A couple of students from the Philippines graduated Summa Cum Laude from their respective universities this week.
Twenty one year-old Lara Andrea Montales graduated with a degree in Bachelor of Science in Economics Major in Finance and Business Analytics from Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, listed as Forbes’ 2017 Best Business School in the U.S.
Montales was the valedictorian in elementary at the Colegio San Agustin-Makati and she graduated with honors at the Philippine Science High School before enrolling at Wharton School.
Janelle Micaela S. Panganiban also graduated summa cum laude last week from the New York University with three majors: Global Public Health, Public Policy, Sociology (Honors).
Panganiban received the prestigious Alexander L. Shluger Award for Excellence in Sociology. This is awarded to a senior student who has majored in sociology and who has excelled in his or her study of this subject. She was likewise a consistent Dean’s Lister and a Founders Day Awardee of her graduating class.
She is a member of the Gaddang indigenous group from Isabela.
With her achievements, Panganiban said that, “As a Filipino, I feel like I have the obligation to bring all of these back to the Philippines and at the same time, as a descendant of the Gaddangs, I find myself impassioned for indigenous resurgence as a step to combat the long and embedded history of colonization.”
CAMP-College Admissions Mentors for Peers
What do they both have in common?
Both got to the universities of their choice with help from CAMP (College Admissions Mentors for Peers) Philippines, an organization that provides and expands international education opportunities for young Filipinos.
Three former Filipino scholars at the International School Manila – Michi Ferreol (Harvard College ‘15), Kimi Rodriguez (NYU Abu Dhabi ‘15) and Kaye Kagaoan (Hamilton College ‘15) – started CAMP in May 2012 to bridge the international education resource gap between international school students and local school students.
Panganiban and Montales both began their overseas journey when they left Manila in 2014 to be part of their respective colleges’ Class of 2018. Little did they know, both of them would be graduating with the highest honors a week apart four years later.
“I didn’t feel like I did anything extraordinary. I was just studying what I loved studying. It was less for me and more for my family who was more excited than I was,” Panganiban told the Asian Journal in an interview a few days after her graduation.
“I was passionate about getting out of the bubble and I realized all the new ideas that were out there. I learned to love learning,” she added.
Panganiban finished secondary school at ICA (Immaculate Conception Academy) in Greenhills. While still there, she saw a number of ICA graduates who went outside the country to pursue their college education. It was also there that she met some members of CAMP.
“That’s where it started. They were teaching high school students how to study abroad and they gave tips about applying. I heard their experiences and I wanted to experience that as well,” Panganiban shared.
Wharton
Wharton awards the summa cum laude honor to a student whose grade point average (GPA) is between 3.80 and 4.00. Montales entered Wharton School in 2014 where she was a consistent Dean’s Lister.
She received the Freshman Leadership Award in 2015 for taking initiative and engaging with the Filipino community in Pennsylvania.
Montales was an elementary valedictorian at Colegio San Agustin-Makati and graduated with high honors at the Philippine Science High School-Main.
On her social media account, Montales posted “My very first profile picture at Penn was with the LOVE statue, so it’s only fitting that my last one be with the LOVE statue as well. So thankful for the love that I have given and received at this school, for the friends I have met and the families I have found, and for the home I have made. Until next time, Penn.”
Her testimonial about how CAMP helped her in getting to Penn is also posted on CAMP’s website.
“Thank you very much for standing by me throughout the whole process, for guiding me in the completion of my application, and for advising me on the best action to take. I don’t think my admission would have been possible without CAMP’s help,” Montales wrote.
NYU
Panganiban said she chose NYU specifically because she has family members in Long Island, New York and also in New Jersey.
“It was easier to settle and I knew that NYU is a global university and there was something in me that was itching and wanting to really explore the world and look what’s out there,” she shared. “And also, it’s not a closed campus so it made New York the campus.”
And after four years at NYU, she gained experience enough for her to be able to give advice to Filipino students who might be thinking of studying abroad as well.
“Remain curious, step out of your comfort zone, and engage in conversation. In our world that’s growing more and more divided, I still have hope that we can find ways to transcend our differences,” she said.
Panganiban is the daughter Representative Jose T. Panganiban, Jr. of ANAC-IP Party list and Mayor Lourdes S. Panganiban of Angadangan, Isabela.
Panganiban will be one of the awardees in the 6th Annual Philippine Graduation (PGRAD) at the Philippine Center. PGRAD, which is slated to happen on June 9, is a flagship project of the Philippine Consulate General in New York, in cooperation with UniPro.