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History of the
Educational Opportunity Fund
In November 1967, in the aftermath of the previous
summer's riots in Newark, New Jersey's newly-appointed Chancellor
of Higher Education, Ralph A. Dungan, directed a memorandum to
the presidents of all of the state's institutions of higher education.
In it he outlined a proposed program of special assistance to young
men and women from economically and educationally disadvantaged
backgrounds. The presidents' response was immediate, widespread,
and overwhelmingly favorable. Enthusiasm was particularly marked
at those institutions that were participating in the federally
supported Upward Bound Program, which sought to help high school
students from disadvantaged backgrounds prepare for entry into
college.
The following February, the Select Commission
on Civil Disorders (the Lilly Commission, established in response
to the events in Newark) made its report to Governor Richard Hughes,
who subsequently submitted his Moral Recommitment message to the
New Jersey State Legislature. The message called for the establishment
of a broad range of programs to address the basic conditions the
Commission had cited as contributing to the summer's unrest. Among
those programs was the Educational Opportunity Fund, established
by legislation sponsored by then - freshman legislator Thomas Kean.
EOF set the pace for many initiatives which today
are widely incorporated into college life. Among the many powerful
strategies implemented by EOF are precollege articulation, basic
skills testing and remediation, systematic retention efforts, peer
counseling and peer tutoring, academic support courses, multicultural
curricula and human relations programming, student leadership development,
and outcomes-based program evaluation.
EOF has also been a leader and a linchpin in the
higher education system's effort to increase diversity. While participation
is not limited to minority students, EOF sponsors more than one-third
of the African American and Latino students at the state colleges
and New Jersey's independent institutions, and over one-quarter
of the African American and Latino students enrolled at New Jersey
colleges and universities participate in the EOF program. EOF enrolls
about 12.5% of the first-time, full-time New Jersey freshmen who
enter the state's colleges and universities each fall.
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