Coca-Cola First Generation Scholars Honored

Apr 1, 2010 | Blog, Inside the College Fund

Making the transition to college is hard for anyone, but when a student is a first-generation college student, the transition is even more difficult, because they do not have the family resources to help guide them through the process.

The Coca-Cola Foundation is helping to ease that transition for first-generation scholars through its first-generation scholarship program, which provided 46 scholarships to American Indian students for the academic year 2009-10. The scholarships are for the amount of $5,000 a year and they follow the student throughout their academic career if they maintain a grade point average of 3.0 or above.

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In Memoriam-Ernie Stevens, Jr. Chairman of the Indian Gaming Association

In Memoriam-Ernie Stevens, Jr.
Chairman of the Indian Gaming Association

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In Canada, Orange Shirt Day is observed on September 30 as a federal holiday called the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. The American Indian College Fund (College Fund) and other National Native Scholarship Providers are working to raise awareness of this important day of observation in solidarity with the survivors of boarding schools across North America.

American Indian College Fund Partners with National Native Scholarship Providers to Raise Awareness of Boarding School Students 

American Indian College Fund Partners with National Native Scholarship Providers to Raise Awareness of Boarding School Students 

The American Indian College Fund (College Fund) and other National Native Scholarship Providers (NNSPs), including AISES, Cobell Scholarship Fund, and Native Forward Scholars Fund, are raising awareness of Orange Shirt Day in solidarity with Native people in Canada, where it is observed on September 30 as a federal holiday called the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.