LEAP 2020!
Students reflecting on their internships through the annual LEAP 2020 presentations demonstrated the depth and breadth of the liberal arts.
By Sasha Nyary
How does a 20-year-old learn how to get and keep a job? How can a liberal arts education boost getting a job? How does the classroom connect to a career?
Internships hold answers to these questions. Internships are such an important aspect of an undergraduate education that 网红爆料 funds them 鈥 for everyone. Through its Lynk Program, every Mount Holyoke student has the opportunity to do a paid internship.
Lots of colleges have internships, said Eleanor Townsley, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Sociology. Her research shows that internships are a key stepping stone to future jobs and graduate school. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 different at Mount Holyoke is the scale. At Mount Holyoke, you don鈥檛 have to be wealthy to go to a high-end arts internship. We鈥檙e going to support you to do it. You have access.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
As part of receiving that funding, students make presentations about their internships at the annual LEAP symposium. 鈥淟EAP,鈥 which stands for 鈥淟earning Through Application,鈥 was on October 2 this year. The sessions were held virtually, because of the pandemic. LEAP is open to the general public and the audience included other students, faculty, staff, alums and family members.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge plus for Mount Holyoke to have the Lynk opportunity that many schools don鈥檛 have,鈥 said Carol Law 鈥21, a sociology major. Law worked as a digital marketing and social media intern for Under The Mango Tree, which was founded by Vijaya Pastala 鈥89 to help beekeepers in India. 鈥淚 am so eternally grateful for the experience that I got. Without Lynk I might not have had that opportunity and I might have struggled with my future. But now I have that assurance that I鈥檓 going into the field in which I want to continue to work.鈥
The 150 students participating in LEAP this year were divided thematically into 37 panels that met in hour-long Zoom sessions. Panel topics were as varied as the internships: 鈥淐reativity and Connection: Digital Media for the 21st Century,鈥 鈥淒ata Analysis Across Different Fields: Cloud Forest, Proteins, Hormones, and Liver Cirrhosis,鈥 鈥淏uilding Equity in Classrooms Around the World,鈥 and 鈥淢astering the Elements: Managing Resources to Promote Sustainability and Public Health.鈥
鈥淟EAP is a moment for our students, a real high point, where they show the world, their professors, and their peers that they really accomplished something,鈥 said Townsley, who organizes the symposium in her role as director of Nexus: Curriculum to Career. Nexus helps students create individual programs of study and combine them with internship experiences.
鈥淟EAP also reflects the depth and breadth of the liberal arts,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd LEAP is an intergenerational student symposium, where juniors and seniors share their experiences with first-year students and sophomores.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
How does LEAP reflect 鈥渢he depth and breadth of the liberal arts鈥?
Some internships are particularly relevant to a student鈥檚 studies. Prakriti Shrestha 鈥21, a biology and data science double major, interned with the University of Pittsburgh analyzing protein networks using concepts she had learned in data science. English major Olivia White 鈥21 worked with the International Shakespeare Center鈥檚 press, where she edited original 17th-century versions of three plays.
Others found themselves using skills and interests they may not have intended when they accepted their positions. Anthropology major Marion Wolloch 鈥21, interned with DOROT, a nonprofit organization in Manhattan focused on older adults. One of her projects was to create a 20-page magazine depicting the patrons鈥 experiences of COVID-19.
鈥淐an I make a zine?鈥 Wolloch said she had asked herself. 鈥淐an I illustrate that zine? I am so lucky they put so much faith in me to be creative. It was very cool. I didn鈥檛 anticipate using my art skills 鈥 I have no formal training in art. Now this magazine can be found virtually at .鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Do students work with faculty?
Many students spoke about the importance of Mount Holyoke faculty mentorship. Anjali Rao-Herel 鈥22, an anthropology and psychology double major, investigated DES and hormonal risk discourse in an internship with medical anthropologist Jacquelyne Luce, a lecturer in gender studies. She heard about the position when she took Feminist Engagement with Hormones with the professor. 鈥淚 wanted to expand my qualitative skills and further my interest in medical anthropology,鈥 she said.
Rao-Herel coded interview transcripts, conducted literature searches, read archival materials, and helped write a full draft of a journal article.
鈥淚 learned interview coding, time management and academic writing,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his internship solidified my interest in medical anthropology and introduced me to graphic methodologies and ethnography as a way to convey ideas. I鈥檓 really hoping to work with Jacqueline Luce again.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
How did COVID-19 affect LEAP?
Typically, LEAP sessions are held in classrooms over the course of a full afternoon. LEAP 2020 transferred well to the Zoom environment 鈥 if anything, it was more intimate and personal.
鈥淭he COVID-19 times created another layer of solidarity,鈥 said Townsley, who works closely on LEAP with Katie Walker, the Nexus coordinator. 鈥淕etting to the day can be challenging but this year the process was very smooth. The students understood this was important to Mount Holyoke, especially since we couldn鈥檛 be with each other. This was a moment that we could spark some of that Mount Holyoke magic.鈥
More than 250 students received Lynk funding this past summer 鈥 and 20 of them were supervised by alums, said Jenny Watermill, senior associate director of experience and exploration at the Career Development Center. When in-person internships disappeared with the advent of COVID-19, alums responded even more generously , and they were among the LEAP audience members.
鈥淚 am so impressed by the ability of our students to take challenges of all kinds and to turn them into opportunities for growth and learning,鈥 said Watermill. 鈥淟EAP allows us to hear stories about individual student achievement while also understanding the community support that makes it all possible.鈥&苍产蝉辫;