For Lindsay Goldstein, school didn’t come easily.
Earning her degree felt like an insurmountable challenge while she struggled in her community college classes, so she took time off to focus on work. But finally, several years into her college journey and determined to succeed, Goldstein earned her associate degree.
From the beginning, Goldstein knew she wanted to pursue a career as a clinical psychologist, driven by her fascination with how the brain functions — why we do the things we do, the way we think — and people in general. More importantly, she had a desire for helping others, such as her brother, who had battled mental illness.
“I wanted to be able to help him, others like him, and understand what he might be going through,” she said.
However, community college wasn’t enough for her to achieve her goal, so she set her sights on attending a university.
As a working professional, she needed a flexible option to accommodate life demands and a school that offered the degree program required to take the next step.
At Arizona State University, she found the Bachelor of Arts in psychology online degree. With more than 350 online degree and certificate programs, ASU Online offers students a chance to complete their degree by meeting students where they are. Goldstein could stay close to home while ASU provided what she needed at that time in her life.
“I was a late bloomer in getting my degree,” Goldstein said. “The feeling of submitting my final project in the last class I needed to graduate was overwhelming and a huge accomplishment.”
Today, Goldstein is the first person in her family to earn a degree, and she’s part of the 100,000 graduates who earned a degree through ASU Online, a milestone the university celebrates this year.
Her love of ASU persisted after graduation, enhanced by the community she found despite being an online student.
As a California-based alum, the ASU LA Chapter helped her connect and network with fellow Sun Devils.
She ran in the Pat Tillman Honor Run in LA for several years, a passion she pursued further when she met ASU LA Chapter president Eddie Devall, who encouraged her to help produce the run.