After Four Years, Now What?
Be inspired by these profiles of recent graduates, who made the most of their time at Hollins and used those experiences to lead them to the next step.
By Jeff Hodges M.A.L.S. 鈥11
The Power of Internships
At age 14, Samantha 鈥Sami鈥 Makseyn 鈥19 faced the biggest challenge of her young life. Diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, she spent 11 days in a coma and missed nine weeks of school. The experience transformed her into a force for change. Passionate about healthcare advocacy, she helped found a nonprofit organization for youth advocacy in politics and legislation when she was just 18. Before she turned 21, she had already worked in both American and international government.
Hollins鈥櫬燬ignature Internship Program made much of her achievement possible, she says. 鈥淢y choice in college was influenced by the fact that I later wanted to go on to law school, but internships intimidated me. How was I going to take time during a semester to do an internship? They鈥檙e not paid, so how would I live somewhere? With Hollins and the January Short Term, I was able to do an internship, receive a stipend, have housing provided, and not miss any school.鈥
Makseyn completed three Signature Internships, all in Washington, D.C.: with the office of U.S. Senator Al Franken, the nonprofit Lawyers鈥 Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and the American Healthcare Association. Studying abroad in London her junior year, she interned with a member of Parliament, Virendra Sharma, whose constituency is largely Indian and Southeast Asian.
Makseyn augmented her real-world experience, and honed her public speaking, multitasking, research, and debating skills, by participating in Model United Nations (MUN) and Model Arab League (MAL). At MUN and MAL conferences, she encountered 鈥渃risis simulations鈥攁nd you have to figure out how to deal with them,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 learned how to find my voice.鈥
With a likely focus on healthcare law, Makseyn is attending George Washington University Law School. Concurrently, she plans to complete a master鈥檚 degree in public health. 鈥淓ventually, I want to work in politics,鈥 she says, 鈥渟o I want to be well-versed in healthcare policies.鈥
Sense of Adventure
To illustrate his daughter鈥檚 fearlessness, Lillian 鈥Lilly鈥 Potter 鈥19 says her dad loves to tell the story of her childhood trip to India for a family wedding. 鈥淲e encountered a cobra charmer, and I just went and tried to pet the cobra. Fortunately, my dad got me away in time.鈥
At Hollins, her curiosity and sense of adventure continued to flourish. She devoted January Short Terms to traveling in Japan and Greece and spent full semesters studying abroad in London and Paris. She completed internships with Peace Boat US in New York City; the Diplomatic and Consular Officers Retired in Washington, D.C.; and the聽Nursing Times聽in London.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a testament to Hollins and its flexibility that I was able to fit in so much,鈥 Potter says. 鈥淭he school made each of these experiences possible. I don鈥檛 hear from my friends at other schools that they receive the same support to participate in these kinds of extracurricular opportunities.鈥
A double major in English and international studies, Potter was drawn to Hollins because she knew that the university 鈥渕akes good writers, and good writers seek out Hollins.鈥 She took classes in philosophy, gender and women鈥檚 studies, statistical analysis, 鈥渁nd a lot of French鈥 in addition to the coursework in her majors. She also earned a certificate in leadership studies from the聽Batten Leadership Institute. 鈥淭hat was one of the strongest pulls of Hollins for me. I didn鈥檛 see women-centered leadership development courses at other universities.鈥
Potter is attending William & Mary Law School. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really good fusion of my love of English and rhetoric and my desire to get out there and do something positive in the world. I鈥檓 interested in human rights law, and I鈥檇 like to live internationally and work in either the nonprofit or foreign service sectors.鈥
The Music of Poetry
When deciding on a college, Yitazba Largo-Anderson 鈥19 turned to her family for advice. 鈥淢y dad is a professor and my mom is a librarian, and they value education,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭hey urged me to go to a liberal arts school because they knew it would help me round out who I am as a person.鈥
The campus beauty and 鈥渁 really strong creative writing program鈥 are what drew her to Hollins, after living most of her life in Phoenix, Arizona. 鈥淚 came here not knowing what I wanted to study. I鈥檓 interested in so many things,鈥 she says. After taking classes in several disciplines, she chose to major in English with a concentration in multicultural literature and a minor in social justice.
She describes her Hollins experience as 鈥渇inding the power of my voice. Poetry to me is not only something you read or that鈥檚 visual. It鈥檚 also very sensory. I love doing music with my poetry.鈥
Her talent for expression evolved when she took voice lessons at Hollins. An experience in the theatre department helped her overcome her shyness. 鈥淚 want to speak my poetry more now in public, and instead of just submitting my work for publication, I鈥檇 like to get into slam poetry,鈥 she says.
She has a fellowship this year at the College of William and Mary鈥檚 Swem Library, working with its Project Outreach initiative on making inclusivity and diversity more prevalent in academic research. She then hopes to attend law school and focus on some aspect of Native American law (her roots are Scotch-Irish and Din茅, the Navajo Nation鈥檚 preferred name, which translates to 鈥渙f the people鈥). 鈥淚鈥檇 like to get an M.F.A. in creative writing after law school and eventually teach Native American voice through poetry in conjunction with Native American studies,鈥 she says.
A Woman You Should Know
She describes it as 鈥渒ind of a running joke鈥 between herself and the Office of Admission, but no one can say Mary Daley 鈥19 wasn鈥檛 diligent in researching Hollins before enrolling. 鈥淚 first found Hollins during my sophomore year of high school when I was just starting to look at colleges, and I visited about once a month for the rest of the time I was in high school.鈥 She also took the Hollinsummer creative writing course.
鈥淐oming into Hollins, I was looking at combining art and psychology and becoming an art therapist,鈥 she explains, 鈥渂ut ultimately I decided this wasn鈥檛 what I wanted to do. During the first semester of my sophomore year, I took a class in every department on campus in which I was interested. I fell in love with [Professor of Practice-Business] Karen Messer-Bourgoin鈥檚 [鈥84] marketing class. I even did my own marketing research projects for fun.鈥
In addition to honing her photography skills through an internship with Boyd-Pearman Photography (co-owned by Amy Cavanaugh Pearman 鈥97), Daley served as a student chaplain. She discovered a creative way to boost students鈥 spirits, one that landed her a spot on the website聽Women You Should Know. She made bottle-cap pins 鈥渨ith inspirational messages and handed them out to students. It was a simple way of saying, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 a little something to brighten your day and remind you that you鈥檙e loved and you鈥檙e important.鈥欌
Daley developed an interest in business-to-consumer marketing after a聽Signature Internship聽with Atlanta-based Scout, an advertising agency that focuses on healthcare and consumer goods. Last fall she started a master鈥檚 degree program in marketing at Vanderbilt University.
Going Viral
When biology major Ciera Morris 鈥19 wanted to challenge herself by completing a voluntary senior thesis, she sought a project that would reflect her interest in infectious disease research as it relates to public health. Collaborating with biology professors Elizabeth Gleim 鈥06 and Morgan Wilson, she found the perfect vehicle: exploring tick ecology in Southwest Virginia and its possible connection to the risk of Lyme disease.
鈥淕iven there are a lot of public health implications in regard to tick research, working with Dr. Gleim and Dr. Wilson was the best option for me,鈥 Morris says. 鈥淲e decided my project should focus on species composition and the abundance and phenology of ticks in Southwest Virginia to better comprehend disease ecology in the Roanoke Valley. This included understanding what tick species are present and what times of the year they are active.鈥
鈥淗er project has been incredibly intensive, involving a year of monthly field collections of ticks at sites all over the Roanoke Valley,鈥 Gleim explains. 鈥淪he collected almost 20,000 ticks and did a聽lot聽of lab work, too.鈥
Morris鈥檚 research, along with a Signature Internship with the nonprofit organization Climate Central, earned her a two-year post-baccalaureate fellowship at the聽聽in Montana. The facility is part of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a division of the National Institutes of Health, where she鈥檒l 鈥渂e looking at how pathogens are transmitted to hosts, and how disease development occurs out of that. I鈥檓 excited because I think it鈥檚 going to be a good transition from dealing with tick ecology to viral research in general.鈥
After completing her fellowship, Morris expects to go on to graduate school and pursue either a master鈥檚 degree or a Ph.D., focusing on infectious disease.
Thinking Big
Meaghan Harrington 鈥19 once believed her inability to focus on one interest or a single area of study reflected poorly upon her. 鈥淚n a lot of places, there鈥檚 really no space to be indecisive,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 viewed as a negative thing.鈥
But at Hollins, Harrington could immerse herself in an environment that encourages exploration and self-discovery. 鈥淢eaghan is what I鈥檇 describe as a 鈥榖ig thinker,鈥欌 says Associate Professor of History Rachel Nunez. 鈥淪he really exemplifies the power of a liberal arts education to help students find new ways of thinking and being.鈥
Ultimately, Harrington double majored in history and classical studies, but she continued to embrace topics she found compelling. For example, a class in dance helped inform her choice to write her senior history thesis about the rhetoric of Mormon women on the female body in the late 19th听肠别苍迟耻谤测.
Interested in archaeology since grade school, Harrington spent six weeks in the summer of 2017 doing hands-on fieldwork at the annual Archaeological Field School in Jamestown, Virginia, site of the first permanent English settlement in North America.
Field excavation drew Harrington back to Jamestown last summer for an internship designed to help 鈥渄emystify archaeology.鈥 She helped conduct research on the Angela Project, an effort to explore the life and landscape of one of the first recorded Africans brought to English North America in slavery. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to contribute to the creation of more diverse stories about the past,鈥 Harrington says.
She used Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to collect data at the site. 鈥淲ith this software-based technology, you can create maps and three-dimensional images,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the perfect way to visualize everything in which I鈥檓 interested.
鈥淚鈥檓 probably going to graduate school at some point,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut in the meantime I think I will spend a couple of years in the field using GIS. The creativity in that work will certainly help me to define my future interests.鈥
Making It Happen
As a student at Roanoke鈥檚 Virginia Western Community College, April Arnold 鈥19 wasn鈥檛 certain a four-year degree was in her future. Her mom was raising Arnold鈥檚 four younger siblings (three of whom were actually cousins who were adopted after their own mother died) when she suffered an accident that left her on disability. Arnold had to take on significant responsibility in helping care for her family.
鈥淚 was thinking I wouldn鈥檛 transfer to a four-year college like I had planned,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 was in Virginia Western鈥檚 early childhood program and figured that with a two-year degree, I could get a job working in childcare right out of school.鈥
While attending a college fair with her sister, Arnold first heard about聽Hollins鈥 Horizon program for adult women. 鈥淎 few weeks later I came to a meeting to learn more, and something clicked. I met these amazing Horizon students and said, 鈥業 have to be here.鈥欌
Thus began Arnold鈥檚 two years at Hollins and a remarkable balance of meeting family obligations while attending the university as a full-time student, majoring in psychology.
Arnold credits faculty and 鈥渕y Horizon sisters鈥 for helping her make it all happen. 鈥淟uckily, my teachers knew and worked with me. [Professor of Psychology] Bonnie Bowers, my advisor, is the most amazing person ever.鈥
Arnold excelled academically, earning induction into Pinnacle, a national honor society for nontraditional students that seeks to support leadership and scholarship.
Graduating, Arnold says, was 鈥渂ittersweet鈥 because she wasn鈥檛 quite ready to leave her Hollins friends. 鈥淥n the other hand, I鈥檓 very excited to have my diploma. It鈥檚 40 percent for me, 60 percent for [my family]. I know I鈥檝e made all of them proud, and I鈥檝e shown my younger siblings that even with all the stresses and hardships, anything is possible.鈥
To read longer versions of these stories, go to www.糖心传媒.edu/news.
Jeff Hodges is director of public relations.
Photos by Sharon Meador