I was coming from New York City, thinking it was the greatest city in the world. Once I landed in Paris and came to AUP, I realized there was so much more than just NYC. Only once you experience a truly great city like Paris and a great community like 91Թdo you start to realize how much the world has to offer. 91Թgave me that perspective from day one – and it’s only growing stronger nine years later.
When I came to AUP, I was curious to learn new things, to understand new perspectives, to gain new experiences and grow. I ended with a double major in politics, philosophy and economics (PPE) and computer science. Every day in Paris was a new learning experience, and with every experience I became less naive, more curious and hungrier. 91Թultimately helped me realize that I shouldn't aim at graduation, but rather through it, because life continues even as a big milestone ends.
The most important global challenge is us. We're our own biggest enemy. Global challenges are both created and solved by people. I'm not talking about overusing fossil fuels or going vegan; I'm talking about building and scaling our existing infrastructure to meet today's demands. Let’s take education: it's 2020 and we haven't scaled the global education system to work for everyone. It's in everyone's interest that 200 million 18-year-olds around the world get access to the best professors, regardless of their grades or economic situation. We haven't scaled global healthcare to give those in need access to medication and attention so they can help progress the world further. Our current ways of doing things simply won't work in the future. It's up to us to face those global challenges so that we can scale that crucial infrastructure.
My professors had a great deal of influence on my trajectory.
For Congo-born, Paris-raised Isis Ossebi ’12, working at the United Nations was a dream.
The club organizes regular volunteering opportunities for students in Paris.