Here - Carolina College Advising Corps
Transcripción
Here - Carolina College Advising Corps
HIGH SCHOOL The Other Counselors Carolina has taken the lead in a program that tries to ensure that nobody misses out on college ‘for no good reason at all.’ by Bill Krueger raceli Morales wants to do something unheard of in her family. She wants to go to college. Morales is 17, a senior at Graham High School. Located just a few miles off I-85 in Alamance County, Graham is full of kids whose greatest aspiration is to finish high school. Some are simply waiting to turn 16 so they can drop out. Many of them come from low-income families where college simply is not a consideration, either because it seems too expensive or too difficult to get in. Morales, though, is determined. Her dream school is Davidson, but she has applied to others “just in case.” The process hasn’t been easy. No one in her family went to college; she can’t turn to her parents for advice about what to write in her essay or how to apply for financial aid. And her parents don’t speak English, so it’s tough for them to seek help for their daughter. But Morales is getting advice and help — from Jennifer Alston ’09. PHOTOS BY DAN SEARS ’74 A It’s Jennifer Alston’s job at Graham High to find and counsel students such as Araceli Morales, seated, who want to go to college but lack the necessary support at home. 28 “I think this is good, but you need to go back and check your grammar,” Alston — barely out of college herself — tells Morales after looking over one of her application essays. They are huddled around a small table in Alston’s office, set up in a trailer behind the school. College posters and pennants cover the walls. One of the colleges requires a 680-word essay. Another wants one that’s only 500 words. Morales can’t figure out what to cut for the shorter one. March/April 2011 C A RO L I N A A L U M N I R E V I E W 29 A mutual benefit Farmer set out in 2006 to address that problem, jumping at an opportunity when the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation was offering grant money to expand a collegeaccess program that had been started at the University of Virginia. The next year, UNC was awarded $1 million to start a North Carolina program and additional money to host the national office of the National College Advising Corps. North Carolina, with 21 advisers in 55 schools across the state, is now one of 14 30 March/April 2011 BY ‘I’ve never been involved in something more rewarding. It’s really in the DNA of this institution. At Carolina, part of our makeup is to be thinking about public service and outreach this way.’ PHOTOS “Don’t worry too much about 500 words,” Alston tells her. “You’re going to be fine. They just don’t want you to write a novel. Being a little over is not going to hurt you, especially if it’s worth reading. I think you’re on the right track.” That’s Alston’s job, to make sure Morales and other high school students are on the right track to getting into college. Alston is an adviser in the Carolina College Advising Corps, a program run out of UNC to help high school students like Morales get to college. The program targets students who don’t see college as a viable option and tries to show them that it’s attainable. The advisers are assigned to work in schools that have high percentages of kids getting free and reduced-price lunches and that have had low numbers of students moving on to four-year colleges. In many of the schools, the ratio of students to regular counselors is astronomical. “There are students in every school across the state who are capable of going to college who never make it there,” said Stephen Farmer, associate provost and director of undergraduate admissions at Carolina. “There are a lot of little obstacles that seem insurmountable to a low-income student or to someone whose family has never gone to college.” Students from middle-class or wealthy households aren’t even aware of those obstacles. College is simply assumed to be the next step after high school. “They are like cracks in the sidewalk,” Farmer said. “But to somebody who grows up in different circumstances and doesn’t get the same kind of support, they are not cracks in the sidewalk. They may as well be the Grand Canyon. It’s wrong that kids miss out on going to college for no good reason at all.” DAN SEARS ’74 THE YOUNGEST COUNSELORS Nicole Hurd states with such a program. Nicole Hurd, a UVA professor who ran the Virginia program, moved to Chapel Hill to head the national program, which serves as an umbrella organization for the state programs. “I’ve never been involved in something more rewarding,” Hurd said. “It’s really in the DNA of this institution. At Carolina, part of our makeup is to be thinking about public service and outreach this way.” The advisers — recent Carolina graduates who have demonstrated a penchant for pub- Nicole Hurd, above left, headed an advising corps program at the University of Virginia. Now she runs the national program from Chapel Hill. Yolanda Keith coordinates the North Carolina corps, in which recent Carolina graduates are the heart of the enterprise. “Any student who wants to be served will be served,” Keith says. UNC undergraduate admissions director Steve Farmer is pictured at top. lic service — are the heart of the program. They are hired to spend one or two years working in North Carolina high schools, serving as counselor, cheerleader, financial guru, scheduler, tour guide and whatever else it takes to help college become a reality for high school students who thought college was beyond their grasp. The advising corps reaches 9 percent of all high school seniors statewide — nearly 5,000 — and 15 percent of those who identify themselves as American Indian, African-American or Hispanic. The advising corps adviser sometimes is the one person at school who is willing to listen and talk with students about their dreams of college. This is not necessarily a funnel to Chapel Hill — the goal is to find the college that’s the best fit for each individual student. For some, that will be Carolina or Harvard. For others, it may mean going to a community college first and then transferring into a four-year school. “We are an inclusive organization,” said Yolanda Keith, the program coordinator for the Carolina College Advising Corps. “Any student who wants to be served will be served.” The pay for being an adviser is not great, but the program helps the advisers pay off student loans. Hurd said there are 15 applicants for every adviser chosen. The vast majority of those who apply — and those hired — are not education majors. They have majored in sociology, public health and journalism, among other fields. Many are looking for a bridge between their undergraduate years and graduate school. Each adviser splits time between two high schools. “Carolina has a great population of young, energetic, public service-oriented young people,” Keith said. Many of the advisers, like the students they are serving, are first-generation college students. That, plus their age, makes it easy for them to relate to their students. Farmer says the advisers serve as “living, breathing evidence that it’s possible to get from where the students are to where the advisers are.” Justin Simmons ’07, who worked as an adviser in two Charlotte high schools for two years, said a lot of the kids he worked with told him they could relate to him continued on page 34 True or False here are several popular — and persistent — myths about UNC undergraduate admissions. The Review tackles them periodically. Here are 15 — every one of them false; to see how the admissions office responds to these and others, see the March/April 2010 Review’s coverage at alumni.unc.edu/admit2010. ■ UNC has hidden admission caps and quotas. ■ There are secret cutoffs for SATs, ACTs, GPAs and number of AP courses. ■ Students from low-income families have a better chance of getting in. ■ UNC does offer interviews, and they do affect admissions decisions. ■ UNC prefers the SAT to the ACT. ■ First-deadline applicants have a better chance of getting in than second-deadline applicants. ■ It is better to pad and protect your GPA than to take tough courses and risk a slightly lower grade. ■ If students show how much they love UNC — by calling, writing, e-mailing, visiting or sending gifts — they will have a better chance of getting in. ■ Students who choose “undecided” for intended major on their applications will hurt their chances. ■ The children of deep-pocketed donors — or of alumni, employees and people otherwise connected with the University — almost always get in. ■ Being well-rounded is the key to getting in. Also its opposite: Having a passion for one thing is the key to getting in. ■ Students who go to a certain kind of high school — public or private, highly competitive or underperforming — will have a better (or worse — take your pick) chance of getting in than students who attend a different kind of school. ■ Letters of recommendation from bigname UNC alumni or other power brokers will make a big difference. ■ The junior year is the only year that really counts. ■ A minor discretion will keep a student from getting in, so it’s best to try to cover it up. T ONLINE: Have questions? Undergraduate admissions has a place to ask them at www.admissions.unc.edu/ask_carolina.html. C A RO L I N A A L U M N I R E V I E W 31 THE YOUNGEST COUNSELORS Geographic Distribution of Freshmen* North Central 111 Guilford 255 Students with NC in address field Wake 612 Forsyth 146 Mid-Atlantic 246 East 140 Midwest 79 Northeast 143 Northwest 170 West Central 169 New England West 58 West 158 North Carolina Mecklenburg 458 South Central 366 n Demographics Residency North Carolina Out of state Total Number 3,153* 807* 3,960 % 79.6% 20.4% Sex Female Male Total Number 2,378 1,582 3,960 % 60.1% 39.9% Race/Ethnicity* Number Caucasian/White 2,717 Asian-American/Asian 368 African-American/Black 362 Hispanic/Latino/Latina 123 Native American 19 Pacific Islander 2 Total 3,591 % 78.2% 16.1% 3.4% 2.3% Cum% 78.2% 94.3% 97.7% 100.0% *1,018 students did not report a class rank Numerical Rank Number First 196 Second 153 Third 160 Fourth through 10th 727 Total 1,236 % 6.7% 5.2% 5.4% 24.7% 42.01% Grade Point Average* Number 4.0 or higher 3,227 Average 4.47 % 89.2% Cum% 6.7% 11.9% 17.3% 42.0% *342 students did not report a GPA 1298 1328 1304 Middle 50 percent North Carolina 1200-1390 Out of state 1210-1460 All 1200-1410 % 75.7% 10.2% 10.1% 3.4% 0.5% 0.1% AP Results Total scores submitted Nationality U.S. citizens Permanent residents Nonresident aliens Total Number 3,784 103 73 3,960 Scores 3+ 15,034 % 3+ 84.3% ALL SCORES Students % of class Number of enrolling students submitting 1 or more 2 or more Students submitting 3 or more Students submitting 4 or more Students submitting 5 or more Students submitting 6 or more Students submitting 7 or more Students submitting 8 or more Students submitting 9 or more Students submitting10 or more Students submitting11 or more Students 12 or more Students submit 13 or more Students submit 14 or more SAT Score Bands Number 1600 5 1500s 204 1400s 738 1300s 1,145 1200s 955 1100s 493 1000s 166 Below 1000 56 Total 3,762 % 0.1% 5.4% 19.6% 30.4% 25.4% 13.1% 4.4% 1.5% % 95.6% 2.6% 1.8% *Geographic distribution is not necessarily tied to residency status or citizenship. The number of students who qualified for admission as in-state students differs from the number of admitted students who have North Carolina addresses as their primary residence, according to the admissions office. (For example: A student might live with one parent out of state while the other parent is a North Carolina resident and taxpayer.) Scores 17,844 2,978 2,877 2,700 2,458 2,098 1,664 1,182 795 492 282 150 87 42 21 Cum% 0.1% 5.5% 25.1% 55.5% 80.9% 94.0% 98.4% UNC, Fall 2010 North Carolina Non-alumni children Alumni children Total Applied 8,186 1,283 9,469 Admitted 3,914 821 4,735 Admit % 47.8% 64.0% 50.0% Enrolled 2,551 602 3,153 Yield 65.2% 73.3% 66.6% Out-of-State Non-alumni children Alumni children Total Applied 13,292 510 13,802 Admitted 2,606 218 2,824 Admit % 19.6% 42.7% 20.5% Enrolled 715 92 807 Yield 27.4% 42.2% 28.6% All Non-alumni children Alumni children Total Applied 21,478 1,793 23,271 Admitted 6,520 1,039 7,559 Admit % 30.4% 57.9% 32.5% Enrolled 3,266 694 3,960 Yield 50.1% 66.8% 52.4% South 284 Southwest 47 Durham 88 *Reflects students who reported one race or ethnicity only; an additional 282 students reported two or more races; another 87 students did not report race or ethnicity. Sources: UNC Office of Undergraduate Admissions and UNC Office of Institutional Research and Assessment n Academics Percentile Rank* Number Top 10 percent 2,300 Second 10 percent 473 Third 10 percent 100 Below third 10 percent 69 Total 2,942 3,157* Southeast 189 Orange 152 SAT Results* Average North Carolina Out of state All 29 n Profile of Freshmen Entering By Residency and Alumni Status SCORES 3+ Students % of class 2,870 2,661 2,387 2,041 1,635 1,235 851 573 348 205 108 65 30 12 72.5% 67.2% 60.3% 51.5% 41.3% 31.2% 21.5% 14.5% 8.8% 5.2% 2.7% 1.6% 0.8% 0.3% 75.2% 72.7% 68.2% 62.1% 53.0% 42.0% 29.8% 20.1% 12.4% 7.1% 3.8% 2.2% 1.1% 0.5% ACT Results* Average North Carolina Out of state All Middle 50 percent North Carolina Out of state All 28.3 30.0 28.8 26-31 28-33 27-31 By Residency and First-Generation College North Carolina FGC Non-FGC Total Applied 2,308 7,161 9,469 Admitted 847 3,888 4,735 Admit % 36.7% 54.3% 50.0% Enrolled 609 2,544 3,153 Yield 71.9% 65.4% 66.6% Out-of-State FGC Non-FGC Total Applied 1,843 11,959 13,802 Admitted 276 2,548 2,824 Admit % 15.0% 21.3% 20.5% Enrolled 109 698 807 Yield 39.5% 27.4% 28.6% All FGC Non-FGC Total Applied 4,151 19,120 23,271 Admitted 1,123 6,436 7,559 Admit % 27.1% 33.7% 32.5% Enrolled 718 3,242 3,960 Yield 63.9% 50.4% 52.4% School and Community Activities Participated in community service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94% Played a sport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74% Participated in music, drama or other arts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59% Traveled outside my home country . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55% Held a job during the school year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48% President of class or club . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48% Participated in academic competitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47% Participated in student government . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34% Captain of a varsity sport. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33% Contributed to a school publication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28% Conducted research outside the classroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27% Earned all-conference or higher recognition as an athlete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24% Participated in academic or professional internship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23% Founded an organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20% Achieved fluency in non-native language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17% Earned National Merit Semifinalist recognition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10% Named National Achievement Scholar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10% Served as editor-in-chief of a publication. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7% Participated in Governor’s School. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7% Earned National Merit Finalist recognition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7% Participated in Boys’ or Girls’ State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6% Earned Eagle Scout or Gold Award . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6% Served as student body president . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6% By State State Alaska Ala. Ark. Ariz. Calif. Colo. Conn. D.C. Del. Fla. Ga. Hawaii Iowa Idaho Ill. Ind. Kan. Ky. La. Mass. Md. Maine Mich. Minn. Mo. Miss. Mont. N.C. N.D. Neb. N.H. N.J. N.M. Nev. N.Y. Ohio Okla. Ore. Pa. R.I. S.C. S.D. Tenn. Texas Utah Va. Vt. Wash. Wis. W.Va. Wyo. Applied 11 104 39 87 578 181 345 90 77 1,119 747 20 31 13 379 107 53 86 103 462 939 50 191 99 116 43 6 9,615 4 23 86 953 25 33 1,122 445 24 37 626 64 337 3 312 562 32 1,044 40 97 92 53 6 Admitted 0 29 11 21 102 36 47 21 21 365 213 1 8 2 58 18 21 30 25 52 206 6 17 22 24 13 1 4,743 0 8 5 148 6 7 230 90 5 15 93 3 87 0 88 163 4 232 4 16 15 7 1 Enrolled 0 1 2 8 30 8 13 4 6 94 68 0 3 0 17 4 5 8 6 12 64 1 5 7 5 1 0 3,157* 0 1 3 53 2 0 80 25 2 6 36 0 25 0 20 41 2 61 0 4 7 3 0 *Some N.C. residents have non-N.C. addresses, while some nonresidents have N.C. addresses. *2,594 students did not report ACT results *For critical reading and math; 198 students did not report SAT results 32 March/April 2011 C A RO L I N A A L U M N I R E V I E W 33 DAN SEARS ’74 THE YOUNGEST COUNSELORS Each adviser splits time between two high schools. Shamelle Ingram ’09 has Southern High and Hillside High in Durham. A public policy major at Carolina, she’s decided she wants to go to graduate school for counselor education. continued from page 31 better than they could with “these old teachers and old counselors.” “I liked some of the same things they liked,” Simmons said. “We could talk about musical artists they knew about. Knowing I liked sports helped out. I was able to relate to them.” Shamelle Ingram ’09 is an adviser at two Durham high schools — Southern and Hillside. She was drawn to the program because she was helped by a college-access program when she attended an inner-city high school in Trenton, N.J., that didn’t have a good track record of sending students to college. Alston, who works at Graham High and another high school in Alamance, was attracted to the job as an opportunity to give back. Her father, who went to community college, lost his job when Alston was in the eighth grade. Alston 34 March/April 2011 ‘I’ve not been able to save the world, but I’ve been able to save a piece of it. And for me, that’s enough.’ Shamelle Ingram ’09 needed financial aid to go to college. “I thought about it, and I would be doing myself a disservice if I didn’t give back,” Alston said. “I felt like it was my calling.” All advisers are given intensive training in the rules of college admissions, the process for seeking financial aid, and how to work with students, teachers, guidance counselors and parents. But they also are given wide latitude in determining what sort of approaches to use to reach the students in their schools. Alston has made classroom presentations, set up a Facebook page to communicate with students and held countless oneon-one sessions with students. Rachel Brody ’08 felt like she had to be a detective to figure out how best to approach her job as an adviser in Caldwell County. She found that e-mail was not an effective way to reach students but that building relationships with teachers and counselors led them to send students to see her. She arranged several community events to get parents involved and made stickers for students proclaiming that they had applied for college. Ingram has taken students on several tours of college campuses, letting them see firsthand where they want to be. Many of the advisers put together school assemblies last May to celebrate students who were accepted into college. The clean-slate club Inevitably, though, the advisers’ idealism collides with reality. They learn that they can’t solve all the problems facing some students and that many students — or their parents — aren’t ready to buy into the notion that college is an option. “I’ve not been able to save the world, but I’ve been able to save a piece of it,” Ingram said. “And for me, that’s enough.” Among the schools to which advising corps counselors’ students have been admitted are Meredith College, N.C. State, UNCPembroke, N.C. Central and Appalachian, as well as a number of community colleges. Brody said she went into the program hoping to see greater results but recognized eventually that she was getting results beyond the individual students she was helping. She was excited when there was a big turnout on the first date that students could take the SAT. To Brody, that was tangible evidence that her work was making a difference. “We were changing a culture, and that takes time,” she said. “The amount of information that was getting out into the community was changing the way people were thinking about college.” For most of the advisers, this is their first full-time job. And Hurd says they learn some valuable lessons in just two years. “They go in very idealistic, but they end up learning how to be strategic,” she said. “They learn you can make an impact as a young person, but you’re not going to do it alone. They need to learn how to work with others, how to collaborate.” Farmer says the fundamental challenge facing the advisers is to find 15 to 20 kids in each school who are capable of going to college but are at risk for not making it. Some already may be thinking about college but don’t know how to get there. Others may not have entertained the idea. The advisers, he said, “can demystify the process for families,” Farmer said. “They can help people get excited about the process instead of fearful.” Jennifer Milton, a staff counselor at Graham High, says having someone like Alston focusing solely on college access has opened doors for students. Milton spends most of her time dealing with issues to keep students on track in high school — mediating disputes between students, dealing with students who are considering running away from home or committing suicide, talking with kids who are missing school. She has little time left to help students get to college. Alston, she said, “doesn’t have a background with these students. 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General Alumni Association C A RO L I N A A L U M N I R E V I E W 35 THE YOUNGEST COUNSELORS Expanding carefully Jerry Bowens, 19, is a sophomore at Carolina now, thanks to the help he received from an adviser at West Charlotte High School. He did well in high school, finishing second in his class, but knew that he would need a lot of financial help to go on. No one in his family had been to college, and he didn’t know how to navigate the world of financial aid. “All my friends kept talking about this new lady here helping us with college applications,” Bowens said. “I had a lot of questions about college, the whole process, and didn’t have an outlet to go to at home. Having that support system was very beneficial.” Bowens assumed he was going to have to rely on loans, but the adviser at his school helped him find scholarship opportunities. He ended up being selected as a Carolina Covenant Scholar, a member of UNC’s renowned program that helps lowincome students graduate debt-free. “That relieved a lot of stress for my family,” he said. “I’m able to focus just on my school work.” Morales, the Graham senior who dreams of Davidson, said Alston has helped her with specific questions about college applications and with encouragement to keep pushing ahead when she reaches a stumbling block. “She’s been a great help for me. I appreciate the time she spends with me.” The program has served more than 100,000 high school students nationally since 1995 and has helped students secure more than $5 million in scholarships and grants for college. In North Carolina, the program is in about 10 percent of all public high schools; the 55 schools is substantially 36 March/April 2011 DAN SEARS ’74 them all as potential college applicants. We may have experienced some burnout, but she has come in with some new zeal.” The program has a memorandum of understanding with each of the schools it serves that specifies that the advisers have to be able to work with any student who wants help. When the program began at Virginia, they called it the “clean-slate club” — no one is denied help because of problems they’ve had before. “The advisers have to be willing to listen to their colleagues in the school, but they also have to be tenacious on behalf of the kids they serve,” Farmer said. Jerry Bowens finished second in his high school class, but he didn’t know how to navigate the world of financial aid. Counseling led to his being chosen a Carolina Covenant Scholar. ‘All my friends kept talking about this new lady here helping us with college applications. I had a lot of questions about college, the whole process, and didn’t have an outlet to go to at home. Having that support system was very beneficial.’ Jerry Bowens higher than the 18 originally projected for this year. Twelve percent of all low-income high school students statewide attend a school served by an advising corps adviser. School officials in Caldwell County, for instance, say the presence of advisers in the schools there has led to a big jump in the number of kids going on to college — from 24 percent who said in 2007 that they planned to go to college to 38 percent in 2009. MAKE THE WORLD A GREENER R P East 54 is as environmentally en nvironmentally responsible as it gets. It also has quite the restaurant rant scene. scene Indian. Italian. Thai. Sushi. York– pharmacy, A a New Y And Yor ork– style deli. Add to that live music, bars, boutiques, salons, alons, a Dutch chocolaterie, pharmac accyy, cleaner, Euro hotel and more. So, one S o, whether you come here to eat, shop or play, you’re doing it in on ne of the greenest places in the world. orld. 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As successful as the program has been, Farmer hopes they can put advisers in closer to 100 schools over the next five years. But Hurd says it is important to be deliberate in expanding, that the program only works if it is based on a partnership between the high schools and the program. Guidance counselors and principals help plan and help decide whom to hire as advisers. “We’re trying to make sure we’re all in this together, that the universities are committed and that the high schools are involved,” she said. The national program just got an additional $500,000 from the Cooke foundation, whose funding was expected to expire in May. In February, it received a $1.5 million grant from the Pathways Fund, a new public-private education partnership. When matched with other private funds, this would enable the program to add 50 advisers nationally and to expand from four Charlotte high schools to about eight. The program has received funding nationally from Bank of America, the Kresge Foundation and the Lumina Foundation for Education and in North Car- DAN SEARS ’74 THE YOUNGEST COUNSELORS olina from several foundations. The advisers share some of that desire to do more and do it quickly. Most of their Jennifer Alston ’09 congratulates Graham High senior Mariela Serrato, who’s just been accepted to N.C. A&T State University. work is with high school juniors and seniors, but they sometimes find that students’ grades are such a mess by that point that getting to college is difficult. It would help, they say, if there were advisers who could get to students as early as middle school. Sometimes that means advisers have to provide students with a reality check. Their dream may be to go to Carolina, but their grade point average may say that community college may be a necessary first step. “I’m not a dream-killer, but they have to be realistic to reach their goals,” Alston said. “Sometimes community college is the best option.” Alston recalls one girl who came to her looking for help. She came from a singleparent home and had a low grade point average. “Something within her made her come talk to me about her dream of going to college. She said, ‘I know I have everything working against me. Don’t have money. I don’t have good grades.’ ” Alston got her to work harder in the classroom. She managed to raise her grade point average and, with Alston’s help, was ‘I’m not a dream-killer, but they have to be realistic to reach their goals. Sometimes community college is the best option.’ Jennifer Alston ’09 accepted at Livingstone College in Salisbury. Alston said she is doing well there. “This is why I do this.” Taking their own advice In helping others, though, advisers often find out something surprising about themselves. Most went into the program unsure of what they wanted to do next. Graduate school was likely for many, maybe law school or even medical school. But it’s not uncommon for them to decide that they would like to make a career out of counseling. Brody is now in graduate school at George Washington University, studying public administration and working for a nonprofit organization that does collegeaccess work. She was a double major in political science and Spanish at Carolina but now thinks she might want to work in higher education. “This took me on a path that I would not have predicted,” she said. Simmons, another former adviser, is in graduate school for school counseling. Ingram, a public policy major at Carolina, wants to go to graduate school for counselor education. “I would love to stay with a collegeaccess program,” she said. “I love working with high school students, helping them realize their potential.” And Jerry Bowens, the sophomore at Carolina who benefited from the help of one of the program advisers? He’s thinking about applying to be an adviser in the Carolina College Advising Corps after he graduates. BILL KRUEGER is a writer based in Raleigh. ONLINE: Each spring, the Review writes about admissions; past articles are available online to GAA members at alumni.unc.edu/admissions. To those who helped us become the only top ten Children’s Hospital in North Carolina: When you purchase products that bear UNC logos, please look for the "Officially Licensed Collegiate Product" hologram. This hologram assures that the product has been approved by UNC and that a portion of its proceeds will be directed toward University programs. Revenue generated through the sale of UNC merchandise helps to fund both needbased and academic scholarships. Once again, U.S. News & World Report has ranked the North Carolina Children’s Hospital among the nation’s top 10 Pulmonology centers for children with respiratory problems. We were also recognized in Diabetes and Endocrinology ranking 23rd in the nation. To all of our physicians, researchers, nurses and staff members—we applaud you. Because of your courageous effort and selfless dedication, this hospital can be called one of the nation’s finest. Families across North Carolina can rest easy knowing their children have access to world-class care at one of the best children’s hospitals in the entire country—here in Chapel Hill and at more than 25 satellite clinics throughout the state including our N.C. Children’s Specialty Clinic on the campus of Rex Hospital in Raleigh. What drives us? Our mission is simple. Make the world a healthier and happier place for kids. ncchildrenshospital.org 38 March/April 2011 C A RO L I N A A L U M N I R E V I E W 39