Through a program with roots at the University of Virginia, thousands of high school students across Virginia every year are receiving free, individualized help untangling the complexities of accessing higher education.
The service – provided by recent college-graduate advisers who work directly with students in Virginia high schools – is sorely needed in a state with an ambition to become the “best educated state in the nation by 2030.”
A 2019 report of the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, which set that ambitious goal, identified actions most likely to increase the number of Virginians who earn college degrees. Among them: “Expand and enhance outreach, advising, counseling, mentoring, work-based learning, career planning and credit transfer, especially for those at most risk of non-enrollment, non-persistence and non-completion.”
Now even more Virginia students will get just that kind of assistance from advisers provided by the Virginia College Advising Corps.
Thanks to a recently announced $2 million grant from Virginia529, the UVA-based organization is poised for a major expansion, significantly boosting its ability to provide equitable opportunities to low-income, first-generation and underrepresented students on the path to attending college or a vocational training program after graduating from high school.

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