Kent Campus to complete the last two years of her degree.
"Wanting to be a mentor pushed me to be a better person and to do better in school. Now Iām setting an example for my mentees.ā
āMorgan Briand, 2018 Rising Scholar Program graduate, mentor and sophomore at Kent State University at Salem
āBefore I got into this program, I was really shy and didnāt know what I wanted to do,ā says Briand. āBeing part of Rising Scholars taught me about career paths that I never would have thought of on my own and helped me with my personal skills, like just talking to people.ā
Through her years in the program, Briand realized how many people were helping her and others to find their places in the world. āI knew I wanted to give back in some way,ā she says. āWanting to be a mentor pushed me to be a better person and to do better in school. Now Iām setting an example for my mentees. When they see that I went through the program and am overcoming my challenges, it makes them realize they can do the same.ā
While her eyes are on the future, Briand says she canāt forget how this journey began. āI didnāt know what to expect from Rising Scholars when I first started, but Iām so thankful that I had this opportunity. There is no way I could afford to go to college without this program and, knowing what I know now, I realize I had a lot to learn before I ever got here.
āEven my parents see a big change in meāI am goal-oriented and much stronger as a person. Rising Scholars has changed my life.ā
Founder and Facilitator
Any story of a student who navigates successfully from high school to college is heartening for David Dees, PhD ā00, dean and chief administrative officer of the Columbiana County campuses, who created the Rural Scholars Program at the Kent State Salem campus in 2011. He had started thinking about the need for such a program in the early 2000s, partly as a reflection of his own journey as a college student.
A self-described ārural Appalachian hillbilly from Kentucky,ā Dees was in college at the same time as his mom and brothers. He earned a bachelorās degree in communications with a minor in biology and a masterās degree in theatre from the University of Kentucky. After short stints as a college football coach, disc jockey and theatre teacher, he went on to earn a PhD in cultural foundations of education from Ā鶹“«Ć½.
Along his educational journey, he experienced many of the challenges that first-generation college students face: being unfamiliar with academic terms, feeling reluctant to ask for help or talk with professors, struggling with the time commitment and navigating the system and the culture change with family and friends who werenāt able to assist with the process.
"The mentors are the secret sauce; those are the individuals who keep the students on the right path all the way.ā
āDavid Dees, PhD '00, dean and chief administrative officer, Columbiana County campuses
āAlthough my family was supportive, when I went away to college, I was getting lost in the shuffle, and I was struggling,ā says Dees. āEven then, I thought, āThereās got to be a better way to help students navigate from high school to a university or college.ā"
That thought kept coming up as he became a professor and later an administrator. One of his graduate students was interested in college access and studied programs across the United States that focused on rural or urban students. The two of them wrote a white paper in the early 2000s, taking the best ideas from those programs and creating a system to increase college access, retention and graduation rates. Although their conceptāwhich included mentoring in middle schoolāwas powerful, financing remained a stumbling block.
Then, while Dees was working at the Kent Campus directing the Center for Teaching and Learning, a colleague suggested he apply for an AmeriCorps VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) grant to help implement the program. He received the grant, and Americorps VISTA volunteer Wendy Pfrenger came to help him create the community partnerships and program design necessary to support the programās first cohort of admitted seventh graders in fall 2012.
āWe went to the community and asked, āWhat are the issues in Columbiana County that we, as a university, can help serve?āā says Dees. āAnd they told us, āWe are losing our best and brightest; we have high-paying jobs we canāt fill; we need more educational opportunities; we need kids who are ready for the workplaceānot just ready for college, but ready for whatever is next in life.ā
āTo build the program, we took the best practices and ideas from programs around the country we had identified through research and put them together with the community input we had obtained over yearlong conversations.
āI think thatās why weāve had so much success. We did our research, we followed through, and we had a lot of community buy-in for what we were trying to accomplish.ā
Proponent and Program Director
Donny Larabee, BA ā18, could be a poster child for the Rising Scholars Program, even though he grew up prior to its founding.
He started out as a mentor in the program three years ago, while he was studying psychology at Ā鶹“«Ć½ at Salem, and his psychology professor, Rachael Blasiman, PhD, recommended him. After graduating with a bachelorās degree in psychology last May, he became a master mentor to coach new mentors and assist with programming. Recently, he was named interim program director for the Rising Scholars Program at the Columbiana County campuses.
From the first time Larabee heard about Rising Scholars, it resonated with him. āI immediately fell in love with it,ā he says. āIāve always had a large part of my heart devoted to helping kids.ā
"In this program, I want to share my experiences with the students and give them an idea of whatās available out there.ā
āDonny Larabee, BA ā18, interim program director, Rising Scholars, Columbiana
County campuses
Perhaps thatās because his own childhood had a rocky start. Both he and his older brother, A.J., were removed from their biological mother and stepfather when he was seven years old and his brother was eight. They were placed in a group home before going to live with foster parents Richard and Kathryn Larabee, of Muskegon, Michigan. The couple adopted them at ages 11 and 12, when their biological motherās rights were terminated. By then, the Larabees were retired, and both have since passed away.
But Donny Larabee keeps his adoptive parentsā memory ever present, having tattooed reminders of them on each of his forearms. On his left forearm is the logo of the Detroit Tigers in memory of his dad, who was a Tigers fan, along with his initials, RAL; on his right forearm is a lilac blossom in memory of his mom, who loved lilacs, along with her initials, KLL. His parents gave him a loving, stable home, but both of them had worked in factories, so they werenāt able to help him navigate the college admissions process.
Larabee joined the military and was in active duty for eight years, stationed in Alaska and Kentucky, with three tours in Iraq during that time. After meeting his wife, Katie, who is from Ohio, the couple moved to Columbiana County six years ago when he left the military. Katie Larabee, who recently gave birth to their second son, is taking courses at Kent State Salem in business management and is also a mentor in the Rising Scholars Program. Larabee says he is making every effort to stay with the program indefinitely.
āI feel this is kind of a calling for me, because Iāve had all these life experiences,ā says Larabee of his new position. āIāve come from living in extreme poverty with no one to guide me, to having the right people come into my life at the right time. Iāve worked at a variety of jobs, including pizza delivery, telemarketing, cook in a hospital kitchen, military and college student. So in this program, I want to share my experiences with the students and give them an idea of whatās available out there.
āI donāt think college is the answer for everybody; you can live an amazing life without it. But the experience of going to college is what got me to where I am today.ā
The Rural Scholars Program assesses the developmental assets of program participants via an annual health and wellness survey. Results are extrapolated and compared with the participantsā peers within Columbiana County. Rural Scholars students outperformed their Columbiana County peers on both internal and external developmental assets as indicated on the chart above, which gives just a sample of the findings. See the complete 2018-2019 Rural Scholars Impact Report.
This summer, tenth grade Rising Scholars participated in a workshop titled āLocationologyā and learned about regional enterprise and the economy, as well as geology, astronomy, geography, archaeology and history. In this photo, they are helping identify different species found in river water at a local park during a lesson on soil and water conservation.
How to help your children get on track for college:
- Read with them every day when they are younger; keep them in the habit of reading as they get older.
- Encourage them to participate in a variety of extracurricular activities, allowing them to be involved in their community.
- Talk to them about their interests; help them look into related careers.
- Check in on their academic progress using online tools like ProgressBook, an integrated student information and learning management program.
- Push them to take challenging classes rather than seek easy As; make sure they are meeting high school requirements for graduation and college readiness.
- As they get older, accompany them on college visits and help them make the decision that is best for them.
See for more checklists and advice.
Learn more about Rising Scholars