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Friday, July 27, 2018

Black Teen Denied Scholarship Money a Week Before Graduation… For Being Homeless!

Zaviona Woodruff

18-year old Zaviona Woodruff

Kalamazoo, MI — Zaviona Woodruff, a brilliant high school student, worked hard for the Kalamazoo Promise – a scholarship guaranteed to every student in Michigan who studied in a Kalamazoo Public School from kindergarten through 12th grade. And she always maintained high grades, so she would be eligible. But officials decided that she does not qualify for the scholarship that she dreamed of because she had been homeless for 6 months.

Zaviona graduated with high honors and a 3.57 GPA from Loy Norrix High School, a Kalamazoo Public School, in June. She dreamed of studying Mechanical Engineering at Oakland University in Rochester Hills, Michigan through Kalamazoo Promise, wherein free college education would be given to every student who could pass all of its three requirements.

Zaviona thought she passed all the requirements because she graduated from Kalamazoo Public Schools, was continuously enrolled in KPS, and continuously resided in KPS district for all of her high school years. But she learned a week before her graduation that the Kalamazoo Promise had not been kept on her.

The reason? In 2016, two years from high school, Zaviona apparently lived outside of the KPS district when they had to move into a shelter for 6 months. Her father, Cecil, also wasn’t aware that they actually moved into an apartment in the Comstock School District, just outside the border for the KPS District.

“My whole life, I’m like, okay, I get the Promise, I’m good,” Woodruff said. “[To] just have that chair ripped from under me, like last second, [in] May, last second, it’s just really really hard.”

She wrote a letter to the scholarship appeals committee and she was supported by her teachers. However, Kalamazoo Promise Executive Director Bob Jorth said that the committee has a case-by-case system when it comes to appeals and they will take it “very seriously with careful consideration.”

Zaviona was crushed but she did not waver. She is now working two jobs while waiting for the committee’s decision. A GoFundMe page has also been started to help her attend college, and so far, she has raised more than $14,000.



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