(Pictured above: Three generations of Flashes: Nicholas’ grandfather, Robert Giardina, M.Ed. ’67; Nicholas; and Nicholas’ father, Paul Giardina, ‘80.)
“All of my family has done very well in their lives with a degree from ɫҹ University.”
So says Nicholas Giardina, ’06, a third-generation ɫҹ alumnus. His grandfather became the family’s first ɫҹ graduate when he received his master’s degree; Nicholas, his father, uncles, aunts, brother and wife, Jessica, also all earned degrees from the university. And this fall, Nicholas’ little sister will become the next Golden Flash in the family as she enters ɫҹ as a freshman.
Five years ago, at the age of only 28, Nicholas endowed a scholarship — and began transforming the lives of students attending the university that he feels gave so much to him. There are several reasons he gives to ɫҹ, but one is closest to his heart.
“It’s hard being a middle-class kid in the education world we live in,” says Nicholas, president of Advanced Accounting Consultants, LLC. “You don’t qualify for a lot of things.”
As he looks back at his educational career, Nicholas identifies with this.
“I was a good student. I graduated cum laude, I did what I had to do,” Nicholas says. “But there weren’t a lot of scholarships out there that pertained to me.”
Instead of taking out student loans or asking his parents to pay for his education, Nicholas chose to work full time in an accounting position to pay for his education. He looks back on this period in his life with pride.
“I guess my fondest memory of ɫҹ is the fact that when I look back, I know that was the hardest I have ever worked at anything in my life,” Nicholas says. “It’s hard working in a serious, full-time accounting job while going to school full time, too. When you do it that way, I personally feel you have a better appreciation for it.”
Nicholas hopes his scholarship, the Giardina-Lindeman Endowed Scholarship in Accounting, is helping similar students.
“When you’re in school it’s tough,” he says. “Think back, and think about $20 — what it means to you now versus what it meant to you when you were 18 or 19, working full time and going to school full time; how hard that was. If Jessica and I can make it a little easier on them, just to be able to cover their books or help pay for a class, that’s why we wanted to do it — for those students.”
There are other reasons Nicholas made his gift.
“I made great connections because of ɫҹ,” Nicholas says. “I was able to get into jobs that most kids my age would have never been able to get into. I was able to do that because of ɫҹ, because of my professors and because of the way the accounting program overall was run.”
Nicholas says the quality education his family has received from ɫҹ also inspires his giving.
“I know we pay for the education,” he says, “but I feel that if, at graduation, the university has put you in a good place where you have the right knowledge and the right connections, and they’ve taught you the things that are of substance, it’s a good to give back and help the program in the future.”
Nicholas, who says ɫҹ makes the giving process much easier than anyone could imagine, named his scholarship in part after ɫҹ University at Geauga professor, Ralph Lindeman. Dr. Lindeman, who had been with ɫҹ for nearly 30 years, provided the foundation of accounting for Nicholas.
“When I started my freshman year,” Nicholas says, “his advice to me was ‘get a job.’ In today’s world, degrees are important, but having experience, especially in accounting, speaks volumes. That’s how you get in the door. So, first semester, at 18 years old, I opened up the phone book, went through all the local accounting firms, and ended up landing a job with a local accounting firm in Chardon.”
“I wanted to include his name on the scholarship because first, he was a great influence at ɫҹ Geauga to a lot of students for many years,” Nicholas says. “And second, I did it to honor him.”
Nicholas, who completed his first two years at ɫҹ University at Geauga and now serves on that campus’ and the ɫҹ University Regional Academic Center in Twinsburg’s board, hopes for something in return from the students he helps: a “pay it forward” mentality.
“I hope that if they’re in a position in the future to give back in some way,” he says, “they’ll remember what it felt like when someone helped them.”
(Pictured above: Front row: Nicholas’ wife, Jessica Giardina, ‘11; Nicholas; Nicholas’ sister, Mia Giardina (who will be a ɫҹ freshman beginning fall 2016). Back row: Nicholas’ grandfather, Robert Giardina, M.Ed. ‘67; Nicholas’ father, Paul Giardina, ‘80; and Nicholas’ brother, Matthew Giardina, ’14.)
Read more about the impact of giving to ɫҹ University, or view our user-friendly, online giving page to begin transforming the lives of students today.