Nineteen-year-old Virgie Toliver鈥檚 a junior at the University of North Texas at Dallas, thanks to a couple years of college credits earned while attending Lincoln High School. Lincoln鈥檚 one of many local schools where bright kids can take free college courses 鈥 or gain certifications 鈥 by the time they finish high school.
Toliver liked , signed up, and gained an unexpected education along the way.
鈥淭eachers are very different,鈥 Tolivar said. 鈥淵ou had to be more independent for yourself to get your assignments in and pass that class.鈥
The big takeaway?
鈥淭hey treated you like an adult.鈥
So Toliver did some growing up. She鈥檇 moved to North Texas from an Arkansas school with no early college program. With dreams of a job in law enforcement, she eagerly dove into college course work.
But COVID-19 soon left her floundering. In 11th grade, in the middle of the early college program, she gave up.
鈥淚'm not an online learner,鈥 Toliver said. 鈥淚 was real down. I didn't want to do it. I told my parents I was like, 鈥業 don't want do this anymore.鈥 And they were questioning me like, 鈥榳hy?鈥欌
At least 65,000 Texas students take advantage of similar early college programs statewide. But setbacks like Tollivar鈥檚 can be common
That鈥檚 where might help. Beginning next year, 40 UNT Dallas early college high school students can apply for $4,000 scholarships from the Greater Texas Foundation. The multi-year program is designed to help them finish that bachelor鈥檚 degree.
ECHS programs, which were at Bard College, have been touted as a way to help students from lower-income families attend college. Thanks to grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, ECHS programs began spreading nationwide beginning in 2002.
But even though research shows more ECHS students get a bachelor鈥檚 degree than similar students not in the program, those numbers could be better.
Texas education nonprofit reports 17% of Dallas County ECHS graduates obtained bachelor鈥檚 degrees. Statewide, 16% of Texas ECHS graduates obtained bachelor鈥檚 degrees by 2019 鈥 the most recent data available.
UNT Dallas President Bob Mong says 31% of his students obtain a bachelor鈥檚 degree in four years, and 45% take six years. Those numbers include students from ECHS programs.
Many UNT Dallas students are what Mong calls 鈥渉igh need," which can include lower-than-expected college entrance scores, growing up in a non-English-speaking home, and often, low-income.
"85% of our graduates are high need," Mong said. "That is among the highest in the state of Texas."
UNT Dallas鈥 Lisa Hobson, assistant to the president, has seen too many college-capable kids fail to finish that degree.
鈥淪ome kids take what they're calling a gap year and it turns into a gap five years and a gap decade and a gap lifetime where they never return to school,鈥 she said.
That irks Hobson, who knows college degrees five, 10 or more years down the road statistically lead to higher incomes. She also said many UNT Dallas students don鈥檛 know anyone else 鈥 including family members 鈥 even in college.
鈥淐ollege attendance can be so far away from kids,鈥 Hobson said. 鈥淪ome kids legitimately think 鈥業 have a (better) opportunity to be bit by a spider and I could be Spider-Man鈥 than completing a degree.鈥
Virgie Toliver, who was adopted six years ago, wants to be the first in her family to complete a college degree.
"My previous people, they didn't care about that type of stuff,鈥 Toliver said, referring to her birth parents鈥 view of a college education. "My adoptive parents now, they still aren't graduated. They have some college background, but they have not graduated.鈥
Toliver plans to apply for the ECHS scholarship. Even though the teen said she had lost faith in her smarts when COVID forced online learning, her adoptive-parents did not.
And the support she got from her adoptive parents and from some UNT Dallas faculty paid off: Toliver was the valedictorian of her Lincoln High School class.
鈥淭hey were like, this is what you want to do? We're going to push you,鈥 recalled Toliver. 鈥淎nd they helped me. A lot. I feel like it's a support system issue as well. Like no parents, which - you don't need parents - you need a support system.鈥