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Student Knowledge Exchange Through Community Hubs

The SKETCH student experience

My name is Patrick Miklos Szell and I am originally from Budapest, Hungary. During my secondary school studies, I was unsure about the subject that I would pursue during my university years.

I started to work in a private hospital in Budapest to identify the key areas that interested me. I often asked questions in my head, “How does this end up here?”, “How do they price their product?”, “Why is this a sought service?”, etc. I was curious about multiple subjects, like health care, technology, and consulting. This led to my decision to study Economics as it’s a broad subject, with a rooted, rational, and analytical mindset. And so, my journey began at Queen Mary University of London. patrick

During my first year, I came across an initiative called Student Consulting Project (SCP), which offered pro-bono consulting services to local SMEs and start-ups. The services were provided by Queen Mary students, supported by professionals. I was fascinated by the initiative: to help and create value for the community using the University’s resources, knowledge, and academics are a great way to give back to society. Thus, I applied and got into the program, where my team successfully delivered a 10-week long project to our client. Months later, I got introduced to a new initiative that was looking for students who will support its aims and help deliver them, called Student Knowledge Exchange Through Community Hubs (SKETCH). A brand-new initiative founded by academics to create an umbrella across the University’s student knowledge exchange activity, namely: SCP, theLegal Advice Centre, qLegal, qNomics, the Social Venture Fund, and Social Impact Unit.

This was an opportunity for me to give back to my community and to my peers.
Therefore, I joined SKETCH as an Ambassador in 2020.
This was an opportunity for me to give back to my community and to my peers.

My role is a mix of everything: creating a roadmap, defining milestones, attending recurring board meetings, recruiting and onboarding new SKETCH members, and running various projects. This led to new experiences and challenging scenarios from which I have learned a lot. For example, recruiting undergraduate and postgraduate students as Associates challenged my interpersonal skills. Leading the podcast project shaped my managerial skills such as time and team management.

Being an Ambassador at SKETCH has helped me, a 21-year-old individual, gain insights, experience, connections, and knowledge. Whilst doing so, it was also generating value for the community through SKETCH’s projects. It is such a great opportunity for students to deploy their academic knowledge on real-life projects whilst learning. Fundamentally, I believe that it is our mission, as university students, to generate a positive impact for our surroundings and communities.

 

Being an Ambassador at SKETCH has helped me, a 21-year-old individual, gain insights, experience, connections, and knowledge. Whilst doing so, it was also generating value for the community through SKETCH’s projects.
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