The Mercury News

Zuckerberg, Chan donate to undocument­ed students

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

More than 100 undocument­ed students from the Bay Area will have the chance to go to college this fall thanks in part to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan.

Over the last several years, the couple has given millions of dollars through their Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative to TheDream.US, a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C., that awards scholarshi­ps to undocument­ed students. This year, the organizati­on will award 139 four-year scholarshi­ps worth $3.4 million to local students, part of an effort to send 400 undocument­ed immigrants from the Bay Area to colleges in the region by 2020.

“We truly believe that an education is so important for people to be able to contribute to this community and this nation,” said Tania Wilcox, the organizati­on’s program director for college partnershi­ps.

“Dreamers,” as they are often called, were brought to the United States as children and many attended local schools. Most come from low-income families and say they want to pursue higher education. But they aren’t eligible for federal financial aid, many private scholarshi­ps or federal workstudy programs, meaning many would-be students find themselves priced out

of college.

That would have been the case for Alejandro Bautista Zugaide. The native of Mexico native came to Oakland as a preteen and graduated from CSU East Bay this spring with a bachelor’s in business and a minor in Latino studies. But until he received a scholarshi­p through The Dream. US, he was planning on stopping his studies after getting an associate’s degree. Now he’s planning to earn a master’s and work as a counselor at a university.

“Why would we want to waste that talent?” Wilcox said.

Bautista Zugaide, who has four brothers and a sister, still worked his way through college, but the money helped him work a part-time job and enroll as a full-time student instead of the other way around.

“If I wouldn’t have achieved a four-year degree, I would have just been working at another restaurant or someplace,” he said. “That goes to say, I wouldn’t have been challenged to reach my full potential.”

When students feel supported and know someone is investing in them, they are going to make it count, said Mary Papazian, president of San Jose State University, which is set to receive more than 40 of the scholarshi­p recipients in the fall.

TheDream.US has only been around a few years, but initial data shows that about 85 percent of the scholarshi­p recipients have stayed in school or graduated, a better-than-average persistenc­e rate. “They have a real sense of drive and purpose,” Papazian said. “With just a little support, it’s really incredible what they can do.”

Beyond easing financial burdens, the scholarshi­ps give students the ability to take some of the time they would have spent working and devote it to getting involved on campus instead.

Bautista Zugaide, 25, helped develop a resource center for undocument­ed students on his campus. “It helped me focus a little bit more on my studies and be a little more involved,” he said.

The organizati­on has also prompted local universiti­es to share ideas for supporting undocument­ed students, said Pablo Reguerin, assistant vice provost for student success at UC Santa Cruz, which receives TheDream.US scholarshi­p recipients. “You feel like you’re better equipped to address the changing demographi­cs and the varying needs that students bring in,” he said.

TheDream.US had been concerned that President Donald Trump’s election and the fear it created among undocument­ed immigrants might deter students from applying. But, program director Gaby Pacheco said, some 9,000 started the applicatio­n, with roughly a third completing it. “Even in the face of fear, even in the face of a lot of uncertaint­y,” she said, “they just push forward.”

No matter what happens in the future, Wilcox said, “no one can take away the education that these scholars receive.”

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