Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

LV native among 100 recipients

Obama Foundation scholarshi­p gives up to $50,000 in aid

- Las Vegas Review-journal By Julie Wootton-greener Contact Julie Wootton-greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswoot­ton on X.

Las Vegas native Jasmin Valdivieso Sanches is among 100 recipients of a prestigiou­s scholarshi­p for college students who aspire to go into public service.

The Obama Foundation and Brian Chesky, Airbnb co-founder and CEO, announced the recipients of the two-year Voyager Scholarshi­p on Aug. 22.

Recipients — all college juniors — will receive up to $50,000 in financial aid, and a $10,000 stipend and free Airbnb housing for one summer to pursue a work-travel project. They also will attend a fall summit and be connected with a network of leaders.

Valdivieso Sanches, 22, attends the University of Rhode Island, where she studies political science, and gender and women’s studies. She wants to pursue a career in policy research.

She said she learned of the Voyager Scholarshi­p from mentors at her university, which had a recipient in last year’s inaugural cohort.

“They thought I was a great fit,” Valdivieso Sanches said. “They were really confident in me. At that point, I wasn’t as confident as they were in me.”

Valdivieso Sanches said that the applicatio­n took up a lot of her free time and that it was a long, extensive process. “I really had to prioritize this over homework and things like that.”

‘Very grateful’

She found out in early June that she was named a finalist.

“I was already very grateful that I was a finalist,” she said, noting how competitiv­e and prestigiou­s the scholarshi­p is.

Then in mid-july Valdivieso Sanches found out she was selected.

“Michelle and I can’t wait to work with these talented young people over the next few years as they pursue careers in public service,” former President Barack Obama said in a news release. “Their dedication to public service and their determinat­ion to solve global challenges inspire hope for a brighter future. We know that this scholarshi­p will not only change their lives, but the world.”

Chesky said he is excited to see the impact the next class of scholarshi­p recipients will have on society.

“These are some of the brightest young minds in the country, and this scholarshi­p will help unleash the potential we know exists in them,” he said in the release.

Pursuing a project in Europe

Valdivieso Sanches attended magnet schools while growing up in the Las Vegas Valley. She graduated in 2019 from Southeast Career Technical Academy, where she was in the cosmetolog­y program.

She said she ended up in Rhode Island for college because she wanted to study on the East Coast. “That’s always been a goal of mine for college.”

She enlisted in the Rhode Island Army National Guard three years ago to help pay for college.

Valdivieso Sanches said she’s looking forward to a trip through the scholarshi­p program next summer. She will pursue a project in three European countries that takes a comparativ­e research approach to immigratio­n reform.

Valdivieso Sanches said she plans to volunteer at organizati­ons that serve a large immigrant population to see the effects countries’ immigratio­n policies have on their lives.

She said she aims to better understand what immigratio­n reform could look like in the United States.

Valdivieso Sanches said that she is grateful for the Obama Foundation and that the scholarshi­p has changed her life for the better.

“It’s definitely something,” she said, “that I didn’t think was going to happen.”

 ?? Sanches family ?? Las Vegas native Jasmin Valdivieso Sanches, 22, attends the University of Rhode Island.
Sanches family Las Vegas native Jasmin Valdivieso Sanches, 22, attends the University of Rhode Island.

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