John Tokarski III maintained a 4.4 GPA in Pittsburgh's Schenley High School, played three sports and took on leadership roles. Yet it appeared his dreams might burst: the $45,000-a-year tuition for the private college he wanted to attend was too steep.
"We said, if you meet these rules, if you obtain these goals, you reach these objectives, everything will fall into place," said his father, John Tokarski Jr. "I felt like I had lied to him, like I had come up short in my promise to him, because he did it all and it looked as if we weren't going to be able to do it."
Then, in March, a news headline - "Pittsburgh Promise expands" - flashed across his father's laptop screen. The Pittsburgh Promise scholarship now included Pennsylvania's private colleges, not just public institutions. With other scholarships and grants, that $5,000 a year made the difference for the 17-year-old, who was determined to go to Washington and Jefferson College in nearby Washington, Pa.