
But something was missing: As engaging as the tour was, she didn鈥檛 meet anyone she felt reflected her experience. And that let a bit of doubt creep in.
A first-generation college student, Ayyash didn鈥檛 have any family in the medical field. She worked full time as an undergraduate. She came to the U.S. just prior to college; English was her second language.
鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 sure how much of a chance I had for medical school when I didn鈥檛 see someone who was in the position I was or looked like me. But I did get in,鈥 said Ayyash, who graduates from U-M Medical School this spring and begins her OB/GYN residency in July. 鈥淚 want other UM-Dearborn students to know they can too. It鈥檚 motivating to see someone who has come from where you did 鈥 that reminds you to keep working hard because it is possible.鈥
So Ayyash and her medical school peer Zeinab Rizk (鈥13 B.S.) created a program to do just that.
Together 鈥 they founded the UM-Dearborn Pre-Med Alumni Mentoring Program in 2015. The program connects pre-med students with alumni currently enrolled in medical school. (UM-Dearborn graduates are enrolled in all seven medical schools in Michigan and are accepted to universities across the nation, from University of Washington to the University of Florida.)
"It鈥檚 motivating to see someone who has come from where you did 鈥 that reminds you to keep working hard because it is possible."
Nearly 60 have served as advisers since 2018, with each working one-on-one with a UM-Dearborn student. Ayyash knows the importance of mentors firsthand. She considers Rizk, who went to medical school a year before she did, a personal source of her success with the application process.
鈥淲e, the mentors, had a great experience at UM-Dearborn and want to give back,鈥 Ayyash said. 鈥淢any of us didn鈥檛 have family or close connections in the field [to share their experiences]. But we can now give that to students.鈥