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 ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅. 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 canβt see that myself,β Castillo-Cobian said. βJust 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.β
Castillo-Cobian said while her parents made her education a priority, receiving the 2017 Eagan Family Scholarship made the choice to attend CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ 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.
β(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,β she said.
βReceiving 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.β
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 CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ studying math). But, while scholarships helped reduce the financial barriers, cultural divides still tug at her.
βEven though I have light-skin privilege, I was still βthe other.β 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,β 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 CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅, 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 CUβs 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.
βMy 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,β 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.
βIn 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.β