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Double Impact: Academic and Emotional Support Propel Teens to College

Two women who are graduate students stand next to each other in front of a sign for the Upward Bound office.

July 24, 2025

by Lauren Ferguson

For three decades, the Upward Bound Math and Science program at 69色情视频 of New Jersey has empowered high school students from disadvantaged backgrounds to earn their diplomas and prepare for college.

Throughout their high school years, low-income and first-generation students from Paterson, NJ, who qualify for the program receive support such as tutoring, college tours, and seminars in areas like financial aid, college admissions, and career counseling.

They also spend six weeks each summer living on Ramapo鈥檚 Mahwah campus, taking courses in subjects such as science, math, language arts, and Latin, and getting a feel for college life. They are exposed to college science labs, field trips to go fly fishing, swimming and ice skating, and opportunities to give back through area non-profits.

But a few years ago, the program鈥檚 director realized that in order for the teenagers to truly focus and succeed academically, they first needed support dealing with real-life issues, and their emotions surrounding them.

Recognizing Roadblocks

鈥淭he problem isn鈥檛 trying to help them learn this material, the problem is everything else is getting in the way,鈥 said Dr. Sandra Suarez, Ramapo鈥檚 director of Upward Bound, who also serves as director of the college鈥檚 STEM Center.

The teens have experienced things like losing family members, parents getting divorced, or having anxiety or being stressed out themselves, Suarez explained. 鈥淭he goal of the program is to help them achieve academically, but this is an obstacle,鈥 she said.

So when Assistant Professor of Social Work Dr. Colleen Martinez offered to lend her expertise, as well as a student intern from Ramapo鈥檚 Master of Social Work (MSW) program, Suarez recognized it as a win-win.

Martinez, a licensed clinical social worker and registered play therapist, previously worked as a psychotherapist for young people. She still volunteers at camps, helping young people have a good time in groups and in natural settings.

鈥淚 know that when you bring groups of people together, especially people who have been under-resourced, that there’s a lot of trauma and there’s a lot of hardship and adversity,鈥 Martinez said. 鈥淚 had a feeling that Sandra was serving kids that had a lot of needs, and so I wanted to help her with that.鈥

Gaining Hands-On Experience

Martinez now advises a MSW intern who serves as a social emotional learning (SEL) counselor to the high school students. The internship provides the MSW intern with hands-on experiential learning, and access to a mentoring, encouraging faculty advisor, both hallmarks of a Ramapo education. And the experience is right on campus.

鈥淭hey’re working with at-risk individuals, very smart people who have a lot of life challenges,鈥 said Cardacia Davis, director of practicum education for Ramapo鈥檚 social work program. 鈥淪o it still gives students an opportunity to be able to work with a very vulnerable group of people without going outside of here.鈥

The MSW intern uses the evidence-based RULER approach to SEL, developed at the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence. The intern provides a multi-tiered system of support to the high schoolers, ranging from one-on-one sessions with students who are determined to need the most support, to small groups of students on specific topics such as grief and toxic relationships, to large groups of the entire Upward Bound program on character development themes such as acceptance and demeanor.

鈥淭he RULER approach basically says that we’re listening to the emotions of others, we’re practicing regulating our emotions, we’re practicing understanding our emotions, labeling our emotions, expressing our emotions. And we, in turn, use all of that to help the students gain more of an understanding about themselves and how they can utilize that in their education,鈥 said MSW student Tijani Browne 鈥26. 鈥淏ecause sometimes when you’re not emotionally regulated, it could be really hard to focus on your schoolwork.鈥

Browne, of Bogota, NJ, spent last year as an SEL counselor with a caseload of students who could benefit from one-on-one support. She also conducted assessments, ran small groups, dubbed 鈥淒eep Dives with TJ,鈥 and large groups focused on character development, provided brain breaks during tutoring sessions, and even put together guidelines, or policy, for incoming MSW interns to follow.

A social work intern facilitates a role play in front of students in a classroom.

MSW student Sara Gustavsen 鈥26 facilitates a large group session on demeanor with Upward Bound students.

Browne鈥檚 successor, MSW student Sara Gustavsen 鈥26, of Pequannock, NJ, is following her lead this summer. She kicked off the large group sessions with a program on acceptance.

鈥淭here’s just a lot of newness going on with coming to this program and they worked hard academically, so there’s a lot of challenge and discomfort,鈥 Gustavsen explained. 鈥淪o we were talking about the importance of being able to be comfortable with discomfort and accept that challenge.鈥

Witnessing the Impact

Gustavsen is the fifth MSW student to intern with the Upward Bound program so far. Suarez said they are now collecting data on whether the high school students are becoming more emotionally aware, resilient, or regulated, after having access to an SEL counselor, and they are hoping to publish the results at some point.

But Browne, who also conducted a research project for Ramapo鈥檚 2025 Scholars鈥 Day entitled 鈥淪EL Interventions with First-Generation and Low-Income Students in Upward Bound,鈥 said the quotes from the students she has helped are already showing the impact.

One student said: 鈥淪EL counseling has helped me in two big ways. First, it taught me how to handle stress better, especially with schoolwork and other responsibilities. Instead of freaking out over deadlines, I’ve learned ways to stay calm and manage my time. Second, it helped me communicate better with people. I’m more comfortable expressing how I feel and dealing with conflicts without me making things worse. It made my relationships with friends, teachers, and even family a lot easier.鈥

Three women stand in front of a poster.

MSW student Tijani Browne 鈥26 reads from the research poster she created, as Dr. Sandra Suarez looks on.

For Martinez, who no longer handles a caseload herself, witnessing the impact that her graduate students are making is fulfilling. 鈥淚t’s really nice to know that through the MSW students鈥 work, we’re touching the lives of so many young people. We鈥檙e not just teaching them math and science and English and writing college essays, but also about their feelings, their families, their lives and their hopes and dreams,鈥 Martinez said.

The Upward Bound Math and Science program 鈥 funded by the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) 鈥 is part of the Federal TRIO Programs, a group of eight initiatives designed to assist low-income individuals, first-generation college students, and individuals with disabilities to progress through the academic pipeline from middle school to postbaccalaureate programs, according to the DOE.

This critical federal funding allows high school students from disadvantaged backgrounds to gain academic support, tutoring and exposure to thrive, and ultimately, access to the colleges that best suit them. Launched in 1995, Ramapo鈥檚 Upward Bound Math and Science program now has close to 1,000 alumni.

To learn more, visit Ramapo鈥檚 Upward Bound Math and Science webpage.