I started college as a single mother on public assistance, with a GED. I had recently gone through a divorce and was living in my parents’ house with my two children. I worked full time for a business that was new and booming with growth. However, the department I worked in was an experimental department. The time had come when the company I worked for had to make a decision on whether the department was beneficial to the business. They had to decide whether to keep the department and expand or dismantle it all together. This both terrified me and prompted me to look at my future in a whole new light. I knew my income was higher than it had ever been before and that I enjoyed my job, but the probability of continuing to make that income in a position that I enjoyed if I lost this job was slim. With that being said, I started to weigh my options and look at local programs that were available.
When I told my parents I had applied to college they were proud of me, but their first question was, “Can you afford it?” I told them I had researched it and I believed I could with financial aid. I had completed my FASFA and turned in my application. I was just waiting to hear something from Gainesville State College. I took my entrance exams, and I was ecstatic when I received my acceptance letter. My parents were ecstatic for me as well, but none of us knew what to expect or what to do.
I started in Math Support, but in my first semester, I had a professor that saw something in me. Jürgen Grandt referred me to the Honors Program. I took Honors classes the next semester while I took Math Support for the second time. That semester, both of my children had to have surgeries. I spoke with my professors, and they worked with me to get my coursework done. I spoke with everyone I had access to. If I hit a hurdle I was in someone’s office asking for advice. I was tenacious. I used all of my resources and thanked God that I was on a campus that had a large population of Non-Tradition Adult learners who could empathize with me. I was surrounded by professors who cared and wanted to see me succeed. I participated in clubs and committees and soon found myself part of a larger family. This family grew even more as we went through consolidation with North Georgia State College and University to become the University of North Georgia.
Before I knew it, I was eligible to graduate with my Associate Degree in Psychology. I was the first in my immediate family to have a college degree. Not only did I graduate, but I was one of the first two students to graduate in the Honors Program from the University of North Georgia.
I continued my education on the Gainesville campus as a Human Services Delivery and Administration student. I was elected and served as the President of the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society, and attended HSDA club meetings, and some SGA meetings. I attended the Student Conference on Leadership. I served on a search committee for the AVP of Student Affairs and completed my Service Learning hours, with a good portion of them being served under the new AVP for student affairs, Dr. Cara Ray. During that time I was able to involved in the planning of the Student Conference on Leadership. I was involved but involved at a pace that was comfortable for my family and I. I even took a dance class with one of my best friends as a PE credit and had the time of my life.
During this time I had hurdles in my personal life as well as my educational life. I went to my advisors overwhelmed and in tears on more than one occasion. They were absolutely wonderful. They always reminded me that I could do it and were there to help. Even when I got so wrapped in up in life that I earned my first and only F. I sat in that professor’s office and cried. She reassured me that I would be ok and that I would succeed regardless. She became a trusted advisor. Not only did I graduate, but I was one of the first two students to graduate in the Honors Program from the University of North Georgia.
I continued my education on the Gainesville campus as a Human Services Delivery and Administration student. I was elected and served as the President of the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society, and attended HSDA club meetings, and some SGA meetings. I attended the Student Conference on Leadership. I served on a search committee for the AVP of Student Affairs and completed my Service Learning hours, with a good portion of them being served under the new AVP for student affairs, Dr. Cara Ray. During that time I was able to involved in the planning of the Student Conference on Leadership. I was involved but involved at a pace that was comfortable for my family and I. I even took a dance class with one of my best friends as a PE credit and had the time of my life.
During this time I had hurdles in my personal life as well as my educational life. I went to my advisors overwhelmed and in tears on more than one occasion. They were absolutely wonderful. They always reminded me that I could do it and were there to help. Even when I got so wrapped in up in life that I earned my first and only F. I sat in that professor’s office and cried. She reassured me that I would be ok and that I would succeed regardless. She became a trusted advisor. I graduated magna cum laude from the University of North Georgia with a Bachelor Degree in Human Services Delivery Administration. I used what I had learned through my service learning to serve the community in my new position at Hall County Treatment Services until I saw an opening at my alma mater, University of North Georgia. I started my journey here a little over a year ago and since then have experienced that same feeling of family, support, and growth as I did as a student.