In scholarship shape
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Jeff Benson
Political science major Brittany Schick said that so far she’s
achieved everything she’s wanted in life, and if everything goes
according to plan, she could become the next Colin Powell or
Condoleezza Rice.
“I grew up being told I could be anything I wanted to be, and so
far I haven’t found that to be untrue,” Schick, 21, said.
In November, the UC Irvine political science and international
studies major and ranking officer in UCLA’s Air Force ROTC program
received the George J. Mitchell scholarship, one of 12 that the
U.S.-Ireland Alliance gives annually to deserving students aspiring
for graduate study in Ireland.
The Mitchell scholarship is on par with other prestigious
scholarships such as the Rhodes, the Truman or the Fulbright, Schick
said. It’s awarded each year to honor former U.S. Sen. George J.
Mitchell’s contributions to the Northern Ireland peace process and to
network future American policymakers with Irish leaders.
Schick becomes the first Mitchell recipient from UC Irvine in the
award’s six-year history, said Dell Pendergrast, director of the
Mitchell program.
“Our committee was very impressed with her enthusiasm and her
public spirit in what she envisions with her public life,”
Pendergrast said. “She’s very committed to her military career and to
serving the community in that way. And of course, she’s very bright
and intelligent.”
Schick said she’s locked her scopes on someday becoming the U.S.
secretary of state or secretary of defense. She said she got her
interest in national security and international political affairs
from her father, a former Air Force fighter pilot.
“I want to be involved in international politics,” she said. “I
grew up believing that America is the greatest nation on Earth.
Although we’ve made mistakes, what we’ve sworn to protect for future
generations is important.”
In the meantime, Schick plans to parlay her college experience
into a career in military intelligence, after she attends Dublin City
University in the fall to earn her master’s degree in international
relations.
Mitchell scholars are selected because they exhibit high levels of
academic achievement, leadership and community service, Pendergrast
said.
Irish universities each accept up to two Mitchell scholars per
year. The universities waive tuition and pay for housing, while the
U.S.-Ireland Alliance pays for the transatlantic airfare and a
stipend of about $12,000, she said.
“I was thrilled,” Schick said, recalling when she was selected for
the award in November. “This is one of those huge scholarships that
you hear about people getting. It was sort of like a big pat on the
back.”
Schick has also served as flight commander, vice wing commander
and training director at UCLA’s cadet-run Air Force ROTC program,
where she’s learned to communicate efficiently in the military’s
chain of command. She’s working to obtain her top-secret clearance,
she said.
“I was trained to be an officer,” she said. “ ... In the ROTC, you
go to field training. It’s a rite of passage because you take on
leadership and training opportunities. There’s a point to everything
you’re doing.”
As an undergraduate student at UC Irvine, Schick has focused on
how American intelligence policies and practices have changed
according to terrorist threats posed after Sept. 11. Responses to more traditional threats, such as those used in the Cold War era, no
longer work because of technological advances, she said.
Changes in the intelligence structure are forcing domestic
policing agencies such as the CIA and FBI to work together now more
than ever, she said.
Audrey DeVore, director of UC Irvine’s Scholarship Opportunities
program, said Schick was selected from 220 candidates endorsed by
their universities. The field represented only a small percentage of
those who applied, which DeVore estimated at 800 students.
“They’re looking for people who are leaders, who have contributed,
and will contribute to society,” DeVore said. “I’ve never met anyone
like her. She’s got nerves of steel, and she’s highly dedicated to
this country.”
When Schick graduates from UC Irvine in June, she’ll commission
into the Air Force for the summer. In September, she’ll spend a year
earning her master’s in international relations and research the way
Irish government coordinates with British intelligence.
When she returns to the U.S., Schick said she’ll be able to choose
between pursuing a career in the departments of state or defense or
continue to work her way up through the Air Force ranks.
Job opportunities in the intelligence field have increased
significantly since Sept. 11, she said.
“The Air Force stuff will be put on hold while I’m in Ireland,”
she said. “Basically, when I get back, I’ll probably go to Intel
school and start active duty. The military’s been a good decision so
far.”
* JEFF BENSON covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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