Friday, August 21, 2020

Program Assistant Introduction Nabila Hassan MPA 20 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - SIPA Admissions Blog

Program Assistant Introduction Nabila Hassan MPA 20 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - SIPA Admissions Blog Nabila Hassan was born and raised in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. She is a second-year MPA student concentrating in Economic and Political Development and specializing in Technology, Media and Communications. After graduating from the University of Edinburgh with a MA in History and Politics, Nabila worked in communications in Malaysia focusing on social impact, public sector client communications and digital communications. What were you doing before you came to SIPA? Before SIPA, I spent three years at McKinsey Company in Malaysia with the  integrated communications team in Southeast Asia and then Asia. During my time there,  I had the opportunity to work on client projects with public sector and government-linked companies which re-energized my ambition to contribute to change both in Malaysia and in the region. What attracted you to SIPA and Columbia University? A former colleague attended SIPA a few years ago and encouraged me to apply. I dug deeper into SIPAs curriculum, faculty and student profile and  it quickly became my dream graduate school. Knowing that I would return to Southeast Asia, I wanted to attend a school with immense diversity from its people and thinking to the breadth of classes and faculty expertise. SIPA also has a healthy balance of classes that teach practical skills, which is useful regardless of what industry you pursue after school.  Location was most definitely a helpful deciding factor theres no other city like New York and the abundance of opportunities that exist here. Did you choose to attend SIPA to change careers, or to gain experience in a career path you already had experience in? I chose to attend SIPA to change careers or rather, to focus my career. My previous role was in communications and I would like to move towards a technology policy role which will both leverage my prior experience while at the same time be a shift towards a more specific policy career. So I guess its a little bit of both! Do you feel like you have gotten to know some of the faculty members? Yes! The faculty members that I have gotten to know at SIPA are incredible and extremely thoughtful! They have given me career and academic guidance and have proactively shared opportunities that fit my interest.  As I completed my undergraduate degree in the UK, I wasnt sure what to expect of the education system in the US. I find the approaches very different as the US takes a more hands-on approach to education, and there are efforts to link you into the broader college community. What most surprised you about SIPA after you arrived? How fast orientation ended and the first day of classes arrived! The first few weeks at SIPA was overwhelming because it took time to adjust to being a student again while at the same time juggling classes, add/drop period (this was not a thing in the UK!), attending socials and making friends. What surprised me the most are the incredible people here who constantly create an inclusive and welcoming environment. Did you have a lot of quantitative experience when you applied to SIPA? Why not? How did you perform in those classes?   I applied to SIPA with very limited quantitative experience that I struggled with writing the quantitative resume, primarily because I did not use those skills after high school. Studying for the GRE helped build that confidence and I also took a college-level online introduction to micro- and macroeconomics which helped me better prepare for those classes at SIPA. While I was initially apprehensive about any quantitative class, they have all turned out to be very valuable and it will most definitely be useful regardless of what job you wish to pursue post-SIPA. Strangely enough, Quantitative I was my favourite class last year, and I hope to take Quantitative Analysis II in the Spring.

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