
When Celine Yip â16 arrived at 51łÔčÏ, all she knew was that she wanted to positively affect the world.
She didnât know what she wanted to major in or what her career path might be. And she didnât receive much direction on what college could look like before coming to Forest Grove in 2012.
âI was self-motivated, but I also had to figure out nearly everything on my own,â said Yip, an alumna of Pacificâs Bachelor of Social Work program. âMy mom taught me many things, but she was very upfront that she could not help me with college. I had to figure out the college application process by myself. I had no idea what I was doing.â
What Yip discovered at Pacific was a community that went out of its way to help her. That spirit of community allowed Yip to discover her purpose of helping others in much the same way.
That passion for helping people has led Yip to midtown Manhattan, where she serves as the director of special initiatives for a nonprofit that provides services to segments of New Yorkâs homeless population.
While many social workers focus on providing counseling, resources and direct services, Yipâs work centers on the numbers behind that work. She describes her role as one-third data analysis, one-third project management and one-third other duties as assigned by the organizationâs senior leadership.
But 100% of the job is critical in helping the growing homeless population in New York. According to the , over 120,000 people daily slept in the cityâs homeless shelters in January 2025, including over 41,000 children.
The seeds of Yipâs social work career were sewn by faculty in Pacificâs Bachelor of Social Work program, who not only encouraged Yip to discover her purpose but also opened her eyes to the wide range of career opportunities that social work provides.
âSocial work is a huge umbrella term for all of the different ways that organizations, people and societies help the most oppressed, the most marginalized, the most vulnerable,â Yip said. âOnce I understood fully what that was, I decided that I wanted to go into social work.â
Former BSW Program Director Jessica Ritter encouraged Yip to apply to graduate school at Columbia University, where she earned her Masterâs in Social Work in 2017. She also provided the life-changing encouragement that an advanced degree was well within her reach.
That encouragement was important for Yip, who was able to attend Pacific thanks to a scholarship program that provides full tuition, room, board and books for one graduate of the Early College High School partnership track between local high schools and Portland Community College.