Education

Scholars win college money

Hoover HIgh School students Victoria Dardov, 17, and Razmik Megerdichian, 18, are winners of a scholarship providing them with $20,000 each for their college education. (Alex Collins/News-Press)

Three high school students in Glendale each earn $20,000 and a laptop from Dell Foundation.

By Angela Hokanson
Published: Last Updated Friday, May 2, 2008 10:41 PM PDT
The burden of paying for college has been lightened considerably for three Glendale Unified School District students who will receive significant financial assistance through the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation.

Glendale High School senior Joseph Yoo, 18, and Hoover High School seniors Tori Dardov, 17, and Razmik Megerdichian, 18, have been named Dell Scholars for 2008. Each student will receive $20,000 toward college tuition and associated expenses over their four years in college, as well as a Dell laptop computer. The three Glendale Unified students were among 254 students in the country named Dell Scholars this year.

“It was surreal at first,” Tori said about finding out she was a winner. “I checked the site like five times.”

Then, Tori said, she went shrieking over to her mother to deliver the news.

The Dell scholarships, which are run through the Austin-based Dell Foundation, are “need-based” and “recognize academic potential and determination in underserved and low-income students,” according to the program’s website.

Besides looking just at applicants’ academic records and test scores, the Dell Scholars Program looks for students who are determined to succeed, according to the site. Students must also have taken some kind of college-readiness program to be eligible.

A strong work ethic and a determined sense of purpose are characteristics the three winning students seem to have in common, teachers said.

Tori was born in the U.S. but lived in Bulgaria during her childhood, before moving back to the U.S. at 7. She learned English as a second language while adjusting to a new way of life. She moved to California from New Jersey, and had a rocky freshman year of high school, she said. With the help of a college-readiness class called Advancement Via Individual Determination, or AVID, she learned strong study skills and found support and encouragement, she said.

“She had a very, very strong desire to become a student,” teacher Kathy Angers said.

Tori plans to study engineering at UC San Diego.

Megerdichian moved to the U.S. from Iran when he was in seventh grade, and also learned English as a second language while adjusting to a new life. The educational opportunities in Iran would not have been what they are here, Megerdichian said, so he was set on pushing himself to succeed.

He has been a remarkable student for his perseverance to improve, Angers said.

“I think I was really determined,” he said.

Megerdichian will attend UC Irvine, where he plans to major in engineering.

In addition to school, Yoo helps take care of his two brothers, who are 11 and 16.

He is bound for UCLA, where he plans to study science.

“I hope to major in physical science, like physiology or biology,” he said.

Yoo has taken a half-dozen Advanced Placement classes, and he tutors AVID students twice a week.

“He’s a very hard worker,” said Holly Ciotti, who teaches English and AVID at Glendale High.

“He’s very patient, and math is his strength,” she said.

The scholarship will greatly reduce the financial strain of paying for college, Yoo said.

“It’s going to help me pay for, like, most of it,” he said.





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