Courses & Documentary

Hope Chicago: Charity Sending Students From Chicago High Schools To College For Free

You have to admire the ambition of an inner-city high school that calls itself Johnson College Prep. Especially when a third of the students have no permanent home and many dodge violence just to get to class. But the students in this Chicago public school believe in their name. They've done the work. They've been accepted to college. Trouble is, few have the money to go. Johnson College Prep needed something like a miracle. And we were there when the miracle called Hope Chicago arrived.

Johnson College Prep, on Chicago's South Side, embraces nearly 500 students.

Jonas Cleaves: Every student that walks in our door deserves an opportunity to be engaged by staff members who love them for no other reason except the fact that they are one of our students.


Principal Jonas Cleaves knows the names and the dreams in the halls of Johnson College Prep.

Scott Pelley: College is your middle name.

Jonas Cleaves: Absolutely. Absolutely. That's why we're here. We want kids to have a shot.

But, on the South Side, 'a shot' is hobbled by stumbling blocks and tall barriers on a narrow path to the dream. One-third of households here bring in less than $25,000 a year.

Jonas Cleaves: Right now, at least 40% of our senior class have identified either themselves or a very close relative being impacted by gun violence. Like, imagine the trauma associated with that.

Scott Pelley: You must worry about them when they're not under this roof.

Jonas Cleaves: I's a struggle. You know, when we go on, you know, Thanksgiving breaks or any holiday break. We get those calls when there's a student who has been shot or assaulted. We receive those calls from parents and students who need support financially with a major bill.

Scott Pelley: For a lot of your students, school is the safest, best part of the day.

Jonas Cleaves: It's a sanctuary.

And an inspiration.

Ajani Cunningham joined Marine Corps Junior ROTC to add some ammo to his many applications for financial aid.

Ajani Cunningham: Because I am in a 1,000 programs all at once including ROTC, debate, I have honors and AP classes. I've taken college courses. So, I'm just trying to do the most that I can to make college the least expensive.


Kavarrion Newson's hopes lean on faith.

He told us that's how he endured being raised by his grandmother who was drug addicted at the time.

Kavarrion Newson: I have so much faith in God. It's like, I'm not even gonna worry about money. Anything I've ever put in God's hands, it never failed. So, I know he'll come through. I know it, for a fact.

Jonas Cleaves: You know, we have students who are doing construction, working in warehouses-- working the night shift, getting off at 6:00 a.m. and coming to school.

Scott Pelley: You got to admire the dedication and the character.

Jonas Cleaves: What could that kid do if given the chance?

We told the students we were writing a story about college ambition, which wasn't the whole truth. We knew what was about to happen because we'd met the man who would change their lives.

Pete Kadens: I'm a guy who got really lucky in life. I'm a guy who won a lotta lotteries: the birth lottery, the zip code lottery, the education lottery. And when I think about having won all those lotteries and all the people who are suffering, it's my chance to give them those same opportunities. That's who I am.

He is Pete Kadens, a Chicago millionaire who retired at the age of 40 after starting five companies, including one of the largest growers of cannabis.


Scott Pelley: Sense of guilt?

Pete Kadens: Yes. 100%. I feel horribly guilty that I created this amount of wealth, and that so many people are still suffering.

Suffering, in his view, because the richest country in history has not found a way to educate all its children.  

Pete Kadens: I used to think that college and going to college was the great equalizer. In truth, what we've come to find out; college is the great stratifier in this country. It furthers the gap between the haves and the have-nots. Most people just don't realize that. And they don't realize how expensive it is for a minority student in a disinvested community. They don't just get a bunch of financial aid. And if they do, they come out with a boatload of debt so they can't compete with their white suburban contemporaries, even after college. I just think that, fundamentally, there's a misunderstanding in this country that college is accessible to everybody. And the fact is, no it is not.

But it was about to be accessible at Johnson College Prep.

Scott Pelley: When everyone's assembled, and no one knows why, you're gonna look across that room, and what are you going to see?

Jonas Cleaves: I'm gonna see students and families who deserve this moment. You know, you asked me earlier about students that we've lost. And we often tell our families in those moments to like, "Hang in there," you know, "Stay in the fight. Don't give up. A better day is coming." This is their better day.

Ajani Cunningham was there, beside Kavarrion Newson. They didn't know what the assembly was about or who Pete Kadens was, but they will never forget.


Free. Kadens' charity, called Hope Chicago, will pay in-state tuition and expenses. An act of kindness so great it had to be squeezed to fit within belief. That same week, Kadens made the same announcement at four additional Chicago high schools.

Pete Kadens: Look, we are operating in a city, here in Chicago, where the number one cause of death for children under the age of 18 is gunshot wounds. No, we're not going to wait anymore, it's now or never.

Scott Pelley: How many tuitions in Chicago altogether?

Pete Kadens: We will end up funding about 30,000 individuals to go to college or trade school in the city of Chicago.

Scott Pelley: Over what period of time?

Pete Kadens: Over the next decade. That makes this the largest scholarship program in the country.

Kavarrion Newson deeply appreciated Pete Kadens, but he told us he knew who he needed to thank.

Kavarrion Newson: Well, I didn't get to pray about the assembly yet because I'm still trying to process all of those feelings because of what just happened was, I mean, simply amazing. But God will get some special time from me tonight.

But in the assembly, there was more. Just when a better day couldn't be any better, Janice Jackson took the stage. The former CEO of Chicago Public Schools is the new head of Hope Chicago.

Hope Chicago is sending a parent or guardian from each family to college. For Ajani Cunningham's mother, incomprehension was finally broken by the memories of her dreams deferred.


Yolanda White: We have always had a too-close relationship with poverty and lack.

Once homeless, Yolanda White, a single mother, cleared a path for five children -- two through college already.

Yolanda White: And I've taken all the hits so now they can go and, you know, understand that I've been the shield. And they can be free to do what they want to do with their lives.

Now it's her turn. She'd like to take technology classes to grow her baking business.

Scott Pelley: Ajani, your mom's ferocious.

Ajani Cunningham: She's amazing. 

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