Hobbies and interests
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Reading
Education
Academic
Biography
Classics
Anthropology
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Environment
Economics
Historical
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Philosophy
Politics
Psychology
Sociology
I read books daily
US CITIZENSHIP
US Citizen
Chase Podsakoff
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FinalistChase Podsakoff
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FinalistBio
I am on my way to doing my life's work: change the education system. As a high school dropout, college was once the furthest thing from my mind. But 4 years after I was supposed to graduate from high school, curiosity struck me. I began to wonder how trees "worked," how the sun "worked," how feelings and emotions "worked." After my 7am to 4pm construction job, I would come home and google search all of my curiosities. After months of doing this, I had accumulated a decent amount of internet knowledge. Some day soon after that I said to myself, "I wish there was a way to verify that I know these things. Like a certificate..."
That was the moment I realized I needed to go back to school. I decided to earn my G.E.D. I proceeded to earn my associate's degree in construction management. Then I earned my BA in Sociology from the University of California, Berkeley. Now I am earning my MSc in Global Development to tackle some of the most pressing issues of our time; one of which is education.
I believe that every student has the capabilities to make the most of themselves. Luck brought the most inspiring college professors into my circle. They encouraged me to take risks, fail, learn from them and try again. If only this could have been fostered during my time in grade-school. It has become my mission to make sure students live up to their potential. I aim to discover the effects of pedagogy on student outcomes within and beyond school. With your support, we can change the world by changing education!
Education
University of California-Berkeley
Master's degree programMajors:
- International/Global Studies
University of California-Berkeley
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Sociology
Minors:
- International/Global Studies
- Education, General
Fullerton College
Associate's degree programMajors:
- Construction Management
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
Career
Dream career field:
Education
Dream career goals:
Creative Director- I would like to research and discover the teaching methods/styles which yield the highest student outcomes in students' post education lives.
Supplemental Instructor
Fullerton College2015 – 20172 yearsAssistant General Contractor
J & S Construction and Property Management2011 – 20154 years
Finances
Loans
Granite State Management and Resources
Borrowed: January 1, 20202,275
Principal borrowed2,275
Principal remaining
Interest rate:
3.75%
Granite State Management and Resources
Borrowed: January 1, 20195,500
Principal borrowed5,500
Principal remaining
Interest rate:
3.75%
Granite State Management and Resources
Borrowed: January 1, 20195,500
Principal borrowed5,500
Principal remaining
Interest rate:
3.75%
Granite State Management and Resources
Borrowed: January 1, 20185,500
Principal borrowed5,500
Principal remaining
Interest rate:
3.75%
Granite State Management and Resources
Borrowed: January 1, 20175,500
Principal borrowed5,500
Principal remaining
Interest rate:
3.75%
Sports
Tennis
Intramural2019 – Present5 years
Racquetball
Intramural2017 – 20192 years
Bouldering
Intramural2020 – 2020
Basketball
Varsity2007 – 20092 years
Research
International/Global Studies
Blum Center for Developing Economies — Program Researcher2019 – 2019Education Policy Analysis
University of California, Berkeley- Demography Department — Undergraduate Researcher2019 – 2019
Public services
Volunteering
MSc in Global Development — Mentor2021 – PresentVolunteering
School on Wheels — Tutor/Mentor2017 – 2017Volunteering
Kindercaminata — Sociology club coordinator- engage with and light the spark in kindergarteners to consider going to community college once they finish high school.2015 – 2016
Future Interests
Advocacy
Politics
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Charles R. Ullman & Associates Educational Support Scholarship
One's individual responsibility to help and support one another should not be restricted by boundaries based on traditional definitions of community. These traditional definitions of a community may be understood as physical or geographical boundaries, social boundaries, familial ties, shared livelihood strategies, racial groups, religious groups, or some other identity composition. First, it is imperative to reframe the community as a malleable and ever-changing space. The community has historically been understood in terms of arbitrary lines of demarcation at best; and political projects at worst. By stepping out of this traditional framework, we open ourselves to understand our community as our constant engagement with any people in any given space, whether or not we ascribe to that specific space, people, culture, or lifestyle. In other words, the community is a place that we are continuously engaged in, no matter where we are. It is simultaneously a place for agency and a structure that shapes our actions, behaviors, and understandings of the world. With this new understanding as a point of departure, people can reimagine their involvement within every community in a way that is not so different from their engagement in their original community.
People being involved in a community is important for a host of reasons. Involvement fosters connections and builds trust. Involvement creates space for differences to be celebrated. It can also act as a source of stability and inspiration within the community. Both familiar and foreign communities should be engaged in a way that leads with these reasons.
In the summer of 2017 in my home community of Los Angeles, I was a volunteer tutor for homeless children. The program I volunteered for was a 501c3, non-profit organization called School on Wheels. Located in an office directly on Skid Row, the most impoverished area in downtown Los Angeles, I tutored six days a week. Most of my students were between the ages of five and 12 years old. They all lived in temporary housing such as churches, motels, or cars. My official role was to tutor them in their school subjects but I quickly found that my unofficial role was much greater than that.
One of my students, a six-year-old boy named Michael, came into the tutoring center one day not acting like the happy, cheerful Michael I had come to know over the recent weeks. Today his eyes were fixed towards the floor as he slowly and silently made his way through the room full of children’s laughter and cheerful outbursts. His shoulders were slumped and his head was low. Before he sat down at our tutoring session, I walked over to him and dropped to a knee to meet his eye contact. As I asked him what was going on. He avoided my eyes. I remained on one knee, kept eye contact with him, and asked him if I could do anything to help him. He was silent and continued to stare away from me. I asked if he needed a hug. Without words, he nodded his head and leaned into me with his arms open. He then whispered to me that he slept on the street last night with his family, including his baby sister. They got kicked out of the motel they were staying in for failing to pay and the local church was full; his family had nowhere else to go. Quietly, he told me that he was scared. As I held Michael closer I knew then that my responsibility to him, as well as the rest of my students, was much greater than being a school tutor. I had to be there to support them, inspire them, and be a force of stability in their lives. We continued our tutoring session. I could see he was happier and more focused on school after he had talked to me. As the tutoring session went on, he slowly returned to being the happy, cheerful Michael I knew.
Here I began to understand the role that school can play in shaping the outcomes of precarious children. While stable living conditions, family continuity, and food security were rarities in my students’ lives, I realized that school could ameliorate some of these factors. Furthermore, I realized that teachers’ pedagogy shapes student outcomes; not only in the classroom but in their lives as well. Anecdotally discovering that precarious youth could benefit from certain pedagogical practices has informed my drive to uncover more empirical evidence on this subject.
One year later in the Summer of 2018, I was attending the University of California, Berkeley as an undergraduate. I had earned a scholarship to do eight weeks of fieldwork in Pokhara, Nepal in the education sector. This experience required that I conduct fieldwork within a children’s home in which 85 Tibetan refugees between the ages of three and 18 were housed. As a researcher, I had a much more objective engagement with this community. However, whether I was in Los Angeles or Nepal, my mission was the same: to support the children, be a force of stability, and inspire them to uncover their dreams to envision a future they wish to become their reality.
With my experience in these two communities, I have realized that I can do more. So I have taken my drive to help children to a higher level by pursuing a career in pedagogical research and educational policy reform. As a part of my MSc in Global Development, I am currently researching the effect of different pedagogical models on student self-efficacy in Pokhara, Nepal. I want to uncover the pedagogical styles that are most effective at inspiring children and increasing their self-confidence so they see themselves as the force of change towards the life they want. If awarded the Charles R. Ullman & Associates Educational Support Scholarship, I will utilize the funds to continue this research. Ultimately, I aim to bring this project to Los Angeles and begin to inform teacher's pedagogical styles in my community.