Æ
Font Size:

August Hummelbrunner poses smiling while leaning on a balcony wall. She is wearing professional clothes.

Written by Paul Fraumeni  

August Hummelbrunner is very busy.

During the summer break from her studies at Western University’s Ivey School of Business, she’s working at accounting giant Ernst and Young in the Toronto office on the banking technology consulting team.

But as busy as August is, she’s excited to be on her way to a degree in business administration and, when she graduates from Western in 2025, her career.

“There are so many areas you can go into with a business degree,” says August, 21. “I just love the variety of the business sector.” For now, she’s keeping her options open but is thinking about working in the consulting field or maybe going to law school.

August has an affinity for business. She and a friend founded Toys for Joy, a charity that has raised $38,000 for Ronald McDonald House in London, Ontario over the past two years. “It’s been a profoundly rewarding experience and taught me that my energy could be a force for good.” In fact, she and her colleagues were recently recognized by Ronald McDonald House of Southwestern Ontario with the Team Harmony Chapter Donor Award, which celebrates extraordinary teamwork and community engagement through donation efforts.

That “energy” August talks about was once a challenge for her.

She says that as a child, she was always on the move, with a “boundless energy that I couldn’t quite control.”
As a young child, FIREFLY, a social services agency based out of her hometown of Kenora, Ontario, supported August and her family to help manage her energy levels.

Competitive skating enabled August channel that energy. The discipline essential to skating helped her to shape “the resilient professional I am becoming.” She also uses these strategies to support her colleagues when they find it difficult to navigate their busy and stressful schedules, providing guidance for effective time management and overcoming failure.

She’s also developed her growing business skills through her other part-time work experience—at K-Sport Marine in Kenora and at Saffron Road, a fashion shop in London.

August is thankful to her family—her mom, Jackie, and dad, Laurin, and her older sister, Elise. “My parents always knew when to step into my life and when not to. And Elise has always been in my corner. We’ve really stuck together.”

Now, as she enters her final year at Ivey—where she especially enjoys the classes in entrepreneurship and interpersonal negotiation—she’s excited about what’s to come.

“I’m so thrilled to have this opportunity. That’s what I’d encourage others to focus on—the opportunities and not the struggles. And don’t be afraid to ask for help.”

Meet our 2024 EKO Scholars

Read about Audrey Godbout
Read about CJ Barry
Read about Jordan Diana
Read about Josephine Noue
Read about Keira Gayowsky
Read about Kim Mantha
Read about Logan Pickells

OUR MEMBERS

Logo of 'The SAAAC Autism Centre'
Hamilton Health Sciences Logo
Niagara Children’s Centre Logo
CTC Logo
Lansdowne Children’s Centre Logo
Pathways Health Centre for Children Logo
KidsAbility Logo
Children
One Kids Place Logo
NEO Kids Logo
Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital Logo
Grandview Kids Logo
Sioux Lookout First Nations Health Authority Logo
Logo of 'KidsInclusive | EnfantsInclus - KHSC'
Cochrane Temiskaming Children's Treatment Centre Logo
Mackenzie Health Logo
firefly
Logo of 'ErinoakKids Centre for Treatment and Development '
Children’s Treatment Network Logo
George Jeffrey Children’s Centre Logo
John McGivney Children’s Centre Logo
Logo of 'Woodview Mental Health and Autism Services'
Five Counties Children’s Centre Logo
Resources for Exceptional Children and Youth Logo
The logo turn the word
Lumenus Community Services Logo
Surrey Place Logo
IWK's logo is a blue rounded rectangle with white figures that look like people dancing and
TVCC logo
Quinte Children’s Treatment Centre Logo
CHEO Logo
Hands The Family Help Network Logo
THRIVE Logo
Did You Hear?!

EKO Spring Symposium is Back in 2025!

Every two years EKO hosts this pinnacle event for the child development sector and the largest gathering of professionals and stakeholders from Ontario and across Canada.

learn more about the event!