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An Education

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An Education

An Education

Hardeman has struggled to find another job. Over the past few years, she has taken odd jobs such as sewing and baking to support her family, which also includes an adult daughter. They stick together as a tight, church-going family, but they still don’t have a place of their own. They live with relatives in Hutchins and their struggle continues.

Chima says his life is more stable now, but there were times when he was uncertain how his family would get by from day to day. Even when he could settle his worries enough to concentrate on homework, it was hard to find the time and a quiet place. He fell behind in his studies, but counselors and teachers helped him get back on track last year.

Despite all the turmoil of his high school years, Chima, a 17-year-old Kimball High School senior, will graduate this month and go to Prairie View A&M University; he plans to study political science.

Taking those steps toward higher education and a career puts Chima ahead of the dismal statistics for homeless youth.

Texas has the highest population of homeless children in America, according to a 2015 study from the National Center on Family Homelessness. The center estimates 337,105 children from newborns to age 17 are homeless in this state; about 31,000 of them are high school students.

The study found that fewer than 25 percent of those students would be likely to graduate from high school.

Oak Cliff-based nonprofit Promise House specializes in helping homeless teenagers.

Paloma Belmarez, now 37, was one of them. Born and reared in Oak Cliff, she ran away from home at age 15. She lagged so far behind in school that she wanted to drop out.

“You’re severely behind in school, and it’s so easy to throw in the towel, and that’s just a catalyst for so many more problems,” Belmarez says.

A little bit of help goes a long way, she says. Belmarez came from a middle-class, two-parent home with no obvious turmoil. Her bad behavior escalated to a point that she couldn’t see a way of turning it around. She felt rotten. But with family counseling at Promise House, she found her way back. She transferred from a private school to Kimball and was able to graduate on time by taking extra courses.

Eventually she earned a psychology degree from the University of Texas at Dallas and returned to work as a counselor at Promise House.

“We have young adults that haven’t finished their GED or high school because they don’t know how to get back on track,” she says. “It makes me so sad when I see situations like that because I can see how I could’ve become a high-school dropout myself and stayed that way.”

Chima Nsi says his hardworking mother is what keeps him focused on a better future.

“For a long time, I felt like we were never going to be able to make it. But I realized that if my mom is still pushing and still fighting, why should I give up?” he says. “Other than God, she’s been my No. 1 motivation.”

Vice President

Kenneth Robinson, Kimball High School

Kenneth and Ben Robinson look alike. People who have known them for years still confuse one for the other. Even their names are alike. Which is Ken and which is Ben?

Brothers

The similarities don’t end there. The brothers, about a year apart in age, are both officers in Kimball High School’s ROTC program. Ken is a senior, Ben is a junior. They both prefer staying home with video games rather than going out on a Friday night. And both are expected to be valedictorians of their respective classes.

That’s despite suffering a tragedy four years ago, when they were in seventh and eighth grades. After years of sobriety, their mom relapsed into drug addiction and died.

Even though she had her struggles, their mom, Carla Robinson, always encouraged them to be good students. She had dropped out of school in 11th grade, and she wanted a better life for her boys, Ken says.

“When we were little, she would take us to the zoo every week,” he says. “She would take us to Six Flags every summer. She cooked. She helped us with our homework as much as she could. And besides that, she was just a cool person to be around.”

Children whose parents struggle with serious drug addiction are more likely to

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