Douglas Correa Ospina says that if his family hadnāt settled in Lowell, he might never have gone to college.
Fortunately, heād taken English classes at school in MedellĆn, Colombia, before his family immigrated to the United States when he was 15. At Lowell High School, he studied hard and got help applying for scholarships to ŠÓ°É“«Ć½.(He got the Unitas Scholarship.)Ā
āI would not be who I am today if we hadnāt come to Lowell,ā he says.
And who is he today? Correa Ospina, a first-generation college student, is a junior in the Honors College. Heās double-majoring in economics and psychology. In the future, he hopes to help immigrants and other people from marginalized groups gain access to the education and resources they need to become more financially secure.
āInequality is so pervasive that itās systemic, and thatās where economics comes in,ā he says. āItās also a personal issue that affects people and families, and thatās where psychology comes in.ā
Heās also an Emerging Scholar, doing research with Biomedical Engineering Asst. Teaching Prof. Yanfen Li in a first-year engineering design class. They have seniors acting as project managers for teams of new students, and they want to find out if first-year women students feel more confident when their project manager is also a woman.
āWeāre trying to find out what kinds of things develop leadership skills in engineers, and also how first-year students develop their identity as engineers,ā he explains.
Correa Ospina is vice president of the club swim and dive team. Heās also vice president of the Latin American Student Association, or LASA, where heās working with LASA president Juana Guerrero to make the organization a resource center for Latinx and Hispanic students.
They organized a major networking event for undergraduates in fall 2021, bringing together alumni, graduate students and the dean of Fine Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences and Education, Luis Falcón, for panels on careers and graduate school.
āWe wanted them to be able to ask questions of someone who looks like them and has been able to advance as a Hispanic person,ā he says.
Outside the university, Correa Ospina has a job as a āuniversal bankerā at Salem 5, where he helps customers open accounts, apply for loans and transact business. He also has a per diem job as a case manager in a program for men who have alcohol and substance use disorders. He says that job has taught him compassion.
āSome of the stories they tell me are heartbreaking,ā he says. āRecovery is a complex process, and itās not easy.ā
That compassion and his bilingual skills will be useful in the work Correa Ospina plans to do after graduation: helping to lower some of the economic barriers facing immigrant families and their children. Heās going on for a masterās degree in finance through the Bachelorās-to-Masterās Program.
āIf youāre an immigrant or a first-generation college student, sometimes thereās a language barrier along with the lack of education and resources that you have,ā he says.
āImmigrating is like starting anew. Your priority is having a roof over your head, getting a job and getting food on the table. People donāt understand how hard it is.ā