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  • CNN Money - "I'd be the first in my family to graduate college"

    Folashade Olatunde is a teen in the "Boogie down Bronx," where hip-hop was supposedly born. It's also a part of New York City where most families earn under $30,000 a year.

    Expect to see her on TV or running for elected office one day, she says, but right now she's focused on college. Only 11% of adults in her zip code have a bachelor's degree. "I would be the first person out of my entire family to graduate college," Olatunde told CNNMoney. Her mother and brother took a few classes but never earned degrees. A high school senior with a big smile and "a lot of talents," Olatunde has already had a taste of success. In December, she sang at a taping of ABC's "The View" in front of her idol Raven-Symoné. Last week, First Lady Michelle Obama gave her a hug, congratulating her on being accepted to college. "That really motivated me," says Olatunde.

     

    Defying the odds

    New York University was Olatunde's "dream school" because of its reputation in her favorite fields: journalism and the arts. "The hardest part was choosing if I should stay home or go away for college," she says. As the months went by, reality hit. She changed her mind and didn't apply to New York University. She was accepted by half a dozen schools, but most didn't give her enough financial aid. Unaffordable tuition is a key reason why low-income students don't finish college. As if getting in isn't tough enough, once they enroll in college, only 22% of students from families earning less than $35,000 a year graduate with a bachelor's degree. That's according to a report from The Pell Institute and the University of Pennsylvania's Alliance for Higher Education and Democracy. At the other end of the spectrum, 96% of students from wealthy families complete their degrees once they enroll in college.

     

    The affordable option: staying close to home

    To make it work financially, Olatunde will stay at home and attend York College next year. It's part of the public university system in New York City known as CUNY. Tuition is only $6,400 a year. "I don't care about the name of the college. I care about what the school has to offer," she says. York College has promised her a counselor for four years, a summer pre-college prep program and funds to help her buy books and supplies.

     

    High school culture makes a difference

    CNNMoney followed Olatunde and several classmates during their senior year of high school as they tried to defy the odds by getting into college from one of America's poorest neighborhoods. The students attend Morris Academy for Collaborative Studies, a public high school in the South Bronx that looks like a castle. It was built in the late 1800s and has prestigious alumni, including former Secretary of State and military leader Colin Powell. His picture hangs in the main hallway, a constant reminder of the American Dream. In some ways, Morris Academy is typical of high schools in poor neighborhoods. Nearly all the students are on the free lunch program and some routinely skip school. But Morris Academy has something special: mostly young and scrappy teachers and staff. They work Wall Street kind of hours, texting and calling kids to hound them to show up to school and get assignments done. The school partners with everyone from college counseling non-profits to JROTC to get more resources for the school. "Morris Academy is a really unique school compared to other low achieving NYC high schools," says Emma Wen, a college advisor funded by College Advising Corps, who started at the school in the fall. Teachers also talk about college non-stop. On every classroom door, teachers list where they went to university to expose students to the names and logos of more schools. Last year, 42% of seniors went on to enroll in college. Everyone wants that to be higher, but it's a big increase from just a few years ago.

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  • NY Times - To Teach a Child to Read, First Give Him Glasses

    “In the context of the neighborhood schools and its cohort of schools, Morris Academy feels like another world.”

    Morris Academy opens early — breakfast is provided, along with before-class tutoring. It’s open until 6:30, as well as on some Saturdays and during the summer. Students can choose among clubs for chess players, step-team dancers and bloggers. The robotics team competes with high schools nationwide. During lunchtime and after school, tutors offer one-on-one help to struggling students. An in-house clinic provides medical, dental and psychological services. Community school funds enabled MACS to deliver the emotional support that battle-scarred children badly need — recruiting a squadron of social workers, training teachers to counsel students and teaching older students how to mentor their younger classmates. “Our problem wasn’t lack of an academic strategy but our inability to answer students’ pleas for help." Now, remarkably, Morris Academy students are more likely than their peers citywide to say they feel safe in school and believe that their teachers care about them.

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