News & Media
Media
Covenant in article on "13 standup school that cost less than $5,000 a year"
A Look at a Covenant Scholar
Carolina's YouTube Channel
College Aid that Works
News & Observer
Grads Fulfill Hopes of Covenant Plans
News & Observer
First Covenant Scholars to Graduate
NBC 17
A Covenant with Students
Inside Higher Ed News
No Need to Mortgage Future
New York Times (PDF)
Carolina Covenant Continues to Impress
Chapel Hill Herald (PDF)
Debt-Free Education
News & Observer (PDF)
Other articles
Carolina tops Kiplinger's List
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ranks first – for the fifth consecutive time – among the best values at the top 100 U.S. public university campuses, according to Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine. Read More ...
Carolina Covenant adds mentoring program
In September 2004, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill expanded its groundbreaking Carolina Covenant initiative to ensure that even more low-income Carolina students can graduate debt-free. Read More ...
Covenant Helps Where Help is Needed Most
The Carolina Covenant is important to North Carolina and similar parts of America where a growing population is more diverse; the economy lags; and a larger proportion of college-age youth are low-income and in need of assistance.
At the same time, never has a college education been as crucial to self-sufficiency and employability. Projections show that the majority of North Carolina's counties will grow in population through the end of 2010.
This growth will heighten the need for Carolina's continued emphasis on access to affordable, high-quality education at all levels as a means to ensure the well-being of its students. As successful students who have accomplished much with some assistance from the Carolina Covenant move into a competitive job environment, they can only help the economy of their communities.