7 minute read
Pathway to Purpose
By Laura J. Cole ’04 ’08MLS | Photos by Scott Cook
In the game of life, your college experience is perhaps the most transformative move as you start discovering what drives you. At Rollins, we know that expert guides are the key to successfully navigating your life’s greatest journey. We surround you with an entire community of mentors whose counsel, knowledge, and connections accelerate your pathway to purpose.
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How to Play
connect with a
of mentors, which includes everyone from faculty advisors and alumni mentors to peer guides and staff experts. These relationships are the key to deciphering the game and successfully forging your pathway to purpose.
choose your own
as you dive into our innovative, interdisciplinary core curriculum, which is designed to help you develop the broadbased knowledge and 21st-century skills like critical thinking and communication necessary to succeed in life and work.
How to Win
Live a purpose-driven life and forge a productive career by immersing yourself in Rollins Gateway, our signature approach to liberal arts education. Here you’ll discover your passion and how to pursue it with all your might.
seek out real-world
from prestigious internships and study abroad programs to community engagement and collaborative research with faculty. At Rollins there are myriad opportunities to put what you’re learning to work in the world, and there’s no better way to learn than by doing.
skills 21st-century Develop
Recent Winners
Follow along with three recent graduates who credit the mentorship and opportunities they received at Rollins for helping them make the right moves on their pathway to purpose.
SOCIAL ENTREPRENEUR
Name Madhavi Mooljee ’21 Major Communication Minor Social Entrepreneurship
Purpose-Driven Outcome-
Fellow, Venture for America Having grown up in Zimbabwe, Madhavi Mooljee ’21 started at Rollins not knowing what career she wanted to pursue. She simply knew that she wanted to make the most of her college experience. She credits that mindset combined with passionate mentors for setting the tone for her time at Rollins—and helping her find her way. “I come from a family of entrepreneurs, so I originally figured I’d major in business management,” she says.
Mooljee soon learned that though the major was broad enough to help her pursue any career she wanted, her heart just wasn’t in it. A slew of mentors—including alum Aislinn Betancourt ’12, whom she was paired with through Rollins’ Career Champions mentorship program—were instrumental in her development. But two professors she met in her first year would ultimately help Mooljee solidify her purpose.
with alumni Connect
The first was communication professor Greg Cavenaugh who taught an Intro to Communication course that helped Mooljee better understand and appreciate her reflective nature. The other was social entrepreneurship professor Josie BalzacArroyo, who recognized how passionate Mooljee was about social impact work during her Rollins College Conference (RCC) course, Be the Change. Cavenaugh and Balzac-Arroyo encouraged Mooljee to change her academic focus because they saw the call to service churning inside her.
“Service has always been a big part of my life, but I didn’t know that it could be a whole career,” she says. “Their advice to combine communication with social entrepreneurship was the perfect match for me, even if it’s not a very common or traditional major combination.”
Blending a life of service with her career would prove to be exactly what Mooljee was meant to do. After partnering with IDignity while at Rollins, she is currently working as an accounting assistant at the nonprofit, which helps underserved residents obtain proof of identity. And this fall, she’ll begin her two-year fellowship with Venture for America, which will hone her entrepreneurial focus by partnering with one of the country’s top startups.
“I don’t believe that I would be in the same position I’m in now if I went to a different college,” she says. “Everything I did at Rollins has brought me to this Venture for America opportunity, and I know it’s the perfect fit.”
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ANALYTICAL DIPLOMAT
Name Raul Tavarez Ramirez ’21 Major International Relations Minors Economics and Middle Eastern & North African Studies
Purpose-Driven Outcome
Trade Trainee, European Union Delegation, Dominican Republic
Raul Tavarez Ramirez ’21 chose Rollins because of the interdisciplinary nature of its international relations program, study abroad opportunities in the Middle East, and liberal arts approach to learning. He knew he would have to make the most of all three to prepare him for a career in international relations.
What he didn’t yet understand at the time was how the opportunities he took along the way and the relationships he developed would help him refine his purpose.
Among the most influential was an internship he completed with NAMA Strategic Intelligence Solutions as part of the School of International Training’s study abroad program in Jordan. That experience allowed him to clearly ascertain the connection between international affairs and the private sector—and reignited his childhood love of science.
“That was a critical point for me—realizing what direction I could take with my career,” he says. “I realized I didn’t have to be limited just to government jobs. I could go into consulting, still keep an international focus on my career, and get involved in science.”
He began taking science classes on top of his regular course load and engaged in pivotal conversations with a range of mentors across campus. International relations professor Mike Gunter provided him a clear view of the reality of a career in international relations and how long it would take to advance to the
top. English professor Jana Mathews set more realistic expectations about how long it takes to land your dream job. Biology professors Brendaliz Santiago-Narvaez and Jay Pieczynski helped him figure out how to incorporate science without changing majors.
“I realized I needed to find a hybrid between the two disciplines if I was ever going to be satisfied in my career,” he says. “Having all these mentors allowed me to see what was possible—the different directions I could go and the steps I needed to take to get there.”
Today, Tavarez Ramirez is coordinating trade efforts between the Dominican Republic and the European Union, making sure free trade agreements are met, educating DR import and export businesses on the benefits of the trade agreements, and supporting financial initiatives funded by the EU. He describes it as the perfect match of quantitative skills and international relations, a combination he wouldn’t have discovered without the freedom to explore and the close-knit relationships he was able to harness at Rollins.
ART CONSERVATOR
Name Isaac Gorres ’21 Majors Art History and Biochemistry/Molecular Biology
Purpose-Driven Outcome-
Environmental Microbiology MS Candidate, Radboud University, Netherlands
Isaac Gorres ’21 still recalls the skeptical looks he got during his high school graduation ceremony as he told people he planned to double major in biology and art history in college. Unlike his peers, Rollins professors nourished his dual loves of science and art, helping pave his unique path. As part of that journey, Gorres is currently pursuing a master’s degree in environmental microbiology at Radboud University in the Netherlands, and he cites two projects through the Student-Faculty Collaborative Scholarship Program for giving him a leg up on his current classmates in both his writing ability and interdisciplinary approach to problem-solving.
For the first project, he partnered with art history professor Susan Libby to explore new and emerging methodologies for conserving modern artwork.
“Contemporary art objects can present a lot of challenges for art conservators because they can be very diverse in their material origin,” he says. “How do you even begin to approach an art object made from a mylar balloon, for example? Dr. Libby was so incredible to work with, and it was really cool to get to go to the Venice Biennale as part of that experience and see some of the artworks in person that I was writing about.”
Next he worked with biology professor Brendaliz Santiago-Narvaez to identify which specific pigments were used to create the different red paints in The Crucifixion with St. John, the Virgin Mary, and Mary Magdalene, an Old Master painting attributed to Marcellus Coffermans, a 16th-century Flemish Renaissance artist. Gorres developed the concept proposal, which helped earn him a Goldwater Scholarship—the most prestigious undergraduate science award in the nation.
“The project allowed me to fuse together the two best parts of my education,” he says. “It’s also a huge part of why I’m in the Netherlands. I wrote about it as part of my application to Radboud and got a full scholarship. I’m so thankful to my Rollins professors for being so open and flexible to making my undergraduate experience as full and purposeful as it could be.”
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Your Next Move
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