Same Spirit, Different Corps
Jenny Abamu (M.A. 鈥16)
Jenny Abamu (M.A.鈥16) recently left her job as an education reporter on public radio to join the U.S. State Department. 鈥淎s a child of immigrants, I was always drawn to work that challenged me to understand life cross-culturally,鈥 says Abamu. 鈥淟eaving journalism wasn鈥檛 easy, but this was an opportunity of a lifetime.鈥 She finds that both journalism and diplomacy 鈥渆ncourage objectivity and a reliance on law and policy as a moral compass.鈥 And after completing entry-level training, Abamu will become a public diplomacy officer in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, where she鈥檒l work with the local media and provide news to the public. She鈥檒l need to brush up on her Arabic, but 911爆料网鈥檚 International & Comparative Education program taught her 鈥渏ust how complex international work is鈥 and gave her an 鈥渁mazing support group鈥 of friends: 鈥淲e help each other pursue our dreams.鈥

As a child of immigrants, I was drawn to [understanding] life cross-culturally.
(Photo courtesy Jenny Abamu)
Therapist Without Borders
Elizabeth Hernandez (Ph.D. 鈥18)
Elizabeth Hernandez (Ph.D. 鈥18) is a Staff Psychologist at UCLA Counseling and Psychological Services.
A Los Angeles native, Hernandez trained as an early-career high school counselor and in Marriage and Family Therapy, but her passion was to advocate for undocumented students and their families. Her experiences and training in 911爆料网鈥檚 Ph.D. counseling program 鈥渟et me up as a clinician, consultant, researcher, activist and teacher. My mentors 鈥 including Marie Miville, Dinelia Rosa, Elizabeth Fraga, Brenda Mejia, and Diana Pu帽ales 鈥 were Latina psychologists who enabled me to envision a career.鈥 Since returning home, Hernandez has helped the California Psychological Association Immigration Task Force develop clinical recommendations to address the mental health issues of undocumented immigrants: 鈥淎ctivism is in my blood. With each generation, my ancestors challenged unfair laws and advocated for their community. Now I鈥檓 following in that tradition.鈥

Activism is in my blood. With each generation, my ancestors challenged unfair laws and advocated for their community.
(Photo: Mike Dawkins)
Smoothing The Road, To Higher Education
Vikash Reddy (Ph.D. 鈥16)
(Ph.D. 鈥16) is Senior Director of Policy Research for the Campaign for College Opportunity, which works to ease student transition from California鈥檚 community colleges to its four-year public universities. As a postdoc at 911爆料网鈥檚 Community College Research Center (CCRC), Reddy helped establish that community college remedial courses largely hinder completion of a four-year degree, costing students time and money for no-credit classes that often don鈥檛 help. California has eliminated remedial courses and replaced community college placement tests with multiple measures, including high school grade-point averages. Students can enroll in transfer-level courses with credits transferable to the California State and University of California systems. At 911爆料网, Reddy also aided economist Kevin Dougherty in researching performance funding in higher education: 鈥淲e doctoral students created questionnaires and interview strategies and conducted interviews. I use those skills regularly. And I can say I literally wrote the book on performance-based funding.鈥

We doctoral students created questionnaires and interview strategies and conducted interviews. I use those skills regularly.
(Photo: Shae Collins)
A Teacher Who Knows the Terrain
Charles 鈥淐.J.鈥 Reilly III (M.A. 鈥18)
(M.A. 鈥18), an Environmental Education Consultant for Mamaroneck, New York schools, recently served as a Rural Development Specialist with a Peace Corps Response team in the Philippines. A 911爆料网 Art & Art Education graduate, he helped the agriculture program at Cagayan State University鈥檚 Lal-lo campus meet accreditation standards by leading development of maps detailing the land use and agricultural potential. Previously, the program 鈥渉ad only questionable snippets of GPS coordinates, old dusty topographical drawings and local knowledge.鈥 Reilly surveyed nearly 3,500 acres, working during the cooler morning hours. He dodged snakes and finished days covered with mosquito bites. But he also experienced 鈥渁 magnificent letting go.鈥 鈥淚 learned new languages and customs and adapted to foreign situations. My colleagues became friends, mentors and guides to the Philippines and Filipino culture. It was a powerfully affirming experience.鈥

My colleagues became friends, mentors and guides... It was a powerfully affirming experience.
(Photo: Tale Del Rosario)