
The inaugural class of Diamond Family Scholars celebrated the first year of the program in style with a trip to New York City — just as COVID-19 began to spread across the United States. The first cohort, made up of six students from Texas, may have found their spring break trip disrupted by a global pandemic, but it couldn’t stop their excitement — or enthusiasm for the program that is transforming their lives.
The trip was courtesy of Houston philanthropists Andy and Andrea Diamond, who made an astounding $17 million gift in 2019 to create the program bearing their name. The Diamond Family Scholars serves students who have aged out of the foster care system, offering financial aid and other support services to boost their chances of success.
“We want to create hope for those aging out of foster care,” Andy Diamond said about their gift. “Their circumstances are beyond their control. Now, however, those who want to help themselves will have an opportunity to do so. Success is defined not by a gift, but rather by hard work and determination.”
More than 23,000 youth a year nationally age out of the foster care system when they turn 18, according to the National Foster Youth Institute. Experts say few have the outside support, both financial and emotional, that can be crucial to college success.
“This is a special population of students,” said Richard Walker, vice president for student affairs and enrollment services. “We want to make sure these students stay in school and that we are providing them the support they need.”
Year 1 of the program was an astounding success. Three of the six students were named to the Dean’s List. One was invited to join the Honors College. The overall spring semester GPA for the group was 3.5.
One student in the first class said the program offered her an amazing opportunity that will help her succeed.
“The Diamond Family Scholars program gave me the resources to flourish as a freshman in college, offering a home to grow and seek guidance to ensure success,” Maddie Couling said. “It has given me a space to explore who I can be with a new family by my side.”
Couling joined the Honors College in January and is majoring in health communications. “Most scholarships, they just give you money and send you on your way,” she said. “I didn’t anticipate how much of a family we would become. How much we would hang out.”
The project focuses on improving success rates — from recruiting to retention and graduation and a group will be selected each year. The program includes the opportunity to live together in a living and learning community at Cougar Village, and the expanded services, including enhanced advising and mentoring, will be available to all UH students who have been in the foster care system.
Andrea Diamond said she and her husband ask only that Diamond Family Scholars pay it forward in the future. “Sometime down the road, give another person in need hope and opportunity,” she said.
Between 60 and 100 UH students self-identify as graduates of the foster care system every year. The group has a current four-year graduation rate of 37 percent; the program has targeted a graduation rate of 60 percent after the first four years, with a long-term goal of 80 percent.
Housed in the University’s Urban Experience Program under the leadership of UEP Director Raven Jones, the program helps students tap all established resources, using the endowment to fill the gaps.
The Year 2 cohort is already underway. The program has interviewed new students and have offered six incoming freshmen the opportunity to join the Diamond Family Scholars.