For Poor, Leap to College Often Ends in a Hard Fall [View all]
By JASON DePARLE
GALVESTON, Tex. 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 dont 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 ONeal 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 mothers boyfriends and drinking, and Biancas bubbly innocence hid the trauma of her fathers death. They stuck together so much that a tutor called them the triplets.
Low-income strivers face uphill climbs, especially at Ball High School, where a third of the girls class failed to graduate on schedule. But by the time the triplets donned mortarboards in the class of 2008, their story seemed to validate the promise of education as the great equalizer.
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Four years later, their story seems less like a tribute to upward mobility than a study of obstacles in an age of soaring economic inequality. Not one of them has a four-year degree. Only one is still studying full time, and two have crushing debts. Angelica, who left Emory owing more than $60,000, is a clerk in a Galveston furniture store.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/23/education/poor-students-struggle-as-class-plays-a-greater-role-in-success.html