It was after an 8-day native rafting guide training program through Canyon Lands Field Institute in Moab, Utah, that Ingram knew she wanted to work with Indigenous communities through land or ocean conservation. The Native Teen Guide Training on the San Juan River was just a state over for the Arizona native, and the trip influenced Ingram’s career goals.
“We learned about the different environmental issues impacting Indigenous communities in the area, specifically about the water crisis,” said Ingram. “Indigenous culture is rooted in the land, and once the land gets destroyed, that culture also gets destroyed, in a way. So, hearing about that issue within my own community really motivated me to look at other Indigenous communities, as well as my own, and see how I could help.”
Ingram launched herself into undergraduate learning at Oregon State, majoring in biology with a marine biology and ecology focus and minoring in Indigenous Studies. She began constructing an academic pathway designed to prepare her for a land and ocean conservation career that could support Indigenous communities around the country. As a land grant institution, Oregon State offers all enrolled members of the 574 federally recognized Indian Tribes the in-state resident tuition rate, a policy rooted in the university’s commitment to Tribal nations and recognition of the Indigenous lands on which it was founded. Hailing from Sedona, Ariz., Ingram says she’s grateful for the policy and how it gave her access to one of the best marine biology programs in the country.
Now president of the Native American Student Association and an officer in the American Indian Science and Engineering Society at OSU, Ingram credits her willingness to get involved in the clubs and communities at Oregon State with opening doors to many opportunities. Those connections began with the munk-skukum Living and Learning Community before ever stepping foot on campus where she met many of the people she still calls friends today, and continued through the ROOTS (Reaching Our Opportunities Through STEM) program, formerly known as LSAMP (Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation), a program committed to transforming the STEM experience for traditionally underrepresented students.