Washington, DC
Gender
Female
Ethnicity
Hispanic/Latino, Caucasian
Hobbies and interests
Running
Business And Entrepreneurship
Art
Mental Health
Reading
Adult Fiction
Fantasy
Science Fiction
I read books daily
elyse echegaray
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Finalistelyse echegaray
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FinalistBio
Elyse is a graduate student who has a passion for the well-being of children and their families, with a special interest in immigration. She conducted in-field research with New Sanctuary Movement activists and immigrants in Ohio for her senior thesis. After graduation Elyse began her career as an early childhood educator in southern Vermont, working with children ages 1 - 6. In 2021, Elyse moved to Washington, DC and worked at Making Cents International, Elyse worked across the project portfolio, supporting project delivery staff.
Elyse is a Project Management and Operations Analyst at Abt Associates. She is currently working on USAID's Local Health Systems Strengthening Project, she is committed to her daily work on the project supporting important daily functions, managing project-wide meetings, supporting the execution of grants in multiple countries, and managing project wide communications.
Elyse is also a full-time graduate student at George Washington University's Graduate School of Education and Human Development as part of their 2023 Cohort in their Clinical Mental Health Counseling program. She is excited to continue her work at Abt while also pursuing her education in this exciting and important field.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/elyse-echegaray
Education
George Washington University
Master's degree programMajors:
- Clinical, Counseling and Applied Psychology
GPA:
4
The College of Wooster
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Sociology
- History
GPA:
3.8
Career
Dream career field:
Mental Health Care
Dream career goals:
Co-Owner/Co-Founder
St. Severance Vintage (reselling and curated vintage finds)2023 – Present1 yearTeacher
Horizon Early Learning Center2020 – 20211 yearAssociate
Making Cents International2021 – 20221 yearAnalyst
Abt Associates2022 – Present2 years
Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
Growing up in a Latino household, I saw my family struggle with mental health issues throughout my childhood and young adulthood. When I was 5 my uncle committed suicide after immigrating to the United States, after suffering from mental illness his whole life. Growing up in Uruguay during the 80s and 90s, mental health was not important to the community and country that was going through a political crisis. Ultimately, survival was more important than self-care. My family experienced trauma that they carried with them when coming to the United States. This impacted their (and my) daily life in unfathomable ways and that ultimately culminated in the completion of suicide by my uncle, Jorge.
I, myself, also struggled with depression and anxiety that impacted my daily life. I was surrounded by family that battled with addiction and depression, and didn't have neither the vocabulary nor resources to manage these illnesses. I often wondered and struggled with how to make it out of these conditions and to articulate to myself what was even going on. At 5 I didn't have the words and rationale for why my uncle died. Neither did my family. Growing up, it was easier to ignore and move forward than to address these issues.
As a child, I loved history and wanted to study history in college. I was not interested in mental health or psychology, I reeled from it because it threatened to dredge up the parts of my history I didn't want to face. In college, I conducted an ethnography and oral history of refugees in the New Sanctuary Movement in Ohio as part of my senior independent study. I had the privilege to speak with those seeking asylum by living in churches (or any other religious space protected informally from ICE) that offered sanctuary from immigration for extended periods of time. Some of my contributors lived in these churches for over a year, never leaving the actual building except to walk around the church parking lot or garden so as to not risk deportation. By this point I was a history and sociology major, and mental health or psychology were the furthest thing from my mind and interests. But speaking with my contributors, their support network, and other authorities in the subject, it became apparent that those in Sanctuary were experiencing devastating effects on their mental health. They reported anxiety, depression, and one woman even had an emotional support animal that now lived with her in Sanctuary.
My contributors told me about the stress of an ongoing battle with immigration, family separation, and isolation all compounded. It was difficult to not draw parallels to my own family, who immigrated to the United States in waves. My father left his family at 16 and came to the United States at 20 before his mother and brothers came nearly a decade later. My family missed Uruguay, and my family was mixed-status (meaning some members of my family were undocumented/"sin papels"). These experiences of immigration fascinated me, and as a historian and sociologist, I also saw the institutional factors that resulted in these experiences.
However, even at this point where I saw the clear connection between mental health, migration, race, and history, I was still not interested in pursuing a career in mental health. I took the GRE and was going to take a year off between graduating in 2020 to apply to programs and work. However, when Covid-19 happened I found my life and my plan uprooted. Work was difficult to find as a recent graduate, and I felt unimportant. My depression returned stronger than it had ever before, and I began to see my own therapist twice weekly to try and mitigate my symptoms. I was unsure where to turn and where to go next. The only job I got was as an early childhood educator in Southern Vermont. I packed up the car with my partner and moved to Vermont in the summer of 2020, which would change my life forever.
I didn't know this experience would solidify my goal of being a mental health professional. It was my first time in a classroom working with wonderful, unique children. At our first staff meeting, I learned about returning students and their unique circumstances. I was struck by the complexity and thoughtfulness we created in our classrooms through a trauma-informed approach.
I took professional development courses in early childhood development, identifying and preventing child sexual abuse, trauma-informed care, and creating a trauma-informed classroom. My coursework on TIC was especially illuminating as it helped me further contextualize and better understand my students, people I encountered in my everyday life, and myself as well. Taking the ACES test, I realized I had trauma that continued to impact my everyday life as an adult. I had several students experiencing family separation, exposure to addiction and drug use, and abuse. The foundation of my professional development and experience applying it to my classroom solidified my drive to work with children and their families in a direct capacity. In my career as a mental health counselor, I want to focus on working with children. I also hope to work with recent migrants to the United States to support those who may be coming from a culture or country that stigmatizes mental health like my own family's did.
Currently, I am working in the international development field. I knew I wanted to attend graduate school for clinical counseling, but being an educator I did not have the financial resources to do so. As an educator I gave 110% of my energy and time to my students in a field that is underpaid and undervalued.
While I love working in the international space, I miss working in a client-focused setting with children, adolescents, and families. I knew it was time to take the plunge and really apply for graduate school, I am currently a first year graduate student at George Washington University in DC going for my dream.
Meaningful Existence Scholarship
After graduating from the College of Wooster, I began the most informative experience that solidified my goal of being a mental health professional. I became an early childhood educator in southeast Vermont. It was my first time in a classroom working with wonderful, unique children. At our first staff meeting, I learned about returning students and their unique circumstances. This conversation would ultimately frame our entire school year by understanding our students individually and how we were going to support them inside and outside the classroom. I was struck by the complexity and thoughtfulness we created in our classrooms through a trauma-informed approach.
As part of my work as an Early Childhood Educator, I took professional development courses in early childhood development, identifying and preventing child sexual abuse, trauma-informed care, and creating a trauma-informed classroom. My coursework on TIC was especially illuminating as it helped me further contextualize and better understand my students, people I encountered in my everyday life, and myself as well. In my classroom, I had several students experiencing family separation, exposure to addiction and drug use, and abuse. Having the toolset and skills to mitigate stress and anxiety in the classroom was essential to create a safe space for them. The foundation of my professional development and experience applying it to my classroom solidified my drive to work with children and their families in a direct capacity. In my career as a mental health counselor, I want to focus on working with children, adolescents, teens, and families.
Currently, I am working in the international development field. After I left Vermont, I began working as a project management associate for a contractor that implemented USAID-funded projects across a diverse range of subject areas. These projects were around gender-based violence and impunity, rule of law, governance, and youth empowerment for communities around the world. Getting to see these unique and diverse perspectives allowed me to approach my work with cultural relativism and competency. Working with our global partners, both our field project consultants and at USAID, allowed me to collaborate and synthesize ideas with people I otherwise wouldn’t have known.
While I love working in the international space, I miss working in a client-focused setting with children, adolescents, and families. I miss that face-to-face time and connection with others and being able to see and feel my impact on others. In particular, I miss being with young people and their families. I hope one day to connect my passion for working with immigrants, the international community, and the practice of mental health counseling. In the fall I will begin my first year of graduate school at George Washington University, studying clinical mental health counseling. I am going to be a full-time student and working full-time as well. I am excited, passionate, nervous, undaunted, and ready to take this leap for my career and future as a therapist.