Amna Adnan sits in front of the "University of Toronto Mississauga side" outside of campus

‘Grit and resilience’: UTM graduating student shares her journey, mentors fellow students

Kristy Strauss

Amna Adnan isn’t graduating with the highest grade point average. She changed her major six times between first and third year, discovering more about herself along the way. During her journey at UTM – best defined by determination and resilience – Adnan was also a role model. She touched the lives of numerous fellow undergraduates as a leader and mentor, empowering them to realize their full potential.

When she receives her degree this week, Adnan will also have a couple of other honours under her belt, including the Laura Krajewski Student Mentorship Award and being named UTM's welcome ambassador for convocation.

“My friends and family that I’ve told have been incredibly excited,” says Adnan, who will be graduating with an honours bachelor degree in science, majoring in psychology with a minor in English and sociology.

Adnan has been an active volunteer and work-study student throughout her five-year university career, particularly with the Centre for Student Engagement. She mentored fellow students at the centre and facilitated workshops in a variety of roles including as a peer leadership coach and LAUNCH Leader. Adnan has also been a student mentee through various programs like UTM Lead & Alumni Mentorship.

“My goal is to try and help people reach the potential that they have within them that’s often obscured by a lack of confidence, or not knowing where to go,” Adnan explains. “Mentorship for me is a personal value, and I want to help people become what I can’t become.”

While Adnan served as a role model and leader on campus, she notes that she went through her own mental health journey – an experience many other students can relate to.

In her third year, she learned she had ADHD. She calls that moment a “game-changer.”

“Once I learned that about myself … I did take a few courses just to help learn more about mental health partly because I wanted to understand myself more, but also because I wanted to become a better resource and tool for accessibility both in my life and also in my professional spaces,” Adnan says.

She also pivoted throughout her academic career. Initially accepted to UTM as a life sciences student with a plan to study biology or chemistry, Adnan realized that while she loved learning about it, her heart wasn’t in the lab components.

After that, she looked into studying psychology, management and English. In the end, she decided to study a combination of psychology, English and sociology.

“There are lots of ways for you to achieve your goals, and your goals can be different than the mainstream. In terms of academics, I really made it work for me,” she says, adding that she hopes her personal experiences have helped others – particularly first-year students and those who have felt nervous about changing her major.

When Adnan graduates, she is planning for a career in student affairs at a post-secondary school.

“University is one of those really, really cool areas where the majority of folks are young adults that are looking to start something – start that next chapter of their life, or folks that are coming back after having done things outside and are looking to pivot or grow more,” Adnan says.

While she has been a role model to many over the last five years, Adnan says she has always looked up to her parents – including her father, who passed away when she was in high school.

“(They were) immigrants to the country, incredibly hardworking, very sacrificing,” Adnan explains, adding that they taught her that “the hard work you put into something is more important than whether or not you succeed in it, and that has helped to kind of define my processes of grit and resilience.”