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Release Date: 
Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Transfer Bridges to the Humanities @ University of Michigan

Student drawing on paper propped up by a tabletop easel

Henry Ford College students will have greater opportunities to transfer to the University of Michigan Ann Arbor to study the humanities through an innovative new collaboration that creates a more tailored, unique student experience.

HFC and the University of Michigan have received $1.6 million in grant funds from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to create Transfer Bridges to the Humanities @ Michigan — an innovative collaboration designed to increase the number and success rate of humanities students transferring from HFC to U-M’s College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LSA).

The grants will fund a three-year project to streamline the path from HFC to U-M for humanities students. The program will lead to similar LSA collaborations with other community colleges and is expected to create a new model for humanities majors who intend to transfer to U-M from colleges across Michigan.

The Transfer Bridges to the Humanities website provides information for prospective students and their families.                                                                                                        
 cars on a bridge from HFC to U-M “Henry Ford College and community colleges across Michigan are doing tremendous work attracting and teaching talented humanities students,” said Angela Dillard, associate dean for undergraduate education at the University of Michigan’s College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. “These students want the opportunity to continue their liberal arts education at the University of Michigan. We know they have the academic ability to succeed here; this funding will create greater access and better resources for in-state transfer students to make that dream a reality. We’re grateful to the Mellon Foundation for its generous support and can’t wait to get started.”

“Ultimately, establishing transfer protocols on both sides will make these two educational institutions stronger, more innovative in teaching and learning practices, and more responsive to the needs of this distinctive population of students. Most importantly, it will provide the opportunity for students to complete a first-rate educational journey,” said Dr. Jennifer Ernst, dean of the HFC School of Liberal Arts and co-principal investigator of the grant.

How Transfer Bridges will benefit students                            

For students, the Transfer Bridges to the Humanities @ Michigan program will create more access to and greater success at LSA through core program elements such as:

  • Streamlined academic requirements and credit equivalency to remove obstacles for humanities majors transferring from two-year institutions to U-M
  • New and expanded learning and co-curricular experiences to ensure students’ seamless transition between schools
  • Academic advising tailored to students as they prepare to transfer and as they get started at U-M LSA
  • Immersive summer prep programs and first-semester courses aimed at supporting and retaining transfer students
  • Curriculum support and capacity building to allow students studying liberal arts, humanities, and humanistic social sciences to seamlessly transfer from HFC’s Henry Ford II Honors Program to LSA’s Honors Program
  • A focus on high-impact practices such as undergraduate research, community-based learning, and social innovation programs
  • Internship opportunities at global companies and organizations through the new LSA Opportunity Hub
  • Ongoing collaboration between faculty members, counselors, admissions officers, and recruiters from both institutions
  • Strong connections to existing resources throughout LSA and across the U-M campus including career counseling, the Comprehensive Studies Program, optiMize, academic advising, peer mentors, and more

         

The big picture

The HFC U-M transfer program is part of a larger Mellon Foundation initiative. Through its Community College-Research University Partnership (CCUP) initiative, the Mellon Foundation offers targeted support for students and faculty at community colleges and four-year institutions in order to help more students succeed at obtaining an impactful humanities education. “Transfer Bridges to the Humanities @ Michigan and similar programming that helps more community college students transfer successfully is an investment in the future of humanities scholarship, higher education, and American democracy,” said Mellon Foundation Executive Vice President Mariët Westermann.      

This three-year pilot project is expected to double the number of HFC transfer students to LSA’s humanities programs and create a new model which will be replicable for humanities majors at community colleges across the state of Michigan.

HFC and U-M LSA have created a steering committee and will formally launch program planning in February, with a conference planned in May and the program open for student participation as early as summer 2018. For prospective students interested in learning more, visit hfcc.edu/transfer-bridges.