Editor鈥檚 Note: This is the fifth in a series of profiles of Spring 2024 graduates.
For Brittany Adjei, earning a college degree from University of Maryland Global Campus (UMGC) was about two things: taking advantage of an opportunity and proving her strength and resilience.
When Adjei, a member of the Georgia Army National Guard, stepped onto the stage at t 黑料社区鈥檚 2024 Grad Walk, she proved that she can stick to a goal鈥攅ven through a military deployment in Afghanistan, even through the death of her child鈥檚 father, even through a relocation. She believes her Bachelor of Science in Business Management also busts what she sees as myths about young mothers and women who raise children alone.聽聽
鈥淚 deployed in 2018鈥 and while on deployment, I wanted to use my free time wisely,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a single mom. I鈥檓 a young mom. I always knew that I wanted a degree, the degree is the ultimate goal, but I had a lot of pauses along the way.鈥
Adjei鈥檚 educational record reveals a young woman with changing interests and an ongoing curiosity about the world. Her course transcripts, for example, detail multiple chemistry classes from the period when she wanted to be a dental hygienist. And there are the social science courses from the stretch when she considered social work. Adjei learned about t 黑料社区 through her first sergeant 鈥渂ecause that鈥檚 where he got his degree,鈥 and it was there she decided that a business degree best matched her aspirations.聽聽
Adjei works as a recruiter for the National Guard in DeKalb County, Georgia, and said she has picked up skills at t 黑料社区 that help her in that position. Long-term, however, she wants to tap her entrepreneurial spirit and pursue a career in real estate.
Knowing her family was not equipped to pay for college, Adjei joined ROTC as a junior in high school .
鈥淚 had my son right after I graduated my senior year. My son鈥檚 father was already in the National Guard, and he told me to finish it out because I had already started ROTC. He said we should sacrifice now so we could be where we wanted to be.鈥 So, she joined the National Guard in 2012.
鈥淚 wanted to prove to everyone that I could do it as a young mom,鈥 she added. 鈥淚鈥檝e never wanted to be part of a negative statistic. I want to contribute in a positive way, as a woman, as an African American.鈥
After starting her full-time service with the National Guard, Adjei began taking classes at Georgia State University. That coursework was interrupted when she was deployed to Afghanistan. At the time, her son鈥檚 father was in Bahrain, so family members watched their child.
鈥淢y son鈥檚 father suddenly passed away due to cardiac arrest, so I had to come back home to Georgia. I was set to come home in two to three months, but I came home before my son鈥檚 last day of school. He was 6 years old.鈥
Married for five years, the couple had just divorced five months earlier, although they remained close friends. 鈥淲e talked every day,鈥 Adjei said. 鈥淲e texted that morning but by the time I called him, there was no answer.鈥
She said the death of her former husband motivated her to push forward.
鈥淢y new focus was to make sure my little one was OK. I put him into therapy. I came home and within two months, I bought my first house, went back to work and went back to school,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 always wanted to show my son how to be resilient. He鈥檚 11 now, turning 12, and I am very proud of how Mason has carried forward with himself.
鈥淣ot a lot of children his age have gone though the kind of loss he has,鈥 she said.
Mason will attend Grad Walk but Adjei laughed when she explained why: 鈥淗e didn鈥檛 have a choice.鈥 She said he鈥檚 at the age where 鈥渉e doesn鈥檛 want to hang out with me.鈥
Adjei said she has proven to Mason鈥攁nd others鈥攖hat she鈥檚 a committed parent and employee. And against the backdrop of those responsibilities 鈥淚 was still able to finish out my school strong.鈥
She said she knew from the time she was in middle school that she wanted to go to college.
Her UMGC experience was a good one.
鈥淯MGC for me, with the lifestyle I have as a single mom and working as a recruiter 鈥 gave me the opportunity to reach my goal without sacrificing,鈥 she said. 鈥淓ducation for me is power. It is about making my grandmother proud. It鈥檚 about resiliency.鈥澛
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