Northeast Valley Youth Look Upward
Bound
Education: Mission College will select 50
low-income students for free preparatory program that
includes a campus stay.
By KARIMA A. HAYNES, Times Staff Writer
SYLMAR--Raquel Bolanos knew she was in the right place at the
right time when she listened to a recruiter talk about Upward
Bound, a free program for low-income, first-generation college-bound
high school students.
"The program comes at a good time for ninth-graders,"
Raquel said, picking up an application.
"We can get better grades and think about college."
Raquel was among 1,400 Sylmar High School freshmen and sophomores
gathered in the school auditorium recently to hear a pitch for
the college preparatory program that promised rigorous academics,
field trips and a taste of campus life.
Although Upward Bound was established in 1965 as part of President
Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty program, organizers said this
summer marks the first time it will be offered to high school
students in the northeast San Fernando Valley. Fifty students
from Sylmar, San Fernando and Kennedy high schools will be selected
to participate in the program at Mission College beginning in
June.
To qualify, students must be the first generation in their family
to attend college. Also, they must come from low-income families,
be U.S. citizens or permanent residents and high school graduates
with a demonstrated desire to attend college. Upward Bound offers
two components--the academic year session and the summer session--and
students can be in one or both, organizers said. During the academic
year, students take math,English, foreign language and computer
science classes two Saturdays a month at Mission College. They
also participate in personal enrichment workshops, cultural activities,
educational field trips and college tours.
In the five-week summer session, they spend two weeks at Mission
College and three weeks living on campus at Cal State Northridge.
CSUN ceased its Upward Bound program in the late 1980s, after
federal funding dried up, said
university spokesman John Chandler. Since then, the school has
provided room and board for several college preparatory programs
operated by other institutions. Valley and Pierce colleges offer
similar academic outreach programs for high school students. In
his recruiting presentation, Program Director John Klitsner pointed
out the door-opening benefits of an undergraduate degree, but
he also made it clear that students would have to make sacrifices.
"If you don't want to give up your Saturdays, you're not
one of the 50 people we are looking for," said Klitsner,
a straight-talking former football coach. "I want to hear
from people who say, 'They want to help us go to college--for
free--tell me more, keep talking.' "
To separate those students "who really have a passion
to go on to college" from those "who think it's just
an OK idea," Klitsner asked students to come back to the
auditorium at lunch and pick up an application. About 300 students
returned, including sophomores Hilda Madrano and Fernando Nunez.
Hilda, 15, said she planned to apply to avoid a future of physical
labor.
"My mother works very hard in a factory," Hilda said.
"If I go to college, I won't have to work that hard. I can
work in an office." Fernando, 16, said the program would
help him to
stay on track to finish school. "It will be something great
for my parents, because
no one in my family has graduated from high school or gone to
college," he said.
Tucking the application in her notebook, Raquel said, "People
are willing to help us in math, writing, proper Spanish--and to
be someone."
L.A. Times, Valley Section, Sunday, March 12, 2000