Í) £ Clackamas Community College Wednesday, April 19, 1978 KI, No. 23 oposed legislation ases requirements for student aid iproximately 20 percent of the students at this College who qualify for federal financial aid because they didn't meet the U requirements for independent status will qualify next year ling to Financial Aid Specialist Ron Hoodye. oposed legislation would allow students to live with their parents maximum of six weeks and still maintain their independent status. Lly students who lived at home for two consecutive weeks were tad ineligible. hurt the person who went to school for nine months and then me and got a job during the summer," Hoodye said. "It also w if you went home for a break or just for a visit." rnye feels that legislators have finally realized that the two week [for living at home was unrealistic and have amended it for that ¡also agreed that the rules as they were made perjurers out of students who just didn't notify anyone when they went home for mas break or to visit for two or three weeks during the summer, mgressman Les AuCoin(D.-3rd district) has introduced these dfflents to the bill changing residency requirements that would al- ngetheway independent status is determined: Students would have to wait for only one year after their parents entributed to their support to be declared independent. Currently must wait two years. Students may receive financial assistance from their parents up to Hunt equal to the federal income tax dependent deduction and |eeligible for independent status. Itsechanges will make more students eligible for more money at Allege, according to Hoodye. (everyone who qualified for minimal assistance last year was to ly,they would probably qualify for the maximum assistance un- lenew proposal," Hoodye said. ¡Coin has also introduced a proposal that calls for providing a non- dable tax credit for one-half of post-secondary educational expen­ do a maximum of $750. The credit would be targeted to fami - ithan adjusted gross income ranging from $9,000 to $40,000. Coin's legislation would address four different income levels: For families below the $9,000 per year income level, the bill is that government grants and loans wi ll be used to meeteduca- [expenses. For families with incomes between $9,000 and $15,000, the tax [provided in the bill begins to rise according to a formula which sitto be combined with a Basic Educational Opportunity Grant. For incomes between $15,000 and $30,000,families would be feforthe full tax credit amount. [For incomes between $30,000 and $40,000, families would be bfor a tax credit which drops one percent for every $100 earned Pie$30,000 level. Local second grade students celebrate spring with a visit to the College's Environmental Learning Center's Ecoloqv Pond. The baby ducks recently joined the babyneutrias to in­ crease the ELC's nursery. fed approval sought Guided Studies program opens door to learning ieopen door policy is the sophy behind community |tsoftoday, said Kent Hea- tollege counselor. Inorder tee institutions to remain feation, in effect, the col- test retain its students. wiously, students lacking academic skills would en- nthe College and find that [could not compete with [Scholastically favored stu- F in terms of progress in teroom, Heaton said. In ¡they would not return for plowing semester. te vanishing student" will ie extinct if the present d Studies program is ap- by the school board this Heaton said. ten a student decides to Ho the College, we will require him/her to take a place­ ment test consisting of math, reading and English skills," Hea­ ton said. Many of these students have settled upon a definite ma­ jor but many of them cannot apply the basic academic fun­ damentals of math, reading, and English necessary to complete their major. "Guided Studies is a program designed for those students who lack these necessary academic skills," Heaton said. The College, realizing the problem after many students were "disappearing" after one term of school, acknowledged the need for something which could solve this, Heaton said. After considerable study and re­ search into this problem, Heaton said that he employed Guided Studies into the College. "Our objective in Guided Studies is to put out a compe­ tent graduate who can do the job they were supposedly trained to be able to do," he said. Before, there were three main reasons for students leaving the College and not returning for the following semester. "One is that many of these students had no definite objective in mind. Secondly, nobody really cared about their needs, and thirdly, they lacked the basic academic skills," Heaton said. "It was just one more failure added to their lives." Guided Studies will help the students learn about themselves, others and help them adapt to the College's environment as well as society in general, Heaton said. "The major point of the Col­ lege is to keep students in the school and make them both suc­ cessful as responsible human be­ ings and successful in their oc­ cupational interest," he said. Guided Studies will also revise classroom study format, Heaton said. "Before Guided Studies was established, the instructor planned his course of study be­ fore the actual class was to be­ gin. The class was prepared to touch on subjects interesting to both the intellectual student, the average student and the academically unfavored student. The instructor then focused his course objective toward the aver­ age student, thereby touching on a little of everything. This caused boredom for the intellec- tual student and confusion for the low skilled student. Guided Skills should elimi­ nate a little of this by consoli­ dating the low students in a de­ signed course of study, enabling the instructors as well as the in­ tellectual students the chance to venture deeper into more soph­ isticated material, Heaton said. "This does not mean that the low skilled students will be treat­ ed as refuse, it means that they will now be able to become bet­ ter familiarized with course ma­ terial pertaining to their major before returning to their neces­ sary courses of study," he said. "The students are thinking people. The concensus of the students as well as the non- Guided Studies students is that the program is needed", Heaton saick «C lackamas community COLLEGE ARCHIVES