And the

lucky winner is … Yale.

Metro

Academic and Classical High School graduate Jennifer Lunceford

chose Yale out of many universities she was accepted to – including

Princeton, Brown, Vassar and Georgetown.

“It’s

pretty much a full ride,” she said. “They gave me a work study, but

I’ve received outside scholarships so that’s the first thing that

goes away.”

She’s one

of four St. Louis Public Schools graduating seniors who will go on

to Ivy League universities, all of them Metro students.

“font-size: 10.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Xavier duMaine has

applied and been accepted to Harvard University, Penn, Columbia

University and Brown. Nicholas Schmidt will attend Princeton

University to study engineering and visual arts. Sarah Harrington

has been accepted to Cornell University and Swarthmore College to

study engineering.

“mso-spacerun: yes;”> 

Through

Yale’s American Studies track, Lunceford will explore her various

interests, including history, English and politics. Eventually, she

might end up studying law, a childhood interest that intensified

with her time on the debate team and in mock trial

competitions.

At Metro,

she served as co-captain of the varsity tennis team and the Metro

Dance Company, among many other activities. She’s graduating with

an International Baccalaureate diploma, an international program

that prepares students to “live, learn and work in a rapidly

globalizing world.”

She said

she was fortunate to get on the magnet-school track at the

elementary level after a few teachers and administrators urged her

parents to have her abilities tested.

“I’ve

always loved school,” she said. “In kindergarten when we did our

handwriting assignments, I always took it very

seriously.”

From

kindergarten, she attended Kennard Elementary School, McKinley

Middle School and then Metro.

“I want to

create more schools like Metro because so many qualified students

are turned away every year,” she said.

Being on

Student Council, she was one of the representatives who brought up

this point to Superintendent Kelvin Adams at a student

summit.

“Students

shouldn’t be discouraged from going to school because they aren’t

learning anything,” she said.

She

developed disciplined study habits to do better than the examples

she saw around her.

“My

family’s history of teen pregnancy really pushed me to do well in

school,” she said. “Subconsciously, I had to do better.”

She has a

large family, with her mother having six girls and her father

having three girls and three boys.

“A large

percentage of them starting having children during high school or

straight out of high school,” she said. “Without realizing, I was

watching.”

Lunceford

has thought about becoming a political leader. She would propose

that public schools include self-esteem classes and courses where

teens learn about the various forms of sexual

protection.

“A lot of

teens don’t want to talk to their parents – understandably, but

it’s not wise,” she said.

In

addressing teen pregnancy, Lunceford would put education at the

forefront.

Like many

who achieve success, Lunceford seeks out resources and support

networks. Lunceford was part of QuestBridge, a non-profit program

that links motivated low-income students with educational and

scholarship opportunities at some of the nation’s best

colleges.

“It was an

extensive application,” she said. “I really don’t know where I

would have applied if I hadn’t done QuestBridge.”

Aside from

her school activities, her volunteer and community service

activities include serving as a camp counselor for children and

young adults with cerebral palsy and volunteering for the early

learning center at United Way of Greater St. Louis.

“font-family: Verdana;”>Lunceford’s personal life motto is: “Never

give up. There is always a solution, you just have to stay in there

and persevere,” she said. 

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