Chicago Sun-Times

THE SCHOOL THAT OTHER COLLEGES COULD LEARN FROM

NLU’s Pathways program key to record jump in downtown college’s applicants

- BYMAUDLYNE­IHEJIRIKA Staff Reporter Email: mihejirika@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ maudlynei

As a rising Chicago Public Schools senior with a 3.0 GPA, Jairo Melendez hadn’t been sure he’d be able to afford college.

He was the oldest of three children of immigrant parents, and would be the first generation to pursue a college degree. But all five colleges he was accepted to stipulated significan­t out- of- pocket expenses.

That’s when his Kelvyn Park High School counselor recommende­d he check out National Louis University, which had just launched its unique Pathways program, designed to make college both affordable and achievable for more low- income, urban students.

“I had to ask myself, how am I going to pay off college? I was working third shift at a factory at the time to help my family,” says the 20- year- old, of Logan Square, now a sophomore studying business administra­tion at NLU, with plans to go to law school.

“What I liked about National Louis was the tuition was so affordable, it offers a possibilit­y of graduating with no college debt,” he says.

NLU’s Pathways is being credited with propelling the downtown college to an astounding No. 2 national ranking for growth in student applicants over the past decade, recently reported by MSN Money and 24/ 7Wall Street.

Applicants to the school increased 1,667.4 percent between 2006 and 2016 — second only to Grand Canyon University in Arizona, which saw a 4,210.5 percent jump. The data, from the National Center for Education Statistics, finds only one other Illinois school in the top 10: Roosevelt University, at No. 9, saw a 331.2 percent jump.

“Our undergradu­ate numbers were fairly flat, and the applicatio­n growth has been so significan­t since Pathways. We quadrupled our numbers from year 1 to year 2 and grew almost 10- fold from year 1 to year 3,” says NLU Vice President of Strategic Initiative­s Aarti Dhupelia, who was CPS’ chief officer of college and career success when hired away to launch Pathways.

“I was seeing CPS ACT scores, GPAs and graduation and college enrollment rates growing; yet college graduation rates unchanged. It’s when I realized colleges needed to do something different, play a bigger role in solving the college completion challenge,” she says.

In a rapidly evolving job market, where a college degree is increasing­ly necessary, universiti­es nationwide wrestle with raising their enrollment and retention rates among diverse population­s, amid rising tuitions that leave college out of reach.

With its $ 10,000 annual tuition, smart technology learning software and an individual success coach, Pathways has been lauded by education groups such as the Partnershi­p for College Completion, and New Profit, for designing a model that has addressed primary barriers for such students.

With federal and state grant aid, the $ 10,000 tuition can, for many, be reduced to zero. Smart technology designed for adaptive learning allows students to proceed at their own pace, completing each learning module — with additional instructio­n when needed— before moving on to the next. A support system comes via the success coach.

Pathways, serving students with high school GPAs of 2.0 to 3.0, currently has 800 students enrolled.

Last month, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation awarded the data- driven Pathways program — continuous­ly testing and improving curriculum and wraparound strategies— with a $ 1.1 million grant.

NLU sophomore Jazlene Rodriguez, 20, was drawn to Pathways because of the cost and the strong, individual student support.

“I didn’t want to be too far away from my family and didn’t want to have to work two jobs to be able to afford college,” said Rodriguez, who is studying political science and psychology.

“Pathways feels like home, like a family. We all know each other’s stories,” said Rodriguez, raised by her mother and grandmothe­r. “I’ll be the first in my family to go to college or finish high school. I just can’t wait to graduate, to go far and to break that education chain, because I have a passion for it.”

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 ?? | KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THESUNTIME­S ?? JairoMelen­dez ( fromleft), NLUStrateg­ic Initiative­s director Aarti Dhupelia and Jazeline Alize.
| KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THESUNTIME­S JairoMelen­dez ( fromleft), NLUStrateg­ic Initiative­s director Aarti Dhupelia and Jazeline Alize.

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