|
What
is Cal-SOAP?

The California Student
Opportunity and Access Program (Cal-SOAP) was established
by the state legislature in 1978. Today, Cal-SOAP is
instrumental in improving the flow of information about
postsecondary education and financial aid while raising
the achievement levels of low-income, elementary and
secondary school students or geographic regions with
documented low-eligibility or college participation
rates, and who are first in their families to attend
college.
Today, Cal-SOAP projects operate
in seventeen locations throughout the state by consortia
made up of secondary and postsecondary schools and community
agencies. Cal-SOAP works in cooperation with other intersegmental
outreach programs to avoid service duplication.
In many instances, Cal-SOAP fulfills
needs not met by other programs. In 1995-96, five active
Cal-SOAP projects provided outreach services to more
than 29,000 students. The projects propose to serve
more than 142,000 secondary, elementary (grades 4 -
12) and, community college students and their parents
during 2004-05.
Current Cal-SOAP projects
include: Central Coast (Santa Maria), Central Valley
(West Fresno County), East Bay (Oakland and Richmond),
Greater Long Beach Region, Los Angeles, Merced, North
Coast (Eureka), North Valley (Yuba), Sacramento College
Horizons, San Diego/Imperial, San Francisco, San Jose,
Santa Barbara, South Coast (Whittier), South County
Gilroy, South San Joaquin, and SUCCESS (Solano).
Because each project specializes
in serving students within its community, the type of
programs and services may differ. However, the projects
share the common goal of improving the flow of information
about postsecondary education and financial aid while
raising achievement levels of targeted students. Some
common services provided by the consortia includes advising,
tutoring, parent outreach, and college awareness workshops.
The Cal-SOAP program is administered
by the California Student Aid Commission, with individual
projects applying each year for continued state funding.
By law, each state allocation must be matched by an
equal or higher level of local resources.The Student
Aid Commission is assisted in administration of the
program by a 12-member, legislatively mandated advisory
committee.
Cal-SOAP has extensive
intersegmental participation, including:
Ninety-seven public school districts, from the largest
in the state to small, rural districts plus fifty-one
individual high schools;
Nine of the ten general campuses of the University of
California system;
Eighteen of the twenty-three campuses of the California
State University system;
Thirty-nine of the state's one hundred and eight community
colleges- including all those in each area in which
a project is located;
Seventeen of the seventy-one Association of Independent
California Colleges and Universities members; and; Forty-seven
other community-based organizations.
|