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Schools

Northfield's TORCH Sparks Success for Students

The program has helped raise the percentage of graduating Northfield Latino students.

Josh Woods just finished his first semester at Hamline University with a 3.3 GPA, barely missing the cutoff for the dean’s list.

Though he hasn’t chosen a major yet, he knows that he wants “a career that is needed,” possibly in education or social justice work. 

But the future hasn’t always looked so bright for Woods, who said transitioning from to was a challenge.

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“In eighth grade I was missing school—I didn’t have a purpose,” Woods said. 

Without a consistent attendance record, he was falling behind academically.

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What changed the equation for Woods was Tackling Obstacles and Raising College Hopes, a program that works to improve graduation rates and post-secondary participation of Northfield’s minority and low-income students and those who would be first-generation college attendees.

Through academic tutoring, mentoring, enrichment programs and leadership opportunities, TORCH aims to help traditionally under-served middle and high school students achieve success during and after their school careers.

Sharing his story with an overflowing room of Northfield community members at for a TORCH open house on Thursday, Woods explained how the program helped him get on the path toward academic and personal success.

The summer after his freshman year, high school TORCH coordinator Beth Berry encouraged Woods to work as a high school fellow at Summer Ventures PLUS, a program that provides academic learning and enrichment to elementary and middle school students. After one summer, Woods was “hooked,” and he came back for the next three summers. 

“Through TORCH and through Summer Ventures PLUS I got that initial contact with the community and saw the value that I had, value in myself,” he said. 

Woods went on to receive academic support and guidance from TORCH until his graduation in 2011, and his participation even earned Woods college credit through an online Post-Secondary Education Opportunity (PSEO) program run by Riverland Community College.

Woods’s positive experience with TORCH is just one of the program’s many success stories.

Adriana Casillas, another one of the TORCH alumni who spoke at Thursday’s open house, studies fisheries and wildlife at the University of Minnesota. Casillas said that without TORCH, she probably wouldn’t be a student at the U. 

Berry “pushed my way in there,” she added, describing Berry’s help with preparing for the ACT and completing her college application. Thanks to the college credit she earned in TORCH’s PSEO program, Casillas will graduate from the U of M fisheries and wildlife program in December after only two and a half years.


Rising from the ashes

Woods and Casillas are just two of the hundreds of students TORCH has worked with since its start in 2005. 

The program has made enormous progress in its goal of boosting graduation rates and post-secondary participation, a goal whose importance is made evident by the statewide achievement gap for minority and low-income students. 

The current six-year graduation rate for Minnesota high school students who are eligible for free and reduced-price lunch is 62 percent compared to an overall rate of 79 percent statewide, according to Dr. Nancy Walters, program manager at the Minnesota Office of Higher Education. She said the rate for Latino students is only 50 percent. The most notable success for the TORCH program has been the increase in the graduation rates for Latino high school students from just 36 percent in 2001-2004 to more than 90 percent today. 

“The TORCH students and project outcomes speak for themselves,” said Walters.

Since the economic downturn of the last several years, TORCH’s role has become even more important. 

The percentage of students who are eligible for free and reduced-price lunch has more than doubled in the last year, increasing from 12.3 percent to 25.5 percent of students in grades 3-12, according to data.

Increased demand for a program’s services doesn’t necessarily result in increased funding for that program, however. Recent state budget cuts to the Intervention for College Attendance Program, whose grants have funded TORCH since its inception, add an extra challenge to the program’s mission. 

While TORCH continues to receive state funding, “The total state appropriation [for ICAP] was cut by $75,000,” said Walters.

But the state isn’t the only source of TORCH’s support. 

The program is “absolutely a microcosm of what I see is the best about this community,” said Northfield Superintendent Chris Richardson, describing the network of local partnerships and individual donors and volunteers that makes TORCH’s work possible. 

Students like Woods and Casillas owe their success to TORCH.

They just hope its light burns for a long time.


WANT MORE INFORMATION ABOUT TORCH?
Visit northfieldtorch.org. To find out how you can help support the program as a volunteer tutor, mentor, college coach, or donor, contact High School Coordinator Beth Berry (beth.berry@nfld.k12.mn.us) or Middle School Coordinator Susan Sanderson (susan.sanderson@k12.mn.us).

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