For Poor, Leap to College Often Ends in a Hard Fall
Jason DeParle:
Angelica Gonzales marched through high school in Goth armor -- black boots, chains and cargo pants -- but undermined her pose of alienation with a place on the honor roll. She nicknamed herself after a metal band and vowed to become the first in her family to earn a college degree.
"I don't want to work at Walmart" like her mother, she wrote to a school counselor.
Weekends and summers were devoted to a college-readiness program, where her best friends, Melissa O'Neal and Bianca Gonzalez, shared her drive to "get off the island" -- escape the prospect of dead-end lives in luckless Galveston. Melissa, an eighth-grade valedictorian, seethed over her mother's boyfriends and drinking, and Bianca's bubbly innocence hid the trauma of her father's death. They stuck together so much that a tutor called them the "triplets."
Related:
Madison's ongoing
reading challenges. More
here.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at December 23, 2012 8:36 AM
Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom:
Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas