Mother and Daughter Set to Graduate from Lincoln Together

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LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pa. – Jabreeah Harris recalls being filled with joy after hearing that she had been accepted to Lincoln University for fall 2013. Her mother, Yolanda Grange, remembers the ecstatic look on her daughters face as they celebrated the news at their home in Wilmington, Delaware.


Jabreeah Harris will graduate in the Class of 2018 with her mom, Yolanda Grange

For Harris, it was the tight-knit sense of community and the small student-faculty ratio that attracted her to Lincoln. Harris credits having open access to her professors and mentors as one of the major factors that led to her success at Lincoln.

“The one-on-one attention you receive from the faculty here is something you may not get at larger institutions,” said Harris.

In just a few days, after countless exams, all-night study sessions, and clinicals at nearby hospitals such as the Nemours Alfred I. DuPont Hospital for Children and the Coatesville Veterans Affairs Medical Center, the nursing major will join her fellow Class of 2018 classmates at Lincoln’s commencement ceremony on May 6.

But unlike her classmates, Harris will graduate alongside her mother, Yolanda Grange.

A Non-Traditional Path


Yolanda Grange will graduate in the Class of 2018 with her daughter, Jabreeah Harris

After working a few years in the finance sector, her department at the wealth management fiduciary was laid off.  Fortunately, Grange had already found a new home at Lincoln as a program assistant in the Office of Student Life and Development.

“Working at Lincoln has been a blessing,” Grange said. “I love helping students navigate their way through the Lincoln community.”

When Grange decided it was time to go back to school to obtain her bachelor’s degree, her decision to study at Lincoln was a no-brainer.

“Like my daughter, I wanted open access to my professors,” Grange said, “I knew I would receive the support I needed from the faculty at Lincoln.

Grange continued working full-time as a program assistant while working towards her degree at University City in Philadelphia where she studied business and entrepreneurship. For 14 months she braved weekend traffic on I-95 to attend her classes that ran from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. every Saturday.

Despite the challenges of going back to school while working full-time and raising a family, Grange was determined to complete her journey.

“I knew it would be hard,” Grange said, “but I wanted to set a standard because I knew my family was watching me.” Grange credits her husband Alden Grange, her son Josiah, and her daughter Jabreeah Harris for serving as her support system.

“I’m so proud of her,” Harris said, “It’s a privilege to graduate with her because despite everything she had on her plate; she still took care of us.”

A New Journey

With a freshly minted nursing degree in hand, Harris will begin her nursing career at the renowned Christiana Care Hospital in Newark, Delaware as an operating room nurse. 

“I’m very excited and ready to get to work,” Harris said, “helping people has always been a passion of mine.”

As for Grange, she plans to complement her business and entrepreneurial studies degree by applying to Lincoln’s MBA program.

“It is my hope that with my education, I can be more of an asset to Lincoln,” said Grange. “I love the faculty and staff here; it feels like family.”

Article and photos by Devin Bonner, Office of Communications and Public Relations

Lincoln University, the nation’s first degree-granting Historically Black College and University (HBCU), educates and empowers students to lead their communities and change the world. Lincoln offers a rigorous liberal arts education to a diverse student body of approximately 2,200 men and women in more than 35 undergraduate and graduate programs.