Getting into elite universities — through community colleges

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At Cornell University, 28 percent of 561 transfer students this fall came from two-year colleges, including community colleges, a spokesman said.

Princeton by policy does not accept transfers.

Harvard admits only 12 transfer students per year from a pool of about 1,500 applicants, spokesman Jeff A. Neal said. (Penn has admitted 15 from community colleges to its regular program since 2009.)

Columbia in New York takes quite a few into its general studies program, which serves nontraditional students who have had a least a one-year break from high school. About 35 percent of the 1,600 students hail from community colleges, said Anna O’Sullivan, a spokeswoman.

As at Penn, that program uses a different but equally rigorous admissions process, and students take the same classes as regular undergraduates. Jan Kargulewicz, 32, graduated magna cum laude from Columbia in 2012, after having transferred in from Montgomery County Community College. He was hired by the Vanguard Group in Malvern, where he is being groomed to be a manager.

As a high school student, Thomas had his heart set on attending Howard University, a historically black college. He was choosing his dorm and figuring out his meal plan. Then reality set in.

He didn’t know he had to fill out financial-aid forms — he saw his guidance counselor only once while at Central and didn’t get that advice at home — so he missed the deadline. He also found out he was going to become a father.

As a result, Thomas wound up at Temple University, which helped him get a grant. He dropped out after one semester.

“I really had lost interest in academics,” he said.

Over the next 15 years, he worked a variety of office jobs. Friends kept encouraging him to go back to school.

It wasn’t easy. He continued working at a suburban restaurant, taking three buses to get there and back. He made it through community college without his own computer — visiting his aunt’s house in a pinch.

Academically, he was happy. He was inducted into the honor society, which caught Penn’s attention. Penn sent him another recruitment pitch — and this time, he was ready.

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