F&M Latest News
- From Passion to PodcastRising senior Mia Gwirtzman has always been an artist. But after a semester at Franklin & Marshall College, she began to realize the broader implications of art. “Franklin & Marshall has such an awesome liberal arts program and a flexible sort of curriculum that I was able to customize my learning,” she said. That enabled Gwirtzman to create a joint major in art history and public health. Thanks to funding from the Marshall Fellows Program, she traveled to London over spring break to complete research for a podcast focused on both fields. After returning, Gwirtzman recorded the audio on campus with a podcast kit available for any F&M student to rent. A media studio in Old Main provided a sound-proof space. Below, learn how Gwirtzman’s academic passions led her to London.Mia Gwirtzman '24Hometown: Hewlett, N.Y. Major: Art history & public health (joint major) See her art: Instagram.com/throwingemshade Tell us about your Marshall project. This spring, I had the most amazing opportunity to travel to London on the Marshall Fellowship. London is home to the Wellcome Collection, a vast library filled with primary and secondary medical sources. During my trip, I focused my research on the larger ethical question of displaying medical information through the lens of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. When I got back to the states, I consolidated my research into an episode of a podcast. How did you combine art history and public health for this project? I took an art history course at F&M – “Survey of Art History” – and I fell in love. I was always a creative person. I love trying out new mediums: drawing, painting; I do it all. So I thought art history would be a great way to carry out my passion while learning about a historic time period. [Marshall funding] gives you a lot of freedom to make a meaningful project. Originally, my plan was to do an art installation. Before public health, before everything, I'm an artist. That all changed when I was driving back to campus one day, listening to a public health podcast. They were talking about the history of epidemics. And meanwhile, I was taking my first public health class, “Public Health in the United States,” with Nicholas Bonneau [adjunct assistant professor of history]. It was that moment on the Pennsylvania Turnpike where I had this brilliant idea: What if I make a podcast? What if I combine my two interests – history and public health? Why did you choose F&M? It was honestly love at first sight. I had never felt so connected to a school. When I was walking the campus, I really did see myself here. I knew that I was going to thrive here. I could not have ever expected this amount of support and research opportunity as a humanities scholar, as a public health student. I wish I could go back and tell my younger self, “Although you're excited, get more excited about how much you'll learn, change and adapt.”
- Liberal Arts is the Future of WorkLiberal arts colleges and educational leaders from around the country will gather at Franklin & Marshall College June 1-3 for a conference to imagine the workplace of tomorrow. “The Liberal Arts and the Future of Work” is expected to focus on the changing nature of education and work and the central role the liberal arts can play in the workplace now emerging. “We’ve reached an inflection point where there is a need for liberal arts colleges to become more forward-looking, to envision and create the knowledge needed for the future,” said Professor of Legal Studies Jeffrey Nesteruk, deputy provost for new academic initiatives.Leading the conference, Nesteruk said this does not mean abandoning the liberal arts’ invaluable tradition of preserving and transmitting the wisdom of the past, but rather it means folding that wisdom into new curricular programs. “Because today’s students will experience a work world significantly different from that of even a decade ago, liberal arts colleges must strive to imagine tomorrow,” he said. Among the institutions that will be represented at the conference are the Aspen Institute Business and Society Program, Babson College, Bentley University, Bryn Mawr College, Bucknell University, Carleton College, College of the Holy Cross, Colorado College, Connecticut College, DePauw University, Gettysburg College, Lawrence University, Mount Holyoke College, New York University’s Stern School of Business, Oberlin College, Prescott College, Swarthmore College, Washington and Lee University and Wesleyan University. A panel of college presidents will open the convening. “It is in addressing this new environment that the classic virtues of liberal arts colleges display their contemporary currency,” Nesteruk said. “Liberal arts colleges have always been integral to strength and cohesion in our flourishing years. In disconcerting times, we may discover their value is even greater.”
Bell & Tower
- Liberal Arts is the Future of WorkLiberal arts colleges and educational leaders from around the country will gather at Franklin & Marshall College June 1-3 for a conference to imagine the workplace of tomorrow. “The Liberal Arts and the Future of Work” is expected to focus on the changing nature of education and work and the central role the liberal arts can play in the workplace now emerging. “We’ve reached an inflection point where there is a need for liberal arts colleges to become more forward-looking, to envision and create the knowledge needed for the future,” said Professor of Legal Studies Jeffrey Nesteruk, deputy provost for new academic initiatives.Leading the conference, Nesteruk said this does not mean abandoning the liberal arts’ invaluable tradition of preserving and transmitting the wisdom of the past, but rather it means folding that wisdom into new curricular programs. “Because today’s students will experience a work world significantly different from that of even a decade ago, liberal arts colleges must strive to imagine tomorrow,” he said. Among the institutions that will be represented at the conference are the Aspen Institute Business and Society Program, Babson College, Bentley University, Bryn Mawr College, Bucknell University, Carleton College, College of the Holy Cross, Colorado College, Connecticut College, DePauw University, Gettysburg College, Lawrence University, Mount Holyoke College, New York University’s Stern School of Business, Oberlin College, Prescott College, Swarthmore College, Washington and Lee University and Wesleyan University. A panel of college presidents will open the convening. “It is in addressing this new environment that the classic virtues of liberal arts colleges display their contemporary currency,” Nesteruk said. “Liberal arts colleges have always been integral to strength and cohesion in our flourishing years. In disconcerting times, we may discover their value is even greater.”
- A Q&A with Matthew Thomas ’10, Director of Leadership, Mentorship, and Life Design InitiativesStaff Council is proud to spotlight F&M departments and professional staff in Bell & Tower, a weekly newsletter for the faculty and professional staff of Franklin & Marshall College. We hope these spotlights will reveal some of the tremendous work being done by professional staff across campus, chip away at existing silos, and help you gain an understanding and appreciation of the varied ways in which your colleagues contribute to the mission of the College each day. Do you want your department to be in the spotlight? We invite you to share stories and information about your teams via this form. Tell us about your role and how you support students at F&M. I’m thrilled to be back at my alma mater supporting students in the multiple areas covered by my role: leadership, mentorship, and life design. My position allows me ample room to support F&M students in a variety of ways — from running leadership cohort groups on campus, such as the Harwood Leadership Seminar and the Diplomat Leadership Program, to stewarding some of F&M’s hallmark mentorship initiatives, like our True Blue Mentorship Program. In addition, I have the opportunity to lead a variety of trainings and workshops to support individual groups across campus — from helping club leadership intentionally transition from one year to the next to encouraging students as they build literacy in diverse areas of their lives, from career development and financial management to networking and articulating their own personal and professional stories. I’m excited to offer experiential learning opportunities that support students in being the best version of themselves. Why do you feel leadership, mentorship and life design is important to student success? Success means different things to different people, but no matter the definition, it relies on students having the skills and confidence to chart their own paths in life. Giving students the knowledge that leadership is inclusive, values-based, and collaborative — and the space and guidance to explore what leadership means to them within and beyond these principles — offers them a head start in understanding who they are as leaders, community members, and individuals and how they will achieve their personal goals (or, put another way, design their own lives). Mentorship promotes this growth through individualized connections and support. I’m excited to work with our students as they build their own mentor “board of directors,” a diverse support network that makes it easier to navigate the complexities of our constantly changing world. What exactly does life design mean? Life design is an extension of design thinking, which is a process used by designers and teams in various industries to intentionally create all manner of products and outcomes. In my role, I’m excited to help students connect with the resources they need to explore and chart meaningful, balanced, and fulfilling lives — from courses about financial literacy or etiquette to guidance for choosing an industry that feels personally fulfilling. Life design models can also provide students with tools for making difficult decisions in their lives. Moving from being told “you can do anything” while students are in high school and college, to choosing a defined something in a career or field after college can be a difficult transition. OSPGD and the larger F&M community are here to help students navigate these changes and exciting opportunities. What sort of programs and support can students expect this upcoming year? My career has focused on experiential and leadership education. I’ve taught in a range of settings up and down the East Coast and in the mountains of Colorado, and students will see our programming reflect that background. I’m looking forward to getting students outside and off-campus and connecting with the Lancaster community. We have some exciting plans for students this upcoming year — from community events in Lancaster to a Susquehanna Riverlands tour. I’m so looking forward to working with groups from across our campus and community, and my office door is always open! How do you feel F&M prepares students for success beyond F&M? As an alum, I call upon the skills and critical lens that I developed at F&M on an almost daily basis. In every class I took at the College, I was given the opportunity to develop personal relationships with not only my peers but also my professors — many of whom were the first colleagues I connected with upon returning to campus. It’s wonderful to now be supporting students with programming that compliments this academic power and to be joining a community full of individuals who are part of the same mission — fostering students of intellect, creativity, and character.