High Potential Celebrates 40 Years
Past and present SMC community members will gather Tuesday, April 22, 4-7 p.m., at the Soda Center to celebrate the High Potential Program鈥檚 40 years of excellence. Founded in 1973, the Program initially targeted under-represented students, beginning with about 25 undergraduates admitted to the college on the condition of joining HP. Today, the Program has grown, and just extended invitations to 90 admitted students who are the first in their families to attend a four-year American college. The goal remains the same: to offer students the support and skills necessary to their success at Saint Mary鈥檚.
With more than 500 High Potential alumni, involved faculty, and many current HP students, the event promises to attract a large number of Gaels.
HP aims to address the challenges many first-generation students may face, including being the first in their families to attend college and not having someone to describe the college experience, said Tracy Pascua Dea, co-director of the Program and director of student engagement and academic success. Asking for help can be students鈥 biggest hurdle, Pascua Dea said, adding that once they do, they find a plethora of resources at their fingertips.
Pascua Dea affectionately describes the hands-on role the Program plays in a student鈥檚 academic and personal success as 鈥渋ntrusive advising.鈥 All admitted HP students are invited to attend the Summer Bridge Program that offers a glimpse of college life with classes, academic empowerment sessions, and workshops in personal and academic skills to help them during their first year of college. HP students also participate in a First Year Advising Cohort specifically tailored to the experiences of a first-generation student, with a peer mentor and a student engagement and academic success specialist who meet regularly with students.
鈥淚n everything we do here鈥攊n the classroom, in support services, through mentoring and all the dimensions of the student鈥檚 experience鈥攚e strive to ensure that students will be successful, will be able to navigate these transitions, and have all the support they need to do that,鈥 said President Jim Donahue, confirming HP鈥檚 place in the community and the integral support it provides.
Right away, support tools such as Summer Bridge introduced HP alum Anthony Zapien 鈥08 to the expectations set by HP instructors and peers to reach his potential. According to Zapien, during his Summer Bridge courses fellow incoming students encouraged each other to talk and lead discussion: 鈥淭hey knew when you got into [a non-Summer Bridge] class they wouldn鈥檛 be there for each other, so you needed to be comfortable in that role,鈥 said Zapien, who said that Program coordinators made it clear that 鈥淗P students sit in the front of the class.鈥 For Zapien, the support and push provided by the HP community was always clear, encouraging him to actively pursue his success at SMC.
Pravda Wright 鈥94, another HP alum, remembers her own experience. 鈥淭he people who ran the Program really cared about you and kept an eye on you all four years.鈥
HP keeps tabs on how the students evolve during their time on campus and encourages them to mentor younger members of the Program. 鈥淚t is so neat to see the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior versions of our students,鈥 said Pascua Dea. 鈥淵ou see the freshmen who are so shy and then the seniors who do all sorts of things on campus. You think, 鈥楬ow do you do all that?鈥 They are living up to what they set out to do when they arrived on campus.鈥
HP has also served as a successful retention tool for the College, its rates of returning students and student performances constantly on the rise. To continue this success, the Program has been awarded an assessment grant that will help identify student-learning outcomes and hold focus groups with both current students and graduates. The aim is to continue a narrative project they implemented this past summer. Students attending Summer Bridge read a collection of narratives from first-generation students at other campuses and our own HP Program hopes to soon write its own narrative collection. The goal of the project is to create a positive narrative that documents the history of the Program through the voice of the participants, said Assistant Professor Gloria Aquino Sosa, co-director of the High Potential Program.
A book will be available at the anniversary event for returning and current HP members to write about their experiences. Other future goals include a possible alumni panel and more scholarships specifically for first generation students. 鈥淲e want to do a lot!鈥 said Pascua Dea about the future of HP.
The late John Dennis, a History and Collegiate Seminar professor who served as HP鈥檚 director for 12 years, was a devoted supporter of the Program. Wright remembers a time when Dennis challenged her. 鈥淥ne day when in Seminar he pulled me aside and said, 鈥榊ou know you have a lot to say but you need to speak. Some others are talking to talk. You need to speak up.鈥 I went on to take other classes and right now am back at a master鈥檚 program at SMC. When I am in class and speak up, I think of him.鈥 Dennis was an important part of HP history whose contribution to the Program will be remembered.
Joining the High Potential Program is joining an intentional community where you receive support from fellow peers, past graduates and the specialists who are trained to ensure student success.
鈥淐entral to the mission of the College is a commitment to be consistent in our Lasallian traditions and mission鈥攖o serve the underserved and those in need,鈥 said President Donahue. 鈥淭he HP Program is part of what makes us distinctive. We strive to coordinate what we do with who we are and what we believe is valuable and important. Then we translate that into very specific actions and walk the talk.鈥 It personifies the core principles of Saint Mary鈥檚, Sosa said.
An entire network of people care not only about the HP student鈥檚 academic success, but also care about their personal success. Victoria Roca 鈥17 praises the benefits of the Program, saying it is helping her 鈥減hysically and mentally prepare鈥 for college and also has given her an 鈥淗P family.鈥 Alumni claim as their dearest friends the people they met in the Program, something current students have already discovered. Forty years of devotion to students have produced a rich past, a bright future and a network of profoundly appreciative Gaels.