Kesha Swaringer, a sophomore who dreams of becoming a global hematologist, is one of those students. Her classes usually consist of about 32 students, she said, making it difficult for students to get one-on-one attention.

City Year — and specifically Iana Garrick — helped change that for Kesha.

“We have a lot of kids assigned to one classroom with just one teacher and having City Year there to assist the teachers is kind of a good thing because you have more attention on the students than just you and the whole class,” Kesha said.

After graduating from La Salle University with a biology degree, Garrick was looking for gap-year programs when she stumbled upon City Year Philadelphia. Now, she works at Kesha’s school, helping in the classroom, tutoring math and English, and crafting after-school programs based on “Jeopardy!” and basketball. For Garrick, the 9½-hour work day is rigorous — and rewarding.

“She can see herself in me,” Garrick said of Kesha. “She knows now that she can be a doctor because she knows someone that’s four years ahead of her.”

Now, through programs such as City Year and GEAR UP, Kesha is able to meet with advisers about her post-high school career and enroll in early courses for college credits.

Permission to dream

Welter’s keynote speech drew laughter as she recounted her unlikely athletic career. In 2015, she began working as an assistant coaching intern for the Arizona Cardinals.

Before, she’d coached — and once competed — for the Arena League’s Texas Revolution team. Her Philly roots didn’t run much deeper than a congratulatory nod to Nick Foles, but the mission of City Year, she said, aligns closely with her beliefs.

“This was a dream that I was never permitted to have, because there was no woman I could look to, and say, ‘I want to be her when I grow up,’ ” Welter said. “So for me, to be able to give that vision, that purpose and even that permission for girls to dream bigger than I ever did, that’s why this is so important.”