猫咪社区

Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.

Brown doubles undergraduate veteran population since 2019

University to continue offering student veterans full scholarships in future application cycles

A $25 million fundraising campaign and $20 million gift from Joseph P. Healey P’22 P’24 in 2020 will allow the University to continue offering student veterans full scholarships in future application cycles.
A $25 million fundraising campaign and $20 million gift from Joseph P. Healey P鈥22 P鈥24 in 2020 will allow the University to continue offering student veterans full scholarships in future application cycles.

Four years after committing to double the enrollment of undergraduate student veterans by 2024, the University has surpassed its goal and secured permanent funding for full veteran scholarships, according to an Oct. 17 . 

22 student veterans enrolled at the University in September, bringing the University's total undergraduate veteran population to 49, according to the press release. When the University set its goal in 2019, the total number of veterans on campus was 21, The Herald previously reported.

鈥淭he types of veterans that served in the military and then want to pursue Brown are really rich in terms of what they can add to the community,鈥 said Christian 鈥淢ac鈥 Manning, program director for the Office of Military-Affiliated Students. 鈥淭hey have really diverse backgrounds, they have diverse experiences.鈥

鈥淲e are immensely grateful for the support of Brown student veterans, OMAS, Brown alumni and friends who have made this initiative so successful,鈥 Logan Powell, associate provost for enrollment and dean of undergraduate admission, wrote in an email to The Herald. 鈥淪tudent veterans bring an invaluable perspective to College Hill and their service and sacrifice make Brown a stronger community.鈥

ADVERTISEMENT

The doubled student veteran enrollment follows the rollout of a broad set of initiatives aimed at making Brown more accessible and welcoming for student veterans, according to the press release. President Christina Paxon P鈥19 P鈥橫D鈥20 previously announced the University鈥檚 plans to eliminate out-of-pocket costs, make applications need-blind and eliminate standardized testing requirements for prospective undergraduate veterans. 

A $20 million gift from Joseph P. Healey P鈥22 P鈥24 in 2020 was a key contributor to building out an endowment of scholarships for students who had previously served in the military, according to the press release. Coupled with the completion of a $25 million fundraising campaign, the donation allows the University to offer student veterans full scholarships in future application cycles, according to the press release. 

鈥淭urning Brown into an affordable choice and a supportive educational environment for a broader segment of our nation鈥檚 extraordinary, courageous veterans not only honors their service, but also enhances the education of all Brown students who benefit from veterans鈥 perspectives and experiences,鈥 Paxson said in the press release. 

Veterans can receive up to $27,120 annually from the Post-9/11 GI Bill to go towards mandatory tuition and fees. At Brown, the difference is made up through Yellow Ribbon awards, which are contributions from private institutions towards the tuition of veterans, and matched funding from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, according to the press release. 

Consequently, there are no out-of-pocket costs for veterans at Brown, Manning said. 

鈥淭hat makes us enormously competitive,鈥 he said. 鈥淏rown is an institution that's really committed to working with specialized populations and trying to cut through financial barriers and they鈥檝e done a good job with that.鈥

When Sean Braga 鈥25, who served in the army for four years and is the president of the Student Veteran Society at Brown, was applying to college, he encountered some institutions that were unable to provide him adequate Yellow Ribbon benefits. Brown, he said, was able to guarantee that he would not have to pay any out-of-pocket educational expenses. 

Beyond the recent growth in financial support for student veterans, Manning said that he attributes the University鈥檚 success in meeting its enrollment goal to the , a separate, rolling application that first opened to prospective students in the 2021-22 application cycle. 

The specialized application encouraged prospective students to submit recommendations from military commanding officers and allows 鈥渕aximum time flexibility鈥 for currently serving veterans, who are often deployed on missions without consistent access to a computer, according to Powell. 

Jonathan Black 鈥25 served in the Marines for five years before applying to Brown as a transfer student from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte during the 2020-21 application cycle. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Without the Veterans Application, it was 鈥渞eally tough to navigate the application system,鈥 Black said. 鈥淚 had been out of high school for five years and the application was asking me for teacher recommendations, counselor recommendations and all this stuff.鈥

Targeted recruitment efforts have also been an 鈥渋ntegral and indispensable鈥 part of the University鈥檚 efforts to double the population of student veterans, according to Powell. 

鈥淲e have partnered with organizations such as Service to School to identify and communicate with talented student veterans from across the country, we have hosted more virtual outreach sessions and we have attended more in-person events as well,鈥 he wrote in an email to The Herald. 

Both Black and Braga engaged with during the admissions process. Black worked with a counselor who helped him integrate his military experience into his application, he said. 

Get The Herald delivered to your inbox daily.

Braga has also worked with , an organization partnered with the University, and was able to obtain an alternative letter of recommendation for his application through the program.

鈥淏rown's done a really great job,鈥 Barga said. 鈥淢ore and more service members are learning that schools like Brown are an option for them and that schools like Brown value the perspective that they're able to bring to their student bodies.鈥


Ethan Schenker

Ethan Schenker is a Senior Staff Writer covering staff and student labor. He is from Bethesda, MD, and plans to study International and Public Affairs and Economics. In his free time, he enjoys playing piano and clicking on New York Times notifications.



Powered by Solutions by The State News
All Content © 2024 猫咪社区.