An Enhanced
Worldview
MIAP STUDENT USES EXPERIENCE TO IMPROVE SUSTAINABILITY
L
ia Mastronardi is passionate about two things — logic and cultures. Three, if you count her cat, TomTom. Mastronardi is a Master of International Agriculture Program student in the Oklahoma State University Ferguson College of Agriculture. She is also a small-business owner, co-founder of a technology startup, retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and former political adviser. She has more than 20 years of international experience, but MIAP helps her pursue an interest in sustainability. “I am kind of like the two sides of a brain,” Mastronardi said. “I like people, experiences, culture and languages, but I also like logic.” MIAP students use existing skillsets to develop international agriculture, said Karl Rich, MIAP director. “For Lia, I think MIAP is an opportunity to pivot,” Rich said. “She has all this great experience working in the military. She’s got years of experience working with different contractors, managing projects, and so on. MIAP is an opportunity for her to try something else.” A desire to learn drew Mastronardi into her various careers, she said. “It is a little weird to look back and ask, ‘Why did I go there?’” Mastronardi said. “It was not necessarily any plan of mine.” Mastronardi received an Air Force ROTC scholarship while majoring in math at Vanderbilt University. After earning her undergraduate degree and 54 SUMMER/FALL 2022
an Air Force commission in 1988, she said she hoped to travel. “When I joined the Air Force, I asked to be assigned to either coast,” Mastronardi said. “So, they sent me to Omaha, Nebraska.” In 1992, Mastronardi caught the attention of her superiors, she said, and was selected to attend Naval Postgraduate School, where she earned a master’s degree in national security affairs. During this time, Mastronardi discovered her affinity for languages, she added. “I took a language test, and I walked out of there with my head hung low,” Mastronardi said. “I really thought I failed the thing.” Instead, she had the second-highest score on the exam. The next summer, Mastronardi earned a language proficiency in Ukrainian through Harvard University and the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center. That fall, she was assigned to Europe. “Lia always wanted to be overseas,” said Paul DeSisto, retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and one of Mastronardi’s cousins. “She did extremely well as a junior officer, and that is why they sent her.” While serving as a political adviser at Aviano Air Base in Italy, Mastronardi became friends with then-Capt. Maria Carl, the public affairs director. “One of the things that brought Lia and I together was this desire for lifelong learning,” said Carl, who retired