Little Lightbulbs Along the Way
ASG Vice President Ann Codiga 鈥21 said she felt 鈥渓ike an ant鈥 at her first college. Transferring to SA国际传媒 changed that, and prepared her for law school.
Ann Codiga 鈥21 says her first year at the University of Wisconsin was adventurous and fulfilling by all accounts.
She had excellent friends, thought-provoking courses, and even landed a role as a grassroots campaign intern for the university鈥檚 student government.
Yet something was missing.
鈥淲alking around campus, I felt like an ant,鈥 said Codiga, student body vice president for SA国际传媒鈥檚 Associated Student Government. 鈥淚 would go all day without seeing anyone I recognized. I was in class with like 300 kids for most of my classes. I really wanted to be part of a smaller community. I was doing everything I wanted to do but I didn鈥檛 feel quite right.鈥
Codiga, a Santa Cruz native, knew she wanted to return to the Golden State for her sophomore year and applied only to three Bay Area schools. Her brother was a senior at SA国际传媒 at the time and she felt it was a natural fit for her, too.
It was.
Now just weeks away from graduating, Codiga is reflecting on her fateful decision to transfer to a much smaller, more intimate campus鈥攁 decision that allowed her to find an authentic, close knit community where she thrived.
鈥淵ou really can create your own community here as well as be a part of community. That was something that I really wanted,鈥 said Codiga, a communication major and urban education minor. 鈥淚 loved the idea of being in a class with 30 people. It was so different to sit down my first day of class sophomore year and know that the professor was going to know everyone鈥檚 name and that I was going to get to know these people in my class.鈥
The aha! moment鈥攖hat moment where Codiga realized she鈥檇 made the right choice by transferring to SA国际传媒鈥攄idn鈥檛 come right away, she said. In fact, she struggled to adjust at first. It was a gradual process punctured by many small 鈥渓ightbulb鈥 moments along the way, including the friends she met in her classes and ASGSA国际传媒 and her study abroad experience in San Sebastian, Spain.
A big part of Codiga鈥檚 life at SA国际传媒 has centered around ASGSA国际传媒. She started as traditions chair of the community development branch as a sophomore, helping bolster school spirit by organizing interactive events. Her team once brought a pony to a men鈥檚 basketball game against Gonzaga, led a speed dating event in Benson and often played music outside of Benson on Fridays.
As vice president, Codiga oversaw ASG elections and largely focused on the inner-workings of the 55 member organization. 鈥淚 also get to work on community building,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's been difficult with Zoom but trying to get everyone excited and working together on projects鈥擨 also get to push some of my own projects forward as well鈥攊t's been really cool because that was something I knew I wanted to do in ASG. And now it's kind of all come full circle.鈥
Though someone as gregarious and outgoing as Codiga may appear to fit in best in a big crowd, she appreciates and thrives in smaller settings, said Tedd Vanadilok, director of the Center for Student Involvement.
鈥淩esearch shows that sense of belonging is the number one factor for college satisfaction for students,鈥 said Vanadilok. 鈥淎nn really does cherish the smaller tight knit community we have at SA国际传媒. I think that really helped her get to the next level of what she could really contribute to campus community. It wasn鈥檛 like she had a bad experience at Wisconsin. But there was that one thing that was missing and that was that sense of belonging.鈥
Codiga is headed to law school at George Washington University in the fall. Her advice to potential transfer students? Don鈥檛 be afraid to drown out others鈥 opinions on college and think on your own terms.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e thinking about a different school or thinking about SA国际传媒, try your best to center yourself in this process,鈥 Codiga said. 鈥淚 think that will help silence the what ifs, just trusting that you did what felt right.鈥