Second Chance at Academic Success

Published: September 16, 2015

For Laura Grout, going to college was always an option. Although it took her almost 20 years to enroll in the Biology-Healthcare program at the ĢƵ, she has never lost sight of becoming a formally-trained midwife. After years of supporting her husband’s military career, raising what she calls a herd of children, and operating a number of home businesses, Grout set out to finish what she started years ago.

“It was a leap of faith coming (back) to school and deciding I would try this,” she said.

Grout graduated from Meridian High School in 1994 and tried college right away. She enrolled at Boise State University—then the juggling started. Between being a new mom, her husband’s career and their finances, school became overwhelming. She ended up dropping out to work. But she made a mistake she has since worked to overcome. She never officially withdrew from college, and it left a black mark on her academic record.

“For years I felt like I was a failure and that I would never amount to anything educationally, that I would never be able to have a career, or ever be successful,” Grout said. “I was starting from a deficit and never thought I’d be able to recover.”

Her leap of faith has been nothing short of miraculous. While steadily working her way through the prerequisites needed to get in to CWI’s nursing program, she became a straight A student. And she has turned those stellar grades into a way to help her pay for college. She received the Laura Moore Cunningham Scholarship from the ĢƵ Foundation. The scholarship is renewable as long as a student keeps full-time status and a minimum 3.0 grade point average.

“The gratitude I feel at receiving this scholarship cannot be overstated,” she said. “I never wanted a hand out. I am grateful for this hand up. I can continue my education without saddling myself and my family with added debt.”

This is the second year Grout has received the scholarship; which has more than financially helped her. Her experience at CWI has changed her outlook on life.

“It’s been something that has really altered how I thought about myself for sure,” she said. “I just felt like I was never going to be able to do anything with my life. Now I feel like I can. I see a future. I see that I have potential and that I can do something. It’s really helped a lot.”

In addition to Grout’s full-time credit load at CWI, she also worked to clean up her academic record at Boise State University. Over the past year, she successfully completed one class per semester there—including the summer term. She will now have a clean slate when she returns to earn her master’s degree in nurse midwifery.

More from CWI

Alex Nava on a staircase

Refusing to give up, Alex Nava overcame extraordinary challenges to earn his degree and start a new chapter in accounting.

Read more about Getting Back Up
Faculty and student with a certificate

Nominated by faculty, students were selected based on their commitment to learning, perseverance, innovative thinking, leadership, and professionalism in and outside of the classroom.

Read more about 2027 Emerging Scholars
Autumn Harvey celebrating her win
Courtesy: SkillsUSA

Competing against some of the nation's top career and technical education students, CWI earned national recognition with two medal-winning entries.

Read more about CWI Students Earn National Recognition at 2026 SkillsUSA Championships
Khye Montoya leans on fire truck

Firefighters often talk about trust. For Khye Montoya, that feeling of trust was familiar long before he stepped onto a fire engine.

Read more about Montoya Finds His Place in the Fire Service
Marquez Arredondo poses in front of firefighter gear

Marquez Arredondo turned a life-changing experience into a career dedicated to helping others through CWI's Fire Service Technology program.

Read more about Arredondo Answers the Call
Fire student at a fire truck with a hose

After stepping away from firefighting, Hunter Stephenson rediscovered his passion for the profession and found his way back through CWI.

Read more about Reigniting a Passion
Student speaks in front of audience

Students put classroom skills into action at the Spring 2026 Rookie Speech and Debate Tournament, reviving a beloved tradition.

Read more about Rookie Tournament Gives Students a Chance to Put Skills Into Action
Confetti falls on the crowd at commencement

The event marked the largest graduating class in school history and the College’s first commencement ceremony held at the Ford Idaho Center on CWI’s Nampa Campus.

Read more about More than 1,800 Honored at 17th Commencement
Graduate with candle walking across stage

The Registered Nursing Class of 2026 was celebrated at the Nampa Civic Center as graduates marked the transition into nursing through pinning, speeches, awards, and a candle lighting...

Read more about 2026 Registered Nursing Pinning Ceremony
Gracie Young holding a weighted ball

Gracie Young is preparing to begin her healthcare career after gaining real-world experience through the Occupational Therapy Assistant program.

Read more about Young Finds Her Calling to Help Others
LeAndra Onys

CWI student LeAndra Onys connects classroom learning to real-world experience through technical training and exploring global cybersecurity issues.

Read more about Connecting Cybersecurity to Real-World Impact
Bronwyn Hitchcock sitting on stool in art classroom

Bronwyn Hitchcock credits CWI’s Studio Art program with helping her build confidence, explore new mediums, and pursue a future in art.

Read more about The Art of Finding a Direction

News QR Code

URL: /news/second-chance-academic-success<br>