Reflections Magazine Issue #72 - Summer 2010 | Page 8

Student Feature This issue introduces a new series that highlights individual examples of the Siena Heights brand, “Opportunity U,” and how the university’s mission is transforming the lives of our students as well as the world around us. OPPORTUNITY Mission Accomplished Series Belief System By Doug Goodnough Investment Pays off for McNair Program Graduate Nick Frost ’10 E nough people believed in Nick Frost ’10 to eventually help him believe in himself. As a local youth who grew up in the shadow of Siena Heights University’s campus, Frost was looking in another direction when he graduated from Adrian High School in 2005. “I wanted to play basketball in college, but I applied for a loan and was denied,” Frost said of his initial hoop dream plan, which didn’t include Siena Heights. He and some high school buddies decided instead to attend Jackson Community College— but not to play basketball. His new game plan was to complete his classes at JCC and hopefully attend an Ivy League school. Although his grades were good, Plan B also didn’t work out. What was working out, however, was his involvement with the local Boys and Girls Club. He first started attending the club as an eighth-grader, and became such a fixture that he began working there at age 16 through a special program. 8 Reflections Summer ’10 When he turned 18, he became the youngest person ever hired by the club as a full-time staff member. However, his continued employment at the club meant he had to look nearby to continue his college education. Enter Siena Heights. More specifically, SHU President Sister Peg Albert. Frost was one of the speakers at a club event Sister Peg attended, and he left a lasting impression on her. “She called one of our board members and told her that she would help me financially in order to go to a four-year school,” Frost said. “At the time, what I was doing with the (club) staff members was to scramble and figure out ways to find funding and grants and loans to go to any four-year school. She said she would help bear the brunt somewhat financially if I came to school here. That was really something that encouraged me to keep going.” Frost, a psychology major, got the college opportunity he was looking for, and has made the most of it. He graduated in May with a 3.3 grade point average, and was a Dean’s List student his final three semesters at SHU. He also participated in the Ronald McNair PostBaccalaureate Achievement Program, a federally funded program designed to encourage eligible students from low income and first generation families to pursue graduate studies leading to the completion of a doctoral degree. In fact, the McNair program helped him receive a full tuition and stipend fellowship to attend the University of Wisconsin-Madison next fall to pursue his doctorate in one of the top psychology graduate programs in the country. “I had heard about the McNair program when I was at JCC,” Frost said. “It turned out that one of my mentors when I was at the Boys and Girls Club was a McNair scholar. He started telling me about it, and it sounded like a good idea.” He said McNair Director Dr. Patricia Wallace provided the necessary encouragement to join— and complete—the rigorous program. “She encouraged me and gave me a goal,” Frost said. “McNair really gave me something to strive for. I could have floundered around and took some classes here and there just to get my GPA up, … but I knew I had to finish.