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Gerrard
Russell
Information
Technology Management and Security Plus major
Prospective
2016 graduate
|
By Hadassah Hall
Gerrard Russell is determined to not be
average. His pledge from the first semester at The Bahamas Technical
and Vocational Institution (BTVI) was to remain committed and dream
big.
“BTVI has given me my ability to
dream again. After high school, I quit dreaming, but at BTVI, I
started dreaming about possibilities,” said Gerrard. “The instructors are really
knowledgeable, personable and they actually care. It’s a
community, and as it grows, the students are growing with it,” he
stated.
The Information Technology Management
and Security Plus major is among the 250-plus BTVI students slated to
graduate on the 5th July at Bahamas Faith Ministries
International.
The road for Gerrard has not been
without its challenges. He knows what it is to drive from his
Chippingham home to BTVI on Old Trail Road on a near empty gas tank.
He knows what it is to accept a sponsored suit
to attend a regional conference because he did not own a suit. And
as he did not have a full scholarship, he knows what it is to
struggle to pay school fees.
Nevertheless, Gerrard did not focus on
what he did not have, but what opportunities were in front of him.
“I came to BTVI on faith. My mom used
to pay all my fees, but one brother now attends BTVI and the other
one is enrolled in home school, so it resulted in less money to
assist me. I still had to come up with $600-$700 per semester, so I
fixed computers on the side,” he said.
The 26-year-old refused to allow such
obstacles to deter him; he used them as fuel to propel him. It is a
far cry from what his outlook once was. He admitted that while a
student of C. C. Sweeting High School, he threw opportunities away.
“I began skipping classes, but at
BTVI, I actually wanted to come to classes. There was this draw
(towards BTVI). Here, they focused on my talent. It drove me to the
point I fell in love with school. At BTVI, it’s not the old desk
and book system. It’s more of an exploration of learning.
Besides, after six years in the work world, I needed more than a boss
screaming at me,” he stated.
With his eyes on entrepreneurship and a
cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.7, Gerrard’s career goal
is to become a Security Auditor. “I want to sell security protection.
I would hack the system by showing the vulnerabilities of it in an
effort to improve upon the overall security,” he proposed.
Additionally, because of BTVI, Gerrard
has been afforded opportunities he otherwise may have never received.
Earlier this year, he participated in the first Bahamas
Telecommunications Company (BTC) hackathon. In 2014 he was one of two
local technical education students sponsored by the Utilities
Regulation and Competition Authority (URCA) to represent The Bahamas
at the Regional Youth ICT Innovations Training Workshop in Antigua
and Barbuda.
Also in 2014, Gerrard was an exchange
student at Fanshawe College in Canada. He said the Emerging Leaders
in Americas Program scholarship was eye opening.
“I never dreamt I would come to BTVI
and go to college for two semesters. I thought I would come through
the system, learn some computer repair and graduate,” admitted the
institution’s 2016 student speaker. “Fanshawe really opened my mind. It
was so progressive and I learned there are so many more components to
IT. I remember the first day of class, a professor gave us a sheet
of paper and we had to figure out CISCO switches and routers,” he
exclaimed.
Gerrard said because of the exposure,
he no longer has a myopic view of the world.
“I now know there is a whole world
out there. It is hard to perceive it while here. TV doesn’t do it
justice,” he said. “I cannot go
back to the way I use to live. I learned to cook, manage my finances
and time, I became independent. I had a Brazilian, Mexican and Indian
roommate. I learned about their cultures and how they perceive the
world - whether liberal or conservative. I miss them,” he
confessed.
Although it has taken Gerrard four
years to complete his Associate of Applied Science degree, it is the
journey as opposed to the destination that has made him realize the
possibilities that exist.
“BTVI gave me much more than a
degree. It gave me a hope and a future. Thank you BTVI for giving
me a life,” he concluded.
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