For 13 years, Northfield's Tackling Obstacles, Raising College Hopes (TORCH) program has thought big.
The multipronged outreach to low-income and first-generation high schoolers makes sure students don't just graduate, but also see college in their future.
From 2004 to 2017, the high school graduation rate of Northfield's Latino students who are enrolled in TORCH shot up from less than 40 percent to well over 90 percent. More than 60 percent of TORCH students now attend a college or technical program.
So when that impressive progress slipped, TORCH's leaders knew just what to do:
Think small.
For the past year, surprise packages have arrived quarterly at TORCH students' college doorsteps and dorm rooms, filled with snacks, a $20 bill or gift card, home-baked cookies and encouraging notes. The gesture is sweet, for sure. But it's playing a role as essential for college retention as assisting students with ACT prep or student aid applications.
"It's the most actionable thing we could do," said TORCH alumni services coordinator Teddy Gelderman, who has worked for the college-success program since 2011.
Gelderman had noticed that promising high school students were dropping out of college — some before classes even started. It wasn't because of grades, "but because they didn't feel like they had a community at the college," he said.