During her first two years at 窪蹋厙惇勛圖, Alex (Bing) Marchbanks 14, SLP 18 had only a vague sense of what she hoped to do after graduation.
It wasnt until her junior year when she added a minor in communication sciences and disorders that she discovered her passion for speech-language pathology, a field shed hardly known existed.
The minor, for me, really ignited this passion of wanting to work with people with speech and language impairments, said Marchbanks, now a second-year student in Pacifics master of science in speech-language pathology program.
"The professors in the CSD program are extremely passionate. They made me feel as if I could really make a difference in the field."
Alex Marchbanks '14, SLP '18
Marchbanks is a recipient of the Aurora Rae Peters 65 Endowed Scholarship for undergraduate students who complete the CSD minor and are admitted to the SLP program. Peters, a speech therapist, and her husband, Clark 65, MSEd 70, met as students at Pacific. In 2011, they established an endowed scholarship to honor her support of the SLP program.
Like Rae Peters, Marchbanks was inspired by her professors at Pacific to pursue a career in the field.
The professors in the CSD program are extremely passionate, Marchbanks said. They made me feel as if I could really make a difference in the field.
Marchbanks has taken full advantage of the community-based clinical experiences available to students in the SLP program.
In 2017, she was among a group of graduate students from Pacific who partnered with the Aphasia Network to offer a weekend camp at the Oregon Coast for couples affected by aphasia, a common disruption to the language center of the brain, often caused by a stroke.
Shes also worked with older adults in an assisted-living facility, residents of a memory-care community, and children with brain injury in her full-time externship at Randall Childrens Hospital in Portland.
Of all her clinical experiences, Marchbanks has found it especially rewarding to work with individuals with memory loss related to Alzheimers and dementia.
Were not there to restore their lost memories, she explained. We are there to maintain the function that they do have and increase their quality of life so their days can be more enjoyable.
This story first appeared in the Spring 2018 issue of Pacific magazine. For more stories, visit pacificu.edu/magazine.