Bio: Ryan Patch

“I try to make the most of every opportunity presented to me … and I want others to have the same kind of opportunities I have had.”

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RYAN PATCH ‘08
Lexington, Mass.
Global Economics

Mapping the journey
Ryan Patch experienced an awakening during his First-Year Seminar, “Poverty in a Global Context,” taught by Gordon Weil, former professor of economics.

“The course opened my eyes to the extent and severity of poverty throughout the world,” says Patch. “And once you know, you can’t not know.”

Patch began exploring the dynamics of poverty through courses in sociology, anthropology, political science and economics. “The more I delved into questions of poverty, the more I found that you cannot grasp the entirety of everything affecting people’s lives without a multidisciplinary lens.”

Peak experiences
Patch designed a major comprising courses in economics, political science, sociology and philosophy in a quest to understand the personal impact of poverty and “to find ways to help people empower themselves—not only to achieve economic self-sufficiency but also to extend their capabilities and expand their choices. People say that development is freedom.”

With the support of a Projects for Peace grant from Wheaton, Patch spent three months in Nueva Guinea, Nicaragua, where he set up two community banks that provided small loans to 28 individuals. Over the course of the summer, Patch saw lives transformed as budding entrepreneurs invested their 50- to 300-dollar loans in goods to sell, farm animals to raise, or an oven for baking bread. (Pictured above: Ryan Patch, far right, with Nicaraguan friends.)

“Microcredit can break the cycle of poverty, because it’s self-sustaining,” says Patch. As loans are repaid, the funds are reinvested in new loans to community members. In April 2008, Patch presented his senior honors thesis, based on his work in Nueva Guinea, at the National Conference on Undergraduate Research.

The road ahead
This summer, Patch and a friend are their riding bicycles from San Diego to Boston to promote awareness and raise funds for FINCA, an international microcredit organization. Patch will return to Nicaragua in September to work on a permaculture farm and later will pursue a master’s in sustainable development at the SIT Graduate Institute in Vermont.

Story from: Wheaton’s Independent Majors

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6 Responses to “Bio: Ryan Patch”
  1. jay driscoll says:

    Patch Daddy Patch
    I hope my bro is taking good care of you! Best of luck with the pedaling.
    -jay

  2. Michael Silva says:

    Ryan,
    good for you guys…great experience for a great cause!
    Mike

  3. Rob callahan says:

    Best of luck, Patches! Awesome to see you doing this!
    Rob

  4. Kate Morrone says:

    Ryan!
    I miss you so much and am so proud of you!! Keep on peddling, I’ll be waiting with open arms and a big plate of carbs for you when you get home.
    Lots of love, Kate

  5. epp sonin says:

    This is really amazing. Good work, good luck.Hope to see you when you’re back in Lexington.
    I have 2 names for you to contact if you’re interested: 2 very experienced folks that are very involved internationally with similar work.
    much success, epp sonin (your former music teacher..remember me?)
    ps saw the Boston Globe article today and will send a contribution.

  6. Katherine Kuckens says:

    Dear Patch,

    So excited for you! Please let us know when you are coming through Mass. Sounds like you might be passing near my alma mater, Mount Holyoke College, and I would be pleased to see that you get food, showers, and a good night’s rest there. Here is a new prayer I learned. It takes 7 seconds to say. Imagine if everyone started saying it, every day:

    “The world now has the means to end extreme poverty; we pray we will have the will.”
    Love, Mrs. Kuckens

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