āWhen we were figuring out how we would pay, my mom said if I could get help with scholarships and grants, she could pay the rest so I could come here.ā
āThis support has made a tremendous difference. When we were figuring out how we would pay, my mom said if I could get help with scholarships and grants, she could pay the rest so I could come here.ā āMarylen Leon
Born in Colombia, Marylen Leon and her family moved to the United States, driven by her motherās desire to ensure her daughters received top notch educations. Ms. Leon was nine when she and her family settled in eastern Long Island. Wary of the fact that her new home was nothing like the place where she was born and raised, Ms. Leon resisted acclimating at first. āI didnāt know the language. I didnāt want to learn the language,ā she said.
Her mother encouraged her. Ms. Leon began the third grade in ESL classes. Just three years later she took a proficiency exam, received a good score, and entered [regular classes] with the rest of her classmates.
During her high school years, she worked at the local grocery store in the afternoons and evenings. When it came time to think about college, she already knew that she wanted to go to a school close to home and her family. When she and her mom visited Adelphi, they both liked the University. As Ms. Leon learned more about Adelphiās nursing programānursing had always been a discipline she was interested in studyingāshe was sure it was the school for her. The summer before Adelphi, she volunteered at [Eastern Long Island Hospital] in Greenport, New York to immerse herself in the field.
The financial support Ms. Leon was offered impacted her ability to attend Adelphi. āMy mom and dad divorced two years ago,ā she said. āMy mom said if she couldnāt afford tuition, I wasnāt going to go there. She was not going to let me take out several loans and be in debt as soon as I graduated college.ā
āIāve gotten a lot of help,ā says Ms. Leon, who is the recipient of the Long Island Panhellenic Scholarship, institutional and federal grants, and other forms of assistance. āThis support has made a tremendous difference. When we were figuring out how we would pay, my mom said if I could get help with scholarships and grants, she could pay the rest so I could come here.ā
Throughout the week, Ms. Leon is focused on her academics; going to class, doing homework, and studying for exams. A resident student, she makes a two hour drive home every weekend to work and see her family. She has found a balance between her studies and work, earning herself a spot on the Deanās List.
A sophomore currently taking informatics, nutrition and pathophysiology among other courses, she is grateful for the education she is receiving. āIām doing something I didnāt always think Iād get to do,ā she said. āWe came to America when my mom was a junior in college in Colombia. She didnāt get to finish her degree, but she came here so my sister and I could.ā
āEducation means everything to her,ā Ms. Leon said of her mother, who has clearly instilled her own passion in her daughters. Ms. Leonās sister, a biology major, is currently doing research at C.W. Post. Ms. Leon, a nursing major who will be starting her clinical experience in fall 2013, already has aspirations to earn her masterās degree after she receives her nursing degree from Adelphi.
āWhen I was a senior in high school Iād think, I donāt know what Iām going to do or where Iām going to go,ā she said. āBut now that Iām here at Adelphi Iām so motivatedā¦Iām taking nursing classesā¦my dream is becoming a reality.ā
āI love being at Adelphi,ā said Ms. Leon, whose mother is happy to have her at the University too. āMy mother says, āwhatever I have to do Iāll do for you to finish hereā¦ā Iām really thankful to [get a scholarship and aid]. Any help I can get helps my mom.ā
Published March 2013
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications DirectorĢż
p ā 516.237.8634
e ā twilson@adelphi.edu