Celebrating 20 Years of the Incentive Awards Program at the University of Maryland

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TRANSFORMATIVE GIFT

A nearly $7 million gift from a Boston couple will significantly increase the size and longterm impact of a University of Maryland program that supports promising students from selected areas of the state. Starting in Fall 2021, five freshmen from Montgomery County each year will be awarded four-year scholarships, receive mentoring and join a tight-knit peer community in the Incentive Awards Program (IAP)—which until now comprised students in Prince George’s County and Baltimore—through the funding from Phillip and Elizabeth Gross and a matching grant from UMD and the Clark Challenge for the Maryland Promise Program (MPP).

It is the largest-ever donation to IAP, now celebrating its 20th anniversary, and to the Maryland Promise Program, created by a 2017 investment from the A. James & Alice B. Clark Foundation to provide scholarships to underserved populations from the state of Maryland and D.C. “We’re leveraging matching grant money, and we’re supporting outstanding students in a program where they have a very high chance to succeed and high expectations to perform and impact the community,” Phill Gross said. “Put that together and it was easy for Liz and me to get involved.” The gift, the biggest to the university since Darryll J. Pines assumed its presidency in July, supports both of his top priorities: to promote excellence and to create an inclusive, multicultural campus community.

PARTNERS

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