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Colleges offer veterans classes to ease transition

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The courses are but one example of services that colleges are offering to a surge of veterans who have enrolled after the Post 9/11 G.I. Bill, which expanded tuition benefits. An ACE survey found that 62 percent of the 690 colleges and universities that responded provide programs and services, including post-traumatic-stress counseling and specially trained staff. The Department of Veterans Affairs says 441,710 veterans and eligible beneficiaries are enrolled this fall in educational programs using Post 9/11 G.I. Bill benefits.

That focus may only intensify now that the Iraq war has ended and the war in Afghanistan is winding down, with new veterans seeking education.

Specialized courses enable brick-and-mortar institutions to maintain a toehold in the veterans’ education market at a time of increased competition, including from for-profit career colleges and technical programs that critics say use deceptive marketing to target military families.

“Just like the rest of the country, people in the academy over the decade-long conflicts have come to recognize that we have this tremendously small number of people who are bearing this burden for society,” said Derek Malone-France, executive director of GW’s Writing Program. “There’s this real opportunity to collaborate between the academy and military, which is historically a very fraught divide.”

“They’re back now, and they need it,” Malone-France said. “They need to feel that they have a mission. Collectively, they are saying among themselves, ‘What we can we do? How can we mobilize?

The courses acknowledge veterans’ unique academic and social needs: Incoming freshmen who have seen combat may be less keen on dormitory scavenger hunts than the average 18-year-old undergraduate, but having been away from class for longer, they’re also more likely to benefit from advice on balancing their coursework with professional, family and financial responsibilities and adjusting from the regimented military to the freedoms of college life.

“Having faced some life-threatening situations in the military, I was actually more fearful of the choices that I had when I entered college. I didn’t have someone basically saying, ‘Here is your exact daily schedule’ or ‘Here is your objective,’” said Michael Samano, a Navy veteran who has taught veteran-centered courses at Lane Community College in Eugene, Ore.


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