BATON ROUGE – Nov. 20, Gov. John Bel Edwards announced the creation of a statewide scholarship agreement between the Louisiana Community and Technical College System (LCTCS) and the Louisiana Future Farmers of America Student Association (FFA). The agreement calls for a $500 one-time scholarship for every Louisiana FFA member who graduates from a Louisiana high school and a $1,000 one-time scholarship for each state champion to any LCTCS college, beginning with the high school graduating class of 2017-2018.
“Having a college degree or becoming certified in a certain specialty is one of the most important assets anyone can have who is interested in securing a good paying job, which is something our community and technical college system and the FFA understand,” said Gov. Edwards in a statement announcing the scholarships. “I have long been a proponent of more innovative collaborations between the state’s secondary and post-secondary institutions that would remove financial barriers and increase access to academic and workforce training. This agreement will help accomplish that goal and pave the way for a brighter future for our students and our community college system.”
FFA students who compete in the Annual State Conference and are selected as a State Champion will be offered the $1,000 scholarship. The scholarship offer will be valid for the fall semester following high school graduation only.
In the announcement of the agreentment, Monty Sullivan, president of LCTCS, says the program was conceived to attract high school graduates who aren't going to college. "We have about 40,000 graduates (annually) with about 10,000 of those leaving high school and not entering college or the military," said Sullivan. "These are the students who need to know that we care about their futures and that their local community and technical college is a viable post-secondary option."
Adding to the announcement, Dr. Eric Smith, Louisiana’s FFA adviser, said the scholarship agreement is already creating a buzz. "It's blown up and already inspired a lot of teachers and students," said Smith. "It's the most-viewed Facebook post we've had, and I've had constant calls from teachers who want to know more about the program."