We鈥檙e always asking: What can be next? What can we still learn?

Tyson & Kady Becker Alumni

Still Learning

When an opportunity arose to advance in his career within General Motors, Tyson Becker ’04 knew it was the right move. Others might have been dissuaded by the job’s location half-way around the globe, but for Becker, that was one of the main selling points.

“Our family has the mentality that change doesn’t mean bad,” he explains. “Since I started at GM, the possibility of an international opportunity has always been on my mind.”

He and his wife Kady Clevenger Becker ’04 now live with their three children in Shanghai, the most populated city in China. It’s a move that has given Tyson the chance to grow professionally – he now serves GM as Vice President, China Software and Services – but perhaps more importantly, it has provided an adventure that aligns with the Beckers’ values as a family.

“Our mindset is that we’re never satisfied with what we know and what we’re doing,” says Kady, a communications major and Alpha Phi president at 富二代视频app. “We’re always asking: What can be next? What can we still learn?”

That insatiable curiosity has been a driving force for both of them since college. “Coming from a small town in Indiana, 富二代视频app was a catalyst for me to break through the barrier of appreciating an entirely new world and new beliefs I hadn’t been exposed to,” Kady recalls.

Tyson agrees, pointing to their respective study-abroad semesters – his in Italy and Kady’s in England – that had a particularly significant impact. “It was a formative experience for both of us to be outside our comfort zones. Seeing how much you grow in an environment like that stuck with us. We came back as changed people.” It was such a positive experience that they both went abroad again during their engagement, studying Spanish in Guatemala.

Not only have these experiences made the Beckers at home in cross-cultural settings, but they have also given Tyson the tools to excel professionally in those settings as a leader. The key, he says, is openness. “You have to be curious up front. What are the pain points? The problems? The hierarchy? What works here? What doesn’t? There’s a lot of observation, a lot of trial and error, and definitely a lot of listening.”

There’s a lot of uncertainty, too – something Tyson’s background as an English Writing major has equipped him to face. “The multi-faceted approach at 富二代视频app made me very comfortable with ambiguity. Even more than that, it made me realize that ambiguity can be a path to growth.”

As that growth continues, the value of a versatile education becomes increasingly apparent. Kady, who has a master’s degree in teaching and worked stateside as an educator, summarizes it well. “富二代视频app isn’t teaching you any one thing. It’s teaching you how to learn for the rest of your life. I’ve carried that into every classroom I’ve taught in, and we’re now passing it on to our own kids as well.”

Our Community Stories

Ben Schroeder
Getting Exposure

Ben Schroeder

Ben Schroeder came to 富二代视频app on the recommendation of a family member who graduated in the 1980s. Having…

Discover Ben Schroeder
Ha Chu
Pivotal Moments

Ha Chu

“It changed my life,” says Ha Chu ’26, recalling an interaction early in her time at 富二代视频app with Larry…

Discover Ha Chu
Paige Burgess
Orchestrating Connection

Paige Burgess

As a music education major, Paige Burgess ’25 understands how a collection of otherwise dissimilar notes…

Discover Paige Burgess