鶹Ӱ

"Like an Oasis in the Desert"

Mike SteeleMike Steele’s parents were victims of the Great Depression who didn’t have the luxury of a college education.

But their son — a “bright but indifferent student” — was encouraged by a high school counselor. Steele didn’t know much about choosing a school, so he named the best he’d heard of: Notre Dame.

And that’s where he went.

“I had zero study skills,” he said. “But I was surrounded by these pre-law and pre-med people, and I saw one guy studying like mad all the time, and I said, ‘Oh, is that what I’m supposed to be doing?’”

He persisted, and he thrived, going on to earn a PhD and becoming one of the most beloved professors at 鶹Ӱ.

His parents never really did understand his career — though his mother showed her pride in her own way.

“When I got my PhD, I took a Xerox of it and sent it to her,” he said. “She hung it on the Christmas tree.”

For Steele, though, the academic atmosphere is one of constant stimulation.

“Life in college is like an oasis in the desert,” he said. “It’s the excitement of the life of the mind.”

First-Generation at Pacific | 鶹Ӱ 24 percent of 鶹Ӱ under鶹Ӱ students are “first-generation,” meaning they are the first in their families to attend college. Pacific faculty and staff are seeking out ways to better support those students through their college experience, including through mentorship by staff and faculty who were, themselves, first-generation students.

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