FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, October 17, 2001
Mary Spletter (510) 987-9004
Mary.Spletter@ucop.edu
STUDENT REGENT-DESIGNATE BRINGS NEW PERSPECTIVE TO POSITION
UC Berkeley junior Dexter G. Ligot-Gordon brings fresh perspectives
and a rich tradition of community involvement to his new position
as student-regent designate on the University of California
Board of Regents.
Although he has been recommended by the regents' Special
Committee to Select a Student Regent, Ligot-Gordon's position
was not official until he was approved today (Oct. 17) by
the full board.
As student regent-designate, Ligot-Gordon is able to participate
in all deliberations but not vote until July 2002 when his
one-year term officially begins as a voting member of the
board.
Believed to be the first Filipino-American student regent-designate
on the UC Board of Regents, Ligot-Gordon said, "Too often
Filipinos feel that it is mutually exclusive to be in the
mainstream and be Filipino. My perspective is different."
"I am here to serve the university and the state as
a Filipino," he said.
Having a different perspective is nothing new to the 21-year-old
Vallejo (Solano County) native, who is majoring in political
economy of industrial societies at UC Berkeley.
Higher education was always expected of Ligot-Gordon. "My
grandmother, who had a second-grade education, and my grandfather,
who had a sixth-grade education, made tremendous sacrifices
to send their six children to college. To meet their goal,
they had to stick together, remain family-focused and take
care of each other," he said.
But as he was meeting the expectations of his close-knit
traditional family, he was also striving to meet the needs
of the broader Filipino community. "I'm the first one
in the family to be so involved with the community,"
he said.
By 1999, his activity in a number of community and youth
programs for Filipino-Americans earned him certificates of
recognition for community involvement by both the California
Assembly and Senate.
"I found that working within the community gave me a
large, extended family. It gave me a sense of purpose in a
struggle for social justice," Ligot-Gordon said. "At
first my outlook created some tension within my family. Now
they support my outlook and know it is my mission."
"Filipinos are the second largest Asian-American group
in the United States, but they are an invisible minority.
We have to have an influence in the mainstream in matters
that relate to our community and in matters that go far beyond
our own concerns," he said.
Ligot-Gordon is going to have one of the highest visibility
student positions at the University of California. He finds
it ironic that he had to use the appeal process to gain admission
into UC Berkeley.
"UC Berkeley was my college of choice, but at first
I was denied access. I felt that I was denied access because
the admissions process couldn't identify my service and commitment
to the community," he said.
"The appeals process allowed me to talk about what I
cared about and what was important to me. When I was accepted
into Berkeley, I knew I got in because of who I was, not because
of my numbers on a test."
Ligot-Gordon said that after he graduates he plans to teach
high school for a few years and then earn a degree. "But
I realize that my life is changing drastically. I will follow
the path of where I am needed the most in education, be it
teaching or public service."
Ligot-Gordon is the 28th student regent since the position
was established in 1975. UCLA graduate student Tracy M. Davis
is currently serving as voting student regent.
# # #
(Today Ligot-Gordon is attending the regents' meeting in
San Francisco. Media wishing to schedule an interview may
contact him through his office at UC Berkeley at 510-642-1119.)
|