Fighting for Change
- BY NATALIE FEULNER
- May 15, 2020
Yvette Yarbor knows a thing or two about overcoming hurdles.
The 911±¬ÁÏÍøState East Bay graduate proudly calls herself “member of the 50-plus” club and returned to school in January of 2019 alongside her son, who she was told, “would never attend college.”
“It’s now or never to do what it is I really want to do with my life and my career,” Yarbor, a political science major, said. “I returned to be an educational advocate for minority and marginalized students to help them learn to navigate the educational system and be an advocate for themselves.”
It’s a lesson Yarbor has learned herself over the decades.
The product of desegregation busing in California, she learned early on that she wasn’t receiving as equitable an education as her white peers.
“Although the education was OK, the personal experience was traumatic, a lot of the stereotypes and history that you read about that time, it was true, it was the reality for me and my friends,” Yarbor said.
She remembers hearing about opportunities given to white students that she and her black peers were not privy to, and educational tracking — the separation of students into groups only with students whose academic achievements mirror their own – was detrimental.
But determined, Yarbor excelled academically and after high school set her sights on a college degree.
Many years after community college, Yarbor received her Paralegal Certificate from then-CSU Hayward and transferred to St. Mary’s bachelor’s program in law studies. Four weeks before graduation, she was informed that the Associate’s Degree and work she had earned were not transferable. She would not be allowed to graduate.
“I had been diligent in ensuring I registered for all the right classes, confirming I was on the right track … I took it to the president, the provost, but no response,” she said. With three children ranging in age from 6-11-years-old, Yarbor made the painful decision to leave school and focus on her family. It was then, she says, “I became my children’s biggest advocate and the school counselor’s biggest nightmare.”
After her son was diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, Yarbor moved to Oakland to take