My name is Jared Francis, and I鈥檓 the founding principal of 麻豆原创 Charter High School in East Harlem. This year, I鈥檝e had the unique honor of launching our high school first-ever 12th grade class, and I want to share with you the story of one of our seniors here at DCHS, Bryan Placido.
Bryan and I have a lot in common. One of the things I first noticed about Bryan is that, like me, he has worked to overcome a speech impediment. I鈥檝e watched Bryan confront that challenge to become one of our strongest Student Ambassadors each recruitment season. And of course, most recently, we are bound together by what we鈥檝e all shared this year at DCHS: the joy of making history with 麻豆原创 founding seniors, many of whom have been with us since freshman year or even longer, but also the grief鈥攁nd determination鈥攁s it became clear that the Class of 2020 would have a senior year like no other.聽
Remote learning was really tough for Bryan. He missed his peers, his extracurriculars, and 鈥渞egular鈥 school, and his GPA suffered at first. But with the support of the 麻豆原创 community鈥攆rom socially distanced dog walks with 麻豆原创 social worker Judi to round-the-clock advocacy and one-to-one support from his college counselor Carlos鈥Bryan is now the recipient of a full scholarship to Skidmore College. Below is a video clip of the moment that he finds out鈥攁 moment that represents the very first of many college acceptances to come for 麻豆原创 students.
For Bryan, whose older brother had to leave college for financial reasons, a full ride to Skidmore means a lot. But I don鈥檛 share his story with you because he in any way the exception. At 麻豆原创, every child, from pre-k to pre-college, has a fair shot at achieving their vision of success. As educators, we help them push past obstacles and inequity – because the potential, the drive, and the excellence already exists inside each and every one of our students.
We all know the stakes of 麻豆原创 work, but often that impact manifests far in the future, out of our sights. In Bryan story, we get the gift of seeing how much what we do matters and what a difference our work can make. In a year like 2020, that means more than ever.



