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Higher Education Coordination Commission

Featured Student and Learner Profiles



Welcome to our student and learner profile page.  The Higher Education Coordinating Commission (HECC) is pleased to highlights some stories of students and learners served by the programs we administer. The stories at this time focus on recipients of the Oregon Tribal Student Grant (OTSG).  

Click on the stories below to learn about how the OTSG has made an impact on students' lives.

Featured Student Profiles



Alexa Burgess

Photo of Alexa Burgess     

Student Profile: Oregon Tribal Student Grant was the Path to Commencement for SOU Graduate, Member of the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians 

Alexa Burgess is a proud graduate of Southern Oregon University (SOU) who recently earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration with a focus on management, and a minor in psychology. She is soaring forward in her young adult life, with a job at Lithia Driveway Finance, a wedding on the horizon, and business ideas bubbling for the future. 

A member of the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians, Alexa received the Oregon Tribal Student Grant (OTSG) during her junior and senior years at SOU, which made it possible for her to pursue her bachelor’s degree and gave her time to focus on the upper division coursework, skills and knowledge for her business career. Alexa says, “I was able to say OK, I can focus on my schooling, get that done and find the job that I want ... And thanks to the tribal grant, I don't have college debt, so I'm able to kind of jump-start my life.” 

With few financial resources, grant aid was critical for Alexa. She started at Rogue Community College, thanks to support from the Oregon Promise Grant and Oregon Opportunity Grant, but she was unsure if she could go on to a four-year university because of the higher cost and the fact that the Promise Grant was not available there. She knew stories from family about the challenge of student loan debt on top of making ends meet, and she was afraid of that. She heard about the OTSG through her tribal education office and applied just in case it helped. It ended up being the key. She says, “The grant saved me ... I was worried I wasn’t going to be able to go to a university, so the Tribal Grant really made it possible to get a four-year degree.” 

The fact that the OTSG helps with living expenses and books meant Alexa didn’t have to juggle a job her junior and senior years, so she could focus on her intense academic load. In addition to classes in accounting, software and more, her senior capstone project was to design the groundwork for a business, a project that took research, time, collaboration, and many late nights. She designed a laundromat that offers custom services, and with a spark for management and working with people, she hopes to continue to advance in her job and to start her own business one day. Alexa says, “I have always wanted to open up a laundromat, and I'm hoping one day that I will have the money to be able to do that ... I like to have everything organized, and I like to have a plan. So, with my management concentration and being able to help others and guide others, I would love to make a business a place people want to be.” 

As one of the first among her siblings to finish college, part of Alexa’s pride as a college graduate is in making her mom proud and showing her little brother that he can pursue college too. Alexa says, “My mom has worked at gas stations my whole life, and she's a single mom. I think of her working every single day, day and night, picking up shifts just so that we can have food on our table. ... I'm very thankful for my mom and everything that she has done for me. ... Even since middle school in Honor Society, I always wanted to do everything to make her proud to show her that she’s doing good. She's shown me how to work hard. She's shown what it is to be an amazing human.”  

Jaylin Hardin

Photo of Jaylin Hardin

​Student Profile: Oregon Tribal Student Grant Makes Thriving in College years easier for WOU Childhood Education Student and College Athlete, a Member of the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians  

Jaylin (aka Jay) Hardin, a member of the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians, has the freedom to be involved in campus activities, clubs, sports, and more in the Western Oregon University campus community while she is working toward her degree and dream to become a teacher. Receiving the Oregon Tribal Student Grant (OTSG) removed financial stress, allowing Jaylin to focus her time and energy on campus activities that are relevant to her interests. While completing a degree in early childhood and elementary education, she also plays in the WOU Rugby Club, coordinates events for the Native and Indigenous Cultures Club, writes for the campus paper The Western Howl, and works in the Childhood Development Center. 

Jaylin’s extensive involvement on campus this year, and its benefits to her and the campus community, likely would not be possible without the OTSG. She says the grant is “changing my life and making it so much easier, and making it to where I can be involved in my campus life and I can be part of my campus culture.”

A junior in the program that licenses students for Pre-kindergarten through 5th grade education, Jaylin is excited to be in the process of getting placed for student teaching, including during her final course practicums.  She has been inspired by teachers in her life and her brother’s life, and says, “I’ve pretty much always wanted to be a teacher ... this is for me. This is where I belong.” 

Jaylin grew up in Southern Oregon, and she chose WOU after hearing about it from an older cousin and learning about the good programs. She started getting the OTSG in her sophomore year when she heard about it through another cousin who works in the education department for her Tribe. She also receives aid that includes a diversity merit-scholarship through WOU because of her high GPA in high school, but that was not enough to cover her expenses, and she was going into more loan debt her first year before the OTSG came in.  

If she had not received the OTSG, her college years would be different. “I definitely think I would have taken more loans out, which would have been very stressful for down the line.” She adds that she would likely have had to work in jobs unrelated to her interests just to pay the bills. She says, “It has just made life easier ... It has made it less stressful where I'm not worrying about tuition and worrying about my student loans. ... It’s giving me so many opportunities: to play rugby, to work at the Howl and to work at the Child Development Center, and to just be part of the club. ... If I didn't have this, I would have to be working off campus.” 

Jaylin speaks excitedly about her many levels of campus involvement, from her campus jobs, which she loves to go to each day, her rugby team’s tradition of lifting the player in the “fly half” position in the air when the ball goes out of bounds, to a Pow Wow she is helping plan with her club, and more. Jaylin says, “I’m really involved in that [Pow Wow] planning process and helping getting vendors including our host drum  ... We are actually getting a foundation for donations set up for the first time in the club’s history.”


Jacob Olson

 

Student Profile: Oregon Tribal Student Grant a Life-Changing Opportunity for OSU student, Member of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde ​

“It really has been eye-opening,” Jacob says. While many people taking a drive down a new stretch of highway might just note the smooth glide of new asphalt, Jacob Olson sees the layers of engineering research behind construction materials and decisions. A student in construction engineering management with a minor in business administration at Oregon State University (OSU), Jacob says, “I ended up loving the math and science and the side of materials. The chemistry behind concrete and asphalt is much more complicated than you'd ever think it would be ... there is so much that goes into the research behind it!”   

Jacob is a member of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, and his education is supported by the Oregon Tribal Student Grant (OTSG) program. He is currently one year away from completing his bachelor’s at OSU, after completing associate degrees at Linn-Benton Community College (LBCC). After that, he will enter OSU’s accelerated master’s program in civil engineering with a construction focus.   

Jacob loves the construction field, having grown up with it. His paternal grandfather owned a small construction company and did work for the Tribe, and his maternal grandfather was in the electrical industry. He says, “It's been one of the coolest experiences to be able to go driving down the road with my family and point out a construction project, and to be able to be like yeah, it’s in this stage ... whether it's going to be a steel frame structure or wood light frame structure.” 

His goal is to work as a project manager or field engineer in Oregon after completing his degrees, and eventually to run his own company. Receiving the OTSG has been pivotal for him. But pursuing higher education was not an automatic decision for Jacob.  

He worked for a few years after high school, before realizing he needed a degree to make a comfortable living and have a satisfying job. By this time, he was an adult with bills like car payments, and his income brought him above the cut-off point for need-based aid. When he started at LBCC, he took out $5,500 in student loans the same year a family member was diagnosed with cancer, and he was worried about his future debt burden. Jacob considered stopping out. Then, he started getting texts and emails from his aunt and his Tribe’s education department about the new OTSG program. Jacob says, “I just kept thinking, where’s the catch?”  ​

Jacob was one of the students who received the grant in 2022-23, the first year the program launched, and he has received renewal grants since. He says that “Getting the grant was the real reason I kept going.” Jacob adds, “It was definitely life-changing. It was a change from having to grasp my head around $50-60,000 in student loans by the time I graduated to not having to take any more student loans [above the first]. It opened the door to be able to go to a four-year university.”  

Jacob enjoys not just the complexities of engineering but also the societal relevance. He explains how the smoothness of a road can actually improve fuel economy, which can help the environment. Interested in research, Jacob plans to pursue graduate studies because the OTSG program can help support it. Earning a masters will keep his options open if he chooses to earn a PhD and work in research and innovation in the future. Jacob says, “It's opening endless opportunities.” 




Mark Petrie

Photo of Mark Petrie

Student Profile: Oregon Tribal Student Grant Recipient Supports PSU Graduate, Member of the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians, to Focus on Indigenous Knowledge in Social Work​​

A returning adult student who is active in his tribal community, the Oregon Tribal Student Grant (OTSG) allowed Mark Petrie to earn his degree in social work with a focus on indigenous cultural knowledge in social services. A member of Hanis Coos, one of the tribes of the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians, Mark has already devoted years to tribal community work, and he is excited to expand his career in this area. With the help of the OTSG, Mark recently graduated with a bachelor’s from Portland State University, and he says the fact that the grant supported him in a fully online program was especially helpful as it allowed him to be present at home in Coos Bay with his wife and children. 

With his degree, Mark hopes to embed indigenous cultural knowledge into social work and health work in new ways, and to focus on meaningful connections and evidence-based health practices. Mark previously worked with his Tribe’s cultural, health, youth and family programs, and he also served as an elected leader on the Tribal Council. He says, “My degrees are helping me be a better advocate for and supporter of indigenous cultural ways of healing within the [tribal] community and wider community.” 

Mark’s higher education experience was cut short when he was younger due to a family tragedy. Mark grew up with eight siblings, and has 17 siblings in his family. He says, “We went through a lot of challenges and hardship. I’d say we were from the lower socio-economic background ... and at times we actually became houseless. So our education was not the priority while we were trying to survive.” 

After high school, he went straight into Southwestern Oregon Community College with a focus on business, hoping to start a construction business with his family. Tragically, Mark experienced the loss of one of his siblings during this time. He says,    “The silent suffering of an opioid addiction led to my brother passing away; that really threw my life into turmoil and set me on a new path.” Mark was able to graduate with an associate degree but due to the loss of his sibling, his drive towards a business future fell flat, so he paused his education. Mark set out on a journey of healing and community building, with goals of learning how to prevent loss of life due to addiction. He ended up finding a position in cultural programs through his Tribe, and has worked in service to his tribal community over the last decade in paid and volunteer positions. He has worked supporting youth and cultural programs, helping with canoeing events, supporting community health such as commercial tobacco prevention, restorative justice, and most recently, as a member of the Tribal Council, an elected governmental position he held for two and a half years. When he stepped down from the Council, he decided to go back to school for social work, thanks to the OTSG, which he describes as a “game-changer.” He says, “[the grant] created an avenue, an opportunity I wouldn’t have otherwise taken. I really didn't feel comfortable taking on loans at the time because of my financial situation.” 

With his bachelor’s, he sees potential in social work for “reconnecting medicine with communities and providing ceremony and meaningful connections, and he is applying for a master’s program to build further expertise. He says, “The cultural practices that have supported me through my life, such as being out on the water in a canoe or at sweat lodge ceremonies or solstice gatherings—just living and being in our environment in a healthy way—have offered me mental health benefits.” He adds, “so my life goal is to ... build more of that safe space or brave space as I sometimes call it, where our tribal community members don't struggle.”