Anjali Narain recently graduated from the University of Michigan with a major in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology and a minor in Community Action and Social Change from the School of Social Work.
In April 2020, Narain flew home to India. COVID numbers were climbing. She and three U-M friends got online and created and implemented HumanKind, a nonprofit that uses virtual tutoring to rectify K-12 educational inequities. “I was in India and the kids I was tutoring were in Michigan,” Narain says, “so I was up every night from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. HumanKind volunteers tutored more than 500 kids that summer.”
Narain saw how income disparities affect education. She recalls how “one student, from a low-income community of color, had to use her mom’s work phone. I would tutor her for 10 minutes, then her mom had to make a work call, then she would log back on. The mom would do anything to get her daughter the education she deserved. That touched my heart, and I realized that I loved any kind of social justice or social change initiative.”
Narain researched U-M minors in these fields and found Community Action and Social Change at the School of Social Work. Immediately it felt like home. When Narain learned that her visa limited the number of hours she could volunteer for HumanKind, a CASC instructor suggested she take Social Work 305, Foundations of Community Action and Social Change, and make HumanKind her class project. “CASC feels like a family; I can remember everyone in it and even the conversations we had, because it’s a small group.”
Based on her undergraduate experience and work on the CASC board, Narain has an encouraging message about CASC’s potential: “There are so many people on this campus involved in volunteering and social work initiatives. If we keep spreading the word about CASC, I know more people will pursue it. It will teach them to reflect deeply on their experiences.”
Narain was recently admitted to Stanford University for a master’s in human genetics and genetic counseling. Her CASC background will be useful. “There may be no treatment for a genetic condition,” she says, “so clinicians have to deal with the emotional aspect of that.
“It is so helpful to have CASC knowledge and awareness about educational inequity,” she says. “CASC also made me aware of how each culture has its own norms, values and beliefs. This helps while working with individuals from different backgrounds at HumanKind and it will help me with genetic counseling, too.”