HAZLETON, Pa. — At Penn State Hazleton, one student is pioneering efforts to help guide members of her community on the path to financial stability.
Saraiha Rossi, a fourth-year student majoring in management and marketing, serves as a student financial ambassador for the Sokolov-Miller Family Financial and Life Skills Center, an initiative with the mission to provide students with the ability to use knowledge and skills to manage financial resources effectively for a lifetime of financial wellbeing. Powered by five staff members, a graduate assistant and 18 student ambassadors, the center offers presentations and workshops, self-study modules, bimonthly webinars and confidential one-on-one coaching for Penn State students, faculty, staff and alumni.
While the center’s staff and other 17 student ambassadors are based at University Park, Rossi is “single-handedly leading the financial wellness charge at Hazleton,” according to Sarah DeWolfe, assistant director of outreach and special programs for the center.
“Essentially, the center exists as a service to students to serve them in areas the title implies: financial and life skills,” DeWolfe said. “We provide a lot of financial wellness education services but mixed in with that are a lot of life skills, from teaching about budgeting tools and methods to helping students compare job offers, negotiate their salaries and understand benefits packages. Our biggest service is providing presentations in classrooms — nearly 300 a year — at University Park and via Zoom to Commonwealth Campuses. Our student financial ambassadors play a key role in helping us reach as many students as possible through these presentations, and Saraiha is helping us to expand our in-person presence and resources to the Penn State Hazleton community.”
Rossi talks more about her position as a student financial ambassador and her overall Penn State experience in the Q&A below.
Q: Why did you choose to attend Penn State?
Rossi: I chose Penn State, and specifically the Hazleton campus, because I grew up in the area. It was always right there. Before Penn State I attended a community college, where I earned an associate’s degree. I wanted to keep learning. Penn State Hazleton was a good option; it was close to home and something I knew I could easily do and enjoy.
Hazleton is a beautiful campus. We’re up on top of a hill; I love it. Because it is a smaller campus, you can have close relationships with professors, staff members and other students. I can walk through campus and know most of the people I see — even if I don’t know them by name, I recognize them. There are also so many opportunities to get involved. I went to a small high school, which didn’t offer many opportunities for involvement, so once I got to Penn State I got involved in as much as I could. It’s especially exciting now because we are working to rebuild student organizations that became dormant during the pandemic. I am currently head of Senate in student government and president of the Business Club. I’m also president of the True Crime Club, through which members watch true crime documentaries and work on unsolved case files.
Q: You also serve as a financial ambassador for the Hazleton campus. Before we talk about the work you do, can you describe what financial literacy is and why it is important?
Rossi: Financial literacy is really having a good understanding of not only your finances, but also the topics and concepts that are being thrown at you. It is so important, because having that understanding early will set you up for the rest of your life. Finances is a big topic, and, for many people (me included!), a scary topic. So, by building a good understanding and a solid foundation, the better off a person will be. It’s really important to get that message out, especially to younger people, to give them the opportunity to set themselves up for their best future.