University Commitment to Support Bottom-Income Family Students to Graduate

(SDG 1 – No Poverty | Indicator 1.3.4)

Zamzam University of Science and Technology (ZUST) is firmly committed to ensuring that students from bottom-income families not only gain access to higher education but are fully supported to graduate successfully and achieve long-term employability. This commitment reflects the University’s core value that no capable student should be left behind due to financial or social disadvantage.

Institutional Commitment. Through the Office of Student Affairs, ZUST has developed a comprehensive framework to improve the academic performance, retention, and completion of financially vulnerable students. The University recognises that poverty-related stress, lack of academic confidence, and limited job prospects can undermine motivation and progress; therefore, its student-success strategy combines academic support, personal guidance, and career development opportunities.

Key Initiatives Led by the Office of Student Affairs

  1. Tutoring and Academic Support Programmes: ZUST provides free tutoring sessions and academic clinics each semester for students identified as being from low-income backgrounds or at risk of underperformance. These sessions are led by senior students, graduate assistants, and volunteer faculty members, focusing on essential courses in science, technology, and business disciplines. The aim is to help struggling students regain confidence, strengthen academic skills, and meet graduation requirements within the normal study period.
  2. One-on-One Counselling and Mentorship: The Student Affairs Office runs a one-on-one counselling and mentoring service, pairing each financially challenged student with an academic advisor. Counselling focuses on:
  1. Managing academic workload and personal challenges;
  2. Improving study habits and self-discipline;
  3. Enhancing mental well-being and motivation to complete their studies.
  4. Trained counsellors also monitor progress and provide regular check-ins to prevent dropouts.
  • Incentive and Job-Linkage Initiatives

To inspire persistence and independence, ZUST connects students with on-campus work opportunities, internships, and job-placement programmes through its Career Development and BINA Business Incubation Centre.
These initiatives provide:

  • Monthly stipends or small incentives for student assistants;
  • Internship placements with partner organisations;
  • Guidance on entrepreneurship, CV development, and job readiness.

By linking academic completion to employment pathways, ZUST encourages students to view graduation as the gateway to economic empowerment and self-reliance.

Measured Impact

Since 2024, more than 400 students from bottom-income families have benefited directly from the combined tutoring, counselling, and job-linkage programmes. Internal monitoring data from the Student Affairs Office show a 5–7 % increase in retention and graduation rates among financially vulnerable cohorts compared to previous years.

Conclusion

Zamzam University’s commitment to supporting low-income students goes beyond financial aid, it extends to holistic academic and career empowerment. Through personalised tutoring, continuous counselling, and meaningful employment opportunities, ZUST ensures that students from disadvantaged backgrounds not only stay in school but graduate with the skills, confidence, and opportunities needed to build sustainable livelihoods.
This approach reinforces the University’s mission to advance SDG 1 (No Poverty) and SDG 4 (Quality Education) by transforming education into a tool for social and economic mobility.