11/11/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/11/2025 12:35
The Relentless Journey of Markee Marshall
When Markee Marshall arrived at Cheyney University, he owned just one outfit and a room key. No luggage. No grand plan. Just belief, urgency, and a campus willing to bet on him.
Before arriving at Cheyney, Marshall was searching for the right next step. He knew community college had given him a foundation, but he wanted something more. With little time, limited resources, and a determination to keep moving forward, he reached out to Cheyney. Dr. Edwards handed him a key, and Marshall boarded a bus wearing the only clothes he had. It was a leap of faith-and the beginning of everything.
Born in West Philadelphia, Marshall's path to Cheyney wasn't simple. Before becoming a senior Communications and Criminal Justice major, he spent time at Community College of Philadelphia, juggling classes with jobs at City Blue and FedEx. He describes CCP as "the pivot," a place where he was stacking money, figuring life out, and trying to decide what came next. In his own words, he was "CCP trained, but Cheyney made."
"I didn't know what I was going to do," he says. "I started as a business major, but I knew it wasn't for me. I just figured I'd work, stack my checks, and eventually move on."
What changed wasn't one single moment, but a series of opportunities that forced him out of his comfort zone. That's where Cheyney stepped in.
"Cheyney really is what you make it," Marshall says. And he means it. From modeling and magazine club to fashion shows and skateboarding on campus, he threw himself into everything. Some things stuck. Some didn't. But every experience mattered.
"If you want to be a doctor, they're going to put you around doctors. If you want to be a lawyer, they'll push you toward law," he says. "But you've got to start living that life now."
Today, Marshall is firmly on the path to law school. He's completed internships with the Urban League and the First Judicial District, where he spent time in courtrooms, spaces that once would have overwhelmed him.
"If I was 18 or 19 walking into that courtroom, I'd have been like, whoa. But now? It feels normal," he says. "Professionals there respect me because I'm trying to understand how to be the best."
Internships led to networking. Networking led to growth. And growth led to clarity. "CCP was the pivot to college. Cheyney is the pivot to the professional world," he explains. "This is where it gets real."
One of the most unexpected things Marshall discovered at Cheyney was himself. He didn't even know he liked fashion until classmates started complimenting his style. He tried modeling, liked it, then realized it wasn't his lane. He joined clubs, left clubs, tried new things, and learned from every experiment.
"Do everything," he says. "Apply for everything. Try everything-even the stuff you think isn't for you. You'll learn fast what works and what doesn't."
For him, every opportunity sharpened his focus. Law is the goal, and he's preparing accordingly: LSAT practice, internships, professional relationships, and professors who challenge him.
If Marshall could talk to his 18-year-old self, he'd keep it honest:
"Get the fun out of the way early," he says. "Because eventually your whole mind will be on what's next."
Jobs that didn't build toward his future, selling sneakers, lifting packages, were temporary. Now, everything he does is intentional.
"Every job, every internship should be moving you toward where you want to be."
But his message to the freshmen entering Cheyney in 2026 is even simpler:
"You won't know what you came here for at 18 and that's okay. Try everything. You'll find your lane."
For many students, college is a place to earn a degree. For Marshall, it was a place to become someone.
He arrived on campus with one outfit. He will leave with a degree, a professional network, courtroom experience, and a vision for his life. When asked why students should choose Cheyney, he doesn't hesitate:
"They're going to throw you to the wolves-and that's a good thing. You'll learn. You'll grow. And when it's time to go into the real world, you'll already be ready."
And that, more than anything, is the story of Markee Marshall. Not just where he came from, but where he's going.