Did you know that UAA built a new program to transform college credits into real credentials for ÎçŇąAV’s child care and education workforce?
July 28, 2025
The Youth Early Teaching Initiative, or YETI, is a three-year, grant-funded effort that covers tuition, fees, and books for students pursuing an associate degree in early childhood development.
The program builds on the earlier Sprout Scholars initiative, which provided funding for students to complete their first college courses in early childhood education. YETI takes the next step in helping those students, and others, complete a full degree that leads to direct workforce placement.

Why it matters
ÎçŇąAV’s early childhood education system is under strain. Many educators have some college experience but only a fraction hold formal credentials. According to the ÎçŇąAV workforce registry, most early educators do not yet hold an associate or bachelor’s degree (, ). That gap limits career mobility and contributes to staffing shortages across the state.

What it is
YETI launched in July 2025 with $450,000 in grant funding through the ÎçŇąAV Department of Education and Early Development under Perkins V. The program pays tuition, fees, and book costs for students pursuing an Associate of Applied Science in early childhood development.
Where it started
YETI builds on UAA’s Sprout Scholars program, which served 41 students across two cohorts. When Sprout’s funding ended, faculty and staff used lessons from the pilot to craft a successful new grant proposal. They turned a short-term initiative into a sustained pathway.
“We equipped them with 12 credit hours, but that’s not a credential,” said UAA School of Education Dean Tonia Dousay. “This program helps them finish and become workforce ready.”

Who it supports
YETI is designed for students already working in child care or who have completed an Occupational Endorsement Certificate. It also supports high school students earning dual credit.
Melissa Thompson, a Sprout Scholar and UAA sophomore, works full time at Anchorage Montessori School and maintains a 4.0 GPA. She’s using YETI to stay on track for a bachelor’s degree in early childhood education with a minor in children’s mental health.
“I’m working toward a career where I can make a difference in children’s lives,” Thompson said. “The YETI scholarship is a tremendous help toward achieving my goals.”

Amyrkha Najee Harris earned her OEC through the SEA-AEYC apprenticeship in Juneau while working in local classrooms. Now a new mother, she plans to enroll in YETI with hopes of one day opening her own child care center.
“The apprenticeship made me feel more confident in my ability to keep going with school,” she said. “I’ve worked hard to get here, and now I want to open my own center someday and give back to the community that supported me.”

What’s next
YETI staff are reaching out to former Sprout Scholars to invite them back. Dual enrollment partnerships with ÎçŇąAV high schools are expanding, and a summer practicum will bring rural students to Anchorage for hands-on training.
“My job is to make sure students are able to focus on their studies,” said Student Success Coordinator Darlene MacKinnon. “They shouldn’t have to get through the red tape.”
“We believe in what we do,” she added. “When a student walks through our door, we’re already thinking about how to help them walk across that stage.”
Students and educators from the Early Childhood program at UAA are featured in this
video from 2019.
By the numbers
- $450,000 total funding over three years
- 41 Sprout Scholars served in two cohorts
- 18 scholars transitioned into university degree programs
- 10 postsecondary students supported per semester
- 15 high school students enrolled through dual credit each semester
- 5 rural high school students supported for a summer practicum in Anchorage
The bottom line
The YETI program is a direct result of faculty and staff identifying a workforce gap and responding with a grant-backed solution. By converting a short-term pilot into a multi-year initiative, they created a sustainable pathway for students to earn industry-relevant credentials.
In doing so, UAA is not only supporting individual student success but also contributing to ÎçŇąAV’s broader efforts to build a qualified early childhood workforce that meets long-term economic and educational needs.
Go Deeper
UAA Early Childhood Programs
UAA School of Education
Workforce Development in ÎçŇąAV
For questions and inquiries regarding student support, email UAA School of Education Student Success Coordinator Darlene Mackinnon at dlmackinnon@alaska.edu.