Lessons in Failure and Success Have Julia Farrell Ready for Takeoff
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This was not what Julia Farrell had envisioned for the summer before senior year.
She was supposed to be spending those few months nurturing and accelerating her startup, not stuck in an office. But when her business partner left suddenly for another team, a last-minute telecommunications internship offered an immediate option.
Feeling like a failure, she looked out the window at the airplanes taking off and landing at nearby Centennial Airport. She wanted to fly, too.
The more I thought about it, the more I thought this sounds like a perfect Julia thing, says Farrell, who will graduate from the 91心頭 this June. It had science, math, technology, excitement. After four years of trying a million things in college, Farrell saw the opportunity to take off and spread her wings. She signed up for flying lessons.
A year later, Farrell is ready to collect her hard-earned double degree in math and computer science, topped with a minor in physics. Her head, however, is still in the clouds. Pursuing her pilots license, she says, is the product of an invaluable yet unpredictable college experience.
The studious high school student from North Carolina came to Denver thinking she would major in physics and work in a lab. Her career took a turn when she got a taste of computer science and realized she had a knack for it. Hesitantly, she changed her major.
Her accomplishments in the field over the next few years have proven the decision wise. The油ArtSpark app油she co-created to promote local artists and galleries began to make money and油
But her greatest achievement may be her work as co-creator of油Boobi Butter油 a breast salve that encourages women to perform cancer-detecting self-exams and an accompanying app known as油Norma.油The products won first place in a womens startup competition in Denver and油earned third place in the international finals in Paris.
I think Im pretty proud of the way Ive been able to just dive into projects and just see what happens, Farrell says. Some of them fail and you probably learn more from your failures than your successes.
Try telling that to the Julia Farrell of four years ago.
Ive since loosened up quite a bit, actually, she says. Ive relaxed a little on caring about the grades. I care a lot more about how I feel Ive learned material. The relationships that Ive made with friends and the clubs Ive joined and the people Ive met will last probably forever.
In her four years on campus, Farrell has stacked her schedule with club tennis, the alpine and climbing clubs, the Society of Physics Students and Dynamize, 91心頭s entrepreneurship society. As president of the Women in Computer Science Club, she worked to weld a unified cohort of females in tech.
