Notre Dame joins STARS College Network to support small-town and rural prospective students
The University of Notre Dame has joined the STARS College Network, which partners with top colleges and universities to ensure students from rural and small-town America have the information and support they need to enroll and graduate from selective institutions.
Notre Dame is one of 16 institutions joining the STARS (Small Town and Rural Students) College Network this year, as the organization doubles its membership to include 32 of the nation’s most prominent schools.
“Notre Dame is honored to partner with STARS in its mission to increase access to exceptional higher education for students from small-town and rural communities,” said Vice President for Undergraduate Enrollment Micki Kidder. “Students from rural communities flourish at Notre Dame, contributing their unique talents and perspectives, enriching our vibrant campus community and benefiting from a Notre Dame education.”
In 2023, its inaugural year, the STARS College Network opened doors to higher education for more than 288,000 students with 16 member institutions. It is supported by a $20 million gift from Trott Family Philanthropies. New STARS member institutions this year, along with Notre Dame, are Amherst College; Auburn University; Dartmouth; Duke University; Georgia Institute of Technology; Southern Methodist University; Spelman College; Stanford University; University of Alabama; University of Arizona; University of Arkansas; University of California, Berkeley; University of Denver; University of South Carolina; and University of Texas at Austin.
An estimated $7.4 billion will fund STARS’ mission over the next decade, which includes the financial aid provided directly by participating institutions to students and expanded support for the initiative from foundations, nonprofits and new funding from governmental agencies. Trott Family Philanthropies will build on its initial gift with an additional investment of more than $150 million over 10 years in programs that prepare, recruit and support rural students.
This extraordinary growth follows a year in which STARS outreach connected with 1.6 million people, including students, families, educators, administrators, foundations, legislators, companies and other organizations.
“STARS’ first year demonstrated that there is an appetite and imperative for our nation’s leading universities and colleges to better serve the massive talent pool in our small towns and rural regions,” said Byron D. Trott, chairman and co-CEO of BDT & MSD Partners. “STARS and its affiliated programs are opening doors in higher education for high-achieving rural students they might not have found otherwise, and the students, campuses and our economy will all be the better for it.”
Students from rural America often face unique obstacles to attending college. Although students in small towns and rural communities graduate high school at roughly the same rate as students in metro areas, they are only half as likely to graduate from a selective college or university.
“As a driven and motivated individual from a rural community, Notre Dame has allowed me to finally pursue countless career opportunities that are often inaccessible within rural areas,” said sophomore Madison Cunningham, a political science major from Otis, Colorado. “Notre Dame has given me the confidence and resources I need to hopefully serve as an attorney for marginalized individuals in the future. I have truly been fulfilled in ways I never imagined possible.”
STARS simultaneously addresses a variety of obstacles that contribute to this disparity. Because of distance and cost, college admissions offices may bypass small towns and rural communities. Students in those areas are less likely to encounter college-related ads or attend events on campuses.
In alignment with Notre Dame’s belief that every student, regardless of background, should have access to a transformative education, the University intends to thoughtfully engage and invest in students from small towns and rural areas across the country.
The Notre Dame Enrollment Division plans to
-
visit high schools in rural communities and develop partnerships with rural community-based organizations
-
expand Notre Dame’s Midwest Visit Day to bring students from rural areas to experience Notre Dame’s campus
-
fund rural student participation in summer pre-college programs
-
strengthen relationships with rural school counselors via an advisory board
College counselors in rural high schools are often overburdened, if the school even has a counselor. The average national caseload for rural counselors is 310 students, with a high of 574 in Michigan. This means that students may have less access to educators and college access professionals who have broad experience and familiarity with the full spectrum of college opportunities.
Importantly, these students may not think they can afford college. Many do not have the networks and resources to help them understand the financial aid and other support available to them.
STARS founding members are Brown University, California Institute of Technology, Case Western Reserve University, Colby College, Columbia University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northwestern University, Ohio State University, University of Chicago, University of Iowa, University of Maryland, University of Southern California, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Vanderbilt University, Washington University in St. Louis and Yale University. STARS is led by the University of Chicago and Vanderbilt, and headquartered at the University of Chicago.
Latest University News
- Gen. Martin Dempsey to speak at Notre Dame Forum event on ‘Hope, Global Stability and the Role of the United States’Gen. Martin Dempsey, the retired 18th chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will join University President Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C., for a fireside chat at 4 p.m. Friday (Oct. 10), as part of the 2025-26 Notre Dame Forum. The discussion, titled “Hope, Global Stability and the Role of the United States,” is part of the exploration of this year’s Notre Dame Forum theme, “Cultivating Hope.” It will take place in Rooms 215/216 of McKenna Hall and will also be livestreamed. The event is free and open to the public.
- University of Notre Dame joins the Global Coalition of Ukrainian StudiesThe University of Notre Dame has joined the Global Coalition of Ukrainian Studies after signing a memorandum of cooperation, formalized Sept. 24, at the Ukrainian Institute of America in New York City. Notre Dame joined four other American institutions that were also publicly welcomed to the coalition at this event: Arizona State University, Columbia University, Manor College and the Shevchenko Scientific Society.
- Alumni Association and YoungND honor 2025 Domer DozenThe Notre Dame Alumni Association announced its 2025 Domer Dozen cohort, honoring 12 graduates ages 32 and younger for excellence in their contributions in learning, service, faith and work — the core pillars of the association’s mission.
- Notre Dame School of Architecture poised for global leadership through historic investmentThe $150 million gift represents an unprecedented commitment in the 160-year history of American architectural education. In recognition of this landmark gift, the school will be renamed the Matthew and Joyce Walsh School of Architecture at Notre Dame.
- Board of Trustees announces external investigation into allegations of past sexual misconduct by former rectorThe University of Notre Dame today announced that the University’s Board of Trustees has convened a special committee at the request of President Rev. Robert Dowd, C.S.C., and John Veihmeyer, chair of the Board of Trustees, to oversee an external investigation into allegations that Rev. Thomas King, C.S.C., engaged in sexual misconduct while rector of Zahm Hall, where he served from 1980 to 1997. The external investigation will be led by Helen Cantwell at the law firm of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, and the key findings of the investigation will be shared with the University community.
- Notre Dame Democracy Initiative hosts bipartisan conversation with Western state governorsTwo Western state governors known to work across the aisle on policy issues such as water, housing and energy will visit the University of Notre Dame for a fireside chat about how Western state pragmatism can serve as a model for the country to overcome polarization.