麻豆视频

Students to develop their ideas for social change

Alex Herazy 鈥25, a student in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, knows what the college application process is like for a first-generation student, so he鈥檚 been helping other first-gen friends from his high school with applications and scholarships. Now, he鈥檇 like to reach even more first-gen students, and has an idea to create a set of videos to explain the process.

鈥淰ideos from the College Board or Common App can help students navigate part of the process, but they often feel overwhelmed and confused by information overload, and the technical jargon can be unfamiliar, especially to first-gen students,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y videos would be more engaging and resonate with students. They also harness the power of a first-gen hearing another first-gen student talk about college.鈥

Herazy is one of 10 Cornell students who will be heading to Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. in March for (CGI U) 2023 Annual Meeting, where he鈥檒l meet hundreds of other students who are taking action on pressing challenges facing their campuses, communities and the world. They will talk about their projects, meet others working in similar areas and learn from experts on ways to move forward with their ideas.

CGI U, an initiative of the Clinton Foundation, brings these students together for three days with global experts in business, public service and social impact to develop innovative solutions to global challenges. After the March meeting, students participate in a yearlong curriculum that helps them formulate their ideas and provides resources, feedback, tools and potential funding streams to help move from idea into action.

Since former President Bill Clinton founded the initiative in 2007, it has included more than 11,800 university students from more than 160 countries, all 50 states and 1,800 institutions of higher education. Cornell鈥檚 program is managed by staff from Entrepreneurship at Cornell.

鈥淭his year鈥檚 group is very engaged, with incredible initiatives,鈥 said Natalee Nelson, program assistant for Entrepreneurship at Cornell and CGI U campus representative for Cornell. 鈥淚鈥檓 so excited to see where their entrepreneurial journeys lead.鈥

Firehiwot Gurara 鈥20 M.S. 鈥22, a doctoral student in electrical and computer engineering in Cornell Engineering, will travel to the conference to move forward with her plans for Leveraging Induction for Development (LIFT), an organization that will build affordable and efficient induction stoves for middle to low-income households in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

鈥淢y grandmother owned cows and was famous for selling cow dung used to bake injera and bread,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he average Ethiopian family, including my own, still relies on wood-based biomass for cooking. I believe that integrating the expansion of electricity infrastructure with electric cooking is critical to mitigate 63,000 annual deaths from indoor air pollution, carbon emission and deforestation.鈥

Osaiyekemwen Ogbemudia 鈥25, a student in Cornell Engineering, has spent years working with her mother, who is a pharmacist in her hometown of Brooklyn. During that time, she鈥檚 noticed that many high-risk and elderly patients have problems staying on track with their medications because of transportation or communication issues. Her platform, BetterRxperience, would help facilitate better interactions between patients and their pharmacists and offer a streamlined medication reminder system for patients.

鈥淚 know I can learn how to lead from the CGI U program not only through instruction, but also from like-minded peers with wide-ranging leadership experience,鈥 Ogbemudia said.

Other Cornell students chosen for CGI U include: Joshua Dong 鈥26 (Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management); Arrizka Faida, MPA 鈥23; Ilham Nugraha, MPA 鈥23; Christiani Sagala, MBA 鈥24; Joanne Hu 鈥24, (College of Agriculture and Life 麻豆视频); Julia Sun 鈥25 (Cornell Engineering); Pranav Nair 鈥26 (Dyson School) and Michael Stefanko 鈥22 (ILR School).

Kathy Hovis is a writer for Entrepreneurship at Cornell.

.

More News from A&S

Eight students face forward
Sreang Hok/Cornell University Clinton Foundation Students meet at eHub in Kennedy Hall.