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If SEED Fellows is a platform that extends learning beyond the classroomâallowing alumni to stay connected, continue exploring their interests and take on new roles within the communityâthen Percy, is the kind of participant who makes full use of that platform to the fullest.
He has taken part in almost every type of SEED Fellows activity: serving as a student teaching assistant, sharing as an alumnus mentor, attending social gatherings and joining video production workshops. What keeps him so engaged?
Percy is currently a second-year student in the Information Engineering program at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. He describes his major as âhalf software, half hardware,â which covers a wide range and also means there isnât only one fixed path. Looking back at how he chose his major, he admits he wasnât fully certain at the beginning. Instead, he chose a field that allowed room for exploration, letting his interests lead the way. Before rushing to define a direction, he focused on building experience and possibilities.
This willingness to try was not just something he said, it was a way he lived day to day. In secondary school, he played ice hockey and competed at the Hong Kong youth level. He also learned the violin, photography and photo editing; and he tried sports like basketball, football, and swimming. For Percy, because he never resisted learning something new, he chose to explore SEED Foundationâs cloud computing course in senior secondary school. That choice opened up another direction for him: starting from interest, and turning âtrying it outâ into sustainable learning.
âI think Iâm just like thatâI wouldnât reject any opportunity to learn something new.â
When Percy looks back on his secondary school classes, what he remembers most isnât a specific concept but a very âin-the-momentâ and common experience: getting stuck during a lab, knowing he needed to ask a question, yet being unable to say it out loud.
He explains that when there is only one instructor in the room, many studentsâ questions get worn down while they wait, and itâs difficult for the instructor to respond to everyone immediately. That sense of helplessness stayed with him, and it pushed him to fill the gap that is easiest to overlook in a classroom.
Years later, Percy returned to the same familiar classroom but in a different roleâstanding beside students as a teaching assistant. He says his goal was very practical: when students have questions, he can get to them faster, so those âI want to ask but donât dare toâ doubts donât have to linger.
âIf they have any questions, or if thereâs something they canât do, Iâll help them right away and teach them how to do it.â
To Percy, being a teaching assistant is not only about providing answers; it is a form of learning support. Before students can clearly articulate their questions, he helps them break the confusion down into smaller pieces. When they are still unsure whether it is âokay to ask,â he offers support in a way that feels low-pressure.
In Percyâs SEED journey, he gained not only skills, but also a trust-based relationship with a mentor.
Percy met Sam, a SEED cloud computing instructor, while serving as a student teaching assistant. Sam is a working professional. Percy describes their dynamic as âmore like friends than teacher and student.â
To Percy, a mentor is not necessarily someone who only âlecturesâ on stage; a mentor can also be a companion who shares perspectives and thinks things through alongside you.
Their relationship extended beyond in-class responsibilities into everyday connectionsâgrabbing meals before and after class and chatting casually. Percy said:
âIf I have any academic questions, I can ask him. For example, if thereâs something I donât quite understand, I can ask what approach I should use, or what methods I could use to learn it.â
This low-pressure space for conversation is a very practical form of support for Percy, giving him someone to discuss things with while exploring his direction.
This kind of connection is exactly the kind of long-term extension SEED Fellows hopes to see.
In addition to returning to the classroom as a teaching assistant, Percy has also shared in a business etiquette workshop under the Work Experience Program (WXP), talking with juniors about his own workplace experience. For many students, the workplace still feels like an unexplored map.
The message he most wanted to share, as someone who has been through it, is that there is no need to be overly nervous when stepping into the workplace.
âWhen you join WXP, you should try to gain as much experience as possible. But after you finish, it doesnât mean youâre locked into that path. You could become a teacher later or go into a different industry as well.â
Percy says that every time he sees the uncertainty in juniorsâ eyes, it feels like looking at his past self. So he hopes they take away not a âguaranteed successfulâ path but a sense of reassurance.
This sharing is also a form of giving backâspeaking openly about his own worries and struggles, so the next learner knows, âIâm not the only one who feels this way.â
As an active member of SEED Fellows, Percy rates his level of engagement in the alumni community as â8 out of 10.â He sums up the community in three words: connection, opportunities, and warmth.
Connection: It allows him to meet companions he can learn from and consult with, and to learn shared interests together with like-minded peers.
Opportunities: It lets him try new rolesâmoving from participant to teaching assistant and then to sharing as a speaker. Through different workshops, the community also helps him expand his skill set.
Warmth: This is his most immediate impression. He feels everyone in SEED Fellows is friendlyââno one minds where you come from and everyone is willing to connect with you.â
Percy says that taking on teaching assistant and sharing roles also planted a seed of education in his mind.
As he said:
âI feel SEED Fellows has given me a new pathway. It made me start thinking that, if I have the chance, I might pursue an education qualification and then try becoming an ICT teacher. I think thatâs also an alternative pathway for myself.â
He says SEED helped him grow in two ways: he built solid cloud computing skills, and he also improved soft skills like communication and teamwork. Over time, he went from being a student to becoming a teaching assistant who proactively helps othersâeach step making his direction clearer and his confidence stronger.
For juniors who are about to graduate from SEED and are still exploring their direction, Percy encourages them to join SEED Fellows:
âI think SEED Fellows is a really good opportunity and platform. It lets you keep trying different things after graduation, and keep learning and exchanging ideas with different people.â
Percyâs story shows what SEED Fellows is about: learning doesnât end after a course. It continues through the community. When alumni build friendships and confidence here, theyâre more willing to step up for new opportunities. And as they grow, coming back to share and support others becomes naturalânot âextra help,â but part of the culture.
We believe this cycle can lastâmore people like Percy will join, grow, contribute and come back to support others.