Nicole DeCapua ’05CPS, ’07MPS, ’09PD Succeeds in the Face of Adversity

March 09, 2012

Nicole DeCapua ’05CPS, ’07MPS, ’09PD knows all about the value of persistence. She  lives with the realization that opportunity often comes to us disguised as misfortune, and is committed to encouraging others to follow her example when it comes to overcoming challenges.

A triple St. John’s University alumna who expects to receive her Ed.D. from Creighton University in December 2013, DeCapua is currently Associate Director of the Academically Gifted and Talented Program at Montclair State University (NJ). She describes the program as “…a mini-college for kids from kindergarten to 11th grade who are gifted and talented.” The program is held on weekends and during the summer and offers both academic and fun classes for young people who have been tested and proven to have special talents.

“The best part of my job is being able to create classes and find teachers who are as passionate about education as I am,” she said. “It’s kind of amazing to see the classes that I put together, that I personally come up with, and literally watch the students in those classes becoming educated right before my eyes.”

DeCapua acknowledges that she wasn’t always committed to excellence in education, and believes that if it wasn’t for St. John’s, she would not be as successful as she is today. Many of her family members had attended the University, making it an almost foregone conclusion that she would follow in their footsteps.

The journey, however, wasn’t easy.

“I wasn’t the most stellar student coming in,” she recalled, “and I was actually conditionally admitted. I had two years to prove myself and if at the end of those two years my grades weren’t 3.0 or better, I would be granted an Associate’s Degree and that would be it.”

She was making good progress until her Dad developed a serious form of cancer. An only child in a single parent home, she cared for him until he passed away during the second semester of her Sophomore year. At that point she was physically and emotionally drained and had decided to discontinue her education.

“When my father passed away in March of 2003 I wasn’t where I should have been,” she said, “so I went to the Dean of St. John’s College of Professional Studies and told her that I was done, and that I was dropping out of St. John’s because I just couldn’t do it. Everyone, from the Dean to the secretaries, basically begged me to stay on until the end of the semester. They pleaded with me to just stay until May, when the semester would be over. They told me to finish it out in the best way that I could.”

Moved by the faith that the St. John’s staff had in her, DeCapua agreed to remain. By the time the semester was over she had gotten back on track and was offered a spot in the four-year program. She went on to complete her B.S. in Legal Studies, made the Dean’s List, was offered a position as a Graduate Assistant with the professor who had become her mentor and friend, Dr. James O’Keefe ’79SVC and subsequently earned her M.P.S. in Criminal Justice and Professional Diploma in Instructional Leadership and Administration.

She had come a long way since the darkest days of her life, and was driven to succeed as much for those who believed in her as for herself.

“I wanted to be who those people wanted me to become after they put so much faith in me,” she noted. “I couldn’t believe that they cared so much about one individual student when there were literally hundreds of students for them to be concerned about. That’s when I realized that St. John’s wasn’t just a school – St. John’s was a family. I had made a family there, and that was very important for me.”

DeCapua believes that the way the University rallied around her when she was feeling overwhelmed is a reflection of the values that seem to be a part of everything that happens at St. John’s. She is proud of those values and goes out of her way to carry them into every area of her personal and professional life. An appreciation of what the University did for her serves as the foundation for what she does for others, a characteristic that she finds in so many St. John’s alumni.

“The people at the University are living proof that the Vincentian mission still exists in 2012,” she remarked. “St. John’s graduates still hold on to that mission, because when we were there that’s what was instilled in us. You find St. John’s alumni wherever you go, and if you’re from St. John’s, that mission and those values are in your life. It might sound trite, but I know that St. John’s made me who I am today, and I will always make it a point to do whatever I can for people, because that’s what was done for me. Helping to inspire others, especially the young people whom I work with every day, is my way of saying thank you to the University that didn’t let me slip away when things were tough.”