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“When I think about how I could enrich a college community, well, I just think about all the other Spanish-speaking European Nigerian-American females applying and wonder what their answer might be.”
HIGHLIGHTS OF YOUNG SCHOLAR EXPERIENCE: Modupe’s experiences have ranged from architecture courses at Clemson University and a chemistry course at Siena College to American Sign Language and percussion and movement classes at Yale University. She also enjoys taking hip hop and jazz lessons at a Washington, DC dance studio.
PROFILE: Modupe considers herself Nigerian, not born, but bred. Her name is a cry of thanks in her mother’s native tongue. Every first Sunday of the month she dons the traditional iro and buba, a blouse and cloth worn by many Nigerian women. Modupe says one of her biggest obstacles was moving to the United States nine years ago. “When I first came to the US, I was very young and was not very accepted by the other children. But over time, I was able to become comfortable with a new culture, while sharing my own.”
INSPIRATION: Modupe lives in a single parent household and credits her mother as a major influence. “My mother has always been a constant source of encouragement. She stressed the importance of getting an education before I even started school, and instilled in me a drive to succeed.” She refers to her Jack Kent Cooke educational adviser as a second mother, “because that’s how much she cares.”
ASPIRATION: Modupe hopes to become a civil engineer or architect. In 2006, at a two week architecture enrichment program at Clemson University, she learned to draw floor plans and design and construct a one-story ranch home.
MAKING A DIFFERENCE: Modupe founded her high school’s first writing club and served as its President. She is the Community Service Coordinator for Alpha Kappa Lambda, a sisterhood dedicated to community service. During one winter break she volunteered at a homeless shelter.
ACCOLADES: Modupe was a Semifinalist in the National Achievement academic competition for outstanding Black American high school students. She received the Maryland Distinguished Scholar Honorable Mention and was named a top achiever by The Washington Post. She is a member of the National Honor Society and Spanish Honor Society.
INTERESTING FACT: She speaks Ubbi-Dubbi (aka Pig Greek or Double Dutch).
Nikhit D'Sa
Graduate Scholar
Harvard Graduate School of Education
Nahiris Bahamón Fernández
Graduate Scholar
Boston University
Karima Ben Ayed
Undergraduate Transfer Scholar
Brown University
Aldo Garcia
Undergraduate Transfer Scholar
Cornell University