Read the Spring 2016 Tufts Parents Giving Program
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Read the Spring 2016 Tufts Parents Giving Program
Pachyderm Parents News Spring 2016 Tufts University Parents Giving Program Gina A. DeSalvo Director Craig O’Donnell Associate Director Linda Levin-Scherz, A09P, M16P Assistant Director Deborah Hand Staff Assistant Articles written by Linda Levin-Scherz Photos: Tufts photographers Kelvin Ma and Alonso Nichols parentsgiving@tufts.edu giving.tufts.edu/parents Happy Spring! We did it again! Tufts has reached another Admissions milestone, and while the final numbers weren’t out at print time, we do know that there were a record number of applicants vying for admissions. I see how remarkable the students here are, young people like future world changer Ananda Paez, A16 (page 6), who wants to work on post-conflict development when a country emerges from war; and Michael Turi, A11 (page 4), who attended Harvard Law School after he graduated from Tufts and is using his legal skills to help immigrants find their voices. Both students cite the same things that everyone I meet here says: Tufts professors and students are the most influential people in their lives. This Jumbo pride, respect, civic engagement, and intelligence are what set the university apart. We are all grateful here that parents choose to support enriching and enhancing all students so that Ananda, Michael, and your Jumbo can make a difference in the world. Thank you for considering making a gift to Tufts today! Warm Jumbo wishes, Gina A. DeSalvo, Director 617-627-3798 Visit us on Facebook: Tufts Parents Giving Program Follow us on Twitter: TuftsParentsGiving Tufts Travel-Learn Expand the reaches of your education with the Tufts Travel-Learn Program’s exceptional journeys. Engage in stimulating discussions about history and current events, experience local culture, and explore some of our world’s most impressive destinations. Crafted by leading travel partners, our journeys are open to parents, alumni, family, and friends. For more information please contact: Usha Nand Sellers, Ed. D., Director usha.sellers@tufts.edu or 617-627-5323 Sports Highlights Tufts Athletics has enjoyed a very successful winter sports season. As of mid-February, Women’s Basketball had a 22–2 record, after finishing its third straight 10–0 conference season. Men’s Basketball is enjoying its best season since 2005–06 with a 20–5 record to date. Both teams are ranked in the national top 20. The Men’s Swimming & Diving team recently placed second at the conference championship meet with four individuals winning league titles. An improving Women’s Swimming & Diving squad broke five school records during its conference meet. Men’s Track & Field, under the guidance of new head coach Joel Williams, placed third at the New England Division III Indoor Championships as Jumbos won two events. The Women’s Track & Field team finished tied for fourth at that meet with one event win. The Men’s Ice Hockey team, under first-year head coach Pat Norton, held a 9–9–6 overall record heading into the conference tournament. Women’s Fencing finished fourth at the New England Championships out of 13 teams. With 13 victories, the Women’s Squash team had the most of any team in program history during the 2000s. Men’s Squash won the Chaffee Cup at the annual College Squash Association Team Championships. Jumbo athletes have also been very involved in community service with events hosted in support of Autism Awareness, the American Brain Tumor Association, Green Dot program, and Special Olympics during the winter season. Squash senior captain Paget Stanco, A16 To stay up-to-date with Jumbo sports, visit GoTuftsJumbos.com. —Paul Sweeney, Sports Information Director Save the Dates! Commencement is May 22, 2016, and Parents and Family Weekend 2016 is October 21–22. Shaping the Future Engineering Dean Jianmin Qu on Technology, Teamwork, and Parent Advice It’s Parents and Family Weekend 2015, and an adoring crowd of parents surrounds the new Dean of the School of Engineering Jianmin Qu after his participation in a deans’ panel discussion. Qu had shared his thoughts on topics ranging from computer science to experiential learning, but pauses to tell a self-deprecating anecdote about he and his wife’s ill-fated attempt to impose a curfew on their college-aged daughter. “Let go,” he advises, laughing. “Your children are adults now.” Undergraduates also have unparalleled access to faculty and research, Qu says. “While the student has to take the initiative and talk to a professor, there are many opportunities working with faculty. The limiting factor is funding; we have more students interested in research than we have funds.” The new dean also is looking to the future, imagining a space open 24/7 where all students can gather to create, using imagination, knowledge, and tools like 3-D printers and lasers. Qu, whose research in ultrasonic non“This space would promote the kind of destruction evaluation has led to safer active, experiential learning that encourages aviation and more efficient energy Dean of Engineering Jianmin Qu students to be creative and retain informaconversion storage devices for fuel tion not done in more traditional classes. cells and batteries, joined Tufts in August 2015. He spent This approach forces students to make connections. One of three decades in academia including holding key posiour goals should be to educate young people to be knowltions at Georgia Institute of Technology and Northwestern, edge contributors, not just takers,” he emphasizes. where he was the Walter P. Murphy Professor and chair of “Perhaps an art student designs something useful and aesthe Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. thetically pleasing, an engineering student manufactures it, Qu has also been the principal investigator on more than and students from the Entrepreneurial Leadership Program $16 million in research projects funded by the National look at ways to bring it to market. Having a place like that Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Air would promote interaction and put creative ideas together Force Office of Scientific Research, and the Office of Naval and practice teamwork skills with different knowledge.” Research, co-authored two textbooks, and his publications have been cited more than 6,000 times. Qu is enthusiastic about his new challenge, citing talented, smart students and dedicated faculty doing cutting-edge research. Pointing to a recent meeting with the first-place winners of Tufts’ Hybrid Racing Team and donors, he notes how impressed the donors were with the students’ maturity, talent, and ability to communicate. “Not all were engineering students, but they spoke the same language, took classes together, worked as a team,” he says. It is that intersection between engineering and liberal arts that guides research, Qu says. “There is technology behind everything we do now. “Knowledge allows students to try new things,” he continues. “It’s important that the wall between engineering and liberal arts is permeable to provide a platform for students to be exposed to new proficiencies. Liberal arts and engineering students take classes freely between schools; the infrastructure was set up to allow it.” Qu is confident in the talent of students and faculty to make such a space viable and necessary. “Put young, talented, energetic students together to think, give them the tools, and they will come up with something that surprises everyone,” he says. Knowing the benefits of experiential learning, Qu shares one more story for parents: he and his wife became extremely concerned that their two-day-old daughter was spitting up too much so they brought her to the emergency department where a doctor told them she was perfectly fine and not to worry. “It’s a hard lesson for parents,” Qu says, noting that his daughter will receive her Ph.D. soon. “I understand why parents are so uptight, but I wish we had been more relaxed and enjoyed the experience more. Kids make mistakes, but so what? It’s not the end of the world. Tufts students are smart, well educated, and make good choices. Let go,” he repeats with a smile. spring 2016 Pachyderm Parents News 3 In the Public’s Interest Tufts Graduate Michael Turi Helps Immigrants Find Their Voices Michael Turi, A11, proudly tells the story of the hurdles his father, Zoltan Turi, A11P, overcame when he emigrated from Hungary in 1956 with no money or English skills. Every couple of years, Turi and his parents returned to Hungary to witness the country’s changes and see how people were adjusting to the post-Communist era. “It certainly influenced how I see the world and the experiences of immigrant families,” he says. “Jie Yang, the director of the Tufts-in-China Program, was extremely helpful. He went out of his way to make students feel comfortable but also urged them to take the initiative and explore,” Turi states. The language choice proved to be fortuitous, guiding Turi to his post-college job with AmeriCorps, where he was placed with the Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center. There, he streamlined the citizenship training program, taught English, and prepared immigrants for the citizenship test. Drawing on his own life’s experiences and education, Turi now fights for immigrant workers’ rights at AALDEF. “Wage theft is a huge concern in the community. These are people who may have a Ph.D. in Asia but are here now working in awful conditions,” he states. As a Harvard Law student, Turi pursued the nonprofit path that he began as an undergraduate. “The defining experience for me was working at Greater Boston Legal Services, where I took on two asylum cases with clients from Uganda and Mexico and assisted a few additional clients with other immigration issues,” he says. Grateful for their son’s experience, Zoltan and Adele Turi, A11P, generously support the Chinese program, noting the strong impact it had on their son’s education and career. Michael Turi, A11 As a graduate of Tufts and Harvard Law School, Turi has dedicated his career to assisting immigrants, providing direct legal representation to low-wage immigrant workers challenging labor law violations at the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund in New York (AALDEF). Turi’s position is funded by the Skadden Fellowship Program where he is one of 28 Skadden Fellows in the country who devote their professional lives to providing legal services to the poor. The young lawyer came to Tufts because it attracted a certain type of student who wanted to be part of something greater. “I understood life as a newcomer, having lived in three states and two countries by the time I matriculated at Tufts. I got the sense that Tufts attracts explorers, people interested in living outside of their comfort zone.” Initially daunted by Tufts’ language requirement, Turi decided to venture beyond the familiar Hungarian and French he had been exposed to and began taking Chinese “on a whim.” Turi never intended to go beyond the six semester language requirement, but ended up taking 15 classes and spending a semester in China with the Tufts-in-China Program. 4 Pachyderm Parents News spring 2016 “The faculty not only inspired our son but us as well. We visited Hangzhou and were impressed by the quality and dedication of the faculty both at Tufts and in China, and we like donating to this small program where we feel that the contribution can make at least a tiny difference for the next generation of students,” Zoltan says. Mingquan Wang, senior lecturer and language coordinator in the Chinese Program, was “most impressed with Michael’s sense of purpose, thoughtfulness, and consideration for others.” Professor Xueping Zhong was equally effusive, noting Turi’s exceptional intellectual capability. “He took ‘Confucianism and Modern China’, a seminar course required for Chinese majors, and I was especially impressed by his choice of topic for the research paper and the paper itself,” she says. For Turi, his Tufts professors and friends are among the most influential people in his life. “My experience at Tufts allowed me to embrace liberal arts and think beyond the classroom, he says. “My job helps give marginalized people a voice,” Turi states. “Tufts students are well positioned to make the same impact.” Scaling New Heights Tufts European Center in France Encourages Students to Step Beyond Boundaries When the Tufts European Center in Talloires, France, was recognized as one of the top 10 branch campuses of colleges and universities, Director Gabriella Goldstein, as well as many alumni and parents, weren’t surprised. with a smile. “He became a World War I pilot after graduating from Tufts, which opened up his whole world. He decided to continue his studies in Paris, eventually opening his own school for international children outside of the city.” “The Tufts European Center in Talloires is a magical place,” says Goldstein. A thousand years of history resonate through the walls of this incredible building, which was once part of an 11th-century Benedictine monastery. Nestled in a small village under lush mountains and next to cerulean Lake Annecy, Tufts’ campus in the foothills of the Alps in southeastern France offers students unique opportunities to learn inside and outside of the classroom. Eventually, MacJannet purchased land on Lake Annecy where he opened the MacJannet Summer Camps for boys and girls, attracting students such as Prince Philip, Indira Gandhi, and even Rob Hollister, founding dean of the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service at Tufts. The building, also known as “the Priory,” was purchased in 1958 by Donald MacJannet, who graduated Tufts in 1916, and his wife, Charlotte, who lovingly restored it and then donated it to Tufts in 1979. “These days, we have academic programs for undergraduate and high school students; we welcome alumni, parents, and even host weddings,” Goldstein says, displaying photos from a recent Jumbo-filled reception. The Alpine campus also serves as an international meeting site, hosting meetings and seminars for participants from around the world. “We’ve tried to ingrain the MacJannets’ philosophy into everything we do, from including an experiential component to all of our academic programs to being good and active members of our Talloires community,” Goldstein says. Each year, the Tufts European Center receives gifts from friends and alumni to help fund student scholarships. Goldstein feels that it is important to make the Talloires experience Tufts in Talloires, the summer program designed for undergraduates, features classes taught by Tufts faculty. The for-credit classes, taught in English, represent a range of disciplines, from French literature to Alpine botany to global health. All of the classes make use of regional resources, which provides an interesting experiential component to complement the classroom work. Students stay with local host families who are vetted by Goldstein and her staff, and most have been hosting Tufts students for years, Goldstein states. The host family experience allows students a unique way to observe and learn about another culture. The programs organize a number of activities intended to help students make the most of their time in Talloires, including hikes in the local mountains. “This is not really a summer camp experience,” Goldstein cautions, “but we want students to enjoy themselves. Many have never traveled before and this is their first time abroad. Our goal is to ensure that everyone has a lot of support and a good international experience.” Following in the MacJannets’ footsteps, the staff works hard to cultivate good relationships with the people of Talloires, hosting local conference groups as well as a weekly lecture series. “MacJannet was Tufts’ original global citizen,” Goldstein says Tufts students hiking in Talloires, France accessible to students from all economic and social backgrounds and each year, the European Center provides 40 to 50 students with financial support. Sol Gittleman, Alice and Nathan Gantcher University Professor and guest speaker at Talloires events, says, “Talloires is the best-kept educational secret at Tufts. It is a paradise where faculty, students, alumni, and parents have spent time learning, studying, and experiencing one of the most beautiful places on earth. It is an authentic educational paradise.” For more information about the Tufts European Center and its academic programs, please see http://ase.tufts.edu/ europeanCenter/. spring 2016 Pachyderm Parents News 5 Golden Opportunities World Experience Plays a Big Part in Ananda Paez’s Education Tufts University was not on Ananda Paez’s, A16, radar as a high school student in Ecuador. Then her uncle became a presidential candidate and Paez learned of a student helping him with the campaign through Tufts’ Institute for Global Leadership (IGL) program and she became intrigued. “I was very interested in attending a university with a strong international focus. I decided that if the school attracts someone who would travel to Ecuador to work on a presidential election, I could have the kinds of opportunities I was looking for,” Paez says. Paying for a U.S. education has been a serious hurdle, which was why she was overjoyed to learn she was the recipient of the Poma Family Endowed Scholarship, established by former Tufts Parents Leadership Council members Ernesto and Cecelia Poma, A13P, to provide need-based financial aid for undergraduates, with a preference for students from Latin America. “I was studying in Hong Kong for the semester when I got the news,” she says. When Paez returned to Ecuador, she was able to put the Pomas’ mission of giving back directly into action. As a member of IGL’s Empower program, which allows students to engage in experiential learning in social entrepreneurship, Paez became involved with shelters for adolescents and started a project developing entrepreneurial skills so residents can sustain themselves. Tufts has provided Paez with several opportunities to have impactful experiences around the world. Traveling to Jordan at the cusp of its newly enacted democratic forms in 2014, as part of IGL’s New Initiative for Middle East Peace program, Paez was part of a collaborative dialogue and research group studying the Middle East. There, she researched the intersection of economic crisis and reforms. The experience helped clarify her future goals— Paez intends to work on post-conflict development after a country emerges from war. “There’s a golden opportunity to change history and become more than a failed state,” she explains. As an Oslo Scholar, Paez traveled to Serbia to research the organization involved in overthrowing Milosevic and has had internships in India, where she worked at a Tibetan women’s center, and at the World Bank in Washington, D.C. Ananda Paez, A16, in front of the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet, in May 2015 “It’s always been a struggle to be here. I was very touched that Latin American parents want to encourage young people to get an education. I am grateful for their support,” Paez says. Ernesto Poma states that he, his wife, Cecelia, and family feel privileged to help someone as special as Paez. “We feel a special connection to Tufts, and great respect for its excellent academic standards,” says Poma. “Our daughter Sofia attended Tufts, and we were able to witness the positive impact that her college experience had on her, and how it has enriched her life. During her study abroad semester, Paez was invited to become a youth delegate at the United Nations Commission for Social Development. “The International Relations department paid for my ticket to New York,” she states. Her initiative and research earned her a coveted spot in the five-year dual degree program with the Fletcher School, where she’ll enroll next fall for the Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy. “Being strong believers in education, we are thrilled to be able to help deserving students pursue their dreams through their academic careers, and eventually be able to give back to their home countries.” Paez is grateful that her Tufts education has allowed her to have these experiences and she credits her peers and faculty for inspiring her. “I learn so much from them,” she says. Soon, she’ll be changing the world for the better. 6 Pachyderm Parents News spring 2016 The Importance of Giving Back Multigenerational Jumbo Family Helps All Students Succeed Mark Pollak, A75, A16P, A19P, thought the Tufts tour guide was helpful, nice, and informative, but he had to offer a minor correction when the guide reported that the university’s beloved stuffed Jumbo the elephant was lost in a fire in 1982. “It was in 1975,” Pollak told the guide. “I know, because I was a student here then.” Somehow he managed to sleep through the whole thing, Pollak adds, laughing. “I was living on campus with a direct view of Barnum Hall and didn’t know what happened until I opened my shades the next morning and saw all the fire trucks.” Mark’s wife, Janet Meyers, also starts to laugh. She has fond memories of seeing the pachyderm while visiting Tufts. “I was at another college then, but I felt sad when Jumbo burned.” When the couple’s daughter Adina, A19, came as an undergraduate, joining her brother Todd, A16, Mark and Janet made sure to get a photo in front of the new Jumbo, which was unveiled in April 2015. “Our daughter insisted,” Meyers states. “I have a warm place in my heart for Tufts, and it’s wonderful seeing our children thrive there,” Pollak says. (l-r) Mark Pollak, A75, A16P, A19P, Adina Pollak, A19, Todd Pollak, A16, and Janet Meyers, A16P, A19P, near Aspen it wasn’t a hard sell getting their children interested. “The campus has grown and changed since I was a student,” he says, noting the new renovated student center, Granoff Music Center, and the Collaborative Learning and Innovation Complex, an anchor for the new Science and Technology Corridor. Pollak and Meyers, who are members of Tufts’ Parents Leadership Council, want other students to succeed as well, so they established a generous matching challenge gift for Tufts’ Student Fund, a student-driven giving initiative for undergraduates. Supported by the Tufts Fund, and led by the Tufts Student Fund Leadership Corps, the Student Fund holds an annual campaign to increase awareness of how philanthropic dollars from alumni, parents, and friends contribute to the student experience—and the importance of giving back to the university. The fund raises money for financial aid to help ensure that all students, regardless of financial circumstances, can have access to a Tufts education. Pollak, an attorney and executive with a trade association, and Meyers, a journalist, say they are grateful to be in a position to support the school and facilitate students to have that same positive experience. Returning to Tufts was wonderful, Pollak says, adding that “They are definitely in the right place,” she says. Double or Triple Your Gift! Do you know that many employers offer matching gift programs? Imagine the even greater impact your gift can make on your Jumbo’s experience! If your employer or your partner’s employer has a matching gift program, your gift to Tufts may be doubled or even tripled. Hal Stern, E16P, looks at his company’s matching gift program as a way to double his investment. “It also signals to my employer the types of causes where there is direct engagement and return. Typically, I support student “Tufts formed who I was, helped shape my values, and it’s where I made some of my best friends,” Pollak states. They are delighted that the newest Jumbo generation feels similarly. Meyers says that while Adina hasn’t declared a major yet, Todd has found passion studying computer science, a departure from when he arrived thinking he would be a history major. organizations where doubling my gift has the greatest impact. There’s a sense of pride seeing my company’s name listed, knowing that it empowers me to choose my causes and provide strong financial support,” he says. Your human resources office can supply you with specific instructions about its process for matching gifts. If your company is eligible, request a matching gift form from your employer, send it completed and signed with your gift, and Tufts will do the rest. You can check if your employer has a matching gift policy by looking at www.matchinggifts.com/tufts/. spring 2016 Pachyderm Parents News 7 The Parents Giving Program 80 George Street, Suite 300 Medford, MA 02155 giving.tufts.edu/parents Important Dates! May 2 Reading Period May 6 Final Exams Begin May 16 Senior Week May 22 Commencement May 25 First Summer Session Begins July 5Second Summer Session Begins Aug 31 Matriculation Sept 4 Returning Students Arrive Oct 21–22 Parents and Family Weekend 2016 8 Pachyderm Parents News spring 2016