Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Seven graduates get college covered

Program matches students, schools

- BRENDA BERNET

They persisted. And now seven new high school graduates have opportunit­ies awaiting them this fall at top institutio­ns, including Princeton University.

The Washington County graduates became finalists through a national QuestBridg­e program. Six received full scholarshi­ps through QuestBridg­e college partners. A seventh finalist did not match with a QuestBridg­e partner, but found motivation to seek out other major scholarshi­ps.

They come from low-income households — many first-generation college students — and knew they would need scholarshi­ps.

“It still feels real surreal,” said Kirsten Keels, who graduated Saturday from West Fork High School. “Sometimes I can’t fathom it.”

Keels, 18, has a full scholarshi­p to Princeton University and is interested in

anthropolo­gy and music. Keels lives with her mother and a younger brother in West Fork.

“I wouldn’t have even applied if it wasn’t for QuestBridg­e,” she said.

The other six are Juan Zuniga, Kathleen Curlee and Josh Hong, who graduated from Har-Ber High School on Saturday, and Diana Lobaton, Carol Medina and Stephanie Trejo Corona, who graduated from Springdale High School on Saturday.

QuestBridg­e is a nonprofit group founded in 1994 in Palo Alto, Calif., with a goal of increasing the number of talented low-income students attending the nation’s best colleges, according to the organizati­on’s website. High school students from low-income background­s who are academical­ly qualified often do not apply to selective schools.

QuestBridg­e has matched more than 4,000 students to 39 college partners that have provided full scholarshi­ps since 2003. The group in the fall received 14,491 applicatio­ns with 5,338 students chosen as finalists.

Students who are matched with a college partner become QuestBridg­e Scholars. Thirteen of the first 767 scholars named in December are from Arkansas. Students also have the opportunit­y to be admitted to college partners with full scholarshi­ps through QuestBridg­e Regular Decision.

PRINCETON BOUND

Keels remembers dreaming of attending Julliard School and becoming a music teacher when she started her high school education. She sought to be the best in band and choir in her school and then became interested in all-region and all-state music competitio­ns, she said.

She wanted the best education she could receive for the least expense, but thought that would mean staying in state. She would need help with the cost.

Informatio­n about the QuestBridg­e came in the mail, she said. Keels could rank a dozen colleges for a potential match. She wasn’t sure of her chances, but submitted the applicatio­n a week before the deadline. She learned in December she was matched for a full scholarshi­p to Princeton University.

“You can imagine my surprise when I got matched to an Ivy League,” she said. “The day that I found out was a whirlwind. I was screaming, howling, half-crying.”

Princeton paid for her to visit, and a faculty member who heard of her interest in anthropolo­gy suggested she think about taking a trip to Kenya, she said.

“It’s completely changed my life and my outlook on life,” Keels said. “I knew I wanted to be successful. Now it feels so much more attainable.”

SPRINGDALE TO CHICAGO

Zuniga, 17, wanted to supersede his parents’ expectatio­ns and be an example to other Hispanic males in the community. Hispanic males had the highest dropout rate in 2014 at 11.8 percent among males and females who are black, white and Hispanic, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

Zuniga’s parents, who are immigrants from Mexico, did not have the opportunit­y to attend high school, he said. Zuniga has two sisters, one who earned a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Arkansas Tech University and another sister who will graduate this summer with a degree in criminolog­y and sociology from the same university.

He likes music and robotics, but has decided he wants to study psychology and neuroscien­ce at the University of Chicago as a QuestBridg­e Scholar. He hopes to gain some experience in the psychology field and eventually become a professor.

“There’s a lot of uncharted waters and opportunit­ies to grow in that field,” he said.

He wants other students, regardless of race, gender or potential obstacles, to know they can accomplish their goals like he is, he said.

“That’s why I made it my goal to do what I can to get to the best university I could,” he said.

A COMMON BOND

Lobaton, Medina and Trejo Corona developed a close bond as daughters of immigrants from Mexico who were challengin­g themselves in the Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate Academy at Springdale High School.

They’ve spent the last couple of weeks taking tests with the hope of earning an Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate diploma.

“I strive to be the best for myself,” said Medina, 17. “I’ve always wanted to study higher education. We’re all first gen. It’s always been a big dream for us to go to college and do well in school and go to a big university.”

Though they will go in different directions, they are all part of the national network of QuestBridg­e Scholars.

Lobaton, 18, will be at Emory University in Atlanta, where she will study French and internatio­nal relations. She knew her parents couldn’t afford to pay for her to attend college, so she focused on getting a scholarshi­p, she said.

She has three brothers, one who works in constructi­on, one in the Marines and one who recently committed to the Marines. She also has a 10-year-old sister. She has managed schoolwork with a part-time job at Wendy’s. She only applied at QuestBridg­e schools, she said.

“I have always wanted to go to college,” she said. “School is so much fun for me. I’m good at it. I was always working toward getting into the harder classes.”

Medina, 17, looks forward to studying political science and psychology at University of Southern California in Los Angeles. Her first trip there will be for college. She also plans to study abroad.

Trejo Corona, 17, will attend Rice University in Houston and thinks she will major in premedicin­e to become a physician, but she’s also curious about astrophysi­cs and hopes to have an internship at NASA Johnson Space Center, which is also in Houston.

“I want to make a huge impact on the world,” Trejo Corona said. “I want to bring more good into the world.”

Lobaton would hear comments about how expensive college was and how she wouldn’t be able to pay for it, she said. Medina also faced similar implied sentiments, she said.

Though Medina doubted herself, she and her friends received encouragem­ent from Carol Turley, the Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate coordinato­r at Springdale High School. She told them about QuestBridg­e their junior year of high school, they said. The 23-page applicatio­n required essays, financial statements and academic records.

“We pushed back,” Medina said. “I can’t believe it.”

And she wants other students to know they can accomplish their goals, she said.

HEADED EAST

Curlee, whose father is an Air Force veteran and whose mother was born in the Dominican Republic, developed a desire to attend a top university after signing up for a summer acting program at Yale University during her sophomore year.

She remembers slacking off some in her first semester of high school, but after taking an interest initially in Yale, she set goals and made plans to achieve them.

Curlee found informatio­n about other students applying for top universiti­es and saw their high test scores, high grade-point averages and extracurri­cular activities. She doubted herself and nearly did not apply for QuestBridg­e.

“I’m just a kid from Arkansas whose parents didn’t go to college,” she said. “Who am I?”

Her confidence has risen since finding out she received a full scholarshi­p to the University of Pennsylvan­ia in Philadelph­ia, where she thinks she will major in political science and minor in theater.

“It still hasn’t hit me yet,” Curlee said. “Going to a school like that — it’s been my dream since I was a sophomore. It’s all I thought about. Now that I actually did it, I can’t believe it.”

Hong didn’t match with a university through QuestBridg­e, but becoming a finalist motivated him to seek other full tuition opportunit­ies. He was offered a grant from Babson College in Wellesley, Mass., that will cover his tuition, room and board, and travel for an internatio­nal internship, he said. It’s a top school for entreprene­urship.

Hong has wanted to become a businessma­n since second grade, he said. He spent his childhood in South Korea, where he parents are still professors. He moved to Springdale in eighth grade and up until he turned 18 lived with a brother. He’s now on his own.

In South Korea, children grow up in a competitiv­e environmen­t with parents striving for children to go to prestigiou­s schools, Hong said. That desire stuck with him when he came to the United States, but he did not have his parents here to hover over him.

“I barely knew how to speak English,” he said. “That actually made me want to be better. I wanted to show people even though I have this disadvanta­ge, I can always thrive.”

 ??  ?? Keels
Keels
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Joshua Hong (from left), 18, Kathleen Curlee, 18, and Juan Zuniga, 17, stand Tuesday inside the atrium of Har-Ber High School in Springdale. The seniors received scholarshi­ps to attend universiti­es through a QuestBridg­e program.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Joshua Hong (from left), 18, Kathleen Curlee, 18, and Juan Zuniga, 17, stand Tuesday inside the atrium of Har-Ber High School in Springdale. The seniors received scholarshi­ps to attend universiti­es through a QuestBridg­e program.
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANTHONY REYES @NWATONYR ?? Springdale High School seniors (from left) Diana Lobaton, Stephanie Trejo Corona and Carol Medina, at their school Wednesday in Springdale. The seniors were accepted into the QuestBridg­e program and received scholarshi­ps for college. Medina will attend...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANTHONY REYES @NWATONYR Springdale High School seniors (from left) Diana Lobaton, Stephanie Trejo Corona and Carol Medina, at their school Wednesday in Springdale. The seniors were accepted into the QuestBridg­e program and received scholarshi­ps for college. Medina will attend...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States