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Campus & Community

Shadow Day Comes Full Circle for 鶹ƵUniversity Student

Friday, April 19, 2019, By Joyce LaLonde
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Office of Community Engagement
Young woman in baseball cap and sweatshirt

Ashliqua Menifee

Nearly 100 fifth-graders from the 鶹ƵCity School District’s Seymour Dual Language Academy will be welcomed to 鶹ƵUniversity on Thursday, April 25. For many of the children, 鶹ƵUniversity’s Shadow Day, run by the Office of Community Engagement, is a rare opportunity to spend time on campus with college students. The day gives the fifth-graders an opportunity to see what is possible for them…at least that’s what it did for current first-year 鶹ƵUniversity student Ashliqua Menifee eight years ago.

Menifee says that, as a fifth-grader, coming to campus “gave [her] the opportunity to dream.” As she grew up, though, her dream seemed financially unattainable. Still, Menifee’s high school counselor encouraged her to look at 鶹ƵUniversity as a possibility.

After submitting applications to multiple schools, the furthest—as allowed by her mother—five hours away, Menifee was accepted to 鶹ƵUniversity and into the Arthur O. Eve Higher Education Opportunity Program. The program, funded by the New York State Department of Education, covers the cost of attendance, giving Menifee the opportunity to enroll at the University. And her mother was happy: Menifee was staying right in Syracuse.

Staying close for college was not just for her mother’s comfort; Menifee believes in keeping local talent in the area. After graduating, she intends to stay in Syracuse.

“Growing up in an impoverished community, you develop a negative stigma associated with the place where you grew up and strive to leave,” says Menifee. “Coming to 鶹ƵUniversity and staying here after graduation is my way of showing that good things are possible here.”

As Menifee’s first year as a 鶹Ƶstudent comes to a close, she is excited to have her experience come full circle; on April 25, she will have Seymour fifth-grade students shadow her for the University’s 21st Shadow Day. 鶹ƵUniversity students will be paired in small groups with Seymour students. They will spend the day touring campus, hearing from campus officials and sharing meals together.

“I’m excited to have the person shadowing me possibly want to come here. I want them to know they have the chance to, regardless of possible financial barriers,” says Menifee. “It’s all possible for them. I want to let them know that as a person from Syracuse, it’s all possible for you.”

  • Author

Joyce LaLonde

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