Oregon Offering Free & Reduced College Tuition for Native Americans

0
900

Members of Oregon’s nine federally recognized tribes can attend the state’s public universities and community colleges practically free this school year, and members of federally recognized tribes from around the country will be eligible for in-state tuition at the school’s two largest universities.

In May, the state’s Higher Education Coordinating Commission rolled out a grant for members of Oregon-based tribes, covering the average cost of attendance at the state’s eight public universities, 17 community colleges and 14 of the state’s 18 private nonprofit colleges. The grants cover everything not already paid by other state and federal aid and can be used to help cover housing and book costs, too.

This summer, three public universities in Oregon announced they’d go even further, offering in-state tuition to members of all 574 federally recognized tribes across the U.S. Among them are the state’s two largest universities by enrollment, Oregon State University and Portland State University. On Monday, Southern Oregon University announced it, too, would offer the same deal.

It makes Oregon one of a small but growing number of states offering free and reduced tuition to Native American students in an effort to boost enrollment and graduation rates among the population.

Nationwide, about 24% of Native American students ages 18 to 24  are enrolled in a college or university, about half the rate of the general population, according to the National Center of Education Statistics. In Oregon, about 48% of Native students enroll in college after high school, about 15% less than the rate for all high school graduates in the state.

Oregon now joins Michigan and Montana in making tuition at public universities free to members of tribes based in the state, along with several public universities doing so independently, such as the University of Minnesota at Morris and the University of Maine. This summer, the University of Arizona announced it would offer free tuition to Native students, and the University of California system, the nation’s largest, announced this summer that it would waive tuition for members of federally recognized tribes within its borders.

In late 2021, Gov. Kate Brown joined Oregon’s tribal leaders and the state’s Higher Education Coordinating Commission to discuss equity and access gaps in higher education among the state’s Native high school graduates and their non-Native peers. A survey from the commission found that 40% of Native American students at Oregon’s public universities who had received financial aid still struggled to afford college. The coalition recommended the Legislature allocate money to a grant program to cover those costs, and in February, the Legislature approved $19 million dollars to fund one year of the Tribal Student Grant program.

It will cover the average cost of attendance at public universities, community colleges and the bulk of tuition at most of the state’s private nonprofit schools for Native students enrolled in Oregon-based tribes. The grants awarded for private schools are capped at the cost of the average Oregon public university. The size of the grants are worked out between students and the school’s they attend, given other forms of aid that need to be accounted for, according to Endi Hartigan, communications director at the Higher Education Coordinating Commission.

As of Aug. 22, 423 students had applied and are tentatively eligible for the grant, according to Hartigan. Despite an Aug. 1 application deadline, she said in an email that the commission will still continue to accept applications for any eligible student hoping to enroll this fall.

“We will continue to make awards until funds are exhausted,” she wrote.