Inside Job (original) (raw)
Students become teachers
CPS Ambassadors employs a team of high-achieving students — two seniors from each of CPS’s 14 high schools — to serve throughout the school year as peer resources in the college search and selection process. Students are compensated 10anhourforallUC−supervisedactivities,andthosewhodecidetoattendUCreceivea10 an hour for all UC-supervised activities, and those who decide to attend UC receive a 10anhourforallUC−supervisedactivities,andthosewhodecidetoattendUCreceivea2,000 financial grant.
Ambassadors undergo an application process that requires two letters of recommendation, an essay and an interview with UC staff. Those selected then attend more than 40 hours of training. The 11-week summer course, which includes field trips, campus tours and a community service project, introduces them to a wide range of topics on college access while also helping them hone important time management, leadership and networking skills.
The comprehensive program is eye-opening even for students who have a parent or other adult in their lives who applied for and attended college.
“I thought I already knew about college, but I didn’t know all this,” admits Iona Cottrell, a senior at Woodward High School. “Like, I didn’t really care about college deadlines. I thought you could just apply, but learned you have to apply by a certain deadline.”
“I already had some background on the college application process and financial aid,” echoes Amyas Dawson, who attends Clark Montessori, “but I really got an opportunity to learn about scholarships I didn’t know about and programs like the Gen-1 program at UC.”
Throughout the school year, ambassadors offer monthly programs based on the needs of their classmates. UC staff are on hand to guide and supervise the events, but the students plan and lead the activities.
“We have 14 high schools that each have a different makeup,” explains Carver Ealy, UC’s assistant director of multicultural recruitment. “Some schools might need the very basics of financial aid. Other schools might just need help filling out the FAFSA.”
The role reversal of students becoming the teachers might make for an unusual approach, but it’s one grounded in established research on teen social behavior. If peer pressure can lead youngsters to engage in risky behaviors, why not leverage that powerful sphere of social influence to improve educational outcomes?
“Rather than [us] selling the university and the things that we do, we hope that the ambassadors … will really make the case to their peers in a way that we can’t reach them,” explains Ealy. “We hope that they choose UC as their home, but more than anything, we want to make sure that they end up in college.”