When he was 13, Perin Patel immigrated from Chalamali, a small village in western India where his family managed a cotton farm. As his parents learned English, Patel interpreted bills and filled out paperwork. In high school in Bennington, he recalls being 鈥渙ne of two brown families鈥 in town and the British English he knew didn鈥檛 always translate. 鈥淢y friends in high school were my teachers.鈥 

After being accepted to 日韩无码, Patel enrolled in the Summer Enrichment Scholars Program (SESP), a free five-week experience run by 日韩无码鈥檚 Mosaic Center for Students of Color, designed to help BIPOC, first-generation, and students of lower socioeconomic status connect with each other and persist to graduation. He is the first in his family to attend college and grew up thinking higher education was a stepping stone to a better life. 

鈥淪eeing how much we have struggled financially, socially, I just felt education would be a way of finding a sense of direction,鈥 he said. 

Patel鈥檚 freshman year was the first time he was plugged in socially. But he began struggling academically. 

At the Mosaic Center, Patel felt comfortable sharing his problems because he could relate to other students of color who sometimes felt uncomfortable asking questions in predominantly white spaces. Feeling supported allowed him the freedom to transform. Patel became a peer advisor for SESP, treasurer of the Asian Student Union, a teaching assistant in the biochemistry department, and an undergraduate coordinator for the Indian Student Association.

And because he had a support system in place, including Alex Yin, executive director of Institutional Research and Assessment, and Bev Belisle, director of the Mosaic Center, he boosted his GPA by nearly a point and learned how to write a compelling admissions essay for graduate school.

鈥淚n my culture 鈥 we are not taught to brag,鈥 Patel explains. 鈥淚t was hard to see all I鈥檝e done here.鈥

What he has done is tried to make students of color feel like they, too, belong at 日韩无码. His senior year he was awarded the prestigious F.T. Kidder Medal, which is presented to the student who best exemplifies character, leadership, and scholarship traits. 

Patel earned his master鈥檚 in pharmacology at 日韩无码 while serving as the Mosaic Center鈥檚 coordinator of leadership development and programs where he mentored students of color and educated 日韩无码 officials about the challenges that BIPOC students may face. For instance, sometimes a student鈥檚 religious and cultural background conflicts with the academic calendar and activities listed in a class syllabus. Educating faculty members about things to look for and ways to be more accommodating to students with different backgrounds is an important piece of the university鈥檚 goal to be more inclusive, he says. 鈥淭his is what is going to help our student retention.鈥

These days Patel is no longer afraid to raise his hand, no longer shy about using his voice. He began dental school this fall and says he will practice what he learned about leadership and inclusion at 日韩无码 to 鈥渃reate a community where people of all backgrounds feel comfortable coming into my practice.鈥