$1 Million Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Grant is added to previous funding
Researchers at USC鈥檚 Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis and the University鈥檚 Game Innovation Lab will soon debut a new card game that seeks to link underserved high schoolers with college-going knowledge.
Application Crunch will be available through online purveyors including Amazon.com in September. USC gave away 1,000 free copies of the first edition of the game to college counselors in high-need schools across the country, and the 海角论坛 School鈥檚 Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation has been testing and tracking results.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to reduce the mystery in the college application process,鈥 said USC University Professor William G. Tierney, director of the Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis.
We know we need more people to become college educated. And we know there are people in high school today who could go to college but don鈥檛 know how to do it.
鈥William G. Tierney
The suite of games鈥攃alled Collegeology鈥攕eeks to increase college-going rates among underserved students who may be the first in their families thinking about going to college. They may also lack meaningful college guidance as students in overcrowded high schools, Tierney said.
The Collegeology project began with internal support from the provost鈥檚 office of the University of Southern California and grants from The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert and TG Foundations. In recent months, the project received $1.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Institute of Education Sciences (IES).
In July, the project got another big boost: A $1 million grant from the Bill Melinda Gates Foundation to kick off the development of two additional games aimed at helping students hone their college knowledge. One will be aimed at middle schoolers with the second focused on educating students in high school and beyond about financial literacy and college choice.
In January, Application Crunch will be available to an even larger audience as an online game on the social networking site Facebook.com.
This article was featured in the Summer / Fall 2011 issue of Rossier's Futures in Urban Ed magazine.
Click to see more articles from that issue and click here to download a PDF of the magazine.