ϰٿ Magazine The ϰٿ Fund is all about students
Marshall Pingle ’14 takes his education seriously. “Professor Chapman taught me that only a few people can attend ϰٿ, so we have a responsibility to go out into the world and behave intelligently,” he says. “I know I’m equipped to do critical and creative thinking, and I’m grateful. I didn’t see myself as a student in high school, but I do now. My professors graciously emphasized learning for the sake of learning. I’ve loved ϰٿ. You can’t get away with much when you live in a small community and people care about you, challenge you and want you to grow.”
Generous financial aid helped Marshall attend ϰٿ, including an Orfalea Family Scholarship, a diversity award (his mother is Native American) and a ϰٿ grant. He belongs to the Intercultural Organization and serves as a diversity liaison, helping students feel at home on campus.
An English major, he went to London with the ϰٿ Theatre Mayterm in 2013 and spent a semester at ϰٿ in San Francisco, where he interned at Made in a Free World, a small non-profit organization working against human trafficking.
During spring break this year, he traveled to Utah with the Loving Our Religious Neighbors Club to engage in conversations with members of the Latter-day Saints church. “I learned to articulate the differences between evangelical Christianity and Mormonism, and my relationship with God grew,” he says.
After his summer jobs at ϰٿ end, Marshall plans to look for work. He hopes to attend graduate school one day and earn a master’s degree in social work. “I enjoy building relationships with people and seeing them transition to a better and happier lifestyle and place,” he says. “I want to help people.”
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