Chicago Sun-Times

HEAD START ON TECH CAREER

CPS internship program gives alumni ‘ ladder to success’

- BY RACHEL HINTON Staff Reporter Email: rhinton@suntimes.com Twitter: @ rrhinton DAN MIHALOPOUL­OS is on vacation

Before her junior year at Gordon S. Hubbard High School, Jasmin Murillo never thought she would be working in technology.

But during the summer between her junior and senior years, her career path changed a bit. Through an internship program run by Genesys Works, she worked with Exelon Corp. as a junior tech coordinato­r. Now, in the end of the third year with the program, she credits it for changing her life.

“In high school, I knew I wanted to help people,” Murillo said. “I wanted to get a degree in social work, but once I started [ this program], I found myself liking it.”

The junior tech coordinato­r program places Chicago Public Schools graduates in technology support roles at elementary and high schools across the district. As interns, Murillo and 12 others work about four hours a day, five days a week as IT support specialist­s at CPS schools.

Students work part time and get an opportunit­y to develop their profession­al and critical skills.

Personal and profession­al growth are two goals of the program, which began in 2014. The other goal: Help students in the “quiet middle,” a term Melinda McIntire, alumni services coordinato­r at Genesys, uses to describe students with average GPAs, around 2.9, and average ACT scores, around 21, who often fall through the academic cracks.

“We try to work with students who may not be the highest achievers in their class, who need additional direction and support,” McIntire said. “They’re a population that often gets looked over, and our mission is to support the advancemen­t of their economic self sufficienc­y.”

The program has connected about 42 CPS alumni with part- time technology jobs. Among the alumni, 90 percent are firstgener­ation college students and about 98 percent are students of color.

As a first- generation student, Murillo, who will be a sophomore at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said the program gave her hope for her future.

“It’s been a great experience,” Murillo said. “I’ve gotten to grow, but I see my friends who aren’t in the program not growing in the same ways. I’ve matured a lot — I think I can be successful now.”

The CPS board recently approved more schools to join the program. Phillip DiBartolo, chief informatio­n technology officer at CPS, said that this was the third straight year the program expanded.

“We’re providing them a ladder to success,” DiBartolo said. “When our students see our alumni gainfully employed, it serves as inspiratio­n for them.”

Murillo sees this as a good thing. Without it, she said, she would be working in a factory somewhere because she hadn’t had real support for her future.

“I used to see myself as a nobody,” Murillo said. “I went from someone with no aspiration­s to someone who hopes to work for a big tech company and who wants to help people like me get more involved in tech.”

 ?? | PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Through a GenesysWor­ks program, Jasmin Murillo got a job working part time with Exelon Corp. as a junior tech coordinato­r.
| PROVIDED PHOTO Through a GenesysWor­ks program, Jasmin Murillo got a job working part time with Exelon Corp. as a junior tech coordinato­r.
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 ??  ?? Jasmin Murillo | PROVIDED PHOTO
Jasmin Murillo | PROVIDED PHOTO

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