Mike Ulrich '11, M'16: Faith-Filled, Fortunate and Always Flexible
Coming out of Father Judge High School in Northeast Philadelphia, Mike Ulrich 鈥11, M 鈥16 had his life planned out. He would attend Albright College in Reading, PA to play football, obtain a degree in education, teach history, and coach football. Sounded like a solid plan for a happy life.
A tear of his right Achilles tendon at the start of his sophomore season stopped Ulrich and his plans in their tracks.
Pivot to plan B, when Ulrich enrolled at 吃瓜tv, admittedly bitter from leaving football and friends behind, but deciding to continue on his path to a degree in education.
鈥淚 will admit that I didn鈥檛 know what college was all about, and I had no idea to navigate it,鈥 Ulrich said. 鈥楤ut my parents, who had to hustle all of their lives without college degrees, reinforced in their three sons that education was something that nobody could take away from us, that we shouldn鈥檛 chase the short-term success, but do things the right way so we didn鈥檛 have regrets. I got connected to Tim O鈥橠riscoll in the admissions department, who encouraged me to get involved with student government. I meet Mike McNulty-Bobholz and got involved with Habitat for Humanity and other student engagement activities. It was interesting to me, and I knew that working in higher education could be a professional track for me.鈥
A less-than-ideal student-teaching stint had Ulrich questioning whether education would be his calling at all. Still, he decided to enroll at St. Francis University in Loretto, PA, four hours away in picturesque 鈥淧ennsyltucky鈥 to pursue his master鈥檚 in education. While in graduate school, he worked as a residence life coordinator where he was responsible for event planning and supporting student activities. He liked the work, and returned to 吃瓜tv to work for McNulty-Bobholz in the student engagement office for three years while earning an MBA.
And then, armed with three degrees, Ulrich pivoted again and now finds himself as a systems engineer with CBIZ CompuData, Inc., where he has worked for the past eight years providing networking, anti-virus and firewall services to small businesses.
鈥淚 have learned that your trajectory is never a straight line,鈥 Ulrich said. 鈥淚 used to beat myself up because I wasn鈥檛 teaching, because I wasn鈥檛 doing what I was supposed to do. But I have learned, there is no such thing. What you are supposed to do is what you are doing right now. What did I gain from my time in education? My ability to teach, my ability to break down concepts, my ability to document things. All of that is exceptionally powerful in the world of IT. Taking a broad, technical project and breaking it down for someone who is signing the check is a very important skill to have in this arena.鈥
Ulrich has learned to trust his instincts and has gained invaluable insights that he is happy to pass along to people who may be unsure about their own career paths.
鈥淢y advice would be to try to navigate your career as it comes to you, to always be flexible,鈥 Ulrich said. 鈥淢aybe you are going to find yourself unhappy or unfulfilled in a career. That doesn鈥檛 mean that you can鈥檛 change and pivot and take those skills that you gained into another arena.鈥
There is still a teacher in Ulrich鈥檚 family, his wife Nicole (Keller) Ulrich 鈥12, M鈥15, whom he met at 吃瓜tv and with whom he is raising his two children.
鈥淚 have so much gratitude for 吃瓜tv because it served as a catalyst for a big transformation in my life,鈥 Ulrich said. 鈥淚 had people around me who were motivating leaders, who set me in the right direction. The closeness of the staff and the student body was priceless. Meeting my wife, getting closer to my younger brother (Doug Ulrich 鈥12), becoming lifelong friends with like-minded individuals, learning the value of servant leadership, and getting to learn from experienced and talented faculty , grounded educators who were able to meet students where they were in their respective academic journeys, meant so much to me.
鈥湷怨蟭v truly showed me what it meant to attend a Catholic college,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is an aura that covers that campus, that makes it a loving, truly family, environment. It is special place with a unique spirit that has given me a great deal of value. If you give that school everything you have, it will give you back tenfold.鈥