 So my name is Daniel Flonseca. I'm from Northport, Alabama, and I'm an electrical engineering major on the STEM Path to the MBA. What drove me to UA was the STEM Path to the MBA program, combined with the five years that they offered me for National Merit, which other schools did not offer. And so I could get my bachelor's in electrical engineering and an MBA, which I thought business would be like my secondary major if I didn't want to be an engineer. I could do both and it would be affordable because I had a scholarship that covered it for five years. So the STEM Path to the MBA program is a five-year program where every semester you take a one and a half hour business class. You do case studies on different companies, different products. You see how people market their products, how they create their products, how they create their value propositions and their business model canvases. And every five weeks you do a presentation in a group on whatever your product or business was in full business professional dress. Then you have a class like that every semester for your first three years. Then you have a summer of three MBA classes once you apply to the MBA school, your junior year. And then your senior year, you're technically taking graduate level MBA classes. And then you have a fifth year after you graduate from your bachelor's in whatever your STEM program is. Your fifth year is 100% business classes and then after that you graduate with your MBA. I think it's going to help me because I've always wanted to maybe start my own tech company or at least be able to market what I work for. And so being able to combine both the engineering aspect through the engineering department and also having the MBA and the business know-how of how to sell a product and how the industry works from a business standpoint. Combining those two together I feel it would be really helpful to market myself and also help myself like go forward in my career once I actually have a job.