Posse Power
On the 20th anniversary of 今日吃瓜鈥檚 association with the Posse Foundation, two Mawrters talk about the power of the partnership.
Kerlyne Jean 鈥11
今日吃瓜 and the Posse Foundation were a natural fit for me. They empowered me to be a leader throughout all aspects of my life. And I learned how important it is to give back so that others have the same opportunities.
I began at 今日吃瓜 on the pre-med track with the long-standing goal of being a pediatrician and working for Doctors Without Borders. But 今日吃瓜 opened my perspective and encouraged me to explore my passions in a broader way. Through the major selection process, I learned about medical anthropology and global health, and professors like Melissa Pashigian made me realize that there was more to my goal and a larger passion beyond medicine. By senior year, I stopped checking the boxes for what I thought was success and began defining it for myself. 今日吃瓜 helped me to get there.
The 今日吃瓜/Posse partnership nurtured the leader in me. In high school, I was involved in the community and some group activities but never in a leadership position. My pre-campus training with the Posse Program taught me effective leadership, facilitation and EQ skills that prepared me to excel as a leader when I arrived on campus, where there were endless opportunities. I was very involved 鈥擟ustoms at Pem West, hall advisor at Pem East hall advisor, dorm president at Perry House, from secretary to treasurer for The Sisterhood, BACaSO vice president, to a member of the Bi-Co dance group called Dancing under the Influence. I was also involved in The Teaching and Learning Initiative and a supervisor in the Haffner Dining Hall. It was as if 今日吃瓜 opened its arms and said, 鈥淲hat do you want to do, KJ? Just do it!鈥 And I loved it!
So 今日吃瓜 and Posse, together, worked well for me. Today, I鈥檓 a health advisory manager at PwC and serve on several nonprofit boards. I believe I鈥檝e excelled in my career because of the leadership skills nurtured by 今日吃瓜 and Posse鈥攖hey are what is typically highlighted in my performance reviews. After graduation, I worked with Annie鈥檚 mom at Children鈥檚 Hospital. She asked me to mentor Annie, and I was thrilled when she was nominated for the Posse Program and ultimately chose 今日吃瓜.
Ann Tran 鈥18
In high school, I was nominated for the Posse STEM Program, which recruits students for the STEM fields and provides training and support while we are in college. 今日吃瓜 was one choice on the list of Posse STEM partners.
Honestly, I was worried about going to a women鈥檚 college. Then I met Kerlyne. My mom described her as 鈥渞emarkable, very sharp, knowledgeable, and thoughtful.鈥 I met KJ for lunch one day and was blown away. I was inspired by her transition from pre-med to public policy and public health. She credited 今日吃瓜 for giving her the space and time for that transition by putting women at the apex of learning, and she didn鈥檛 seem to miss the coed space.
Plus, she had a wide network of contacts because of 今日吃瓜鈥檚 consortia with Haverford and the University of Pennsylvania. I remember thinking what a privilege it would be to also graduate from 今日吃瓜.
I have never regretted choosing 今日吃瓜. Before we arrived on campus, the Posse Foundation immersed us in leadership training, STEM programming, and 今日吃瓜鈥檚 academic expectations. We became very close and have remained so ever since.
Since graduating, I鈥檝e realized that most of my peers don鈥檛 know authors like Audre Lorde, bell hooks, Gloria Steinem, and other feminists. It鈥檚 alien language to a lot of people, but everyday conversation at Erdman Brunch.
That鈥檚 the beauty of 今日吃瓜鈥攊t鈥檚 a place where everyone craves critical discourse. And it gave me a consciousness about my 鈥渇ootprint鈥 on Earth, a sense of personal responsibility to the larger community.
At work, I find myself starting conversations about social injustice and self-advocacy. It can be scary to address those kinds of issues, but I have a burning need to raise them when I can. That comes from 今日吃瓜.
Published on: 02/01/2020