Key Takeaways:
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First-generation George Mason social work student Evelyn Carcamo is graduating after six years of balancing work, parenting, and school.
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Through her practicum at Ayuda, she connects immigrants and refugee survivors with resources
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Carcamo plans to pursue a ³¾²¹²õ³Ł±š°łās in social work and become a licensed clinical social worker serving underserved communities.
At the local nonprofit , one client came to Evelyn Carcamo overwhelmed. With limited access to food and no clear way to get health care, he wasnāt sure how to provide for his family.
Carcamo, a social work student at 91°µĶų's College of Public Health, helped him sort through his options. She connected him to food assistance and walked him through applying for Medicaid, linking him to medical and mental health services.
Over time, she saw a shift in the way he engaged. āHe became more confident, more comfortable asking questions, and more involved in planning next steps for himself,ā she said.
Carcamo is completing her practicum at Ayuda as part of her bachelorās degree program at George Mason, conducting intakes and needs assessments for survivors of domestic violence, human trafficking, sexual assault, and other crimes. Many of her clients are immigrants and refugees navigating systems that feel unfamiliar and intimidating to them.
āTheyāre high-need clients,ā she said. āBut it's very rewarding.ā
Itās work she recognizes on a personal level. Carcamo grew up watching her parents, who came to the United States from El Salvador before she was born, teach themselves English and wade through resources without guidance.
In May, Carcamo will graduate as a first-generation college student. She wants to continue her work serving immigrant and underserved communities as a clinical social worker, with plans to start George Masonās master of social work program next fall.
Shifting goals
For Carcamo, a career in social work marks a shift years in the making.
Growing up in Arlington, Virginia, Carcamo never saw higher education as a given. High school graduation was the milestone. After earning her diploma, she went straight into the workforce as a medical assistant and, at 25, gave birth to her son.
For three years at , Carcamo served as an interpreter for largely uninsured, Spanish-speaking patients. Many of them revealed more than their symptoms.
āPeople would tell me their whole story,ā she said. āAnd then theyād leave, and Iād still think about them, like, āOh, I wonder if they got that resource they needed.āā
Moments like that changed how she thought about helping people. āThatās how I started to realize I wanted to do something beyond medical,ā she said. āI wanted to make a difference in another way.ā
At the same time, sheād hit a ceiling in her career. āI realized I had to go back to school or I wasnāt going to move forward,ā she said.
Carcamo first enrolled at Northern Virginia Community College, then transferred to 91°µĶų through the
āAs a medical assistant, I was very task-focused and centered on immediate physical needs,ā Carcamo said. āNow, I take a more holistic and trauma-informed approach. I spend more time listening, building trust, and understanding each clientās lived experience. This shift has made my work feel more meaningful and more connected to the people I serve.ā
Her coursework at George Mason has helped her appreciate more fully what her clients are up against. āTheyāre not just dealing with individual challenges, but also bigger systemic issues like language access, immigration concerns, and financial stress,ā she said.
Finding her place
While raising her son, now 9 years old, on her own., Carcamo has earned Deanās List recognition and received the Rose Rago Braddock Endowed Scholarship, awarded based on merit and financial need.
āItās been overwhelming sometimes,ā she said. āI have to make sure my job is flexible. I have to make sure I get my assignments turned in on time. I have to make sure I make it to practicum and get my hours. I have to be at my sonās events and make sure heās well taken care of.ā
Sheās steadied herself by focusing on the long view. āItās just temporary,ā she would repeat. āThe finish line is almost there.ā
After six years of balancing work, parenting, and school at George Mason, Carcamo is now just weeks away from graduating. And her younger sister, now at Virginia Commonwealth University, is also hoping to pursue social work, following a path Carcamo helped clear.
"I always tell her, get it done now," Carcamo said. "It will be so much easier than what I did. If I can show her it's possible, that means everything to me.ā