Nov. 28, 2019
University alumni recall what a Rhodes Scholarship meant to them
To win a Rhodes Scholarship 鈥 as 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 Emily Boucher and Manpreet Deol just did 鈥 requires an unusual array of talents, excelling not only academically, but also in extracurriculars (sports, music and artistic pursuits) as well as 鈥渕oral force of character.鈥 These two women, along with nine other Canadian recipients, possess these attributes in spades and will head to study at Oxford University in the fall of 2020.
The scholarship 鈥 famously won by Chrystia Freeland, Rex Murphy, John Turner and more than 100 other Canadians 鈥 pays for two to three years of post-graduate study at Oxford University in England. Selected from a pool of hundreds of applicants nominated by their colleges and universities for their academic excellence, ambition, and promise of leadership are the latest to follow in the steps of 16 other 草莓污视频导航 alumni who, since 1969 (when Luigi DiMarzo became 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 first recipient) have become Rhodes Scholars.
- Photo above, from left: Bogdan Knezevic, Rahul Arora and Yan Yu.
Where are these high-flyers today, and did this prestigious award that鈥檚 been around since 1903 truly alter their lives? From his obsession with clotted cream on scones (we鈥檙e looking at you, Yan Yu) to supping on mushy peas in Harry-Potteresque dining halls (too many alumni to list), we caught up with a few of 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 Rhodes scholars. Herewith:
Bogdan Knezevic, BSc鈥15, completed his Rhodes Scholarship earlier this year and is now the artificial intelligence lead at the Creative Destruction Lab in Toronto. Obtaining a PhD in clinical medicine from Oxford, this extraordinary student-athlete (also a world-class swimmer) now works with investors, advisers and scientists to help nurture 25 science and tech ventures a year. He explains how a Rhodes Scholarship flipped his world around.
鈥淚t thrust me into the world of data (broadly) 鈥 both from a technical perspective of how to work with data to how to build machine-learning algorithms for specific purposes,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut also from a broader perspective of where we, as a society, are today 鈥 from a data standpoint. My time at Oxford was definitely life-changing in that it was also a real powerful time of self-reflection.鈥
As for three top lessons he learned at Oxford, Knezevic writes in an email: 鈥淭he first is how we in the West view the world is vastly different from how people elsewhere see the world. I鈥檝e always been aware of this (I am an immigrant to Canada myself), but my time at Oxford underscored this significantly.
鈥淪econdly, time is a luxury and privilege, and lastly ... there are a million different ways to slice things, to approach a problem, to evaluate a solution. They each add value in a different way, so spending time to think about the way you go about tackling a problem is very important (not just what problem to tackle).鈥
Rahul Arora, BHSc鈥19, currently a DPhil student in engineering science at Oxford University, is focused on medical machine learning. Besides biking up Oxford鈥檚 notoriously steep Headington Hill to the hospital campus, 鈥渨hich makes the trek from main campus to Foothills seem gentle in comparison,鈥 Arora says, 鈥渂eing embedded in a deeply international and interdisciplinary community which Oxford provides means the perspectives and conversations that happen here have already fundamentally changed how I see the world.鈥
As for advice for new recipients: 鈥淭here are 10 weird, liminal months between when you鈥檙e named a Rhodes Scholar and when you start in Oxford. Don鈥檛 think about the impending transition too much. Savour living the fullest life that you can in Calgary before your weird, crazy, awesome time in Oxford sweeps you off your feet.鈥
When Yan Yu, MD鈥14, went to Oxford to pursue an MBA and a master鈥檚 in public policy, he 鈥渨anted to better understand the larger social structures and underpinnings of our health-care systems, from both the perspectives of industry and government.鈥
Today, Yu is a busy family physician at Crowfoot Village Family Practice who occasionally attends to patients in underserved communities in NWT and northern Alberta. Despite looking after a panel of 1,725 people at his practice, Yu remains committed to the project he launched as a student in the Cumming School of Medicine: the Calgary Guide to Understanding Disease, currently used by more than 9,000 physicians in more than 100 countries.
Yu admits his experience at Oxford didn鈥檛 alter how he practises medicine. 鈥淭he 草莓污视频导航 takes full credit for that,鈥 he stresses, 鈥渂ut it did drastically impact how I view the world. We doctors can live in our own little bubble, but at Oxford, I was reminded how many blind spots I continue to have.鈥
While a Rhodes Scholarship has been known to command 鈥 dare we say? 鈥 reverence in certain circles, Yu is quick to remind us that 鈥渋t's what we do in life and what benefits we bring to others that matter in the long run. The Rhodes Scholarship is really just one road (no pun intended) to achieve this end goal. It is not a reward for past accomplishments, but an investment in the future.
鈥淚鈥檓 incredibly grateful to have had this opportunity and am thrilled for this year鈥檚 winners!鈥