°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Magazine Outstanding Seniors Overcome Adversity: Mark Skovorodko
Mark Skovorodko, 2013 graduate, talks about his challenges and blessings during his years at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp
Trusting Godās Picture of Life
Mark Skovorodko played trumpet, French horn and piano as a student at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp. A talented photographer, he took professional pictures for weddings and college departmentsāand he excelled academically, earning the top award for the physics department. āHe exemplifies the broad liberal arts graduate,ā says Professor Warren Rogers.
āIāve always loved solving problems,ā Mark says. āMy enjoyment of physics and photography emerges from this challenge; the nature of the problems just varies from one discipline to the other.ā
Mark, whose father, Vitaliy, directs the collegeās auto shop, wasnāt sure he wanted to study where his father worked or his older sister, Taisa Skovorodko ā07, had attended. āI got accepted to the civil engineering program at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo,ā he says. āIt took some nudging from my parents and God to get me here.ā
āLooking back now, itās obvious that God wanted me here,ā he says. āThe environment at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp encouraged my growth as a scholar, a musician and a Christian.ā
The Skovorodkos emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1990 as religious refugees, settling in Santa Barbara. Mark grew up with Russian as his first language, and his family lived in a predominantly Hispanic neighborhood for his first five years.
During junior high and high school, he traveled to Mexico with his church to build homes for underprivileged families. These experiences inspired Mark to learn Spanish. At °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, he served twice on Potterās Clay and three times on Juntos.
During a semester in Spain, he lived in Seville with a Spanish family. He studied Spanish grammar, history and literature and served in a convent with orphaned and abandoned children. āItās definitely one of the hardest things Iāve ever done,ā he says. āI was expected to teach English to troubled children but given no lesson plan or direction. The challenges of that experience taught me that I need to rely more on God.ā
As a senior, Mark worked as a resident assistant in Van Kampen Hall. āIāve always loved being mentored and mentoring others,ā he says. āI grew during the year, overcoming stereotypes about people and learning to love the guys in my section.ā
Mark continues to photograph weddings while he builds his portfolio and interns with a commercial photographer in Los Angeles. āI have so many things I love doing, and °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp has helped me flourish in many of them,ā he says. āI want to be faithful to Godās calling for my life, whether that means pursuing photography, physics or music. Iām excited to see God reveal His plans for my future.ā