Getting into elite universities — through community colleges

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PHILADELPHIA — Christopher Thomas still has the recruitment letter the University of Pennsylvania sent him when he was a senior at Philadelphia’s Central High School in 1993.

But Thomas would not actually get to the Ivy League campus for 19 more years — three children, several jobs, and a lot of life filled the interim. He finally arrived through a route some might find unusual — the local community college.

Thomas, 37, graduated from the Community College of Philadelphia last year and entered Penn in the fall with the goal of becoming a teacher.

“If I hadn’t become a teen parent, then this is what I would have done,” Thomas said. “This was something I was supposed to do.”

Every year, top high school students around the country aggressively play the high-stakes college admissions game, trying everything they can to win a coveted spot at one of the nation’s eight Ivy League schools.

Thomas shows that there is another way in, and he has company. Since 2009, 262 students transferred into Penn’s liberal and professional studies program, which offers nontraditional students the same classes, faculty, and degrees but uses a separate admissions process. About half came from area community colleges.

Among them is Michael Pfaff, 25, a Bucks County Community College graduate who went into the Army out of high school, then decided to pursue higher education.

Another is Danielle Magouirk, 27, who got her bachelor’s in psychology from Penn in 2009 after completing Gloucester County College. She is finishing a graduate degree in school psychology at Rider University.

All three belonged to Phi Theta Kappa, the honor society for students at two-year colleges, which got the attention of Penn.

Increasingly, highly selective colleges including some of the Ivies are welcoming outstanding community college transfers, who tend to perform well and participate in the life of the university, said Rod Risley, executive director of Phi Theta Kappa, based in Jackson, Miss.

“There has been a misperception that those who attend community colleges are going there only out of second chance. That’s not true,” he said.

The students can attend community college for less cost, participate in a rigorous honors program, then transfer to and graduate from a highly selective school, he said.

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