It’s  shaping up to be a dream summer for one graduate at Westchester Academy for  International Studies (WAIS), the kind of internship any tech-minded young  adult would love to put on a professional resume.  
On Monday,  June 1, Cassandra Ung graduated magna cum laude with her 2015 WAIS class at Don  Coleman Coliseum. Next month, she heads to Boston for a prized appointment to  the Google Computer Science Summer Institute (CSSI), which will be held July  12-August 1.
CSSI is a  three-week introduction to the field of computer science for students  historically underrepresented in the heavily male dominated field. The  institute isn’t your average summer camp either. Here is what Google states  about it: “It’s an intensive, interactive, hands-on and fun program that seeks  to inspire the tech leaders and innovators of tomorrow by supporting the study  of computer science, software engineering and other closely related subjects.”
Cassandra’s  travel and board is fully paid to Cambridge, Mass., the location of top schools  like Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Google  students attend learning sessions that include several computer languages, as  well as programming fundamentals. Students may even design or develop their own  applications.
No  previous computer language or computer coding skills are required, but for  Cassandra her winning Google application fits like a glove into her college and  career plans.
An  International Baccalaureate student at WAIS, she will study this fall at the  University of Texas at Austin where she hopes to major in either electrical or  computer engineering, or both. She is also interested in film animation and in  software applications that support film and video.
One of her  WAIS instructors, Math Department chair and campus technology representative  Anthony Carandong spotted the Google summer internship. He encouraged her to  apply.
“I was  completely shocked when I received the email [notification],” Cassandra says. “It  came right after I had received some rejections from universities, and I was  feeling down so that really changed my day!”
She  credits the IB program at WAIS and the district charter high school’s small  size and close student-teacher interaction with her own success as a top  student.
Her  interests include volunteer work in schools in Cambodia, where her parents grew  up. She has traveled to the Southeast Asian nation and volunteered at Don Bosco  High School in Phnom Penh, the capital city.
She helped  several students there remain in school rather than dropping out and working to  support their families. “Two or three girls that I knew when I was in Cambodia  graduate this summer. I’m so proud of them,” Cassandra says.

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