That's because all 55 members of the Class of 2011 are headed to college.
"One hundred percent graduation and 100 percent college placement" have been the norm for every LEAP graduating class, says Gloria Bonilla-Santiago, founder and board chairwoman.
"We don't accept excuses," Golden explains. "That's how we do it. . . . I draw a line in the sand the first day of school. Even though they may have been told they're not college material, they are going to college."
LEAP, which will build a separate high school of science and technology across from its Cooper Street campus, has about 900 students in pre-K through 12. Most are from the city, where many of the traditional public schools are floundering and families are often "fragile," as Bonilla-Santiago says.
The school offers eight-hour days and a 200-day year, as well as merit pay for teachers. Services for families include a medical clinic.
"We're trying to break the cycle of poverty," Bonilla-Santiago says.
Robinson lost her father to diabetes when she was 11 and has two older siblings (both in college) and a younger sister. A dispute with her mother's former boyfriend ended with the family's becoming homeless on Nov. 19, 2009.
"It was my 17th birthday," Robinson recalls. "It was a shock. . . . At school I was around people who were laughing about things like iPods, and I was worried about where we were going to live."
Her family ended up at a shelter in Blackwood. "Honestly, from what I came from, it was a nice place," Robinson says. "It felt good, there was food there, there were other people you could talk to."
She was determined to keep playing basketball for her high school, and she was determined to keep up her grades, too. "I fell off," she says. "I had to build myself back up."