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International student from India found passion, confidence in four years at 91亚色 U

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International student from India found passion, confidence in four years at 91亚色 U

Naima Sood credits University community with encouraging her to pursue an impressive array of leadership roles.

Recently, as she prepared to graduate with a degree in sociology from 91亚色, international student Naima Sood said she was leaving campus with a newfound confidence in her abilities and the freedom to use her voice, both of which she struggled to find growing up in New Delhi.

鈥淚 came from India feeling doubtful about myself, and 91亚色 truly gave me an opportunity to become the person I am today,鈥 said Sood, 22. 鈥淚 definitely feel like I鈥檓 ready to take on what鈥檚 next for me, and if there are disappointments that come my way, 91亚色 has better prepared me for that. 91亚色 has prepared me for the journey ahead 鈥 the good, bad, the ugly, all of it. I鈥檓 ready to take it on.鈥

Over her four years at 91亚色鈥檚 Glendon College, Sood embodied the University鈥檚 mission to use her voice, experience and skills to create positive change.

She was a member of the Glendon student caucus, giving her a voice on programming choices when they were debated at faculty council meetings. She was a student representative on a committee to find a new principal for Glendon. She helped establish a Model United Nations on campus, and she was an executive on 91亚色鈥檚 UNICEF Club, which runs fundraising events and awareness campaigns about issues that impact children across Canada and the globe.

And, perhaps unsurprisingly, given her accomplishments, the University鈥檚 recruitment office hired her as a student ambassador to help prospective international students get a feel for life at Glendon.

Naima Sood walks the stage at Convocation 2022 to receive her degree from 91亚色 President Rhonda Lenton.

Sood dreamed of studying abroad even before she was a teenager. Her father, who is head of operations for BBC in India and South Asia, and her mother, who teaches mindfulness, had always been supportive.

Sood arrived in Canada in 2017, after her father had travelled to Glendon to give her a virtual walking tour over FaceTime. Before long, she had fallen in love with Glendon鈥檚 surrounding north-Toronto neighbourhood, not far from the tony Bridal Path enclave, where enterprising sightseers can find rap star Drake鈥檚 opulent mansion.

But what she came to value most, as she settled into her studies, was the support she received from her peers, professors and University staff, who pushed her to reach again for leadership roles.

鈥淲hen I came from high school, I didn鈥檛 really have faith in myself that I could do it, but with the peers and the environment that Glendon created, it gave me faith in my own abilities and re-instilled that, hey, I鈥檓 capable. I can do this.鈥

In the classroom, in the midst of all her extracurricular commitments, Sood dug deeper into the differences she was perceiving between life in India and in Canada, particularly migration policies and women鈥檚 rights. Through the coursework she completed for her minor in communications, she interrogated the implications of fake news and the explosion of social media. And she found time to pick up French, a language she had had only a passing grasp of in India.

"When I came from high school, I didn鈥檛 really have faith in myself that I could do it, but with the peers and the environment that Glendon created, it gave me faith in my own abilities and re-instilled that, hey, I鈥檓 capable. I can do this.鈥

Naima Sood

Sood put her academic experience to use in real life, volunteering in a communications role for the Ontario Liberal Party during the four-week provincial election in 2018.

Today, Sood is trying to get a foothold in a career in communications as a content creator or production assistant. She hopes to use that as a springboard to one day produce a network series that shines a spotlight on the different practices of people and cultures around the globe, the kind of perspective her transition from India to Canada gave her when she was 18.

鈥淭he biggest thing that I鈥檝e liked about Canada is the freedom that you have to voice your opinions, the freedom that you have to say things without a judgment being attached to them and the open policy we have of just listening to on another without any feeling of anger or hatred coming in,鈥 she said.

Her parents travelled from India to watch her walk across the stage and collect her degree at convocation in June 鈥 91亚色 U鈥檚 first in-person convocation since the beginning of the CODD-19 pandemic.

She can stay in Canada on her student visa until 2023 after which she plans to lengthen her stay by applying for a work permit once she finds her first job.

鈥淗opefully, within the next six to eight months, I can land myself a job, which I鈥檓 passionate about and excited about. And then I can start the process of finding an apartment, finding a home and moving in 鈥 the adulting will truly begin.鈥

This year鈥檚 Glendon Convocation took place on Saturday, June 18, at Glendon Green. All 2020 and 2021 graduates who attended virtual ceremonies were also welcomed back to campus on that day in celebration of their degrees.


Une 茅tudiante originaire d鈥橧nde d茅couvre sa passion, sa confiance et sa voix 脿 Glendon

L鈥橴niversit茅 de 91亚色 cr茅e des changements positifs en encourageant les 茅tudiants et 茅tudiantes 脿 explorer des r么les de leadership

L鈥櫭﹖udiante internationale Naima Sood vient d鈥檕btenir un baccalaur茅at en sociologie et en communication de l鈥橴niversit茅 91亚色; elle quitte le campus non seulement avec un dipl么me en poche, mais aussi avec une nouvelle confiance en ses capacit茅s et la possibilit茅 de faire entendre sa voix, deux choses qui 茅taient difficiles 脿 New Delhi.

芦 J鈥檃vais quitt茅 l鈥橧nde remplie d鈥檌ns茅curit茅. 91亚色 m鈥檃 permis de devenir la personne que je suis aujourd鈥檋ui, d茅clare Naima qui a maintenant 22 ans.

Je me sens pr锚te 脿 affronter ce que l鈥檃venir me r茅serve; s鈥檌l y a des d茅ceptions en cours de route, l鈥橴niversit茅 91亚色 m鈥檃ura bien pr茅par茅 aux bonnes choses comme aux mauvaises choses, comme aux tribulations. Je peux tout encaisser. 禄

Depuis son enfance, Naima r锚vait d鈥檃ller 茅tudier 脿 l鈥櫭﹖ranger. Son p猫re, 颅qui est directeur g茅n茅ral de la BBC Inde/Asie du Sud, et sa m猫re, qui enseigne la pleine conscience, l鈥檕nt toujours soutenue.

Naima est arriv茅e au Canada en 2017. Son p猫re s鈥櫭﹖ait tout d鈥檃bord rendu en personne au campus Glendon de l鈥橴niversit茅 91亚色 pour le lui faire visiter virtuellement gr芒ce 脿 FaceTime. Elle explique qu鈥檈lle est tomb茅e amoureuse de ce quartier cossu situ茅 au nord de Toronto, pr猫s du Bridal Path o霉 se trouve l鈥檕pulente demeure de Drake, la vedette de rap.

Mais 脿 mesure de la progression de ses 茅tudes, Naima a commenc茅 脿 appr茅cier davantage le soutien de ses pairs, de ses professeurs et du personnel de l鈥橴niversit茅 et a r茅essay茅 de se lancer dans des r么les de leadership.

芦 Quand j鈥檃i fini l鈥櫭ヽole secondaire, je ne croyais pas vraiment en moi. Gr芒ce 脿 mes pairs et 脿 l鈥檈nvironnement que Glendon a cr茅茅, j鈥檃i pris confiance en mes capacit茅s et je me suis dit que je pouvais faire 莽a. 禄

Tout au long de ses quatre ann茅es d鈥櫭﹖udes 脿 91亚色, Naima a incarn茅 la mission de l鈥橴niversit茅 en utilisant sa voix, son exp茅rience et ses comp茅tences pour cr茅er des changements positifs.

Elle a repr茅sent茅 la communaut茅 茅tudiante en si茅geant 脿 un comit茅 visant 脿 trouver un nouveau principal pour le coll猫ge Glendon. Elle a contribu茅 脿 la cr茅ation d鈥檜n mod猫le des Nations Unies sur le campus qui permet aux 茅tudiants et 茅tudiantes de repr茅senter des pays, des organisations ou des dirigeants lors de d茅bats fictifs sur des questions internationales pressantes.

Elle a fait partie du caucus des 茅tudiants de Glendon et a pu s鈥檈xprimer sur les choix de programmation quand ils 茅taient d茅battus lors des r茅unions du Conseil de la Facult茅. Elle a 茅galement au nombre des leaders du club UNICEF de 91亚色, qui organise des collectes de fonds et des campagnes de sensibilisation aux probl猫mes qui touchent les enfants du Canada et du monde entier.

Le Bureau de recrutement de l鈥橴niversit茅 l鈥檃 engag茅e comme 茅tudiante ambassadrice pour aider les futures cohortes d鈥櫭﹖udiants internationaux 脿 se faire une id茅e de la vie 脿 Glendon.

En salle de classe, Naima a approfondi les diff茅rences qu鈥檈lle percevait entre la vie dans un pays en d茅veloppement comme l鈥橧nde et la vie au Canada, notamment en ce qui concerne les politiques de migration et les droits des femmes. Elle s鈥檈st servie de sa mineure en communication pour r茅fl茅chir aux implications des fausses nouvelles et 脿 l鈥檈xplosion des m茅dias sociaux. De plus, elle a appris le fran莽ais, une langue qu鈥檈lle ma卯trisait mal en Inde.

Naima a mis 脿 profit son exp茅rience universitaire dans le cadre d鈥檜n poste de b茅n茅volat, en occupant un poste de communication pour le Parti lib茅ral de l鈥橭ntario pendant les quatre semaines qu鈥檕nt dur茅 les 茅lections provinciales.

Aujourd鈥檋ui, elle tente de faire une perc茅e dans le secteur du marketing et des communications.

Elle esp猫re s鈥檈n servir comme tremplin pour produire un jour une s茅rie t茅l茅vis茅e qui mettra en lumi猫re les diff茅rentes pratiques des gens et des cultures du monde entier, le genre de perspective que sa transition de l鈥橧nde au Canada lui a donn茅 脿 l鈥櫭e de 18 ans.

芦 Ce que j鈥檃ime le plus au Canada, c鈥檈st la libert茅 d鈥檈xprimer ses opinions et de dire des choses sans 锚tre en proie au jugement ainsi que l鈥檈sprit d鈥檕uverture qui consiste 脿 茅couter l鈥檃utre sans sentiment de col猫re ou de haine 禄, d茅clare-t-elle.

Ses parents ont fait le voyage pour la voir traverser l鈥檈strade et recevoir son dipl么me lors de la c茅r茅monie de remise des dipl么mes de Glendon, le samedi 18 juin, lors la premi猫re c茅r茅monie de remise des dipl么mes en personne depuis la pand茅mie.

芦 J鈥檈sp猫re que d鈥檌ci six 脿 huit mois, je pourrai d茅crocher un emploi qui me passionne et m鈥檈nthousiasme. 脌 ce moment-l脿, je pourrai commencer 脿 chercher un appartement, un chez-moi et emm茅nager. Je deviendrai vraiment adulte. 禄