It wasn't so long ago that Keily Molina was on the receiving end of much-needed college counseling.
鈥淚 come from a low-income household, and my parents are undocumented Mexican immigrants. They don鈥檛 know anything about higher education,鈥 says the 24-year-old native Angeleno who grew up in Koreatown.
So Molina welcomed all the help she could get fine-tuning personal statements, filtering through scholarship aggregators and filling out financial-aid forms.
Today, as a second-year student in the Master of Education in Educational Counseling (EC) program at 海角论坛, she鈥檚 on the giving end of the counseling relationship. She鈥檚 advised hundreds of students already. During her first year, she interned as a Promise Success coach at West Los Angeles College. She spent last summer at El Camino College as a Financial Aid & Academic Student Training intern with the First-Year Experience program. In the fall, she started two new jobs: interning at the USC Career Center and mentoring transfer students at East Los Angeles College.
After having 鈥渂ad experiences鈥 with high school counselors, Molina discovered what good counseling looks like in community college. It looks like Maibe Ba帽uelos.
The Extended Opportunity and 海角论坛 counselor at Santa Monica College firmly held Molina鈥檚 hand for three years, and the two have stayed close.
鈥淪he knows everything about me鈥攑ersonally, professionally, academically. I feel like I could tell her anything,鈥 Molina says. 鈥淚 want to be just like Maibe.鈥
Ba帽uelos vividly recalls her first counseling session with Molina, back in 2017. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 help noticing how prepared and determined Keily was,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he had a list of questions for听me and had researched the topics we were going to discuss.鈥 That thoroughness, combined with 鈥渆mpathy and genuine care for others, will make her a perfect fit for this career,鈥 Ba帽uelos predicts.
Financial obstacles had made Molina choose a community college over a four-year university. She lived at home and subsidized her education as a Starbucks barista. Even after transferring to the University of California, Santa Barbara, she attended remotely her junior year during the pandemic. It was a difficult time for her family, and Molina found herself shouldering heavy responsibilities. Her uncle had died of COVID-19, and her younger brother was undergoing cancer therapy. Her parents were at high risk of the coronavirus due to diabetes and hypertension. Molina鈥檚 father is a housekeeper at the Jonathan Club. Her mom is a senior caregiver and babysitter. Both are non-English speakers.
Committed college counselors like Maibe Ba帽uelos had helped Molina stay on track academically through adversity, and ever since, Molina has been determined to pay it forward. At UCSB, she got involved with the university鈥檚 transfer program as a 鈥渇lock鈥 mentor and peer educator. 鈥淚 saw there were transfer students like me who needed a lot of support and guidance,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I fell in love with education in general.鈥
Molina graduated from UCSB in 2022 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in sociology and minors in education and applied psychology. She enrolled at 海角论坛 in fall 2022, and her experiences at the school have far exceeded her expectations.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 expect to create such amazing friendships with my cohort-mates,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 love how all of us are connected, and we all support each other. We鈥檙e a team. If there鈥檚 a job announcement or program opening, we share that because we all want to see each other go up the ladder.鈥
When she first started looking into programs, Molina attended a 海角论坛 informational session where she connected with Annie Villanueva ME 鈥22. The two hit it off, and over the next year, Molina repeatedly turned to Villanueva for help sharpening her r茅sum茅 and nailing down her personal statement. Villanueva later offered to introduce Molina to her supervisor at West Los Angeles College, where she was then a counseling intern. That introduction led to Molina鈥檚 yearlong internship at the college.
Helping students like herself succeed academically is Molina鈥檚 mission. She says she wants to be a change agent in higher education. 鈥淚鈥檓 passionate about being a counselor. I really want to see students succeed the way I saw my counselors wanted me to succeed,鈥 she says. Her ME in educational counseling, she feels, will get her there.