Home Bridge to Madison program will enhance student access, affordability
News

Bridge to Madison program will enhance student access, affordability

Contributors
jmu
(© steheap – stock.adobe.com)

A joint program announced Monday by Blue Ridge Community College and James Madison University will open new doors for students.

The Bridge to Madison transfer program, one of only a few similar programs in Virginia, provides academic and social support to help students gain admittance to and succeed at JMU.

Under the agreement, students who applied to JMU but have not been accepted through the regular admissions process can be considered for selection into the program. These students will be able to live on the university campus while taking their first year of college coursework at Blue Ridge Community College. The arrangement lowers costs for program students and provides academic support from both institutions. Students successfully completing the program will be able to attend JMU full time their sophomore year.

“Thanks to this program we’ll be able to serve students in new and innovative ways, increasing access, enhancing affordability and expanding opportunities for success by better meeting individual student needs. There is no single pathway to higher education; through this program we are providing another way for students to pursue their educational dreams” said JMU President Jonathan Alger.

Blue Ridge Community College and JMU will support approximately 50 potential students through the Bridge to Madison program in the first year.

“The Bridge to Madison Program is yet another example of how the longstanding partnership enjoyed between Blue Ridge Community College and James Madison University results in such great benefits to the Commonwealth,” said Dr. John Downey, president of Blue Ridge Community College.  “I’m delighted that even more students will benefit from a supportive academic pathway through BRCC to achieve a baccalaureate from JMU!”

Bridge to Madison is the latest cooperative program to develop from the longstanding and ongoing partnership between Blue Ridge Community College and JMU.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

jan. 6 capitol insurrection
Politics, U.S. & World

South Carolina MAGA congressman says Jan. 6 was ‘made up,’ ‘staged’

Powhatan’s Birthplace
Virginia

Six Virginia Indian Tribes want to save the site of Powhatan’s Birthplace

The historic birthplace of Chief Powhatan, WaHōnSeNaKah, is under threat from a planned development, because we can't have paradise, we need more parking lots.

kyle busch nascar
Etc.

Two-time NASCAR Cup Series champ Kyle Busch, 41, dead after ‘severe illness’

The news with two-time NASCAR Cup Series champ Kyle Busch this morning was that he was going to have to miss this weekend’s Coca-Cola 600 due to “severe illness.” Hours later, he was dead, at the age of 41. This is unfathomable. Nicknamed “Rowdy,” a nod to his wrestling heel-like public persona, Busch competed most...

darby allin aew
Etc.

AEW ‘Double or Nothing’ preview: Can we finally move past Darby Allin?

soccer
Etc.

UVA Soccer: National team call-ups for Cecil, Hardeman, Simmonds

uva baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Issues with pitching, defense doom ‘Hoos in 16-10 loss to Georgia Tech

abigail spanberger ms now
Politics, Virginia

Spanberger doesn’t understand why labor critics see ‘betrayal’ on collective bargaining