Turn Connections into Opportunities

By Erin Peterson

St. Edward鈥檚 emphasizes the power of its community and the strength of its network. But what does that look like in the real world? We asked students and professors to tell us about ways they turn connections into opportunities.

When Nicole Seligman 鈥12 was a student, she knew that Visiting Instructor of Writing and Rhetoric Beth Eakman wanted students to thrive in her classes 鈥 and beyond them. Eakman spent hours teaching students the nuts-and-bolts tactics that would help them land jobs in the publishing world. She brought young professionals into her classroom who could share their experiences transitioning from students to working writers and editors. When Seligman asked for help sharpening her r茅sum茅 and cover letter for an internship, Eakman spent more than an hour helping her make it perfect. And Eakman was a champion of Seligman鈥檚 blog, Feel Good, Dress Better. Such support cemented a genuine relationship between the two that continues today.

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Digital drawing of a woman planning.

Seligman attributes Eakman鈥檚 teaching and support as a key reason she is now executive editor at Junebug Weddings, an online wedding planning site known for its strong editorial work. 鈥淏eth was just such a huge resource and advocate for me,鈥 Seligman recalls.

Now Seligman is paying it forward. She is a regular visitor to Eakman鈥檚 classes, where she shares her best advice about landing publishing jobs and mines the classes to find talented interns for her team at Junebug. 鈥淚 know [students from St. Edward鈥檚] are going to be capable,鈥 she says of the university鈥檚 deep talent pool. 鈥淗iring other [Hilltoppers] has been really fun.鈥

Seligman and Eakman represent just one tiny piece of the power of networks and community at St. Edward鈥檚. The small but mighty campus helps students truly get to know faculty and staff members. These deep and genuine relationships allow Hilltoppers to make the connections they need to find the perfect club, tackle interesting research, land great internships and get meaningful jobs after graduation.

In a world that values who you know almost as much as what you know, St. Edward鈥檚 is making sure that students graduate with both the knowledge and the network to succeed.

Why Bigger Isn鈥檛 Better

Developing a meaningful network of people willing to help advance your career takes more than clicking a button to accept a LinkedIn request or sending a generic application to a general email address. Instead, it starts with a real human connection.

Just ask Jack Musselman, former director of the Center for Ethics and Leadership and associate professor of Philosophy. Earlier this year, for example, Musselman was working in his office when an admission representative, a mom and her prospective-student daughter stopped by. They had a few questions about majors and law school.

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Graphic of main building

Musselman, who teaches a popular philosophy of law class and frequently works with current students who plan to attend law school, was happy to help. He spent nearly 20 minutes with the trio, walking them through important considerations and printing out a few documents he鈥檇 developed for the most common questions he answered.

鈥淚 could multiply that story by 100,鈥 he says of the

frequency of such interactions, both with current students and prospective ones. And it鈥檚 in those conversations 鈥 illuminating, vulnerable and real 鈥 that Musselman gets to know the students, their dreams and their goals.

That genuine connection makes it easier for Musselman to make recommendations and assist a student who is ready to take the next step, which might include connecting the student to one of the dozens of lawyers he knows personally. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to believe in teaching and talking to the whole person,鈥 says Musselman of his philosophy about working with students. 鈥淥n the practical end, that means putting in the time.鈥

Such work is possible, he says, because St. Edward鈥檚 is a small university that emphasizes the value of personal interactions. Class sizes often hover around a dozen, and 鈥渃lose-knit鈥 is one of the most frequently applied descriptions of the community.

Even more than that, there is an ethos of advocacy, mentoring and compassion among professors and administrators who see themselves as doing more than simply filling a professional role. They see students as more than a number or a grade.

"You鈥檝e got to believe in teaching and talking to the whole person." 

Associate Dean of Students Connie Rey Rodriguez 鈥04, MAHS 鈥06 knows the truth of that statement both as an alumna and as an administrator. As a student, she appreciated how often she saw administrators and professors outside their offices and classrooms and engaged in the many facets of the St. Edward鈥檚 community. Today, she models that in her own work. 鈥淚 play intramural basketball with the dean of students [Steven Pinkenburg], and I鈥檓 often in one of the dining halls for lunch,鈥 she says.

Her deep familiarity with campus means that she can provide the kind of support that really helps. For example, when a transfer student recently came to her office with questions, she was quickly able to find him an intramural sport he was interested in joining 鈥 along with the name of someone who could connect him to a comic book club. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just that we want students to see us out [on campus],鈥 she says. 鈥淚t helps us to understand what鈥檚 happening,鈥 says Rodriguez.

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Jo's coffee graphic.

Amy Adams, an adjunct instructor of Rhetoric and Composition, agrees that there is real value in integrating herself into the community. Students find her in her classroom, but they鈥檙e also just as likely to find her conducting office hours at Jo鈥檚 Coffee, sitting in the bleachers at softball games, and even doing a fashion shoot for Cabra, the school鈥檚 digital fashion magazine. When it comes time to write one of countless recommendation letters for her students, she draws on these experiences to paint a fuller and more vibrant picture of each student she鈥檚 endorsing. 鈥淚鈥檓 a champion of these students,鈥 she says.

Timing Matters

Mary Kathryn Cook 鈥17 felt adrift when she sank into the red leather chair in Steve Rodenborn鈥檚 office in the spring of 2016. Cook, a double major in English Literature and Catholic Studies, had no idea what she was going to do after graduation 鈥 and she felt like all her peers had figured it out. She hoped that Rodenborn, whose charisma in the classroom had helped persuade her to add Catholic Studies as a second major, might be able to guide her.

Rodenborn, former associate professor of Religious Studies, didn鈥檛 have answers, but he did have questions. After 30 minutes of gently prodding her about what excited her, what she鈥檇 done so far and what she didn鈥檛 want to do, Rodenborn helped her see clearly that grad school 鈥 a common path for students like her 鈥 was not in her future. 鈥淚 wanted to go and serve in the world,鈥 she wrote in a blog post about that conversation. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to resign myself to writing papers about serving the world.鈥

Rodenborn suggested that she look into Jesuit Volunteer Corps (JVC), a year-long service program she鈥檇 never considered. For Cook, it was a life-changing moment 鈥 she was later accepted into both the 2017鈥2018 and the 2018鈥2019 JVC program.

For Rodenborn, it was all part of his role at St. Edward鈥檚. 鈥淥ftentimes, you get to a point [in conversations like these] where a student鈥檚 face lights up,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen that happens, my job is to be a mirror for students, and to help them see where they need to go. If it鈥檚 an area that鈥檚 in my discipline, I can help identify options, and if it鈥檚 not, I can suggest another professor who can.鈥

Rodenborn says such moments can feel magical 鈥 and they鈥檙e one of the essential ways that St. Edward鈥檚 faculty members serve their students. 鈥淚f [students] don鈥檛 have the experience yet, they can鈥檛 know what opportunities are out there,鈥 he says. 鈥淔aculty can say, 鈥榊ou don鈥檛 know about this yet, but look into it. You might find that it鈥檚 what you鈥檝e always wanted to do, you just didn鈥檛 know it existed.鈥欌

Asking for help isn鈥檛 always an intuitive idea for students, who arrive at St. Edward鈥檚 with intelligence and drive that has often allowed them to succeed in their previous endeavors through sheer force of will. Vice President for Student Affairs Lisa Kirkpatrick says there鈥檚 often an 鈥渦nlearning鈥 process that students go through as they transition from trying to do everything themselves to building meaningful and powerful alliances with faculty, staff and other students. 鈥淲hen I talk to freshmen, I say, 鈥榊ou think you came to college to learn how to do everything independently,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淏ut eventually, students realize that it鈥檚 not about learning to do everything alone and by themselves. It鈥檚 about realizing that they need other people along the way,鈥 she says.

Kirkpatrick, for example, has done extensive preparation with high-achieving students seeking jobs. She鈥檚 done mock interviews with them, helping them tweak their answers and their delivery so they can make the best possible impression. She鈥檚 advised others on professional dress, leading with self-confidence and respectfully engaging with people in higher-level roles.

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Graphic of professor helping students

There is no exact template for these kinds of teaching moments, says Kirkpatrick, nor should there be. Instead she tries to deeply understand where a given student is at, how she can help and what that support might look like. 鈥淚t takes all of us here at St. Edward鈥檚 to make sure that students get what they need in the right place at the right time,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he overarching goal is to understand what each person brings to campus, and provide the personalized education that prepares them for doing good in the world.鈥

Sometimes, the support that students need is not seeing an array of new options or learning the technical skills to achieve a goal. They just need the reassurance from others that what they鈥檙e aiming for 鈥 the fellowship, the internship, the name-brand graduate school, the job 鈥 is well within their capabilities.

"But eventually, students realize that it鈥檚 not about learning to do everything alone and by themselves. It鈥檚 about realizing that they need other people along the way."

鈥淪tudents can be quite humble,鈥 says Rodenborn. 鈥淪ometimes they need for us to confirm that these world-class opportunities are the ones they should be shooting for,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e can tell them: 鈥榃e know what it means to go to these programs and who they will accept. You are that student. You are ready for this.鈥 When they hear that, they really go for it. They just need a few people to say that they can do it.鈥

Built for a Lifetime of Support

St. Edward鈥檚 is purpose-built to foster the kind of meaningful connections that help students make the most of every minute on campus, and those relationships rarely end when students toss their caps at graduation.

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Graphic of two students walking

Eakman, for example, invites all of her students to friend her on Facebook once they graduate. They frequently share job opportunities with her that she passes along. 鈥淥ur alumni often actively recruit our grads because they know how rigorous the writing major is and how well it prepares them for professional writing jobs,鈥 she says, noting that companies including National Instruments, Junebug Weddings and War Games Video Games have hired a series of St. Edward鈥檚 alumni. 鈥淭here are entire lines of Hilltoppers who鈥檝e been recruited and hired by Hilltoppers.

Often, alumni learn to take on that helpful role themselves. In 2012, a student from one of Eakman鈥檚 classes created an Eakman Alumni Association Facebook group. Now boasting more than 100 members, it鈥檚 a hub for alumni seeking and offering jobs in publications and communications.

Eakman is delighted by all of it 鈥 and she loves that it鈥檚 all part of being a Hilltopper. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a real sense of community here,鈥 she says. 鈥淗elping one another is part of the soul of this university.鈥


Illustrations by Gwen Keraval