Urban Prep celebrates getting all seniors into 4-year colleges
One by one, the seven young men strode to the front of Urban Prep Academy’s gym.
Wearing smart blue blazers and khakis, they changed their usual red ties to red and gold striped ones handed to them with the help of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, ties signaling they, too, got college acceptance letters
The seven were the last of the 2013 class of 167 seniors of Urban Prep’s Englewood and West campuses to find out which college they might go to. The other 160, who had received their letters in past weeks, were already standing at the front of the gym.
After Darion Belt, Donald Black- well, Brandon Drummond, Terrick Middleton, Boo-shay Norton, Vernon Spells and Malcolm Williams were in red and gold Thursday afternoon, hip-hop music boomed and classmates, teachers and parents jumped to their feet. The applause was deafening. Urban Prep, a network of all-boy charter high schools that focuses on getting African-American boys into college, has boasted for the fourth year that every one of the seniors who made it this far are on track to graduate and are heading to college.
“At Urban Prep, college is not a dream, it’s a reality,” co-founder and CEO Tim King said. “College acceptance is the new black.”
Indeed, the combined senior class of 167 racked up a total of $6 million in grants and scholarships to some 125 unique colleges. Two students were accepted to 20 schools each. Two others account for more than $600,000 each in scholarship offers from all of the schools they got into.
“Let us start celebrating as a city the kids who graduate and make it to college,” the mayor said in the gym of the Englewood campus, 6201 S. Stewart, just as the city celebrates big sports championships.
Emanuel, who’s been praising Urban Prep as far back as his inaugural address, cheered the students for being accepted into so many institu- tions and racking up tons of scholarships, but said the numbers of colleges and grants couldn’t speak to the obstacles the young men overcame.
“None of those numbers match the 100 percent graduation or 100 percent college acceptance rate,” Emanuel said. “What this 100 percent proves is it need not be the exception but it should be the expectation for every child in the city.”
The 100 percent, though, only pertains to the school’s students who made it this far. The senior classes started out much larger as freshmen. West Campus’ first ever senior class of 76 began high school four years ago with 125 freshman, according to CPS enrollment figures. Englewood Campus shows similar trends, with 91 seniors starting freshman year as 172 strong, according to the same data. In 2012, the school had 65 percent of freshman graduating within five years, according to CPS data, better than the district’s 61 percent average.