University helps minorities succeed
The small rural school is the only hope of higher education for many students.
SEATTLE TIMES
BUENA, Wash. -- It's just after 5 a.m. on the second day of classes and too early for university freshman Magali Ambriz to consider eating breakfast.
Her dad is leaving the family cottage to pick apples and Ambriz, 20, will soon follow to trim and train grapevines before her afternoon business class. Her hands are fast: She's worked in the fields since she was 13, soon after her family of seven moved from Mexico.
"The best decision was for us to come over here, otherwise Magali wouldn't have been able to study at college," whispers mom Irma Arreola, with Ambriz translating softly as her younger brother stirs on the living-room couch. "The main reason we brought the children here was to move forward and get a better future."
That hope is what has drawn many Hispanic farm workers to the towns of the lower Yakima Valley, one of the poorest and least-educated parts of the state. And quietly helping deliver that future for the past 25 years is one of the more unusual small-town colleges in the country: Heritage University in Toppenish, Wash.
It's barely known in Seattle. But speak to a teacher in Yakima, a nurse in Sunnyside or a social worker in Grandview, and chances are they were educated at Heritage.
Helping minorities
Begun in an abandoned elementary school, the private university has grown from a few dozen students to more than 1,500. It's reaching students in a region ignored by the public system, and is raising overall educational attainment there.
Heritage has a higher proportion of minority and low-income undergraduates than any other university in the state: 53 percent are Hispanic and 11 percent American Indian. Nine out of every 10 undergrads qualify for federal financial aid.
The university defies categorization. Although it's private, its philosophy and tuition resemble that of a public university. It's within the Yakama Nation reservation yet is managed independently from the tribe, an arrangement unique in the U.S. It's nondenominational but is run by a Roman Catholic nun -- a woman who won a 335,000 MacArthur Foundation genius grant, then gave the money to students through scholarships and other programs.
2.1 million grant
Although the college has received solid support for years from charitable foundations on the East Coast, this year it landed a 2.1 million grant from the Bill & amp; Melinda Gates Foundation, representing -- finally -- significant recognition closer to home.
The grant means that by spring, when the college marks its 25th anniversary, work will begin on a 15 million project to build 13 classrooms and labs, and a large meeting hall. Ditching trailer classrooms for brick and mortar will represent a sense of permanence for the commuter campus, which for two decades struggled just to survive.
Classes on the rural campus begin in the midst of the fall harvest, when the fragrance of sweet mint competes with pungent hops. Crop fields surround the school and stretch deep into Yakama territory, which is dotted with Indian Shaker churches, longhouses and abandoned missions. Beyond that, wild horses roam an endless expanse of open range.
Students at the college have studied everything from mapping the potato genome to recycling wine-industry waste. The biggest focus is on education: preparing students to become teachers and, in master's programs, preparing teachers to become counselors and principals.
On her way
Four years ago, Tiffiny Shilow, 26, was living on the Yakama reservation without a job or a car, and with a young son, Timothy, to raise. One day she stopped by the Heritage library to read books with Timothy. She began chatting with the librarian and decided to take some classes.
Now, Shilow is driven by an ambition to become a doctor and eventually practice medicine on the reservation. Each day, the biology and chemistry junior rises before dawn to run several miles. She works part-time tutoring and refereeing basketball games, juggling classes and study with motherhood. To help make it through, she drinks about half a gallon of Mountain Dew a day.
This year, through a collaboration Heritage has with the University of Washington, she was awarded a paid internship to study diabetes. Her goal is to attend the UW School of Medicine within two years.
Shilow is one of many single moms at Heritage, where three-quarters of undergraduates are women.