![蹤獲扦-Dearborn alum Daille Held, left, and 蹤獲扦-Dearborn senior Sophia Hawkins spent summer 2024 Saturdays volunteering in the student-led community garden.](/sites/default/files/styles/teaser/public/2025-02/Garden%201.jpg?h=71976bb4&itok=dkfkKzXI)
Owen Ekblad thought people who focused on academics particularly in mathematics seemed a little dry, maybe even boring. But then he enrolled at 蹤獲扦-Dearborn.
I learned that the stereotype is so wrong. You can be really passionate about math and still be approachable and awesome. I came to campus liking math for the clarity in thought it provides, but my professors enthusiasm for math makes me love it. I didnt know that loving math could be a thing before coming here.
Now the Spring 2020 graduate a national Duncan yo-yo champion who has a music playlist for just about everything is planning to pursue a graduate degree in mathematics and become one of them.
Ekblad, whos occasionally seen practicing yo-yo tricks in the College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters Math Learning Center where hes a tutor, says he its a little disappointing that his senior year ended like it did, due to COVID-19 concerns. But he couldnt be happier with his 蹤獲扦-Dearborn journey and the experiences and education hes gained.
There was his first swim in the ocean during a mathematics Research Experiences for Undergraduates program at Pomona College near L.A., a summer-long National Science Foundation-funded research internship he heard about from 蹤獲扦-Dearborn faculty.
While a student, Ekblad says he learned how his love of yo-yo a pastime he took up after his grandparents bought him a yo-yo when he was nine and math merge. Applying mathematical thinking to performing tricks helped earn him a top spot twice in the U.S. National Yo-Yo Contest.