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The night when I left for UNESCO Dar es Salaam, my grandfather came to bid farewell. He did not urge me to keep safe as I anticipated. Instead, he said to me, in an unusually serious tone, “Go flying your dreams.”
Looking back into my college years, I have made innumerable choices on my own. But a decision I would never feel regretful is to become a volunteer teacher for five vacations. Though the experience only composes two lines on my three-page CV, it has defined who I am.
In February 2015, I was surprised to receive a special phone call while taking my quantitative training in Brazil. It was from one of my students in the Boxue County, a small village in China’s Hainan Province. He dialed my number using his mom’s mobile phone: he did not say I miss you; instead he just asked me, in the purest tone of a child, “Will you come back next year”. My eyes turned moist in a flash.
It was the first winter vacation in my college years that I did not go to Boxue County as a volunteer teacher. Before that, I was there for three consecutive vacations. I love those kids and they are waiting for me as well. It is maybe my love to those kids that has planted the seed of NGO dream in my heart. My long-term career objective is to create an NGO that empowers the rural students and other marginalized groups in my late thirties.
After my graduation, I intend to stay in the private sphere for about five years, then jump to the Bill
Looking back into my college years, I have made innumerable choices on my own. But a decision I would never feel regretful is to become a volunteer teacher for five vacations. Though the experience only composes two lines on my three-page CV, it has defined who I am.
In February 2015, I was surprised to receive a special phone call while taking my quantitative training in Brazil. It was from one of my students in the Boxue County, a small village in China’s Hainan Province. He dialed my number using his mom’s mobile phone: he did not say I miss you; instead he just asked me, in the purest tone of a child, “Will you come back next year”. My eyes turned moist in a flash.
It was the first winter vacation in my college years that I did not go to Boxue County as a volunteer teacher. Before that, I was there for three consecutive vacations. I love those kids and they are waiting for me as well. It is maybe my love to those kids that has planted the seed of NGO dream in my heart. My long-term career objective is to create an NGO that empowers the rural students and other marginalized groups in my late thirties.
After my graduation, I intend to stay in the private sphere for about five years, then jump to the Bill