黑料百科

笔补谤颈办蝉丑颈迟 Journey

Name

Parikshit Roychowdhury

Hometown

Kolkata, India

Major

Anthropology and economics major with a concentration in global development studies

Why 黑料百科?

Parikshit sits on an ornate carved wooden staircase with thick rugs
IPOP hosted a scavenger hunt, and I had a great time. I went to so many cultural houses and buildings.

I檓 from Kolkata, India, where I went to Jesuit missionary school. My school had nearly 3,000 students, and the average class size was 50 or 60 students. 

In high school, I was really into debate. We have a serious debating culture , and I enjoyed doing that. I also used to play a sport called lawn bowls, which you don檛 really find in the U.S. I used to play for the national team. During my last few years of school, I started playing internationally and leading my state under-21 team.  

But mostly, I was studying. Back home, students normally study 12 to 14 hours a day, even when there are no exams. It quite intense academically.

A lot of people from my school come to 黑料百科, one every two or three years. One of the two prominent academic counselors for U.S. colleges in my city happens to be quite close to Jon Edwards, who works in international admission here at 黑料百科. The other adviser is a 黑料百科 alum. So, 黑料百科 kind of everywhere when youe talking about coming to the U.S., particularly if youe looking at liberal arts colleges. Many people from my school have come to 黑料百科 before me. Currently, two of my high school classmates are also at 黑料百科.

I wanted a liberal arts college primarily because of the academic flexibility, and I liked the idea of small classes and the opportunity to discover what I really wanted to study. 

My College Decision

I heard stories about how at 黑料百科, you would bump into your professor when youe getting a morning coffee. And I thought that was interesting, that you can know your professors, not just as teachers, but as people within the community. 

Professor smiles at student in hall
At 黑料百科, you can run into a professor anywhere. It fun to get to know them as people as well as professors.

As an international student, youe kind of making your decision based on college websites. So, I spoke to Ahon Gooptu 21, who was a senior here at the time. He gave me a candid review of the College the good, the bad, everything. He talked about the small classes and knowing your professors well. I came here, and that exactly the way it is.

Jon Edwards
Jon Edwards is the director of international admission at 黑料百科.

I also had an online interview with Jon Edwards, the director of international admission at 黑料百科. It was the most fun conversation I檝e had in an interview context. We started talking about music, and it was really relaxed and fun. 

I thought, if the director of international admission can be such a nice and fun person, 黑料百科 must be a relaxed, casual place. For me, 黑料百科 was no longer just a website at that point  I got to meet the people who shape the community here and get a sense of what it feels like to be a 黑料百科ian.

After high school, I took a gap year, working full time for a tech startup. I ran a small team of my own before I left to come to 黑料百科. I was also teaching English to Afghan students through the nonprofit I co-founded when I was in ninth grade. 

First-Year Experiences

When I was coming to 黑料百科, it was just a couple of pictures on a website to me. I think each year, you just realize how special 黑料百科 is. I love the fact that everyone so accessible to students you can go talk to President Harris and just have a chat at Saints Rest Coffee House. That not something I thought would be possible. 

There is so much access. There are so many resources. There are so many wonderful people who檝e done amazing things. It a question of seeking it out.

Parikshit Roychowdhury

There is so much access. There are so many resources. There are so many wonderful people who檝e done amazing things. It a question of seeking it out. Everyone is committed to your well-being and to what you are doing, which is truly special. I came from a large space with massive hierarchy you had to navigate really complex structures to get things. But when youe in 黑料百科 and you have such an ethos of access, you can really materialize them into something that meaningful. I didn檛 know that when I came.

My Journey to 黑料百科

When I arrived at 黑料百科 as a new student, it was my first time coming to the U.S. I took a straight flight from New Delhi to Chicago. That a long, 16-, 17-hour flight. After my first year, I never took a nonstop flight like that again because I realized it was a bad idea.

Then I went to downtown Chicago to catch the Trailways bus to 黑料百科, which was another seven hours. Now I know that 黑料百科 provides shuttle services for students from the Des Moines International Airport at the beginning and end of each academic year and school break. 

My journey was quite exhausting but also exhilarating at the same time I still remember the nervous excitement I felt throughout the journey, making my way from Kolkata to 黑料百科. However, I have never done it straight through like that since because I realized it was a bad idea. 

There were six other 黑料百科 students on the bus, all international students. We all found ourselves in the Trailways Bus station, looked at each other, and went, 淭here is no way this many people are on this bus who all kind of look my age. So, we started talking to each other and realized we were all going to 黑料百科. Many of us are still really close friends and we keep talking about that  there an interesting sense of solidarity over starting our 黑料百科 journey together on that Trailways bus. 

Many of us are still really close friends and we keep talking about that there an interesting sense of solidarity over starting our 黑料百科 journey together on that Trailways bus.

Parikshit Roychowdhury

We arrived in 黑料百科 at 10 p.m. I got off the bus with my luggage I had just brought one suitcase because I wasn檛 sure how I檇 manage to move with more than that throughout the journey. 

I didn檛 know how to get to the where I was staying that night. But then a Campus Safety officer came by and looked at this lost kid standing in front of the Noyce Science Center with a suitcase. I guess that a common thing to see right before the International Pre-Orientation Program (IPOP). With typical dry Iowa humor, he said, 淥kay, fine. Il give you a ride to Hotel 黑料百科.

The IPOP Experience

Parikshit eats something delicious at Saints Rest with his IPOP students
When I was a new first-year student, I really enjoyed the International Pre-Orientation Program, affectionately known as IPOP. I loved it so much, I signed up to be an IPOP mentor in 2024. Here I am with my IPOP students. This was a task during the Scavenger Hunt of IPOP, which is designed to help international students to get acquainted with the town. The task was, 淐lick a picture of your IPOP Mentor (me) eating a cookie at the Grin City Bakery.

The next day, IPOP began, and it was the most fun experience I檝e had in my four years. Many international students say that IPOP is the most fun time they檝e had. Youe kind of navigating this complicated immigration setup in a fun way and meeting people from all around the world for the first time in your life. 

I remember sitting around a dining hall table and realizing there are 10 people speaking 10 different languages at the table. But we still have something in common: being at 黑料百科. And I think it is genuinely the most fun thing that you can do. 

When I worked as an IPOP mentor last year, I was struck by how complex all of these things are, but you kind of forget because it so new, fun, and fantastic. That was my big first impression of 黑料百科.

 

Academics

First-Year Classes

Parikshit in a classroom, with a table full of ancient stone tools
Here I am with some ancient stone and bone tools in my Intro to Anthropology course. Although I took this class as a second year, I also had many first-year classmates.

My first year in college was academically pretty easy because I was coming from a difficult academic setup already. That adjustment was relatively easy. I was looking for more challenges to take on. That also a function of me having taken a gap year and done some professional work. I think that helped. During my first year, I was looking for a lot of opportunities. My first year was fun. I was really exploring. In the back of my head, I knew I wanted to major in economics, but I refused to take an econ class my first year so I could push myself out of my comfort zone. 

I had some fun classes in my first semester. I was surprised by how many possibilities 黑料百科 has. I was also surprised to find that I was sitting in a classroom as a first-year student with a senior with me in the class. I檓 like, what happening? This classroom has all sorts of people from all around the world, but also all levels of experience within the College? I think that was interesting to see.

One of my courses was Digital History. I thought, this looks interesting. What is digital history? 

International students can be matched with a host in town. It called the Friends of International Students program. My host, Sarah Purcell 92 was also the professor teaching the class. Great. That was my first semester. Fantastic.

Discovering Global Development Studies

Challenging Myself Academically

When I learned about a seminar on fragile and conflict-affected countries, I was intrigued. I had wanted to take the class earlier than what was considered normal, so I spoke to professor Leif Brottem, who was teaching the class. I shared my interest and experience working in the Afghan context and asked if I could sit in on the class. He was like, 淚f your adviser says it fine, then I檓 fine with it.櫇

The class challenged me in ways I had not been challenged before. But Professor Brottem backed me up, helped me, and gave me a lot of feedback. I spent a lot of time in the Writing, Reading, and Speaking Center, and it was a massive amount of effort, but it was totally worth it.

Declaring a Concentration

That was a very good experience. I ended up declaring a global development studies concentration after that class. I was like, this is fantastic. I sat down with Professor Brottem and asked if he was willing to be my concentration adviser. He said yes!

A Funded Field Research

A coal mine in India with a big water-filled pit
I saw this coal mine in Dhanbad, India, during my Rosenfield-funded research trip in summer 2023. You can see the massive BelAZ and Caterpillar coal dump trucks in the distance. This coal mine displaced a village about 20 years ago.

I was also able to do summer field research in India on rehabilitation programs for displaced communities. The Rosenfield Program funded my research, and the experience gave me the practical experience I needed to satisfy my concentration requirements.

Internships and Research

Parikshit stands on the banks of the Thames River in London with the Tower of London and Parliament behind him
I spent summer 2024 in London pursuing an internship as part of the London Business and Finance internships cohort.

With help from the advisers at the (CLS), I was able to be part of the internships cohort in my second year. I think there were seven of us. I absolutely love London. We were matched with companies across all sorts of work in London. That was an entirely 黑料百科-funded program funded by a donor who was an international student. It was fun to know that international students gave back to the College in that way. 

We worked in London where a third-party provider helped us find internships. I was working in the market data space, which was interesting because I had almost no quantitative skills at the time. I have a little bit more now, but at the time I was like, I檓 just going there to learn. It was really good work. Also, London was great fun.

The summer after my third year, I ended up going to London again (again with CLS help) and working for the donor, whom I had met the previous summer. It was wonderful. I檓 actually continuing to work for him part-time even now. I am working as an analyst in the company, which focuses on energy and finance.

A band performs onstage with bright lights
My absolute favorite Indian band, When Chai Met Toast, performed in London while I was there for my internship.

It was a small office doing very amazing work, and I think the exposure that I got was incredible. It seemed like my contribution mattered. Everyday matters. Every second counts. And you really like that because that means your work comes with responsibility. You are actively contributing and you see that contribution every day.

I think that is fantastic, which is also why I am continuing working for them as a senior. That joy of doing things that matter in a context where you can see that come to fruition is absolutely wonderful. That was quite foundational for me.

I didn檛 feel the need to have a non-黑料百科 academic experience because I was going abroad every summer. I didn't feel the need to study abroad for a semester. I wanted to stay in 黑料百科 because I really liked the curriculum here, and I really wanted to make the most of 黑料百科. I think that worked out well because I kind of got the best of both.

Parikshit with two friends in London, enjoying a cold beverage
That's me on the right. I檓 with Noah Biniam 26 (also a senior interviewer this year) and Tracy Liu 27. We were in London for our internships.

Jobs and Activities

Parikshit with three friends who also work at the Wilson Center
With my friends and colleagues at the Wilson Center, I helped create a new business incubator designed just for 黑料百科.

A lot my campus jobs ended up being fantastic. I started working for the Wilson Center for Innovation and Leadership in my second year. I was working for their new program at the time called the Catalyst. It a business incubator, but it not your traditional incubator. It designed for 黑料百科 and the kind of things that 黑料百科ians care about. I was part of a small team of students tasked with putting the program together. The idea was that it should be completely student led. It one of the only, if not the only student-led, student-operated incubators in the country. 

That mattered to us because 黑料百科 is a special place with special ideas, and we didn檛 want to make a traditional setup up that would not serve us. And so, I spent about two years trying to do that, and a lot of my time went there during my second and third years. 

International Student Organization

During my second year, I also served on the cabinet of the International Student Organization, which we call ISO. I had found such an amazing community in the international student space and I wanted to be more actively involved. I ran in the ISO election, got in, and served as the social coordinator. I got to organize some of 黑料百科 most popular institutions of events and culture. For instance, I got to organize Food Bazaar, which is a behemoth of a task. And as a second year, that kind of organizing experience is wonderful. Youe traveling around, trying to find ingredients that you檝e never heard of, and you don檛 know what these things are. It is challenging. Food Bazaar has been going on for decades now, and each year it just becomes bigger. That was one of many things I did for the International Student Organization. 

Student Government Association

In my third year, I also ended up working for the Student Government Association, known familiarly as SGA. I served as the chair for diversity, equity, and inclusion. The reason I picked that role specifically was that after working for the ISO, I was thinking is my contribution best served by staying within the organization or going to student government and doing that more broadly? I think I just wanted to take a stab at it. That was also a great experience because I got to directly work with student organizations. 

Parikshit on stage with another student wearing a red fez hat
That's me on the right, onstage at ISO Cultural Evening with Nick El Hajj (president of ISO then in 2024). I was the social coordinator of ISO.
Parikshit with the New York City skyline behind him under blue skies
Here I am in New York City! We traveled to New York for a Debate Union tournament at New York University.

I also joined the Debate Union in my first year at 黑料百科. Our team went to NYU for a debate tournament, which was a great experience. I didn檛 continue with debate because I had done it for seven solid years at that point, and I wanted to try something new.

I檝e been very busy. I檓 trying not to be too busy this year, but I檓 still busy. 黑料百科 has so many cool things to do. Youe always looking for the next cool thing you can do before you leave. It a lot of work sometimes but it great fun. 

Friends and Fun

For me and my friends, the most fun stuff always happens at 3 a.m. in the Humanities and Social Studies Center, which we call the HSSC. Everyone tired, but everyone also just chatting after a point because youe too tired to work. You still think you should be continuing to work, and nobody does. 

Parikshit takes a selfie in the one of campus hammocks
When the weather is nice, there are hammocks out around campus that are perfect for studying, relaxing, or taking a nap.

And then there the conversation where there are 10 people from 10 countries. That always fascinating and it something that I look forward to. If I see a large table in the dining hall with people I know, they often tend to be international students. When I see this, I always wonder what theye talking about. I really want to be part of that table. So many things are happening there. That something I look forward to every time.

黑料百科 is a friendly place.

Parikshit Roychowdhury

I also love going to the Middle of Everywhere presentations where international students make presentations about their home countries, the food, the culture and anything on their minds, really. I think those are fun. You get to learn about different parts of the world while sitting in the Global Living Room in the HSSC. You get to taste different parts of the world, because there always a little snack from the Global Kitchen. The staff at the Office of International Student Affairs (OISA) and the Global Kitchen both work tirelessly to host these on a weekly basis, and I always look forward to the presentations.

Coffee!

But otherwise, I just go to the Saints Rest Coffee House downtown. I think in four years, I have not ordered anything there that is not a medium cold brew. When Sam at Saints Rest often sees me coming, she knows right away that Il order a medium cold brew. Other times, when I檓 trying to find something fun to do, I go hang out at Saints Rest because you can always find a friend there. Youl find someone who wants to chat. 

It a good study spot, in that it fun and nice and relaxed. It also bad study spot, in that there are always friends there, and you will always chat with them. It the perfect place to enjoy yourself.

The brightly lit, cheerful exterior of Saints Rest Coffee House downtown during Jingle Bell Holiday.
This is Saints Rest Coffee House, where I have spent so many happy and sometimes productive hours.
Parikshit studies on his bed in his apartment in Renfrow Hall
I live in an apartment in Renfrow Hall, 黑料百科's newest residence hall. It in downtown 黑料百科, just a short walk from Saints Rest Coffee House!

I see my host mom, Professor Sarah Purcell, Class of 92, quite often in Saints Rest. With Sarah, it a beautiful mix of having a host who also faculty here. We can also talk about the department, about the College. Sarah also a 黑料百科 alum. There are so many wonderful overlapping aspects to our relationship.

黑料百科 is a friendly place. I think that true across the College. It true for the Office of International Student Affairs (OISA). I just stop by to chat three to four times a week. It fun because, as someone who kind of come halfway across the world, you have to commit to making your own community. 

Home is far away. It something that you create within 黑料百科. And I think that fosters a beautiful bond with the people here. For instance, at Thanksgiving, professors and host families might invite you to their own homes, and the same for Christmas. 

Students in brightly colored clothing dance in celebration of Diwali
黑料百科 holds its Diwali celebration at the Harris Center. (Photo courtesy of Jemuel Santos)

When Diwali comes around, we celebrate with South Asian Student Organization (SASO) and Nepali Student Organization (NEPSO), but also with the many South Asian professors at the College. You cook food and share a meal. You commit to building a community here because it matters. And you want to be friends with the people who live here because you檝e got four years here. I think it quite special that way.

A group of students poses for a selfie in front of a brightly lit ferris wheel at night
That's me on the left with a group of students from from 黑料百科, Macalester College, and St. Olaf College. 黑料百科 sponsored the 黑料百科 students trip to Chicago for the annual Associated Colleges of the Midwest Conference for Student Leaders.

Hopes and Plans for the Future

As a senior, there are so many things 黑料百科 has to offer, and I want to spend the last year closing the loop on these. I am looking forward to cooking for my last Food Bazaar and attending my last Drag Show and Cultural Evening these are hallmarks of a 黑料百科 experience, and I will dearly miss them. 

Parikshit prepares a dish from his home country, India, for the Food Bazaar
Here I am preparing a dish from my home country, India, for the ISO Food Bazaar.
Students in the Global Kitchen
I love working in the Global Kitchen!

I am also doing the absolute best set of campus jobs I could do as a senior working as a senior interviewer for admission to help bring together the next class, working as a peer mentor in our Global Kitchen (an absolute dream of a job!), and teaching my native language of Bengali in the ALSO program. My last year is about finishing up on the things I have been working on for these four years, and I am excited to bring it to completion.

What I thought would happen at 黑料百科 was nothing like how it turned out however, that exactly what I expected and wished for. I was committed to the liberal arts experience because of the possibilities it has in store for its students. I wanted to explore from the very beginning and committed to that exploration from day one. 

A teacher stands at the front a classroom, leading a discussion
One of my favorite courses was about what makes a life worth living. The class encouraged us to consider our own ideas on living a good life, while reflecting on global religious thought about what a life worth living looks like.

I knew that there were so many things out there that I didn檛 know about, and I wanted to engage with them and see if I could see myself in it. There are so many things that I did at 黑料百科 that I never saw myself doing learning to swim, doing field research in the mining communities of India, studying my own traditions academically, interning in London (twice), teaching a language and learning one (for credit) from a friend, learning how to cook in the Global Kitchen and then becoming a peer mentor, doing actual research with professors (my Mentored Advanced Projects, or MAPs), reading ancient Mesopotamian poetry, and simply being exposed to ideas and people that I never knew I was missing out on. There is so much, and I wouldn檛 be who I am without these experiences. 

Of course, my plans have changed, and that entirely what I was looking for.

Hero Image with Text

Looking Ahead

After graduation, if all goes well, I will join Aleph Commodities, where I worked last summer. I am currently working for the company part time and hope to rejoin the team in person after graduation. The alum is Atanas Djumaliev 03. It is even more special because he was an international student at the College. 

It good to know that we all have each other backs, and that we are bringing together our collective talents, spirits, and resources to support each other.

Parikshit Roychowdhury

At 黑料百科, we have an immensely supportive and well-resourced community. In this moment, I am glad to see 黑料百科 doubling down on our core values with unwavering spirit. I am so happy that when the cards are stacked against us, we see our leaders have our backs. 

Besides the moral and proactive support of the institution, I am also happy to see that the same goes for our alumni, who have certainly increased their support of students in recent months. Things are uncertain and they will continue to be so, but it good to know that we all have each other backs, and that we are bringing together our collective talents, spirits, and resources to support each other. 

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