While working in the development field,
I realised that I wanted my work to be more meaningful and have a greater impact on the world around me. And this meant not just promoting services and products, but developing and designing them. In 2019, I received a Chevening Award and moved to London to study Service Design Innovation at Ravensbourne University London.
For a few years, I worked as a communications specialist at the
UN Migration Agency and other development organisations in Moldova.
This experience gave me a unique perspective on development work and project management, and it taught me how important it is to craft and communicate my message well.
For a few years, I worked as a communications specialist at the
UN Migration Agency and other development organisations in Moldova.
This experience gave me a unique perspective on development work and project management, and it taught me how important it is to craft and communicate my message well.
My bachelor degree is in cultural anthropology. This degree taught me that there is great deal of people and cultures around the world that speak, think, and live differently. All of them matter. Anthropology, as a discipline, gave me tools to study the world around me (ethnography) and trained me to apply critical thinking in other people's work and in my own.