Elijah’s Story of Exploring Life Beyond High School

“Whether it be a small community of different artists or a community of peers, I am a firm believer in communities. I feel like they draw the best out of us, they allow us to experience diversity, and they allow us to grow from it.”

Meet Elijah

Elijah’s Story of Exploring Life Beyond High School

“I had a financial issue with the school, and I wasn’t able to afford it at the time, so I had to leave and pay [my debt] off. That was the fall of 2017 to the fall of 2018 — a whole year.”

“ I had to fight for that because I didn’t even know that was a thing… I have asked people if they’ve known about this, and no one’s like, ‘I’ve known about this’ before, so I’m like, ‘Why is this so hidden?’ ”

“We start to realize that we’re surviving a lot of the times… but school should be more than just survival mode all the time [because] then this doesn’t even feel like something that I’m enjoying, it’s just a thing to do… That’s not something that I would imagine colleges want us to feel, but that’s what they created.”

“But if college is supposed to be a requirement… there needs to be a lot more effort in [helping] people [with] staying and actually getting that job like they’re supposed to.”

What Elijah Found Helpful

Elijah’s Aspirations for the Field

  • Students have access to spaces and people who affirm and intentionally encourage their interests. Elijah wished high schools and student-serving organizations would continually work to “better create an environment where students feel like they’re empowered to do things they want to do… so that it doesn’t just feel like this hobby or this far-fetched dream.” He felt he would have benefited from having this type of environment in high school. “When I started to really understand more about myself, I think it would have been way more useful for me to go to art school instead of a public institution… No one ever encouraged me to go to art school.”
  • Financial aid is more easily available and accessible for students. While Elijah did find the additional institutional grant he received to be extremely helpful in paying his tuition, he didn’t find out about the grant until after he had accrued debt with his university and had to stop out for a full academic year to pay it off. “The whole process of applying for scholarships and grants is just super outdated,” Elijah said. “It’d be super useful just to know if I have a scholarship available to me that I can get [so I don’t] have to fight for it… It’d be a lot easier if we just had the ability to receive this stuff so we know what we’re working with, instead of getting [to college] and hoping that we can stay because we get a scholarship.”

Read other student stories of exploring life beyond high school:

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The To&Through Project aims to increase high school & post-secondary completion for under-resourced students of color in Chicago & around the country.

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The To&Through Project

The To&Through Project aims to increase high school & post-secondary completion for under-resourced students of color in Chicago & around the country.