Schools
SJC : Money Is No Object: Promise Scholarship Gives Students Debt-Free Start On Life
See the latest announcement from the San Jacinto College.

February 28, 2022
Considering college, some high school graduates give up before even starting.
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Dobie High School senior Christian Reyes hadnβt given up, but he had plenty of reasons to. COVID-19 was causing global uncertainty. He didnβt want to pressure family to foot his school bill. And most of all, he wanted to avoid student loans.
Thatβs why Reyes pivoted his college plans after learning about the Promise @ San Jac scholarship in early 2020.
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βSan Jacinto College wasnβt my only choice,β he said. βI could have gone to a four-year college, but then I would have been stuck with student debt.β
Thanks to Promise, Reyes graduates this fall with a process technology Associate of Applied Science degree -- no debt, no sweat.
Promise @ San Jac is a last-dollar scholarship covering 100 percent of tuition and books after federal and state aid, grants, and other scholarships.
Although it started in fall 2020 with graduates of three Pasadena ISD high schools, Promise is expanding to every in-district high school senior beginning with the class of 2021-2022. MacKenzie Scottβs $30 million donation to the College last spring is helping to fund a student success endowment that makes this expansion possible.
The scholarship promises no student debt and is available to all seniors at participating high schools, regardless of their GPA. Another perk: A certificate or degree offers better career opportunities and income potential than a high school diploma alone.
Current Promise scholar Keyla Guerrero urged her younger brother not to miss out on college, especially with up to three years of paid-for education and a Promise success coach for priority registration and one-on-one help. Thanks to her encouragement, he is applying for the scholarship and plans to attend San Jac this fall.
βItβs a really good program,β Guerrero said. βI recommend it, especially with the amount of resources they offer and how often they reach out to you.β
Like Reyes, Guerrero planned to start at a university, but she opted to stay home and keep money in her pocket. With an Associate of Science in natural science, she can transfer for a bachelorβs degree in biology, then get her high school teacher certification.
βI didnβt want to pass up two free years,β she said. βItβs easy to transfer. I didnβt see any downsides.β
The Promise scholarship opens many doors -- some that students werenβt even expecting.
At first, Reyes pursued process technology at his parentsβ suggestion. Now he embraces that decision. With most classes at the LyondellBasell Center for Petrochemical, Energy, & Technology, he gets hands-on training in high-tech labs. Plus, his associate degree can lead to a well-paid job at a local refinery -- a good back-up plan and way to fund a bachelorβs degree in engineering.
βThis career path helps to support my college path,β he said.
Because of limited finances, Bianca Compean, a South Houston High School graduate, planned to attend San Jac part time, but through Promise, she is reaching her goals faster as a full-time student.
Along the way, Compean even switched to the diagnostic medical sonography program because of her own experience with a pre-surgery ultrasound years ago. Thanks to this βonce-in-a-lifetimeβ opportunity, she is getting quality training at no cost.
βI wanted to be a sonographer at heart,β she said. βAfter graduating from San Jac, I am hoping to get hired on in the medical field.β
Although the Promise pledge deadline has already passed for current high school seniors, the scholarship will be open to future graduating classes.
For Reyes, Promise means he can laser-focus on classes since money is no object. For those on the fence about attending San Jac through Promise, he has two words: βDo it!β
βThis is free money to pay for your college for up to three years,β he said. βYou can save your money to buy something else or pay for a bachelorβs degree.β
Learn more at sanjac.edu/promise.
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This press release was produced by the San Jacinto College. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.