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“Teachers
didn’t know how to deal with me, and that was frustrating.
I was never supposed to make it past high school.”
SMC to UCLA
to enroll in Pre-Med and eventually become a physician. Volunteering
for AmeriCorps—the domestic version of the Peace Corps—so
she’ll be of help in inner city schools. Shannon Yoshikawa
should have a T-shirt with ‘Success!’ written all over
it. But if she did, she’d doubtless want to order some for
a whole team of people.
“I was
diagnosed with dyslexia, at UCLA, about 20 years ago. It simply
slows down my reading, spelling, and mathematical processes,”
says Shannon, who “fell into” Women’s Studies at
SMC. “But I’m getting my Bachelor’s at UCLA this
June and for that, I owe a lot of people who were involved in
my education: my father, my uncle, my husband, my doctor, and
the Center for Students with Disabilities at SMC. All of them
were on my side, helping me to succeed.” When last seen,
Shannon was breezing through the Center to pick up a letter of
recommendation that she hopes will bolster her approach to becoming
an internist for women.
“I’ve
applied to AmeriCorps because I’d like to work somewhere
like the Venice Family Clinic, so I’ll know what to expect
when I become a doctor. I want to see more strong women doctors,”
says Shannon, “because they’re much more able to understand
women’s needs and problems. My own doctor is an assistant
professor at UCLA’s School of Medicine, and she’s volunteered
to tutor me,” says Shannon. On her way to realizing her dream,
Shannon says that she’ll “always keep up my contacts
and friendships with SMC. It’s a place where so much of what
I’m doing now really began.”
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