University of Central Florida

05/05/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/05/2026 08:08

How One Student Turned Tragedy and Self-Doubt into Success at UCF

Highlights

  • Partly influenced by a traumatic experience while on deployment, Preston Strenth reimagined his future and became determined to earn a computer science degree in pursuit of changing his family's trajectory.

  • Strenth set an ambitious two-year goal to earn his degree, balancing monthly travel for National Guard duties, rigorous coursework and long hours at part-time jobs and internships.

  • Thanks to resources he found through the UCF Office of Military and Veteran Student Success, Strenth turned an internship opportunity with Pegasus Partner BNY into a full-time job with tremendous career growth potential.

As Preston Strenth prepares to cross the stage at commencement, he finds himself flashing back to the moment his journey to this milestone started in 2023 with the South Carolina National Guard.

Strenth was on deployment in Kuwait with his unit. Among his fellow infantrymen was 20-year-old Jayson Haven. Haven had been accepted to his dream school, the University of Michigan, and was fulfilling the final two months of his year-long assignment before shipping off to college. He was tragically killed in a non-combat vehicle rollover accident.

"I think all of us who were on that deployment understood you're here and somebody else isn't. What are you going to do with your life?" Strenth says.

"I think all of us who were on that deployment understood you're here and somebody else isn't. What are you going to do with your life?"

Seven months later, Strenth envisioned that life and voiced his goals to his wife, Kriselle. He proposed a two-year timeline to earn a college degree in computer science and start a new career path.

"I feel like everything in my life now is all clicking together," says Strenth, who landed three job offers before graduating and is in the process of purchasing his first home. "I have achieved the American dream in a sense."

As a member of the South Carolina National Guard, Preston Strenth connected with the Office of Military and Veteran Students Services at UCF and accessed their resources to land an internship with BNY, which he turned into a full-time job. (Photo by Daniel Schipper)

The Right Place

A Central Florida native, Strenth moved to South Carolina at 17 and joined the National Guard two years later. He extended his contract twice - his current contract ends in 2027 - as he pursued a degree in criminal justice from the University of South Carolina.

He took advantage of the educational benefits the U.S. Army offers and obtained a certification in computer programming, which introduced him to coding software.

After that fateful deployment in Kuwait, he and his wife set their sights on Orlando and UCF, where Strenth knew of the university's reputation as one of the nation's top military friendly schools, its strength in computer science and our many industry partnerships.

"Without a doubt, coming to UCF is the best thing I ever did," he says.

His credits from the University of South Carolina transferred over to help keep him on track for his two-year timeline. He thrived, in part, because of his willingness to take advantage of the many resources offered through the Office of Military and Veteran Student Success.

His experience here also tested him in ways that led to great growth and confidence.

In his second semester, while taking Computer Science I, he was stuck on his first programming assignment. Every time he willed the coding to work, he was met with the same result: fail.

His frustration turned to tears as he voiced his doubts to his wife. What if he just screwed up his life? What if he couldn't do this?

She encouraged him while leveling with him at the same time - he wasn't the first to attempt this class or this degree. If he wanted to be here, he was going to figure it out.

She was right.

"I think that is kind of the point - they will make you go to that line and ask yourself, 'Do you want to be here?' " Strenth says. "Because it's a program that can lead you to a financially stable future. I have offers that no one in my family has ever had in front of them before. But you've got to work for them."

Preston Strenth on his first day of a summer internship with BNY in 2025. (Photo courtesy of Preston Strenth)

Opportunity Calls with BNY

He applied that same grindstone mentality to maximizing opportunities outside of the classroom - all the while driving to South Carolina once a month to fulfill his National Guard duties.

"I have offers that no one in my family has ever had in front of them before."

In Spring 2024, he attended a lunch and learn with BNY organized by the Office of Military and Veteran Student Success. The leading global financial services company announced a formal partnership with UCF that establishes a co-located educational innovation hub on UCF's main campus - the first-of-its-kind in Florida.

Strenth turned the connection he made with the BNY recruiter into a summer internship as a software engineer and vowed to himself to secure a job offer.

He wasn't deterred by the fact that many of his fellow interns had started programming as middle-schoolers while he, at 24, had just learned the basics a year prior.

He committed to being the first one in the door and one of the last to leave. He reached out to fellow veterans he found in an interdepartmental staff directory to seek advice about integrating into the company. He emailed a weekly recap to his supervisor that listed how his accomplishments that week aligned with BNY's core values.

"I was trying to showcase that I wanted to be here, and I wanted this job offer more than anything," Strenth says.

When the internship ended, he stayed connected, even as he lined up another software engineering internship with Hatalom Corporation, a service-disabled veteran-owned small business.

Strenth had three job offers lined up before graduation day with BNY, Hatalom and Northrop Grumman. BNY's career growth potential, military leave policy and proximity to his home were too good to pass up.

"BNY has a future leaders program that I've already expressed interest in even though I'm not eligible for another two years. But I'm already telling them, 'This is something I want to do. How can I?' " he says.

He draws upon that memory of his conversation with his wife from years ago - in his story, he refers to it as "the gamble" - as he sits here today, once again, betting on himself.

"Now two years later, I'm like, 'We won. We did it,' " he says. "Celebrating this moment at graduation is a testament to the sacrifices that my wife has made, my family has made, and the countless other people who have supported me to get to this point."

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University of Central Florida published this content on May 05, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on May 05, 2026 at 14:08 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]