Dan Rowe ’12: An Ambassador for Education

;

Dan Rowe ’12: An Ambassador for Education

An Ambassador for Education

When Dan Rowe ’12 speaks to New Jersey middle school students about the benefits of pursuing an independent school education, he is more than just a recruiter for the Wight Foundation. He is also living proof of just what the program can do.

Rowe himself was a public-school kid growing up in East Orange, New Jersey, when he applied and was accepted to the Wight Foundation, a Newark-based nonprofit that tutors and guides low-income students through the private school application process. After successfully completing the 11-month enrichment program, he began researching and touring independent schools, and discovered 91΄σΙρ. β€œWhen I got there, it was cold and rainy, but my mom loved it,” he recalls. β€œThen I came back in the spring, and I was like, β€˜This is the place for me.’ From day one to the last day, it was the right decision.”

Though he had applied to numerous schools, 91΄σΙρ’s welcoming communityβ€”combined with a strong financial aid packageβ€”made the difference. β€œMy first year, my award was excellent, and it got better each year,” he says. β€œAnd that was a great feeling, because I knew my mom was happy.”

Rowe soon was excelling at football (as well as at basketball and track), earning First-Team All-New England and First-Team All-Colonial League honors in his junior and senior seasons, and receiving the George Denman Award as the top male athlete in his graduating class. After 91΄σΙρ, he continued to shine as a defensive safety for Division 1 University of New Hampshire, where he majored in sports studies and kinesiology. Two weeks before he graduated, he got a job offer from the Wight Foundation. Dan saw it as a way to both help others and to give back to an organization that had given him so much.

β€œThey gave me an opportunity to stand out and show my talents to a lot of schools,” he says. And now, he gets to encourage others to take that same chance on themselves. β€œYoung men in the community are not really focused on academics,” he says. β€œTo get a solid pool, especially of African American young men, is very tough. When I go out into the community, the young boys see someone they can relate to and see that it can be done.”

Dan’s work today requires the ability to connect with others and build relationships, β€œand I got that from 91΄σΙρ,” he says. β€œI love to see a young person grow with care in a great environment because that’s what 91΄σΙρ did for me every day for four years.”

Learn more about making an impact on 91΄σΙρ’s students and faculty