
Getting her high school diploma and an associate’s degree at 18 is beyond what Von Steuben Metropolitan High School’s valedictorian could have expected when she came to the United States from Morocco eight years ago.
“Coming [here] told me that I could do anything that I may or may not have been able to do in Morocco,” Salma Elananni says, “even if i worked hard and studied as much as i could there.”
Early on at Peterson Elementary School, not knowing English meant her classmates and teachers’ “made me feel like there was a bridge [separating us] that I never felt before,” she says. “Also, people assumed that because you didn’t speak English, you were less intelligent or slow, which is not true. It was a difficult thing to get past, too, being able to tell them, ‘No, just because I don’t speak the language doesn't mean I’m stupid.’ ”
That inspired her to learn the language as quickly as she could and to excel academically.
At Von Steuben, 5039 N. Kimball Ave., she took care of her school work by day, then took college courses at night at DeVry Advantage Academy.
“It’s incredible that you can be in the top of your class in your second language,” her high school counselor Julienne Rickersaid says. “She’s very independent and self-sufficient, and she can usually figure out how to solve a problem on her own.”
When Salma heard junior year about the dual-enrollment program that would award her an associate’s degree in network systems administration, she says, “It was an opportunity that I never thought that I’d be able to get,” to get her diploma and associate’s degree at 18.
She’s hoping that helps her graduate early from DePaul University, where she’ll study actuarial science.