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They took my golden star : Family, friends mourn loss of slain 18-year-old New Haven man

High School Teens Opt for Vaccines on Spring Break – NBC Connecticut

“It’s like a nice setting to be in and it makes getting an education easier I think,” said Moore. “And I can pretty much always get help whenever I need it.” Moore and her brother Gary are top ten national track and field athletes, and they were at the city’s vaccine clinic for high school students Thursday. “This week we decided to kick off a youth campaign of sixteen years and over to ensure that our youth had access to vaccinations,” said New Haven Health Director Maritza Bond. Hall of fame coach Jim Calhoun was also there to do what he does best: coach.

Apply to college, financial aid amid COVID: Some students just can t

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – A few weeks ago, ahead of a nor’easter that unleashed biting winds and snow across New England, Alyssa Washington, a high school senior who wants to be a nurse, made her big college decision: not to go next fall. There was no single reason. Rather, mounting obstacles led Washington, a senior at Metropolitan Business Academy, a public school in New Haven, to hit pause. She had not finished the Common App, a shared application form used by more than 900 colleges and universities; had struggled to write her application essay; had lost her password for Naviance, which collects transcripts, recommendation letters and other forms needed to apply; and – like many students in low-income districts this year – had not filled out the FAFSA, the federal financial aid application form. 

A gobsmacking number of students in need aren t applying to college Are we missing an entire generation ?

A ‘gobsmacking number of students in need aren’t applying to college. Are we missing an entire generation ? Laura Pappano, The Hechinger Report Here s why historically Black colleges and universities are so important Replay Video UP NEXT NEW HAVEN, Conn. – A few weeks ago, ahead of a nor’easter that unleashed biting winds and snow across New England, Alyssa Washington, a high school senior who wants to be a nurse, made her big college decision: not to go next fall. There was no single reason. Rather, mounting obstacles led Washington, a senior at Metropolitan Business Academy, a public school in New Haven, to hit pause. She had not finished the Common App, a shared application form used by more than 900 colleges and universities; had struggled to write her application essay; had lost her password for Naviance, which collects transcripts, recommendation letters and other forms needed to apply; and – like many students in low-income districts this ye

Apply to college, financial aid amid COVID: Some students just can t

Common App data through Feb. 15 showed applications up 11% overall from a year ago – yet down 1.6% among first-generation students and flat among low-income students. Overall FAFSA completion, a harbinger of college-going intent, was 9.2% behind the prior year on Feb. 19. In high schools serving lower-income students, it lagged 12.1%, and in schools with a high percentage of students of color, the decline was 14.6%. The FAFSA drop represents “a gobsmacking number,” said Bill DeBaun, director of data and evaluation for the National College Attainment Network. It makes it less likely that low-income students will be able to attend, because many colleges and universities commit financial aid money to others ahead of those who apply later.

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