Getting into elite universities — through community colleges

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About two-thirds of his credits transferred. He entered as a junior.

His first semester was a challenge, largely because of the copious amount of required reading.

At one point, he wondered: “Did I make the right decision? Is this the place for me?”

Friends helped him overcome that moment.

“I don’t think that moment will return,” he said.

The community college, he said, prepared him.

“They don’t shorten the goal line at CCP,” he said.

He hopes to teach in an underserved school in Philadelphia and some day return to Central.

Pfaff, a graduate of Bensalem High, also was recruited to Penn via Phi Theta Kappa, for which he served as local treasurer.

Out of high school, he enlisted in the Army, where he served on active duty for four years. Then he enrolled at the Bucks community college, with financial aid through the GI Bill.

He earned his associate degree in criminal justice and had planned on going to St. Joseph’s until he received recruitment material from Penn, Cornell, and Columbia.

“At first, I was a little afraid to give it a try,” he said, but his wife encouraged him.

As a criminology major at Penn, he has moved on to loftier goals. He hopes to attend Penn’s law school.

Like Thomas, he found the workload at Penn to be “intense,” requiring about 30 hours of work outside of class per week, compared with 10 hours at the community college.

“But I’ve been able to stand up and meet the challenge,” he said.

He credits the community college in part for the opportunity.

“I don’t think I would have gotten accepted here without it,” he said.

Kargulewicz emigrated from Poland when he was a toddler and graduated from Upper Merion High School in 1998.

He wasn’t ready for college: “I was just trying to figure out what I wanted out of life.”

He worked at a coffee shop among other jobs and traveled. In 2007, he decided he was ready.

Montgomery County Community College was around the corner from his apartment, and the price was right. He qualified for the honors program, which covered tuition.

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