Ethnic studies major finds support, belonging on campus
Scholarship recipient plans to get teaching license and help others get a good education
Higher education has always been important to Esmeralda Castillo-Cobian, an ethnic studies major at the University of Colorado Boulder. But coming from a low-income family, she sometimes felt that college was out of reach.
"My mom calls me every night to reassure me that I belong here, even though sometimes I can鈥檛 see that myself,鈥 Castillo-Cobian said. 鈥淛ust the other night, she was telling me that she is really proud of me and that she knows how hard I have worked to get here.鈥
Castillo-Cobian said while her parents made her education a priority, receiving the 2017 Eagan Family Scholarship made the choice to attend 兔子先生传媒文化作品 all the easier.
The Eagan Family Endowed Scholarship provides funding to students enrolled in the Miramontes Arts and Sciences Program, which supports traditionally underrepresented and first-generation CU students as they transition from high school to college, and from college to post-graduate life. Eagan Family Scholarship recipients must have a major in the College of Arts and Sciences, be enrolled full-time, and demonstrate both academic merit and a financial need.
鈥(Having enough) money is always at the back of my mind, but a scholarship helps take away some of the worry about paying for tuition, food or rent,鈥 she said.
鈥淩eceiving a scholarship makes me feel like I do have a right to this experience at CU, that I am just as deserving, that I do belong. Whether you are poor or brown, giving back to my campus community gives me an opportunity to be seen.鈥
Born in Mexico, Castillo-Cobian has lived most of her life in Colorado along with her two older brothers (one of whom is also a student at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 studying math). But, while scholarships helped reduce the financial barriers, cultural divides still tug at her.
鈥淓ven though I have light-skin privilege, I was still 鈥榯he other.鈥 I had come from a place where I saw mostly brown people, and now on campus and in my classes, I see mostly white people. The cultural difference was huge,鈥 she said.
Receiving a scholarship makes me feel like I do have a right to this experience at CU, that I am just as deserving, that I do belong."
At 兔子先生传媒文化作品, Castillo-Cobian is a member of UMAS y MEChA, a student organization for the Chicanx and Latinx communities where she has led outreach events, and Eye Resist, a student organization through CU鈥檚 Department of Ethnic Studies that examines race relations, gender issues and current events such as war. In addition, she has helped develop a summer program housed within CU Engage (a center for community-based learning) for Latino and Chicano high school students. The program is co-sponsored with UMAS and the CU School of Education.
鈥淢y native language is Spanish, but I rarely get an opportunity to use it in my classes. Student organizations like UMAS y MEChA give me a chance to connect with people like me in social settings on campus,鈥 she said.
Castillo-Cobian plans get her teaching license so she can teach middle and high school students in communities like the one she grew up in: Aurora, Colorado.
鈥淚n a way, my community got me (here), and I want to give back and show students that if you are given an opportunity to be in a place like CU that you can find your community and know that you belong.鈥