Once a struggling high school student, now UOG鈥檚 valedictorian
Maya Nena D. Nanpei holds her diploma up high over Pago Bay. She earned her bachelor's in English on Dec. 27, 2020, and graduated as the valedictorian of her class.
Like many high schoolers upon graduation, the world looked intimidating for Maya Nena Desnacido Nanpei. It seemed too big for her to find her place and lacked guidance, support, and direction. And considering her struggle with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder almost prevented her from graduating high school at all, she lacked confidence that she鈥檇 be able to take on anything greater.
But over the next four years, things took a complete 180, and something happened that, as a high schooler, she never could have dreamed. She graduated at the top of her class as the 91快播 valedictorian for Fanuch氓nan 2020. And her journey to that point was also unlike anything she could have imagined.
鈥淕rowing up, I didn鈥檛 really enjoy going to school,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have a firm handle on my ADHD, so it was hard for me to stay engaged in class and focus on my work. The only activity that I truly enjoyed was reading. I read during snack time, at home, and sometimes, in class 鈥 to the annoyance of most of my teachers.鈥
Feeling lost and unsure of herself and hoping to find some direction, she decided to cross-enroll at the 91快播 and Guam Community College, clinging to the one thing she knew she enjoyed.
鈥淩eading, analyzing, and discussing 鈥 these were my favorite school-related activities. 鈥 I knew that I would be an English major. I declared right when I applied, and I never changed my mind,鈥 she said.
鈥淪taying in Guam for college was the best choice I could have made for myself,鈥 she said. 鈥淸鈥 It helped me realize that it is true what everyone says: There鈥檚 no place like home.鈥
Getting through four years of college 鈥 a challenge in itself 鈥 was even more complicated for Nanpei, who had the additional hurdle of ADHD. Additionally, she and her classmates unexpectedly had to finish their senior year online due to the pandemic.
But alongside those challenges, she found support and encouragement from her professors and her fellow English majors.
鈥淭hey stood by me, challenged me, and, ultimately, taught me lessons that will continue to shape my life in the years to come,鈥 she said of her professors. And of her classmates, she said, 鈥淚 found a home in them.鈥
Her undergraduate experience also brought clarity about what her career would eventually look like. Having had an early interest in law and having been the captain of her high school mock trial team, she had a long-term plan of going to law school, but her undergraduate activities followed a theme that revealed a different path.
She helped plan writing workshops as a member and secretary of , she was a judge for essays and creative works written by elementary, middle, and high school students in the Island Wide Writing Contest, she presented at the Language Arts Conference on classroom activities involving theater to make teaching literature more engaging, and she tutored her peers at the on campus.
鈥淚 later realized that the classroom was where I wanted to be,鈥 she said. 鈥淔rom technical skills, like grammar and mechanics, to more complex ones, like analyzation, there are so many things that can be taught in literature and composition classes. To be able to impart this knowledge onto students is something I hope I can do within my future classrooms.鈥
鈥淚 hope that we leave our time at UOG feeling like we belonged to something outside of ourselves,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd use that feeling to inspire us in future endeavors.鈥
For Nanpei, her future endeavors include gaining experience as a teacher here on island and preparing to apply to a master鈥檚 program focused on rhetoric, composition, and teaching English. Eventually, she wants to get her doctorate as well and return home to Guam to teach college-level English.
Like many high schoolers, Nanpei wasn鈥檛 sure who she was or what she wanted to become. But she followed a passion, she found a community, and she discovered the world has a place for her after all.