Humboldt County Office of Education: North Coast Cal-SOAP

North Coast CalSOAP Logo

The North Coast California Student Opportunity and Access Program (Cal-SOAP) Consortium provides services related to college preparation and financial aid assistance.

Group photo of Cal-SOAP Success Coaches

Mission

North Coast Cal-SOAP seeks to increase the academic and college preparation skills of underrepresented students in Humboldt and Del Norte Counties by providing support, services, resources, and opportunities to middle and high school students, and first year college students, in order to increase financial aid awareness, FAFSA/CADAA completion, and post-secondary participation and success.

Services

  • Professional Development for High School Counselors & College Access Staff
  • College Success Coaches (placed at high schools)
  • College Persistence Coaches (placed at CR and HSU)
  • College & Career Events (for middle and high school students)
College Expo - Sept 13

Cash for College Workshops

College Access PDO Day

Financial Aid Workshops for Counselors

Cal-SOAP Staff

Cindy Porter
Higher Ed Pathways Manager / Cal-SOAP
707-441-3973
Grace Lovell
Cal-SOAP Program & Event Technician
707-441-2006
Rachel Perry
Cal-SOAP Financial Aid & College Access Technician
707-445-7762
Mission Statement
The Mission of North Coast Cal-SOAP is to provide information about postsecondary education and financial aid to elementary through high school students while raising their academic achievement levels. In particular, California Student Opportunity and Access Program is committed to providing services to students from any of the following backgrounds:

  • Students from low-income families
  • Students from families in which they would be the first to attend college
  • Students from schools with documented low college eligibility or participation rates
  • Students from geographic areas with documented low college eligibility or participation rates

We work to provide access to low-income and first generation students who have the potential to succeed in postsecondary education. Each project must apply criteria that will provide it with a pool of students who are eligible for Cal-SOAP services. It should be noted that students in grades seven through twelve are considered secondary school students. The law provides for service to community college students and elementary students, under certain conditions. Projects may assist community college students in transferring to four-year institutions. Projects may provide assistance to low-income fifth and sixth grade students.

The benchmark for identifying low-income students in the Income Ceiling Levels scale used by Cal Grant B, revised annually and sent by Commission staff to Project Directors by February each year.

Program Description and Goals
North Coast Cal-SOAP’s programs range from in-class tutoring and workshops on financial aid and how to apply for college, to college tours and college and career fairs.

Specifically, the goals of the North Coast Cal-SOAP Consortium are:

  • To increase the number of students with historically low college eligibility and attendance rates who are academically prepared to attend postsecondary institutions;
  • To increase the amount of knowledge among designated students and their parents concerning postsecondary opportunities, preparation and admissions criteria and procedures, as well as financial aid sources and application procedures;
  • To help students explore, develop and clarify career interests, requirements and opportunities; and better understand the relationship between postsecondary education and future career aspirations.

Overall, North Coast Cal-SOAP works strategically to provide the appropriate services to students enrolled in the Cal-SOAP program, thereby increasing their academic preparedness upon entering postsecondary education. As a result of these efforts the North Coast Cal-SOAP Consortium is proud to report an 83% college going rate among students receiving these intensive services.

We believe that with the right knowledge and skills, college is more than just a dream, it’s a reality.

The North Coast Cal-SOAP Consortium is one of 14 Cal-SOAP consortiums in California, each serving students in a specific geographical area of the state. Northcoast’s Cal-SOAP consortium consists of the Humboldt County Office of Education (HCOE), middle and high schools where Cal-SOAP tutors are placed, Humboldt State University, College of the Redwoods, and community organizations/initiatives whose mission includes college access information and resources. Specific members of the consortium make up its governing board which makes decisions about the types of activities and services provided by the program. As the legal applicant, HCOE provides programmatic infrastructure and employs approximately 30 Academic & College Access Tutors, annually, to serve 7th-12th grade students in Humboldt and Del Norte Counties.

Base funding for Cal-SOAP comes from the California Student Aid Commission (CSAC) and is matched with contributions from local consortium partners.

Cal-SOAP History
The California Student Opportunity and Access Program (Cal-SOAP) was established by the state legislature in 1978. Today, Cal-SOAP is instrumental in improving the flow of information about postsecondary education and financial aid while raising the achievement levels of low-income, elementary and secondary school students or geographic regions with documented low-eligibility or college participation rates, and who are first in their families to attend college.

Today, Cal-SOAP projects operate in fifteen locations throughout the state by consortia made up of secondary and postsecondary schools and community agencies. Cal-SOAP works in cooperation with other intersegmental outreach programs to avoid service duplication.

Current Cal-SOAP projects include: Central Coast (Santa Maria), Central Valley (San Joaquin), East Bay (Oakland and Richmond), Long Beach, Los Angeles, Merced, North Coast (Eureka), Sacramento, San Diego/Imperial, San Francisco, San Jose, Santa Barbara, South County Gilroy, South San Joaquin, and Solano.

Because each project specializes in serving students within its community, the types of programs and services may differ. However, the projects share the common goal of improving the flow of information about postsecondary education and financial aid while raising achievement levels of targeted students. Some common services provided by the consortia includes advising, tutoring, parent outreach, and college awareness workshops.

The Cal-SOAP program is administered by the California Student Aid Commission, with individual projects applying each year for continued federal funding. By law, each state allocation must be matched by an equal or higher level of local resources.

The Student Aid Commission is assisted in administration of the program by a 12-member, legislatively mandated advisory committee.

Cal-SOAP has extensive intersegmental participation, including:

  • Ninety-seven public school districts, from the largest in the state to small, rural districts plus individual high schools
  • Nine of the ten general campuses of the University of California system;
  • Eighteen of the twenty-three campuses of the California State University system;
  • Thirty-nine of the state’s one hundred and eight community colleges- including all those in each area in which a project is located;
  • Seventeen of the seventy-one Association of Independent California Colleges and Universities members; and;
  • Forty-seven other community-based organizations.