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Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen, 蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022

Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen, 蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022

Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen
蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022

As the first valedictorian for 蜜桃视频 State University鈥檚 Levin College of Public Affairs and Education, College of Arts and Sciences鈥 Salutatorian and overall University Valedictorian, Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen has certainly made a name for herself on the 蜜桃视频 Campus.

Graduating Summa Cum Laude in the Fall of 2022 with a double major in Sociology and Psychology and a minor in Philosophy with a Bioethics certificate, Veronika has proven to be a creative, dedicated, and resilient student. A deep interest in the study of psychology began in high school.

蜜桃视频 provided her opportunity to transform interests into a full launching pad for an exciting career鈥攂uilding out her studies with meaningful undergraduate research projects to deepen her experience.

Under the direction of , Veronika pursued a Psychology Honors Thesis and completed an impactful research project on interpersonal trauma and the parent child relationship. She also participated in the Undergraduate Summer Research Award Program for the THRiVE research collaborative, where she studied perceived school-based sex education for LGBTQ+ youth.

She also had the opportunity to present her research at an international conference known as Resilience Con and in 蜜桃视频鈥檚 Undergraduate Research Showcase. Undergraduate research, as you鈥檒l soon read, is among the key components that made her 蜜桃视频 experience like no other.

Veronika鈥檚 academic career was also enriched through several hands-on, real-world learning opportunities. She served as a psychology and biology tutor in the Tutoring & Academic Success Center, became a Greater 蜜桃视频 College Now mentee (and scholarship recipient), and volunteered at Fairview Hospital, where she helped to discharge patients and perform lab work.

More recently, Veronika volunteered through Shared Vision, a nonprofit organization that promotes and provides opportunities for personal growth, healing, spirituality, and education in a safe and supporting environment through nature based experiential work and community building.

Through her studies, Veronika has grown as a researcher, a student, and most of all as a person. She has appreciated the opportunities afforded to her which have helped to diversify her skillset.

鈥淎s a person, I became more confident than I was when I started. More resilient,鈥 she added. Her academic and lived experiences ignited a passion for social issues and international work.

She will serve as a , supporting Belizean youth to lead healthy and empowered lives to realize their full potential into adulthood beginning September 2023. In the interim, she has designs on working in a Montessori educational environment.

Veronika is looking forward to working closely with the families and the community in which she will be embedded. She will volunteer in local schools, implementing the National Health and Life Skills curriculum designed to address physical education, school-based health, and well-being activities for youth ages 6 to 14.

She thanks Dr. Goncy and Kristi Ninnemann for their mentorship and support as she navigated her 蜜桃视频 experience, describing them as "phenomenal human beings" who believed in her and treated her as a person. Likewise, she expressed gratitude for the support of her family and her dog, Rube.

蜜桃视频 State University caught up with Veronika for an interview recently. She provided some tremendous insights on her time here at 蜜桃视频.

Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen, 蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022蜜桃视频 State University: Can you tell us about the moment you decided to move forward with 蜜桃视频 鈥 your 鈥測es, this is the college for me鈥 moment, if you will?

Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen: When I was in high school, I applied to 14 different schools. I was just sort of throwing ideas at the wall, but my main goal was to graduate without any student debt. I wanted absolutely no debt. I also wanted to stay close to home. My family鈥檚 important to me; I lived at home throughout my time in college, and it was wonderful. I know that not everyone has that experience or privilege, but that was wonderful for me鈥攅specially with the pandemic and the world basically shutting down along the way. Being online and at home was a luxury that I鈥檓 incredibly grateful for. I had friends in college who were across the country and stuck where they were, which was just terrible for them.

Having said that, 蜜桃视频 was just the right choice for me based on my financial goals, my personal goal of staying close to home鈥 and I knew that I would have plenty of solid opportunities for undergraduate research, which was incredibly important to me. It all just made sense.

蜜桃视频: What put you on the path to your majors? Were there any defining moments or inspirations?

VRSJ: I knew I wanted to major in psychology by high school. It felt essential for me. I am passionate about people. I desperately wanted to understand people and still do. So, I started there. And then about halfway through my freshman year at 蜜桃视频, I added sociology as a major thinking, 鈥淭his will really help me understand people!鈥 (laughs)

The overlap between the two was natural, looking at individuals and the systems in which we live. From there, things just became progressively more specific: minoring in philosophy, earning a bioethics certificate, taking philosophy classes鈥 and being a nanny for six-plus years factored in as well. When you work with kids from the ages two to seven? It鈥檚 a formative, wonderful experience. To play a role in someone鈥檚 child development is incredibly rewarding. I have families where I鈥檓 like a part of the family now. Put it all together and that鈥檚 how I began to plot out what I wanted to do for the rest of my life.

蜜桃视频: Once you started into your major classes, did your perception of that course of study change?

VRSJ: I don鈥檛 know that it did. I mean, everything became more complex, but in a good way. You鈥檙e building a foundation for greater and greater understanding. Also, during my entire high school experience, I was reading the kinds of textbooks that are used in colleges and universities just out of a pure interest in the subjects. I did it in my free time, not for any other reason. I feel like that knowledge helped create a sturdy foundation which kept getting reinforced and built upon when I got here.

蜜桃视频: What was the best class you鈥檝e taken at 蜜桃视频 鈥 or the class you enjoyed the most 鈥 and why?

VRSJ: This is a good question. Difficult too, because I鈥檝e taken a lot of great classes at 蜜桃视频. The best class is also the one I enjoyed the most: 鈥檚 Sociology and Mental Illness. It was a very difficult class, he鈥檚 a challenging professor. If you go to Rate My Professor, the poor guy has terrible reviews with students dragging him. But he鈥檚 not a bad professor at all. It鈥檚 almost a graduate-level course in terms of intensity. It completely changed my perspective on mental illness and how we treat it.

蜜桃视频: Tell us more about that.

VRSJ: Well. He really gave you a lot to think about. It wasn鈥檛 all white boards and [Microsoft] PowerPoint slides. It was in-depth, conversational, discussion-heavy and fortified with a great book to dive into. You would come to class and listen. And while I know not everyone does, I learn best that way. I was always excited to go to that class, just listen and soak everything up like a sponge.

In some circles, psychology has this bad reputation for being a pseudoscience, even though that鈥檚 a completely outdated belief. When it comes to how we treat mental illness, he really reinforced that there鈥檚 still a lot of work needs to be done. We still don鈥檛 have a biological basis for a lot of mental illnesses. It鈥檚 disheartening because there are a lot of real-world impacts for people who suffer from mental illness. And that just inspired me on how to see the bigger picture, change my perspectives.

Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen, 蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022蜜桃视频: How has 蜜桃视频 cultivated your character, values, and standards of excellence? How do you think you鈥檝e changed or grown during your time at 蜜桃视频?

VRSJ: My time at 蜜桃视频 has made a more resilient person, a more well-rounded individual, a more confident person. Not that I wasn鈥檛 before, but you know the college experience gives you as many soft skills as it does hard skills. My research experiences took me way outside my comfort zone, but I had so much support鈥 from both my mentor Dr. Goncy and my lab. I developed and executed a qualitative project surrounding interpersonal trauma and parent-child relationships, which sparked a passion for trauma prevention research and the entire research process in general.

I think community support and connection give you strength. You see others鈥 standards and values on display, and you elevate. Your professors and classmates instill a desire to be better. There鈥檚 a shared experience, building upon your own values as everyone around you does. I don't think I had that coming out of high school (laughs).

I should also mention that my sophomore year, I had medical emergency where I was out of school for a week in the hospital and wasn鈥檛 sure I was going to go back. It was terrible. But when I came back to 蜜桃视频鈥攁nd I鈥檒l never forget this鈥攖here was an entire care team that helped me reintegrate back into school. The Office of Disability Services reached out to me, the Counseling Center reached out to me, all my professors went above and beyond to accommodate me. It was completely unexpected, but that鈥檚 a big reason why I am graduating. That instilled values in me that I want to pay forward.

蜜桃视频: Aside from being University Valedictorian, what stands out to you about your 蜜桃视频 experience?

VRSJ: My research experience was phenomenal, though I鈥檓 not sure I鈥檓 in love with research anymore! (laughs) I did qualitative interviewing because I wanted to do qualitative research again; it鈥檚 that human aspect of it that I love. Being able to do that, to present my research, stands out to me about my experience, along with all the friends that I made along the way.

蜜桃视频: What is your favorite 蜜桃视频 memory?

VRSJ: When I was a freshman, my friends lived across the street from campus in an 鈥渋nteresting鈥 apartment. (laughs) We would go there in between classes, eat lunch, run around downtown. Just opening up to a wider world. That first year of college before everything hit the fan with the pandemic, we felt like the world was our oyster! (laughs)

Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen, 蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022蜜桃视频: What鈥檚 next for you in life and how has your experience at 蜜桃视频 prepared you for it?

VRSJ: My plans after graduation were set earlier this year when I joined the Peace Corps. It was a pretty nerve-wracking process, but my acceptance came pretty quickly. I will be a Youth Health Educator in Belize, working in rural schools, teaching the National Life skills curriculum and I鈥檓 very excited. I love working with kids and knew I wanted like something a little more 鈥渙ut of the box.鈥 I'm a very outside-of-the-box person鈥攑erhaps more than my family would like sometimes (laughs)鈥攂ut I had been thinking about the Peace Corps for a while and everything just sort of aligned.

My sociology degree, taking classes in global health and child development鈥攁ll of it factored into my decision. And then for my Sociology Capstone, I did a project who is phenomenal and with his steer, I was able to interview Peace Corps volunteers across generations. Their experiences were all quite different, but the common theme was, 鈥淭his was the best thing I ever did with my life.鈥 鈥淚t changed my life.鈥 鈥淚t was the hardest thing I鈥檝e ever done, but also the most rewarding thing I鈥檝e ever done.鈥 And I like to challenge myself, so that diverse generational feedback clinched it.

I was due to start this coming summer, but my start date was pushed back. So, I鈥檒l be actively looking for a Montessori environment to work in over the summer until it鈥檚 time to head to Belize.

蜜桃视频: What advice would you give to the next class, or a freshman in your major? Any parting words?

VRSJ: It relates to your last question. Be afraid and do it anyway. That鈥檚 kind of been my life motto the past couple years, especially here at 蜜桃视频, because college is scary when you鈥檙e 18-years-old. You get thrown into this new environment and you don鈥檛 really know yourself, or exactly what you want, even if you think you do. The only way to figure that out is to push yourself, have new experiences, connect with people, throw ideas at the wall. You know? See what sticks.

Some of the stuff you throw at the wall is gonna be wickedly uncomfortable for you to do, but do it anyway. The biggest growth happens鈥 when you do something you didn鈥檛 think you could do. I mean, even today I was nervous about getting my picture taken, doing this interview. And I have a speech to give at Commencement on Sunday, which immediately made me think, 鈥Nope! Nope! Nope! Not doing that!鈥 (laughs).

But get outside of your comfort zone enough and soon enough you have a life repertoire鈥斺淥h, I did this hard thing, and that hard thing,鈥 and so on and suddenly, you say, 鈥淲ow, look at how much I鈥檝e grown.鈥 You鈥檙e coming out of an enclosed high school environment and emerging into a wider world鈥

Meet Veronika Ruth Stropko-Jorgensen, 蜜桃视频 Valedictorian for Fall 2022蜜桃视频: Out of an aquarium and into Lake Erie鈥

VRSJ: That鈥檚 a great analogy. Yes! All the opportunities that I had through 蜜桃视频 and all the really prepared me for the rest of my life. If I had any other advice for incoming students, I鈥檇 say talk to your professors. Build relationships there. Connect. This is another invaluable part of the college experience. Make those connections, not because you 鈥渘eed help鈥 on a project or must 鈥減ass鈥 an assignment. Get to know them. Because they鈥檙e more than willing to engage that way. As a student, you might think, 鈥淥h, they don't wanna talk to me!鈥 but it鈥檚 exactly the opposite. I鈥檝e had nothing but good experiences with the faculty here and I mean really, I鈥檓 truly grateful for them.

I would also say, challenge yourself. Take the harder class. It鈥檚 all about learning. If you know what works best for you, pursue that鈥攂ut challenge that notion sometimes. I have never once regretted pushing myself to do something that was difficult. Not once.