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Twelve seniors at partner high school headed to RIT

RPHS students announce future plans at senior signing day event May 23

Carlos Ortiz/RIT Photo">

A student opens a black t-shirt in front of a microphone with RIT's logo displayed on a screen in the background.

Carlos Ortiz/RIT Photo

Maria Marquez unfurls an RIT T-shirt and announces her new school to a crowded gymnasium at Rochester Prep High School on May 23. The annual senior signing day event celebrates students’ next steps.

RIT’s partnership with Rochester Prep High School has reached a milestone this year as the 10th class of students prepares to graduate.

This year, 100 students will graduate from RPHS, and 12 of them will attend RIT as Destler/Johnson Rochester City Scholars, to study biochemistry, engineering, photography, computer science, and other disciplines.

The seniors shared their future plans with the community at a May 23 event at the high school. In addition to RIT, students will attend Boston College, Johns Hopkins University, University of Notre Dame, and Wellesley College, among many others in New York and out of state.

Kadence Wilson, the student-elected speaker at the event, has enrolled in RIT’s biomedical engineering program.

“When I came to Rochester Prep, every year we’d go to RIT to see faculty and to see what they were doing,” Wilson said. “I was in the STEP program, and I did the Capstone project. When I go to RIT, I already know what to expect.”

Counting the Class of 2025, RPHS will have graduated 613 students during the last decade.

According to Rachel Dominic, director of College Counseling at RPHS, 67 students have enrolled at RIT since the first graduating class in 2018.

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A student stands in front of a microphone on a stage holding a black t-shirt

Pete Schuck/RIT Photo

Rochester Prep High School senior Evangeline Simmons will study English at RIT in the fall.

Those numbers are bound to rise with the incoming class of 270 ninth graders. The growth spurt results from Rochester Prep expanding to three middle schools. Jeff Allen, RPHS director of operations, said the staff will grow from 59 to 75 to accommodate the influx.

RIT’s support through the K-12 University Center has given students on-campus experiences and has fostered opportunities for them to sit in college classrooms and conduct research with faculty and RIT students through the Capstone program, and for a few, to co-author three research papers with faculty.

RIT’s partnership has helped students conceptualize college, according to Allen. “To have those experiences is incredible.”

In 2013, RIT Board of Trustee member Ronald L. Zarrella funded the partnership between RIT and Rochester Prep High School to increase the number of Rochester city students who attend college and complete their bachelor’s degree. The public charter school, managed by the Uncommon Schools charter network, opened for the 2014-2015 academic year.

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