Destination: Temple
By the time he was just 8 years old, Wise knew he was part of the LGBTQ community, and he also suspected that his conservative family wouldn’t accept it. As he aged, he realized his school community—a now-shuttered Christian high school near Hershey, Pennsylvania—likely wouldn’t either.
So, he kept it all inside.
“It made high school and my life difficult. I was never able to be my true authentic self,” Wise said. “It’s not fun, but it’s not an abnormal experience. A lot of people experience it. And I’m one of the fortunate ones to make it out and survive it.”
For Wise, heading to Temple for college was more than just a pathway to a profession. It was a life raft. Working at Hershey’s Chocolate World during high school, he heard positive things from coworkers who visited or attended Temple. And he knew he’d find a more accepting community in a big city.
When it came time to start applying for college, Wise was interested in the uncommon obscure major of community development, an interdisciplinary field that teaches a bevy of hard and soft skills aligned with public administration and urban planning and public service. Temple was one of just a few universities Wise could find that offered the major. A surprise call from then-Department Chair Deborah Howe telling Wise more about the major sealed the decision. He’d be a Temple Owl.