UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — When Min Xian came to Penn State four years ago from China, she had to learn how to order a burrito at Chipotle. This May she will graduate as one of the most gifted storytellers in her class.
Xian, a journalism major, describes her path to Penn State as the “ultimate underdog story.” She was a top student in high school and had her eyes set on a prestigious college in her home city of Guangzhou, China. However, there was a problem with her college entrance exam, a one-time test that decides where Chinese students will attend college.
“I bombed it,” Xian said with a laugh. “I don’t know how it happened.”
It turns out that hiccup in her career opened the door to unexpected opportunities. After taking classes at another Chinese university, she revived her college search. She took the SATs three times and the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with her sights set on U.S. universities. Unable to attend campus tours, the decision came down to internet research — and Penn State caught Xian’s eye.
“I wanted to do magazine writing and I went online and saw really good things about Penn State’s communications program,” she said. “I read about Happy Valley and thought it would be new and fresh for me coming from a city … I took a leap of faith.”
Xian arrived in the United States just one week before classes started at Penn State. She braced herself for the move from her massive home city of 14 million people to the rural setting of the University Park campus. But after years of English classes in high school, she was surprised to hear unfamiliar lingo and daily jargon among her American classmates. For someone dreaming of telling stories for a living, it was intimidating.