Famous TRiO Achievers
Sherry Williams
Senior
Vice President and Corporate Secretary, Halliburton Company
Houston, TX
Alumna, Student Support Services, University of Oklahoma
I grew up in a working class poor neighborhood in Fort Worth, TX, literally
and figuratively from the "wrong side" of the tracks. The Union Pacific freight
train lumbered through my neighborhood, past my home, dividing my community, the
working class poor on one side, and more affluent on the other. I was the
youngest of eight children. My siblings were all very bright, but I was my
family's intellectual "star." My bookworm status was a source of pride for my
parents because my mother had an eighth grade education and my father was
functionally illiterate. A "gifted and talented child," I was in honors and
advanced placement classes. I was fortunate to be supported by many amazing
teachers, administrators, and others who were dedicated and kind enough to help
me on the educational journey that culminated in my attending the University of
Oklahoma.
“If not for my participation in Project Threshold [TRIO], I would
not have attained an undergraduate degree and certainly would not have had the
courage to attend the University of Miami, obtaining a Juris Doctorate.”
My OU career had a rather rocky start. I had the intellectual capacity, but I
was not prepared for the freedom and the choices of college. I did not know how
to cope with the nuances of academic life -- how to drop classes when I
registered for too many hours, the importance of seeing a professor during his
or her office hours, the need to do homework though the professor did not check
it. After fall semester of my sophomore year, I was placed on academic
probation. My hopes and dreams, and those of my entire family and community,
were threatened. I had no idea where to turn. One referral, to OU's TRIO
program, Project Threshold, and its Director, Dr. Anthony Bluitt, changed the
course of my future. If not for my participation in Project Threshold, I would
not have attained an undergraduate degree and certainly would not have had the
courage to attend the University of Miami, obtaining a Juris Doctorate.
Throughout my life and career, I have tried to live the important lessons
learned in my Fort Worth community and at Project Threshold: the importance of
determination, faith, discipline, asking for help when it is needed, and the
courage to offer help to others. I became a mentor to other OU students through
Project Threshold, desiring to provide others with the same type of help that
was so generously given to me. I carried this commitment through law school and
my career. Currently I mentor young women from backgrounds that are
substantially similar to my own.
I am proud that I carry the torch of commitment, support, honesty,
excellence, and community service that was passed to me by Project Threshold. I
have used it as a beacon of light to many other dedicated, qualified, and
deserving young people who have gone on to make their families and communities
proud, in the same way that I did mine.
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