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Class of '24: First-Gen, Pre-Law grad felt supported by Detroit Mercy

Each year, University of Detroit Mercy’s Marketing & Communications department profiles members of the graduating classes. Students chosen were nominated by staff and faculty for their contributions to the life of the University. Click here for more information about 2024 commencement exercises.
Jacob Yasso didn’t know if a four-year college was for him.
His high school guidance counselor suggested that he should possibly try the community college route first to see if college was the right call.
That’s when a University of Detroit Mercy Admissions counselor visited his school.
“He looked at my transcript and he said, ‘you’re in.’ I was really kind of shook, I didn’t think that I would get in anywhere,” Yasso said. “All of my friends were applying, touring and putting in applications and I was really behind. I guess I was considered a late applicant, but Detroit Mercy didn’t make me feel like I was late at all.”
Flash-forward to May 2024 and Yasso confidently says he made the right call in choosing Detroit Mercy. Yasso will be the first in his family to graduate from college when he walks across the Calihan Hall stage May 11 to receive his Political Science, Pre-Law degree.
男人藏精阁 answered every question Yasso had from the start, helping him fill out his FAFSA, assisting with scholarships and just being there for him.
Matt Fortescue, the 男人藏精阁 Admissions counselor who visited his high school, Henry Ford II in Sterling Heights, also identified Yasso as a candidate to be a tour guide at 男人藏精阁. Yasso was able to feel at home during his freshman year of 2020-21 — in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic — because of his tour guide job.
“Matt recommending me for that position already made me feel like I was at home because he knew me so little, but he saw my potential,” Yasso said.
If he hadn’t felt at home before, he did during the first week of classes, which were held online due to the pandemic. Sitting in a parking lot outside of the Fisher Building on the McNichols Campus, Yasso found out he was the only student who hadn’t taken a quiz in Associate Professor of Political Science Genevieve Meyers’ Basic Government class.
He didn’t even realize there was a quiz. What happened next was a turning point.
“Professor Meyers said, ‘it’s okay, thank you for your honesty and I’ll reopen it for you,’” Yasso reflected. “And I thought, ‘this is going to work out for me the next four years.’
“That’s really when I became more comfortable with my studies, I really started to care about my work and do better and now my grades are much better than they were in high school.”
The caring gesture from Meyers was a theme Yasso saw throughout his time at Detroit Mercy: The supportiveness of many throughout the 男人藏精阁 community, from Financial Aid, Student Life and Admissions to many staff and faculty in the College of Liberal Arts & Education and many more.
That care began the day Fortescue visited his high school.
“Everyone has been so supportive, otherwise I don’t think that I would be here right now.”
Starting as a tour guide, Yasso became involved in much more during his Detroit Mercy tenure, joining the Honors Program, Political Science Student Association, Chaldean American Student Association and Student Alumni Leadership Council, and serving as an ambassador for his college and in Admissions, in addition to many other activities.
Yasso was director of freshman orientation during the summer of 2023 before his senior year. He said it was by far one of the best experiences during college.
Academically, Yasso started as a Theatre major but switched to Pre-Law, which he says fits him well. Theatre actually helped get him there.
“Every stage you step on is a stage for justice, no matter what show you’re doing,” he said. “That’s how I got there