Foundation supports education for adult students at MU | University of Missouri Extension
Foundation supports education for adult students at MU
Bernard and Barbro Osher
A San Francisco-based foundation has awarded University of Missouri Extension
a grant that may culminate in a $1million scholarship program for adult students
returning to finish their education.
A $50,000 first-year award from the Bernard Osher Foundation will establish
the Osher Re-entry Scholarship Program. In its initial phase, the funds will
annually provide 25 scholarships of $2,000 for adult learners who are pursuing
their first bachelor's degree. If the MU program meets the foundation's criteria
for demonstrated success after the third year, Osher will fund a permanent $1
million endowment to ensure the scholarships continue indefinitely, said Debbie Robison, associate vice provost for extension.
MU is one of 23 universities nationwide to receive the initial Osher Re-entry
Scholarship grants in the past year. Most of MU's growing population of nontraditional
students enroll in online, independent study or evening courses through MU Extension.
“Adults often face different challenges in completing college than traditional-aged
students do, having to balance job, family and other commitments not only in
terms of time, but financially as well,” Robison said. “We hope the Osher funds
will support the first of many scholarships we can provide in the future to this
growing segment of students.”
The foundation was established in 1977 by Bernard Osher, a Maine native who
became a successful businessman and community leader, as well as a patron of
the arts and education. Through the foundation, his philanthropy has benefited
a range of educational, cultural and other nonprofit organizations. In the 1990s,
the foundation funded a series of Osher Scholar programs, extending scholarship
assistance for post-secondary education to nearly 30 colleges and universities
and to professional and technical schools in California and Maine.
MU Extension is in the second year of a related grant program with the foundation
that in 2008 also may culminate in a $1 million endowment. The Osher Lifelong
Learning Institute, located on LeMone Industrial Boulevard, offers noncredit,
personal enrichment courses for adults over age 50. That popular program attracts
500 to 600 enrollments a semester from area residents. Classes on topics including
history, politics, literature, health issues, business and the arts are taught
by retired university faculty and other volunteer instructors.