|
Lottery Changes for 2006-2007
Changes were made to the
Tennessee Education Lottery Scholarship Program (TELS) by the state legislature
in June 2006. These changes will be effective beginning with the Fall 2006
semester.
The following information is
based on early information from the Tennessee Student Assistance Corporation.
Please note that the policy is subject to change without notice.
This site will be updated as
we receive further information from TSAC.
Senate
Bill 2683 changes
the basic HOPE scholarship amounts from $3,300 to $3,800 at eligible four year
postsecondary institutions, from $1,650 to $1,900 at eligible two year
postsecondary institutions and (Wilder-Naifeh) from $1,300 to $1,500 at eligible
technology centers. It also makes certain students who are Tennessee citizens
and dependent children of religious workers serving outside the United States
and certain students graduating from accredited high schools in a contiguous
out-of-state county eligible for a Tennessee HOPE scholarship.
Senate
Bill 2724
establishes Tennessee HOPE teacher’s scholarships as part of the system of
lottery funded scholarships. Teachers eligible for the scholarship must be
seeking an advanced degree in math or a science or certification to teach math
or science. The teachers’ scholarships are $2,000 per year up to a maximum award
of $10,000 per recipient for all years. Recipients must agree to teach math or
science in a Tennessee public school system 2 years for each year of scholarship
funding received and awards must be repaid by each recipient to the extent that
such obligation is not met.
Senate
Bill 2981 permits
students who are initially eligible for a Tennessee HOPE scholarship but who
instead obtain a Wilder-Naifeh technical skills grant, to be eligible for a HOPE
scholarship at either an eligible two-year or four-year institution. The
student must apply for a HOPE scholarship within 3 years of the diploma
program. Additionally, hours taken by a student at a Tennessee technology
center towards a diploma before receiving a Tennessee HOPE scholarship, a
General Assembly Merit Scholarship or a Tennessee HOPE access grant do not count
under the provisions of Section 49-4-913 or 49-4-920 as semester hours attempted
for purposes of calculating the number of semester hours for which a student may
receive one of the HOPE scholarships.
Senate
Bill 3149 makes
provision for the communication of lottery scholarship information to high
school students and their parents by both TSAC and local high schools in
Tennessee. The bill actually makes the lottery scholarship day by TSAC
permissive instead of mandatory but requires each high school to conduct at
least one lottery scholarship day and workshops on completing college admissions
and financial aid applications for 10th through 12th grade
students and their parents. TSAC is required to provide the same types of
information that current law has required (i.e., lottery scholarship eligibility
requirements, information relative to postsecondary institutions admission
standards and scholarship eligibility, computation of grade point averages for
purposes of lottery scholarship availability and information relative to the ACT
and SAT). TSAC must provide such information at its lottery scholarship day, if
it conducts one, and must provide a summary of the information it prepares to
the department of education for dissemination to schools conducting lottery
scholarship days. Administrative costs incurred by the department of education
and TSAC are funded from the lottery for education account.
House Bill
2809 allows
students attending private, as well as public, postsecondary institutions to
obtain Tennessee HOPE foster child tuition grants.
|