SESSION OF 2002
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE
ON SENATE BILL NO. 393
As Recommended by Senate Committee on
Brief
SB 393 concerns the Kansas Teacher Scholarship Program and would remove the present limit of 50 new scholarships that can be awarded each year.
Background
The Kansas Teacher Scholarship Program is a
service scholarship administered by the State Board of Regents
which makes assistance available to students enrolled in teacher
education programs. A student who becomes certificated as a teacher
and works in Kansas in a “hard to fill” teaching
discipline or underserved geographic area one year for each year of
assistance does not have to repay the scholarship. (The provision
about underserved geographic areas will take effect school year
2002-03.)
According
to information presented by the State Board of Regents, in FY 2001,
102 scholarships were awarded, of which 60 were renewals and 42
were new. Total awards were $478,014. In FY 2002, 87 scholarships
were awarded, of which 57 were renewals and 30 were new. Total
awards were $419,411. The average scholarship is
$5,000.
The
State Board of Regents’ Director of Student Financial
Assistance told the Senate Committee that the State Board is not
opposed to removing the limit of 50 new awards, but is not able to
predict the impact of the change, in part because the new provision
relating to teaching in underserved geographic areas could result
in more students applying for assistance. The representative of the
State Board told the Committee that, if more than 50 students are
eligible for assistance and funding does not increase, the awards
would be prorated among scholarship
recipients.
A
representative of K-NEA spoke in support of any initiative that
would help more students enter the teaching profession, but noted
that expansion of the program is dependent upon the availability of
funding.
A fiscal note prepared by the Division of the Budget points out that, in the last two years, removing the limit on new awards would have had no effect because fewer awards were made than the statutory limit. The note also points out that, even if the number of new awards increases and the State Board is able to award additional scholarships, the total cost of the program is subject to appropriation and would not expand unless the Legislature appropriated additional money.
Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet http://www.kslegislature.org/cgi-bin/index.cgi