NP Rank:
“Project Working Mom” Putting Education to Work
By Helen MacDermott
Ever since she was a little girl,
Jeanne Sarmiento wanted to be a lawyer. As she grew older, however, her
life took some unexpected turns. After what she calls “a series of poor
choices” as a young adult, this mother changed her life and became inspired by
her children to go to school. Even as a single parent of an infant, Sarmiento
was determined to get her degree, and she added credits slowly but surely over
the years. Eventually, she graduated with an associate’s degree. She is
now going back to school for an additional degree and cannot wait to hear her
kids yell, “You did it Mom! You did it!”
“I can’t wait to hear my children
screaming my name from the stands,” said Jeanne Sarmiento as she imagines
graduating with a bachelor’s degree. “They are my inspiration. They are
holding my hands as I realize my dream. I will do it. I will do it.”
Sarmiento is one of the over 8
million single working moms in the United States that find themselves
undereducated, and in turn underemployed. According to the U.S. Census,
of the 10 million single moms in the United States, only 16 percent have a
college degree. As a result, only 22 percent of single working moms earn
more than $30,000 per year.
“This is a crisis in America that
needs to be addressed,” said Terrence Thomas, Chief Marketing Officer of
eLearners.com, who recently launched a campaign, Project
Working Mom: Putting Education to Work, to raise awareness and funds
to support this underrepresented population. “Single working moms suffer
from a lack of federal financial support because of their part time student
status, which is compounded by their lack of time and confidence to return to
school.”
To help other moms in the same
situation as Sarmiento, eLearners.com in collaboration with online schools,
American Intercontinental University, DeVry University and Walden University,
will grant at least $2 million in full-ride scholarships to working mothers
across the country as part of the Project Working Mom campaign.
Additionally, eLearners.com has launched a comprehensive website, http://www.projectworkingmom.com,
designed to empower working women to enhance their career by going back to
school. The site includes self-assessment quizzes to determine readiness
for online education, an online community wherein potential students can talk
with other moms in similar situations, a database with $15 billion in financial
aid opportunities and numerous articles filled with advice and insight.
The funds and the website are designed to help moms overcome the barriers of
time with access to online education opportunities; money with the provision of
scholarship; and confidence through a website full of resources and a
community.
Time-
“Working is a full-time job and
being a mom is also a full-time job, so really you’re working 24 hours a day,
seven days a week,” said Sarmiento. “I would work all day and then go to
school at night, plus have homework. Not only was it really hard for me,
it was hard for my son.”
Unlike
a traditional campus education, the convenience of online education allows for
school to be scheduled around the life of a busy mother. Most online
courses have flexible schedules, which allow a working mother to study late at
night or on weekends. The need to arrange for childcare, find parking or
courses that are delivered during a certain period are eliminated with online
education. According to Eduventures, two million students are expected to
enroll in fully online degree programs this year.
Money-
Most full time working mothers need
financial aid to go to school part-time, however, financial aid eligibility and
awards are modeled after a traditional campus based student going to school
full time for 10 months. According to the Institute for Higher Education
Policy, in 2003-04 only 54 percent of students attending part time and
classified as “working poor” received financial aid grants.
“Our goal for Project
Working Mom is to raise awareness of the fact that federal financial
aid is not fulfilling its obligation to the adult working student, particularly
the single working mom,” continued Thomas. “It’s a public policy issue
that must be addressed.”
Confidence-
For most working mothers, the
decision to return to school is filled with hope, uncertainty and anxiety. It
is with that in mind that “Project Working Mom” provides working mothers with
the resources, support and confidence they need to become a successful online
student through a community of other moms and content such as:
Ø 8 Steps To Going Back To School
Ø How To Pay For College
Ø How To Handle The Stress of School, Work and Motherhood
Ø Time Management Tips
Ø How To Succeed As An Online Student
Ø Testimonials from Inspirational Women
Ø Database of $15 Billion in Financial Aid
“Project Working Mom is the long
awaited answer for many women struggling to make ends meet without a college
degree,” continued Thomas. “The scholarships, resources and community
that eLearners.com has pulled together will give women the extra boost they
need to finally take greater control of their life.”
To other moms Samiento suggests,
“Don’t give up. Going back to school as an adult is a whole different
ballgame. I thought I would never get my AA degree. It took me 17
years to get that degree, but with the advent of e-learning, a whole new world
has opened up for people like me,” said Sarmiento. “The feeling of
finishing something you’ve started and finally having that diploma can only be
matched by the pride in my children’s voices.”
To apply for a Project Working Mom scholarship,
join an online community or get advice and financial aid information on going
back to school online, visit http://www.projectworkingmom.com.




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 22:24 on September 14th, 2008
My name is Karen Thun. I am now a working mother. Until two months ago I was a stay at home mother and wife. I thought my life was perfect. I was heavily involved with various volunteer humanitarian help organizations. My husband was seemingly supportive of what I was doing. We went everywhere together. He always attended the prayer meetings that I led. He was always present at every meeting that I went to. Then one morning everything changed. I woke up with a feeling of foreboding. I waited until my husband got dressd sat down on the bed next to him and said, "Do you want to tell me what is going on?" He looked at me with anger and hissed, "Yes, I do. I am leaving you. I have arranged an apartment to live in and I am moving out." I stared at him in shock and then attempted to block his exit. I wanted him to talk to me about this seemingly out of character and crazy decision. He refused and even threw me very forcefully out of the way. This man who I previously trusted completely and never dreamed he would ever lay a hand on me and who I believed loved me unconditionally then began to pack his suitcases and walked out not so much as saying goodbye to any of our three children.
This was almost two months ago and it has literally turned my life upside down. I have had to take a job as a substitute teacher which pays pretty good but is very demanding. And I managed to land a long term sub job at one of the local schools and the teacher of that class was so very ill that she could not return. If I had had a full teaching credential I would have been able to get that position but because I only have an emergency substitute 30-day credential I can't take the position. It is quite a shame because the school really likes my work and I enjoy working there and the kids (I am teaching a first grade class) are really growing on me. But without the credential I can't have a teaching job. The credential program takes two years. It would be so wonderful to do an on-line program and then I could work and support my three children.
I need help to complete the education I need to start a new career. I have a Bachelor's degree in microbiology and fifteen or more years ago I was a laboratory technician. It doesn't look very promising to return to my former career so I would like to pursue a career in education/ teaching. I'm having a hard time making ends meet since my husband left me and the whole situation just feels exceedingly overwhelming. Having a scholarship would really go a long way toward making my dream a reality.
It's funny because I never thought I would be good at working with children but since I started working at Fremont I have found myself to be gifted at teaching. I love it when I make a concept that seems to be eluding a child real to him or her. I feel such a usefulness like I am doing something that really matters. And I love it when the kids bring me flowers or pictures or run up and give me a hug. It's just a beautiful thing. You can give your all in a place like that because you know that you are changing a life. And by changing a life, you change the world.
And by changing my life, by giving me a scholarship, you will be putting the power in my hands to change the world. And that matters. That makes a diference. Thank you.
at 07:22 on September 15th, 2008
Thank you for your post! You can still apply for the Project Working Mom II scholarship if you haven't already done so by going to:
http://www.elearners.com/projectworkingmom/Scholarships/EntryForm.aspx?tsource=home&tid=200
and completing the entry form. For your essay, just copy and paste this post. Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Calibri","sans-serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;}
Everest University is accepting applications through September 30 (extended their deadline). Keep a lookout for the next campaign to launch some time this winter.
Thanks and good luck!