ELA At the Head of her class and homeless Ms. Mulligan
In
June 2014, NPR published this story about Rashema Melson. At the time,
Melson was a homeless high school senior at Anacostia High School in
Washington, D.C. She is now a student at Georgetown University. As you read, identify what obstacles Nelson faced and how she overcame them.
ASSIGNMENT IN PROGRESS FOR 8th Grade ELA: A Day Due December 13, 2019
At The Head of Her Class, and Homeless
In
June 2014, NPR published this story about Rashema Melson. At the time,
Melson was a homeless high school senior at Anacostia High School in
Washington, D.C. She is now a student at Georgetown University.
As you read, identify what obstacles Nelson faced and how she overcame them.
Melson,
18, tells NPR’s Audie Cornish that after school, a typical night
involves reluctantly heading back to the shelter around 9:30 p.m.
“I try to stay out as late as possible,” she says. “I wouldn’t say it’s my favorite place.”
Among
the many frustrations of shelter life are long security checks and
noise. Because of the second, she would often wake up in the middle of
the night just to do her homework in peace. Melson says she didn’t keep
her homelessness a secret from classmates — but didn’t offer up the
information either.
“I
don’t like sharing with kids because they start to pity you or they
start to look at you in a different way,” she says. “And I feel like,
‘Hey, I’m just like the rest of you. I come in to get an education.’”
Even
Melson isn’t sure how she’s managed to successfully juggle school (a
4.0 GPA), athletics (cross-country, track, volleyball) and homelessness.
“I just know when I have a goal, I try not to let anything get in the
way,” she says.
That goal, even before becoming homeless, has been to graduate from medical school and become a forensic pathologist.
She says her father’s murder when she was a baby inspired her to pursue the career.
But it’s never been easy.
“Along the way, we stumbled and we started struggling as a family,” she says.
When
those struggles began, she considered quitting sports and getting a
job. But her coaches and teachers convinced her otherwise.
“They
were just like, ‘Don’t worry, you’re doing the best you can — keep it
up, just do what you have to do,’” she says. “They were always there for
me. They took a lot of stress from my mind.”
But
she says she still worries about what will happen to her family after
she heads off to college in the fall, even if the campus is just a few
miles away. She’s hopeful her younger brother, who’s 14 years old and a
talented athlete, will continue to find a haven in sports.
In the meantime, she has advice for other homeless kids: Don’t let your situation define you.
“I
would just say keep your head up because you never know what’s going to
happen,” she says. “You just have to have hope and faith and don’t let
it change who you are. Don’t become ashamed and don’t be embarrassed.
And just know who you are inside. Just because you live in a shelter —
that’s not who you are, that’s just where you reside at for the moment.”
Notes
1. A forensic pathologist is a person that determines the cause of a person’s death by examining their corpse.
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