Amelia Gonzalez’s (ADS ‘21) first week of college wasn’t an easy one. But neither was her first week at The American Dream School.
Amelia bounced between middle schools as her family moved from the south Bronx to Brooklyn and back again, so when it came time for ninth grade and her parents enrolled her at American Dream, she viewed it as yet another “new” school. She didn’t have her uniform during the first week and was dismayed to learn school let out at 4:00pm. However, she quickly came to appreciate the personal attention and sense of family. In tenth grade, she joined the cheerleading squad, by which point she felt fully at home.
As she entered her senior year at American Dream, Amelia knew she wanted to go away for college, even though she would be the first in her family to attend college and it would be her first time away from her parents. When she learned about Alfred State College, she says, “I felt I was meant to be at this school. I read that it was a small school and that was what I wanted.” She was accepted into Alfred State’s Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) and enrolled, inspiring her older sister to begin her own college career.
Amelia’s first week was challenging as she subsisted on snack foods and battled homesickness, but she soon made friends and successfully tried out for the cheer squad. And her former teachers have already visited. “They always ask me if I need something and will come all the way over here if I do. ADS becomes your family,” she says.
Amelia's career path is being shaped by her desire to alleviate the homelessness and poverty she has seen in New York City and in the Dominican Republic, where her parents are from. She is pursuing a major in Human Services Management with the goal of working as a therapist in a school or hospital setting.