| CSUF Graduate Student Is First Recipient of $6,000 CSU Award Vietnamese Immigrant Wants to Help Abused and Neglected Children
  
                    
                   Sept. 17, 2007 :: No. 36  Cal State Fullerton graduate student Kylie T. Nguyen has been  selected by the California   State University  as the first Trustee Murray L. Galinson  Scholar — a top honor among recipients of the 2007-08  William R. Hearst/CSU Trustees’ Award for Outstanding Achievement. The CSU Trustees honored Nguyen Tuesday, Sept.
                    18, at the CSU Office of the Chancellor in Long Beach. She
                    is among 23 students, one from each campus in the system,
                    to be named Hearst/CSU Trustees’ Award recipients. The eldest child of an immigrant family from Vietnam, Nguyen  will receive a $6,000 scholarship as the Trustee Murray L. Galinson Scholar.  The honor is designated for the Hearst award recipient who “best exemplifies  extraordinary public service.” Galinson  is trustee emeritus of the CSU Board of Trustees; he served as chair from  2004-06 and endowed the scholarship in 2007.  “I’m so excited. I’ve  worked hard and I’ve put myself out there,” Nguyen said. “It’s a humbling  experience to be receiving this award. I’ve been very privileged to be a  student at Cal State Fullerton, and I feel that this award brings recognition  to the university, and that means a lot to me personally.” Nguyen earned her bachelor’s degree in human services in May from  Cal State Fullerton and is now enrolled in the university’s master’s degree  program in social work. Because of her own experiences and struggles as a  child, her ultimate goal after finishing her education is to work with abused  and neglected children. “I am particularly drawn to work with underprivileged children who  carry deep pathological wounds, due to neglect and abuse,” said Nguyen, who  lives in Fullerton  and plans on pursing a doctorate. Her community work has included being a project director at the  CSUF Volunteer and Service Center and performing volunteer work at a Santa Ana homeless shelter.  She also served  as president of the  Vietnamese Catholic Student Association and this year, is the organization’s  co-adviser. An active researcher, Nguyen’s undergraduate achievements included  working on a research team to produce the 13th annual Report on the Conditions  of children in Orange County; serving as a book reviewer for the eighth edition  of the “Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy,” authored by  Gerald Corey, emeritus professor of human services; and participating in the  National Science Foundation’s 2006 Research Experiences for Undergraduates. She  also completed a research study on “Trauma-based Treatment Approaches in  Out-of-Home Care” and presented it last year at the Florida Mental Health  Institute and UC Berkeley. Nguyen was also part of CSUF’s McNair Scholars program, named for  astronaut and Challenger space shuttle crewmember Ronald E. McNair and  established by the U.S. Department of Education in 1986 to encourage students  to pursue graduate studies. The program provides opportunities to participate  in research studies with faculty mentors, as well as help to develop the skills  and mentor relationships critical to success at the doctoral level. Her  research focused on the trends of foster care in Orange County. Nguyen, 33, said she had a challenging childhood similar to others  who have journeyed from another country to start a new life in the United States.  She missed out on enjoying her early years in her new country because while her  parents worked hard to make ends meet, she devoted her time to help raise her  three younger siblings. “My parents came to this country with nothing,” said Nguyen, who  was 6 years old when her family arrived in the United   States in 1980, fleeing the communist country after the  fall of Saigon. “With four children to raise,  they worked long hours to keep a roof over our heads — and they needed me to  watch my siblings. I didn’t have much of childhood; though it wasn’t their  intention, I felt neglected and abandoned. I didn’t have a sense of identity.” After high school, instead of going to college as her parents  wished, Nguyen fled to seek her own path in life. She embarked on a 12-year  journey that involved volunteering for nonprofit organizations around the  country and working primarily with at-risk youth and the elderly. She wanted to make  a difference in the lives of people she met and worked with. Nguyen was nominated for the Hearst Award for her exceptional  academic performance and commitment to education and community service, said  Robert L. Palmer, CSUF’s vice president for student affairs. Palmer said the university is “indeed  fortunate to have a student of this caliber at our institution.” The CSU Trustees also presented two students
                    with a $6,000 Trustee Ali C. Razi Scholar award, for the
                    top-scoring recipients of the William R. Hearst/CSU Trustees’ Award.
                    Additionally, $3,000 scholarships will be awarded to students
                    who have demonstrated financial need, experienced personal
                    hardships and have attributes of merit, including superior
                    academic performance, exemplary community service and significant
                    personal achievements. The William Randolph Hearst Foundation originally established an  endowed scholarship fund in 1984 to honor William Randolph Hearst, founder of  the Hearst newspaper chain. In 1999, the William Randolph Hearst Foundation  partnered with the CSU Board of Trustees to supplement the endowment with  contributions from CSU Trustees and private donors.
 
                     
                      | Media Contact: | Debra Cano Ramos, Public Affairs,  657-278-4027 or dcanoramos@fullerton.edu |  « 
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