The 2015 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards 프루덴셜 지역사회참여 수상자

State Honoree Award Celebration

National Museum of Natural History
Washington DC
May 3, 2015

Raghav Ganesh
Middle Level State Honoree

Raghav Ganesh, 13, of San Jose, Calif., a seventh-grader at Joaquin Miller Middle School, designed and built a device that uses sensors to detect objects beyond the reach of the white canes used by many visually impaired people. Raghav got the idea after watching a video about the challenges faced by those with limited or no eyesight. “I saw how, despite being used for several centuries, the white cane does not provide users enough information about their environment,” he said. “I also saw why many high-tech alternatives are not meeting the needs of visually challenged folks.”


Because he enjoys science and electronics, and has become familiar with sensors and motors through a toy-building hobby, Raghav decided to see if he could design something better. He built a small prototype and entered it in a local science fair. He then sought advice from the head of a local blind center, and over the next several months made five major revisions based on feedback from blind center staff and actual cane users. He ended up with a device that clamps onto the cane, uses ultrasonic and infrared sensors to detect obstacles more than six feet beyond the end of the cane, and communicates this information to the user through vibrations in the cane’s handle. Raghav secured a grant to make multiple copies, and hopes to create an open patent so that organizations for the blind around the world can make the device for their clients.

Carolina Gonzalez
High School State Honoree

Carolina Gonzalez, 18, of Coral Gables, Fla., a senior at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy in Miami, started a nonprofit organization that has helped more than 500 undocumented young immigrants apply for temporary residence and employment in the U.S. under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, and has raised more than $22,000 to pay the application fees of those who cannot afford them. Carolina’s grandparents fled Cuba to give their family and future generations a better life, Carolina said. “Since the time I was able to hold a conversation, my mother would remind me of what they went through. And always at the end of the discussion, she would accentuate how, because of her parents’ decision, I was born an American citizen,” said Carolina. “It has been engraved in me to never take my citizenship for granted.”

Carolina had been volunteering in various ways since she was 5, but was trying to think of some way to do more for her peers in her community. When her father, an immigration lawyer, mentioned how difficult it was for young immigrants to apply for deferred status, Carolina realized she had her answer. She began organizing clinics for DACA applicants and recruiting pro-bono lawyers to help them through the complex and time-consuming application process. She also raises funds to give small grants to applicants who cannot afford the $465 application fee. “I am not only giving them hope for their future, but also giving them the chance to achieve the American dream,” said Carolina.

Eunsuh Chin
Eunsuh Chin, 18, of Seoul, a senior at Daewon Foreign Language High School in Seoul, has provided translation services and other support to a competitive athlete with special needs. Six years ago, Eunsuh met Sejin, who was known as the “robotic leg swimmer.” Eunsuh was impressed that Sejin was never deterred by physical challenges as he pursued his dream of becoming an Olympic gold medalist. From then on, she wanted to become a good supportive friend for Sejin as he pursued his dream.

As Sejin was getting ready for the International Paralympic Games, he and his mother were struggling with all the procedures and document preparations required in English to get into the international competition. Eunsuh was not a professional translator, but she did her best and volunteered to assist Sejin with his IPC admission. Eunsuh also was closely involved in translating Sejin’s stories into English with a couple of other friends, believing that Sejin can become a good role model for other young people with disabilities. She and her friends have finished the translation and the book is out in the market.

Suhho Lee
Suhho Lee, 18, of Busan, a senior at Bugil High School in Chungchungnam-do, is a leader of a club that provides support to a group home that cares for neglected children. For more effective support, the club, called “ConGo,” adopted a one-on-one mentoring program for children in the home. To build a systematic operation process, they introduced club rules on volunteering and a pre-training curriculum on volunteerism. Their customized mentor-mentee system goes beyond volunteering activities for the children, including ConGo members studying baking by themselves to support a kid who wants to become a baker and using baked Korean letter cookies to teach children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder to help concentrate on learning the Korean alphabet.

Through these activities, children at the group home have started to dream of a new future thanks to the genuine care and support of the ConGo members. A child who learned how to play a guitar became a main guitarist in his school band, and another child who was afraid of English is now able to speak it fluently. And many other children have also become more cheerful and positive, enjoying their time at school. Suhho and his friends take great pride in the changes they see in the children’s lives.