FY24 College Track Annual Report

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The future is: ABEL NEGUSSIE

Abel Negussie dreamed of a career in medicine. He just thought he’d walk another path to get there.

“Growing up, I followed in my older brother’s footsteps. He was interested in medicine and that got me excited about it, too,” Abel remembers. “We’d always talk about things like biology, surgery, medicine … I wanted to be a doctor.”

Today, Abel is on the frontlines of medicine in a different way than he’d envisioned. As an investment analyst at Yosemite, a cancer-focused venture firm, Abel evaluates investment opportunities and grant proposals that are on the leading edge of cancer treatment. He spends a lot of time talking to scientists and researchers about their work to support his team’s effort to make effective investments. At Yosemite, the goal is singular: to make cancer non-lethal in our lifetime.

“We’re really in the golden age of biotech,” Abel says. “There is amazing science being done today that has promise to address diseases that we have no good treatment options for.”

But medicines and modalities are only half of the story.

“You can spend a lot of time thinking about the science and start to forget about the practicalities of cancer—the realities of people being treated. Access is a major issue,” Abel says. “Many clinical trials only happen in major cities at large research institutions, only a handful of locations. Worse yet, when new drugs are approved, people might not have access due to costs, issues with insurance reimbursement, and issues with where those drugs can be administered.”

Abel has worked on grants at Yosemite that have sought to decentralize clinical trials. He says considerations about access often inform the process right from the start.

And, as a first-generation citizen of the U.S., Abel often reflects on the trips he’s made to Ethiopia to visit family and how those visits have opened his eyes to the global nature of the disparities.

“There’s a real opportunity to seriously change the landscape of medicine and the impact it can have on people’s lives everywhere,” he says. “We have the privilege and responsibility of considering access at the earliest stages of drug development.”

Abel Negussie

College Track Aurora

Yale University, Class of 2022

from Our President & CEO A MESSAGE

As an organization, College Track roots itself in five values: commitment, passion, joy, authenticity, and excellence. We take these values to heart; they infuse everything we do.

I find myself reflecting on our values in the context of this Annual Report and the ways in which they shine through in the accomplishments of our scholars and alumni over the past year—as well as the past 27.

The future is now because, since 1997, we’ve believed wholeheartedly in the promise of the future and the progress it represents. We believe fully in a better world that can only be created when we

listen to young people and ask them to show us the way forward. When they do this, grounded in their own commitment, passion, joy, authenticity, and excellence, they bring the future to life every day.

I find myself reflecting on these values, too, in the context of the urgent moment we are in as a nation, when the importance of a college education and bachelor’s degree is being scrutinized. In this moment, our work toward educational equity will only be successful if we find common ground in our shared humanity and activate a collective sense of possibility while remaining rooted in the things we hold closest to our heart.

President & CEO Shirley M. Collado (center) enjoys a moment with College Track alumni.

College Track alumnus Abel Negussie is featured on the cover of this report, and I urge you to read his story. Abel, like so many College Track alumni, is living his dream, today. He is lit by a fire that not only fuels his personal and professional growth but also illuminates our understanding of the ways today’s young people see the world and the substantive impact they can have on some of the most urgent issues of our time.

There’s a reason College Track focuses on students who want to be the first in their family to go to college. We know their potential, yes, but we also know that when they earn a bachelor’s degree, they will use their education as a springboard to a meaningful career and as a mooring within their communities to ensure that they are not the only ones who are rising.

Thank you for being a part of a community that unequivocally believes in young people who want to be the first in their families to earn a bachelor’s degree. They will no doubt bring us into a brighter future, right now.

Thank you for being part of a community that unequivocally believes in young people who want to be “the first”—the first in their families to earn a bachelor’s degree and the first to soar in academic, civic, and professional spaces. They will no doubt bring us into a brighter future, right now.

We are moving mountains together.

With gratitude,

Who We

SERVE and WHY

For more than 5,000 College Track scholars and alumni, the future is now. Whether that means negotiating the path toward being the first in their family to earn a bachelor’s degree—or activating their agency in the world as a proud college graduate—our alumni and scholars are realizing their dreams today.

Since our founding in 1997, we’ve been invested in the success of first-generation college students. Our innovative 10-year program delivers the tools, experiences, and academic supports necessary for young people from underserved communities to overcome systemic barriers. College Track brings together a cross-sector ecosystem of stakeholders, spanning diverse geographies, to create a distinctive range of opportunities for talented scholars who exist in every corner of the country.

Now is the time to mobilize a vision of educational equity and social justice. The future has arrived.

Our Mission

To equip students confronting systemic barriers to earn a bachelor’s degree in pursuit of a life of opportunity, choice, purpose, and power.

Our Vision

Our scholars and alumni amplify talent within their communities and inspire a movement to democratize potential.

Student Demographics

Data from FY24, which ended June 30, 2024

College Track NATION

In 1997, College Track’s first cohort of scholars in East Palo Alto embarked upon their dream of becoming the first in their family to earn a bachelor’s degree. Since then, College Track has expanded from one center to 12 nationwide—adding its 13th location in Baltimore in 2025. (Read more about this great news on pages 10 and 11.)

As our presence has grown within vibrant communities around the country, so, too, has our scholars’ presence at colleges and universities from coast to coast. Our 3,000 college scholars and alumni are part of the fabric of more than 300 higher education institutions, including small, private liberal arts colleges, historically Black colleges and universities, women’s colleges, and top research institutions. But it’s more than just numbers. We’re set on shifting the college completion narrative in this country, and we aren’t going it alone. Partnerships with high schools, colleges, nonprofits, businesses, and foundations mean that we are doing more than growing in size. We are growing a cross-sector educational ecosystem that unites likeminded partners to create an environment of equity and achievement.

College and University Partners

In 2023, College Track named its first cohort of formal college and university partners, schools that share our commitment to first-generation scholars from underserved communities. Today, we continue this momentum, welcoming four new partner schools for the 2024-25 academic year, with more on the horizon.

Collaboration CHARM CITY in

In 2024, College Track announced the establishment of our 13th site: the Baltimore Ravens College Track Center. A partnership with the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens, The Stephen and Renee Bisciotti Foundation, M&T Bank, and Baltimore City Public Schools, this new center— our third on the East Coast—extends our 10-year commitment to the talented young people of Charm City.

Strong cross-sector partnerships form the backbone of the collective work to change the college completion narrative in this country. With our Baltimore site, College Track is contributing to a rich educational ecosystem in a vibrant city that is critical to the landscape of American education.

“The Ravens and the Bisciotti family believe enormously in Baltimore, in our youth, and in the transformative power of education,” says Sashi Brown, president of the Baltimore Ravens. “This partnership puts our belief into action in a deeply impactful way that will reach thousands of talented and promising youths across greater Baltimore.”

“Access to education is a powerful way we can transform lives and uplift our Baltimore communities,” says Augie Chiasera, M&T Bank’s regional president for greater Baltimore. “By providing essential support to college completion programs, we are equipping students with the resources they need to reach their full potential.”

Fall 2025 brings the recruitment of College Track’s inaugural cohort of ninth-grade scholars in the city of Baltimore. Our college and university partnerships—including our new partner, University of Maryland, Baltimore County—ensure that when these scholars graduate high school in 2029, they’ll have the opportunity to join a college campus close to home or across the country to continue their journey toward a life of agency and purpose.

We’re creating the future right now in Baltimore, Maryland.

Our first leader in Baltimore: Charelle D. James

At College Track, we pride ourselves on being “of” our communities—not just “in” them. For our scholars to activate their futures, we must provide an experience that reflects their stories, their neighborhoods, their promise. Enter Charelle D. James.

Charelle is a native Baltimorean, a longtime educator with Baltimore City Public Schools, and the founding executive site director at the Baltimore Ravens College Track Center. She brings a tremendous dedication to underserved communities in her hometown, grounding her leadership in educational equity and social justice.

“My vision is to create an environment where our students not only succeed academically but also develop the skills and confidence to be change agents in their communities,” Charelle says. “As an educator at heart, I am a proponent of post-secondary education because it is fundamental to expanding access to choices, opportunities, and an improved, sustainable quality of life.”

HERE, NOW: College Track Alumni

“I truly believe that my education is what brought me here, and that is a very personal thing for me. Long ago, I wanted to inspire my younger sister to go to college. Now, we both have a college education–mine from Cal, and my sister from Stanford. The trajectory of our lives–and of our family–has changed so much.”

As scholars, College Track’s 1,400 alumni envisioned a future where, with a bachelor’s degree in hand, they would walk their own path toward a purposeful life.

Now, as entrepreneurs, artists, scientists, and business leaders in a wide array of professional sectors and creative spaces, our alumni live those dreams today. And whether they earned their degree in 2003 or 2023, they are a vibrant part of the College Track community.

While our 10-year promise stretches from high school through college, all of our alumni have ongoing access to College Track programming that offers networking opportunities, career

Chang Liang

College Track Oakland

University of California, Berkeley | Class of 2017

Chang Liang has always had an entrepreneurial spirit. As a student at UC Berkeley, he started a tech company. After graduating with his bachelor’s in electrical engineering and computer science, he began consulting for educationfocused organizations. Most recently, he has launched Collective Acre, an equity and asset management company based in Texas.

Chang’s professional trajectory not only reflects a jack-ofall-trades flexibility—it reflects one of the major takeaways from his time as a College Track scholar.

“College Track is about being curious, bold, and courageous,” he says. “That was really instilled in me.”

While he’s finding success in management now, Chang is thinking about his next steps, which include venture capital work, earning a doctorate, and, ultimately, using his accumulated experience to launch a career in academic philanthropy.

“To see where my dreams and aspirations are now compared to when I was young, it’s amazing how my worldview has opened up,” Chang reflects.

development, and intergenerational connections to strengthen their impact on the world.

Every day, our alumni show that professional and personal success extends beyond the attainment of a bachelor’s degree. It’s about creating community, reaching out to pull someone up, and understanding that your voice is powerful—and necessary.

This is how College Track alumni light the path forward for today’s scholars, demonstrating the strength of dreams by living them.

are employed or in grad school.

recent graduates completed college with no debt.

Average debt by race:

Latinx Black

Asian American and Pacific Islander $7,768

$23,622 $8,648

Esme Ayala

College Track East Palo Alto

University of Southern California | Class of 2012

As a high school scholar at College Track East Palo Alto, Esme Ayala thought often about her future. She knew she wanted a corporate career and financial independence. So she cut a path to achieve her goals.

She leveraged her bachelor’s degree in industrial and systems engineering to build a career in management, first with Pacific Gas and Electric, and now with Accenture, a professional services company. She partners with utilities to help them tackle core challenges, like affordability, operations, and technology implementation.

“A lot of first-generation college students are also first-generation in the corporate world,” she says. “We learn to navigate new spaces on our own, and that scrappiness becomes a strength.”

Today, Esme is a member of the College Track Board of Directors and is proud of the ways that College Track’s 10year program has evolved to instill a focus on professional development, internships, and career exposure. She’s excited to contribute to the creation of opportunities for today’s scholars.

“As I get more grounded in my career, I realize I can focus on something I’m personally passionate about,” she says. “I always wanted to come back to College Track in some way.”

“Being the first in my family to attend a four-year college— it transformed more than just my future. My younger siblings went on to attend four-year colleges straight out of high school, my brother followed in my footsteps as a College Track scholar, and my younger cousins began to see college as a possibility for themselves too.”

Our

10YEAR Promise

College Track is the most comprehensive college access and success program in the nation. We partner with every one of our scholars for 10 years: from ninth grade until they have a bachelor’s degree in hand, ready to launch their careers or further their studies.

Our program is highly integrated and holistic, ensuring a seamless academic journey with a steady emphasis on career and life design right from the start.

High School: Years 1-4

High School Program

Our high school scholar experience consists of two focused two-year segments: the Pre-College Program, for grades 9 and 10, and the College-Going Program, for grades 11 and 12.

Pre-College Program

Dynamic and inspiring programming creates a foundation. It includes:

► Goal-setting and skill-building to develop leadership and create a life of purpose

► Academic Learning Labs, including STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) and 21st-century skill development

College-Going Program

Scholars grow the skills needed to achieve their dreams and passions through:

Learn more about our 10-year promise online.

► Counseling around college admissions and financial aid

► Arizona State University’s Universal Learner Courses, to develop professional skills and earn college credits

► Semester Zero at Northern Arizona University, a weeklong on-campus experience in the summer before 11th grade 14 | collegetrack.org

College Thrive

Our College Thrive program is designed to equip scholars to achieve their goal of graduating with a bachelor’s degree and prepare for their next chapter.

► Each scholar partners with a College Thrive coach to achieve their goals in college while staying on track to graduate within four years.

► With our Career Accelerator Programs, scholars design a unique and thriving career plan with access to coaching, application preparation experiences within professional environments, and the exploration of different sectors.

► Virtual Life Design Workshops address topics like financial wellness, workplace expectations, and self-advocacy.

College: Years 5-8

Alumni and Career: Years 8-10+

Alumni Career and Life

At every stage of a scholar’s journey, we integrate career-readiness into our program. When our scholars become alumni, they realize the potential for social mobility that comes with a bachelor’s degree while remaining connected to the College Track community.

► Regional engagement events and our Alumni Summit reinforce and support our alumni communities across the country.

► Our Alumni Volunteer Network and 19:97 Alumni Spotlight series sustain relationships between alumni and scholars.

► Webinars for and by our alumni provide continuous learning opportunities, touching on personal and professional topics.

READINESS Zeroing In On College

For one week in July, College Track’s rising juniors from around the country convene on Northern Arizona University’s Flagstaff campus. It’s an experience called Semester Zero, and it provides an opportunity for scholars to live in a dorm, take classes from university faculty, participate in campus life, and find community in their shared dream of being the first in their family to earn a bachelor’s degree.

Summer 2024 marked College Track’s inaugural Semester Zero, with hundreds of high school scholars—literally from coast to

coast—gathering in a space and state most of them had never been to before. Chelsie, a scholar from the College Track Durant Center, was one of them.

“I gained a sense of knowledge about how to navigate my life when I go to college and what kind of community I want to be a part of,” Chelsie says. “I liked exploring campus—the library, the maker lab, the student union—and interacting with the professors.”

For many scholars, Semester Zero marked the first time they had boarded a plane—or

left home. It’s an experience that prepares both scholars and families alike.

“I struggled at first with being so far away from my family and sharing a room with a stranger,” College Track Sacramento scholar Montserrat says. “But I pushed myself. I got out of my comfort zone and opened up to an experience that helped me grow.”

Through Semester Zero, College Track scholars have a chance to preview their future—and see themselves as a college student today.

Semester Zero by the Numbers

College Track Communities Represented

Average Miles Traveled by Scholars to Attend

Increase in Understanding What College Courses Are Like

Reduction in Anxiety About Living with a Roommate

Scholar OUTCOMES

College Track is all about our scholars’ success. In high school, our program amplifies their intellectual curiosity and passion for learning, offering academic opportunities and tools that our scholars use to kindle the fire of their future.

When our scholars move into their college years, we’re right there, too–with resources that cultivate academic, financial, and emotional wellness, as well as targeted programming that supports their ability to make career and life choices with confidence.

Our Student Results

This report celebrates a milestone for College Track: a 62% six-year graduation rate for our Class of 2018— the highest six-year rate in College Track’s history, and more than three times the national average for first-generation college students.

We’re proud to be a part of the success of so many talented young people across the nation, walking with them as they become the first in their family to earn a bachelor’s degree.

Four-Year College

Acceptance Rate

Two-Year or Four-Year College Matriculation Rate

Average High School Senior GPA at Graduation

College

Persistence Rate

Average Time to Degree

A Legendary Legacy MADDEN:

“When we first heard about College Track and learned more about the work they do, it felt like a perfect fit.”
—Virginia Madden, John Madden Foundation

The renowned hall of fame football coach and broadcaster John Madden did not care whether a player was the biggest, the strongest, or the fastest. His favorite players had something more intangible: “It’s about a guy who’s got a dirty uniform, mud on his face, and grass in the ear hole of his helmet,” Madden once wrote.

In other words, what the famed coach cared about was grit, desire, and determination—all qualities shared by College Track scholars, who overcome a wide variety of barriers in their pursuit of bachelor’s degrees.

“When we first heard about College Track and learned more about the work they do, it felt like a perfect fit,” says Virginia Madden, John’s wife, who runs The John Madden Foundation along with several other family members. At the time of his passing in 2021, the former Oakland Raiders coach had dedicated himself to providing educational opportunities to East Bay youth. His family is committed to seeing that dream fulfilled in his memory.

They learned about College Track through Electronic Arts, the company that makes the popular Madden NFL video game. Electronic Arts first partnered with College Track in 2005, hosting our high school graduation ceremonies at their Bay Area headquarters for a decade. In the years since, the company has supported programming for thousands of College Track scholars in California.

The Madden family first visited College Track’s Oakland site in 2023. Soon thereafter, The John Madden Foundation made a deep investment that supports our 10-year college completion program, provides financial assistance for

our undergraduate scholars, and helps us better understand the unique needs of student-athletes on their college journeys. As teachers themselves, John and Virginia knew that education meant access to opportunities otherwise not available. They also believed that test scores were not the only indicators for longterm success in life.

“There are a lot of people whose greatness and potential to contribute to future society can’t be captured in a GPA or after-school organized activities,” says Virginia. “It’s our dream to be able to identify and support that young person.”

It is a dream shared by College Track, which does not require that students have a minimum GPA to enter the program, only the desire to pursue a bachelor’s degree and the grit and determination to see it through.

Those traits—as John Madden knew— are better indicators of greatness. They are what make a leader, on and off the field.

The FUTURE YOU Is

Our commitment to financial sustainability reflects our shared commitment to College Track’s scholars and alumni. We take very seriously our role as stewards of your investment in a better world, holding ourselves to the highest standards of fiscal responsibility and strategic, data-driven

each of our scholars, one that evolves right along with the landscape of academic opportunity and professional mobility in our country. Your generosity makes this possible.

On behalf of our scholars, alumni, and staff,

Our Financials*

* FY24 annual audit, fiscal year ending June 30, 2024

Investing in Opportunity

As a longtime College Track volunteer, Gayle Saldinger knows the impact of our program firsthand. For over a decade, she facilitated college and career sessions for high schoolers at our Oakland center, while also working with individual students on college and scholarship applications. Last year, Gayle and her husband, Ed O’Neil, deepened their commitment to the organization with a generous gift. They are inspired by College Track’s continuous innovation and believe that providing the opportunity for young people to imagine different lives for themselves may be the most important human capital investment we can make.

“There are a lot of organizations that do good in the world. I don’t know of another place that does it so intelligently and brilliantly as College Track. They are willing to change things, willing to do things differently, willing to shake it up,” says Ed.

“I can’t imagine anything more important than encouraging youth to think bigger, to have the chance to show all their abilities and their talents, and go forward in this world caring about our country and each other,” says Gayle.

Our DONORS

$250,000+

Anonymous

The Benificus Foundation

Lynn Feintech and Tony Bernhardt

Danhakl Family Foundation

Dhanam Foundation

Durant Family Foundation

Emerson Collective

ECMC Foundation

The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation

i.am Angel Foundation

JPMorgan Chase Foundation

Len Hill Charitable Trust

Prince George’s County Public Schools

Salesforce

Diana Kapp and David B. Singer

Skyline Foundation

Tipping Point Community

University of Southern California

Chris and Nina Wanstrath

$249,999 – $100,000

Anonymous

Aurora Public Schools

CAA Evolution

The Ron Conway Family

Tim Cook

James V. & June P. Diller Family Foundation

Joseph Drown Foundation

Electronic Arts Inc.

Entergy Charitable Foundation

Amy and John Fowler

Lisa and Patrice Gautier

The Giannandrea Family Fund

Hearst Foundation

Jony and Heather Ive

The Johnson Family

Koret Foundation

Laluyaux Foundation

Lawrence Foundation

Learn24

Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation

John Madden Foundation

Marks Family Foundation

Oakland Fund for Children & Youth

Gayle Saldinger and Ed O’Neil

Quest Foundation

San Francisco Department of Children, Youth & Their Families

U.S. Bank Foundation

Warriors Community Foundation

Webb Family Foundation

Williams Family Foundation

$99,999 – $50,000

A+E Networks

Anonymous

The Anschutz Foundation

Baptist Community Ministries

Kirsten and Michael Beckwith

The Bisconti Family Foundation

William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation

Vera R. Campbell Foundation

Johnny Carson Foundation

Cartier

Concrete Value Corp

Sloane and Topher Conway

Simone Otus Coxe and Tench Coxe

Denver Public Schools

Elena Silenok and Chris Dixon

Elbaz Family Foundation

Evelyn & Norman Feintech Family Foundation

Glass Half Full Fund

Golden 1 Credit Union

Maud and Burton Goldfield Family Foundation

Greater Washington Community Foundation

Lisa and Kenny Jackson

Kate and Christian Jensen

Kaiser Permanente Northern California Community Benefit Programs

Omar and Rosallah Karim

KLA Foundation

Lau Family Fund

MaC Venture Capital / MACRO

Mazda Foundation

The McMorrow Family Foundation

Mildenhall Gros Family

Monumental Sports & Entertainment Foundation

Ruth Porat and Anthony Paduano

Ralph M. Parsons Foundation

Sheri Sobrato

United Way of Southeast Louisiana

$49,999 – $25,000

Anonymous

Bloomberg Philanthropies

Marissa Mayer and Zachary Bogue

Cristel de Rouvray and Jonathan Bruck

Orest Byskosh

Capital One

CityBridge

Carol and James Collins Foundation

Colonial Parking

DC Housing Finance Agency

Denver Broncos Foundation

Ken & Erika Drazan

Encompass

The Fardshisheh Family

Robert Friedman

Joe Gebbia

Adam Goldenberg & Megan Gliebe

Phillip B. Golberg Fund of the Denver Foundation

Debra, Chloe, Allegra and Bing Gordon

Philip L. Graham Fund

Graham Holdings Company

The Green Foundation

HEP Construction

Traci and Monty Hoffman

Jen-Hsun and Lori Huang Family Foundation

Mark Hughes Foundation

JMA Solutions Inc.

Franklin and Catherine Johnson Foundation

Jordan Brand - A Division of Nike, Inc.

The Mayer & Morris Kaplan Family Foundation

Eric & Suyun Kim Charitable Fund

Elizabeth and Darell Krasnoff

Eugene M. Lang Foundation

Lynn and Ted Leonsis

LiveRamp

Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation

Maverick Capital Charities

Nora and Marc Mazur

M.C. Dean

Malcolm and Katie McDermid

Irene Mecchi

MRP Realty

The Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris Foundation

Oak Hill Advisors

The Paige Family Foundation

Chris Paul Family Foundation

Michael and Paula Rantz Foundation

Redbrick LMD, LLC

Mindy and Jesse Rogers

Rosewood Family Advisors LLP

Scheidel Foundation

The Eileen and Fred Schoellkopf Family Foundation

Silicon Valley Community Foundation

The Slemp Family

Ralph Smith

Ashley and Larry Sonsini

Sony Music Group

Laura and Greg Spivy

The Swig Company

Dirk Wakeham

Wurl, LLC

$24,999 – $10,000

Anonymous

Mr. Javier E. Arango

Eran Ashany

John Audino

CAA Foundation

The Cannon Family

Capital Group

College Futures Foundation

Deloitte

Roberta and Steve Denning

Monica and David Dixon

Ray and Dagmar Dolby Fund

Dunn Family Charitable Foundation

Rod Ferguson and Kathleen Egan

Adrian Fenty

Flora Family Foundation

Nanci and Gary Fredkin

William G. Gilmore Foundation

Greater New Orleans Foundation’s IMPACT Program

Renata Dionello and Taylor Hinshaw

Horizon Media

The Katus-Nelson Family

Keller Family Foundation

Kelly Foundation

Stacey and Charles King

Esmeralda Ayala and Jason Lau

Closed Loop

Our Donors (continued)

Jose Mena

MGM Resorts Foundation

Dr. Sarah Schoellkopf and William Neil

The Nussdorf Family Foundation

Gloria Principe and John O’Farrell

Paul Quinn College

Pro Bono Publico Foundation

Prosperity Denver Fund

Ranadivé Foundation

Stephen and Sandy Rosenthal Fund

Salazar Family Foundation

Judi Smith

Douglas Spreng Fund

TJX Companies, Inc.

Toyin Ajayi

Ventana Property Services Community

Mark Williams

Linda and Craig Yoder

$9,999 – $5,000

Diana and Alex Adamson

Russlynn Ali

Ralph and Marla Andersen Family Fund of the Sacramento Region Community Foundation

Steve Anderson

Anonymous

Shirley M. Benzley

Erin Chalmers

Patricia and Tim Daniels

Enterprise Holdings Foundation

Thomas & Eva Fong Foundation

Renee Fung

Cliff and Leslie Gilbert-Lurie

The John & Marcia Goldman Foundation

Goldman Sachs & Co.

Roger and Jane Goodell

Allegra Gordon

Roger Guyett

#HalfMyDAF

Harry Paul Ive

Shirley M. Collado, Ph.D. and A. Van

Jordan

Cynthia and Bert Keely

Peter Lattman

Jennifer Palmieri and Jim Lyons

Neil and Kate Malik

Worthy McCartney

Mikuni Charitable Organization

Michelle Jubelirer and Keith Nelson

Alison Polkinhorne

David Polkinhorne

Jennifer and Matthew Polly

Tracey and Brad Powell

Caroline Swanson Price

Wendy and Ted Ramsey

Sarah Reed

Sinclair M. Skinner

Kirk and Bonnie Steele

Erna & Isaac Stern Foundation Inc.

Renee and Owen Taylor

Tecumseh Foundation

TOR Wealth Advisors

Diane Trombetta

Jeanne Tschann

$4,999 – $1,000

Anonymous

Jason Bandlow and Jessica Goldberg

Minnie Baylor-Henry

Susi and Peter Browne

Kai Campbell

Wilfrido Loor Canizares

Karen Cator

Chowdhury Family Fund

CoBank

Commerce Media Holdings

Cornerstone Institute

Charles Cycon

Arne and Karen Duncan Fund at The Chicago Community Foundation

Shanna and Robert Frati

Nancy Friedman

Douglas Gansler

Jeff Garelick

Gass Family Fund

Gather Consulting

Michele and John Gillett

Chloe Gordon

Sandra Luo and Mudit Goyal

Damon Griggs

Alison Hagan

Phinis Jones

Brian Chand and Anita Joseph

JSG

Robert Kapp

Steven and Nancy Kassel

Julie Kaufman

Kristina Kiehl

Annie and James LaPlante

Chloe Lee

Debbra and Don Lindo

Nancy and Thomas Lue

Gurshaan Madan

Zeni Mallari and Family

Bonnie Matlock

Joan Heinsheimer and Kathleen McCallum

Nicole Embury and Megan Miranda

Lily and Riaz Moledina

Tiffany Murphy

Nancy Ni

Northern Arizona University

Benjamin Orwin

Amy Phee

Richard and Luzaida Pietri

Monica Ray

Susan Lewis and Joseph Reventas

Loren Rodgers

Shay-La Romney

Lauren Lax and Daniel Rosenfeld

Andrew Salisbury

San Jose State University

RJ Scaringe

Katie Albright and Jake Schatz

Nicole Taylor and Steve Seleznow

Eric and Araceli Solis

Michael Sorrell

Brad Squires

The Starbucks Foundation

The Tangherlini Family

Jordan Taylor

Sarah and Jay Thayer

Susan Barnes and Guy Tribble

Leroy Tripette

Tulane SOM/University Medical Center

Mallory and Schuyler Ullman

Wendi Van der Meer

Ellen Goldsmith-Vein and Jon Vein

Brittany and Marcellus Wade

Dr. Ann Tsukamoto-Weissman and Dr. Irving Weissman

Eric Murphy and Tim Wu

Darryl Yeer

College Track Board of Directors

Laurene Powell Jobs

Chair and Co-Founder

David B. Singer Vice Chair

Omar Karim Secretary

will.i.am

Toyin Ajayi

Esme Ayala

Michael Beckwith

Lynn Feintech

Charles King

Darell Krasnoff

Debbra Lindo

Marc Mazur

Michael Sorrell, Ed.D.

Tim Wu

College Track Ambassadors

Andy Dreyfus

Mildred García, Ed.D.

Cynthia Keely

Eric Kim

Marshall Lott

Nancy Lue

Jonathan Mildenhall

Colorado

Aurora 15559 E Iliff Avenue

Aurora, CO 80013 (720) 748-7736

Denver

4777 National Western Drive

Denver, CO 80216 (757) 903-9380

D.C. Metro Area

Prince George’s County

5001 Silver Hill Road Suite 106

Suitland, MD 20746 (301) 453-5510

Southeast D.C.

620 Milwaukee Place S.E.

Washington, DC 20032 (202) 810-2746

Los Angeles

Boyle Heights

2130 E. First Street, Suite 2700

Los Angeles, CA 90033 (323) 360-0730

Crenshaw District 3626 11th Avenue

Los Angeles, CA 90018 (323) 318-3770

Watts 2265 E. 103 Street

Los Angeles, CA 90002 (323) 621-6740 ext. 230

New Orleans

New Orleans

2225 Congress Street, Floor 2 New Orleans, LA 70117 (504) 577-2021

Northern California

East Palo Alto 1877 Bay Road East Palo Alto, CA 94303 (650) 614-4875

Oakland

483 9th Street, Suite 200 Oakland, CA 94607 (510) 835-1770

Sacramento 2450 Alhambra Boulevard, Suite 100 Sacramento, CA 95817 (916) 287-8624

San Francisco 4301 3rd Street San Francisco, CA 94124 (415) 206-9995

College Track Headquarters: 483 9th Street, Suite 200 • Oakland, CA 94607 (510) 834-3295 collegetrack.org

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