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Oh, the places you'll go . . .

August 25, 2017

. . . And oh, the lessons you鈥檒l learn

鈥淔unding from alumni, parents, and the college lets students participate in relevant internships without having to work at summer jobs that don鈥檛 relate to their interests,鈥 says Penny Loretto of the Career Development Center. The number of stipends available for internships and other hands-on experiences has grown from eight to 113 over the past nine years, and this summer students from virtually every discipline got involved, addressing important questions and needs in myriad ways.  

Sophia Fox '20
Marketer Sophia Fox in Tokyo

Interns around the world

Among the farthest-flung activities this summer:

  • Producing digital-media content and photography for Vogue magazine in Bangkok, Thailand 鈥 Schuyler Alig 鈥20, art major
  • Marketing convention services in Tokyo, Japan 鈥 Sophia Fox 鈥20, undeclared major
  • Educating the world about Mongolia to promote cultural connection and preservation (based in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia) 鈥 Amanda Muir 鈥18, anthropology
  • Teaching women to read and write at a women鈥檚 center and orphanage in Kathmandu, Nepal 鈥 Doris Donelan 鈥19, social work
  • Assisting at refugee settlement camps in Uganda and Germany 鈥 Tabitha Krondorfer 鈥18, anthropology and international affairs
  • Emily Rizzo '17
    Emily Rizzo's Capetown filmmaking
    Kate Bjorkland '20
    Kate Bjorkland's clean-water work
    Producing social-justice-related documentary films in Cape Town, South Africa 鈥 Emily Rizzo 鈥17, English
  • Creating a fundraising database and campaign for a clean-water nonprofit based in northern Ghana 鈥 Kate Bjorklund 鈥20, environmental science

Winning one of this summer鈥檚 42 SEE-Beyond stipends, allowed Tabitha Krondorfer 鈥18 to spend six weeks in Uganda鈥檚 Kyangwali refugee camp with families fleeing unrest in neighboring countries, and then to visit a refugee camp in central Germany, set up for immigrants from across Africa, the Middle East, and elsewhere.

Tabitha Krondorfer '18
Tabitha Krondorfer at the Messtetten camp

Krondorfer鈥檚 research project, on how international aid groups respond to gender inequality in Ugandan camps, taught her that she cannot simply 鈥渋mplement Western ideas鈥濃攖hat she can explain the differences in women鈥檚 rights between the U.S. and Uganda but change can only come from the local women and men themselves. But she did see lives transformed. In the German camp she witnessed Hope, a shy kindergartener from Nigeria, hearing that she and her mother had received official refugee status, a rarity for Africans. 鈥淎fter having to convey so many negative results,鈥 Krondorfer says, "it was especially moving that I was asked to translate the decision that Hope and her mother could stay for the next three years. I could see in Hope鈥檚 face the transformation from disbelief to happiness.鈥

A local German newspaper interviewed Krondorfer and described her work, including her future plans to continue gathering data, facts, and stories about refugee experiences and use the data to promote new legislation.

Interns from coast to coast

Ann Hill '18
Ann Hill's Alaska ice-sheet research

This summer鈥檚 80 funded summer experiences around the U.S. included: 

  • Documenting Holocaust survivors鈥 experiences through film and photography for a museum in Los Angeles, Calif. 鈥 Liv Fiddler 鈥19, American studies major
  • Research in two cognitive psychology labs with the University of Oregon in Eugene, Ore. 鈥 Alexandra Tremblay-McGaw 鈥18, psychology
  • Field research on the health of glaciers through the Juneau Ice Field Research Program, Juneau, Alaska 鈥 Ann Hill 鈥18, geosciences

  •  Legislation advocacy work for NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts in Boston, Mass. 鈥 Margot Friedman 鈥18, chemistry   

  • Margot Friedman '18
    Margot Friedman educating voters
    Analyzing data for Washington, D.C., public schools to improve college access for first-generation and low-income students 鈥 Noa Maltzman 鈥18, psychology 
  • Providing strength and conditioning programs to elite athletes at Athletic Evolution in Woburn, Mass.) 鈥 Paul Yoon 鈥18, exercise science 
  • Developing acting skills more deeply at the Stella Adler Summer Conservatory in New York City 鈥 Kallan Dana 鈥19, theater 
  • Researching the genetic roots of Alzheimer鈥檚 and Parkinson鈥檚 at a VA hospital in Bedford, Mass. 鈥 Joseph Pagliarulo 鈥19, neuroscience
Paul Yoon '18
Paul Yoon's elite training work

Exercise science major Paul Yoon 鈥18 earned a Thorne Award (expressly for first-generation college students) to intern at Athletic Evolution in Woburn, Mass., the only official NIKE SPARQ training center in New England. Sport-specific group training sessions and a one-on-one program in plyometrics, footwork drills, conditioning, and strength were the foundations of his daily work with elite athletes of all ages.

Yoon says, 鈥淚 was surprised by how simple (not meaning easy) the programs and individual exercises were. A lot of thinking goes into each plan鈥攎ovement deficiency, injury risks, and more鈥攂ut at the end of the day, it鈥檚 less complicated than I once thought. Final workout programs are not much different than the average Joe鈥檚鈥攋ust more intense and tailored to the individual.鈥 His bottom line: 鈥淭his experience will help me tremendously for applying to physical-therapy schools, not to mention being successful in PT school.鈥

Interns close to campus

A sampling of summer experiences in the Saratoga area:

  • Helping at Mary's Haven home for the dying in Saratoga Springs 鈥 Joshua Kalloo 鈥17, biochemistry major 
  • Interning in human resources at GE Global Operations in Schenectady, N.Y. 鈥 Andrea Tehan 鈥18, business 
  • Working directly with a zookeeper in New York鈥檚 Bear Mountain State Park 鈥 Angelea McPartlin 鈥18, biology and environmental studies 
  • Conducting research for 91精简版 business professor Tim Harper on campus in Saratoga Springs 鈥 Zhengyuan Lin 鈥19, business and international affairs 
  • Discussing life issues with girls and promoting breast-feeding for a community health agency serving Orange, Ulster, and Sullivan Counties in New York 鈥 Caldonia Noland 鈥18, self-determined major in public health 
  • Preserving Irish, Italian, and Black oral histories in Saratoga Springs 鈥 Maddi Callan 鈥19, anthropology and education studies 
  • Angelea McPartlin '18
    Angelea McPartlin and friend
    Providing graphic design services for Saratoga County鈥檚 Economic Opportunity Council in Ballston Spa, N.Y. 鈥 Chelsea Nuesi 鈥17, self-determined major in communications design

With support from the 91精简版 Summer Funded Internship Program, Angelea McPartlin 鈥18 was a zookeeping intern at Trailside Zoo and Museum in New York鈥檚 Catskill Mountains. She was struck by how diverse and extensive the job was: 鈥淶ookeepers clean cages, educate, and run errands. They act as caretakers and provide enrichment for their animals. There is a never-ending list of things to be done; there is rarely a dull moment.鈥

A highlight for the biology and environmental studies major was 鈥渉osing down a bald eagle named Sammi. It鈥檚 the only time she is happy to see me. She flaps her wings while in the water, and it is amazing to watch.鈥 The best outcome for McPartlin: 鈥淚 am now certain that zoology is the field for me. I鈥檝e loved my time at Trailside Zoo and Museum, and I鈥檝e developed a real interest in environmental education as well.鈥 

For full information about all of 91精简版鈥檚 funded internships, click here.

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