Cooperative Extension Administrator Receives George Washington Carver Award
12/10/2025 in Cooperative Extension, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences
By Tonya Dixon / 12/10/2025 Students, College of Engineering, Chemical, Biological, and Bio Engineering
EAST GREENSBORO, N.C. (Dec. 10, 2025) – As the fall 2025 semester draws to a close at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, approximately 1,100 students are preparing to celebrate their achievements at the university’s graduate and undergraduate ceremonies on Friday, Dec. 12 and Saturday, Dec. 13, respectively.
Their journeys have been marked by challenges and triumphs, moments of joy and sorrow, and above all, a deep sense of satisfaction and pride. These soon-to-be alumni share inspiring stories of perseverance, dedication, scholarship, and innovation.
N.C. A&T students have excelled academically, professionally, and personally. While there are countless stories to be told, each one reflects the university’s diverse intellectual climate, entrepreneurial spirit, civic engagement, and commitment to academic excellence. Below are just a few of their stories, shared in their own words. Discover more in the days leading up to commencement weekend, Dec. 12 and 13, on the university’s special commencement website and on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
Alana Holland
“Before I started college, I was told to rely heavily on my relationship with Christ because I was going to need it. I didn’t truly understand what that meant at the time.
My father passed away in the later part of 2019. I always knew I wanted to pursue engineering on his behalf. My mother is a 2005 alumna of North Carolina A&T, but I had never considered attending this university.
My high school environment was centered on PWIs and Ivy League dreams. My mother knew she wanted me to go to North Carolina A&T, but I did not know that when my acceptance arrived, all other letters would become irrelevant to her.
During my first semester, my mother was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. As someone who had already lost a parent, this health scare broke me in a way that words cannot fully explain. My grades suffered, and I lost my scholarship for the fall semester. I was devastated. At the start of spring semester, I decided that I would put myself first.
I got my GPA back up and focused on what mattered. I was accepted as an 1890 National Scholar. I maintained internships all four years. I studied abroad. I served in the community. I participated in coronation as Miss of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers. I became a willing member of the National Council of Negro Women. And I held a research assistant position at the Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering. However, I still faced adversity. But the Lord gave me the strength to see it through. Everything I went through was for this degree, this journey, and this growth. I am grateful. Grateful that I learned how to try again. Grateful that I got to attend my mother’s university. Grateful that I am studying what my father dreamed of studying. Everyone does not have the same timeline. No one receives the same blessings in the same season. If you try to keep up with the person next to you, you will ruin everything God has planned for you. During my time here, I have felt real joy on this campus. There is no place better than North Carolina A&T.”
Media Contact Information: tddixon1@ncat.edu