2023 Commencement Profiles – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Tue, 03 Dec 2024 17:35:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png 2023 Commencement Profiles – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Alice Grissom, GSAS ’23: Lessons from the Middle Ages https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/alice-grissom-gsas-23-lessons-from-the-middle-ages/ Tue, 16 May 2023 15:52:31 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173204 Photo by Patrick VerelAlice Grissom learned a lot from a woman in a box.

To earn a master’s degree in medieval studies, Grissom, who uses they/them pronouns, devoted their master’s thesis to exploring the lives of anchorites, members of a Christian Monastic tradition primarily practiced by women from the 11th to the 16th century.

Anchorites voluntarily confined themselves to a tiny, windowless room attached to a church for the rest of their lives. The community supplied them with sustenance through one or two small windows, but their only source of interaction was daily Mass that they observed through a window looking into the church. Before they entered the room, they were declared “dead to the world.”

For their thesis, “‘Mi bodi henge wið þi bodi’: Dying with Christ in the Anchorhold,” Grissom’s analyzed two medival anchorite texts, Ancrene Wisse, and Þe Wohunge of ure Lauerd that served as sort of instructional texts.

Senses and Sin

“I was wondering, ‘What in that restrictive process makes it so useful for their spiritual work, and how are their instructional texts helping them imagine their bodies differently in order to do that work?” said Grissom, who will graduate with a Master of Arts from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) in May.

“In my research, I ended up thinking a lot about the senses because some medieval theologians and philosophers thought that women’s bodies were more connected with the senses, and through the senses, with sin.”

a picture of a woman being sealed into a little house
A manuscript miniature from a pontifical document circa 1400, depicting a bishop saying the Order of the Dead over an enclosed anchoress.
Courtesy of Alice Grissom

What stood out most in their analysis of the documents was that for an Anchorite, declaring themselves dead and embracing sensory deprivation was not the end of the story. By cutting off their traditional senses, the Anchorite was in fact awakening their “spiritual senses,” and growing closer to God.

“I was really surprised to see that there is this recuperation of the senses in spiritual work. Rather than just this straightforward narrative that medieval men are always suspicious of medieval women’s bodies and their senses, it’s a lot more complicated and nuanced,” they said.

Grissom was drawn to medieval studies because it offers the same sort of interdisciplinary scholarship that they enjoyed as an undergraduate majoring in English and history at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. There, they found themselves studying humanities at a science-heavy institution; and the experience gave them a greater appreciation for the interplay and blend of different disciplines.

Linguistics and Medieval Literature

Another draw for Grissom was the opportunity to delve deep into linguistics.

“A really big turning point for me was taking a history of the English language course. It was one of the coolest things I had ever done, getting to see how language changed over time,” they said. “It provided so many insights into the ways that we as people and societies change as well.”

In March, Grissom tied for second place in the GSAS three-minute thesis competition, an annual gathering where graduate students boil down their research projects for the general public.

Last year, they were the recipient of a GSAS Student Support Grant, a Mary Magdalen Impact Fellowship, which supported a research trip they took to Prague last summer, and a Fordham Jewish Studies Fellowship. In 2021, Grissom was also awarded a Loyola Fellowship, an award established by the Jesuits of Fordham that allowed them to develop digital humanities projects, run and attend language reading groups, co-organize a symposium, and develop and submit abstracts for conferences.

New Medievalists: Establishing the Diversity of the Past

In the fall, Grissom will be pursuing a Ph.D. in English at Rutgers University and plans to combat the misappropriation of medieval history by groups such as white supremacists who use Nordic runes to symbolize white supremacy.

“By showing that these are inaccurate uses of the past and that the past was a lot more diverse, a lot of us newer medievalists are trying to establish a historic precedent for the diversity of the present,” they said.

Andrew Albin, Ph.D., an associate professor of English who directed Grissom’s Fordham thesis, said their work illustrates a creative use of the few surviving materials to tell the story of the lived lives of people in the past.

“It humanizes people from the past who might feel really alien to us. The idea of choosing to wall yourself up inside a six-by-six cell for the rest of your life just so that you can pray feels kind of outlandish,” he said.

“It is a kind of practice that we don’t really have an imaginative space for anymore inside our culture. Rather than exoticize it and play up the kind of strangeness of it, [Grissom] tries to get inside the experience.”

Album said Grissom has also shown a knack for building community, reaching out to graduate students in the English Program and moderating panels at a conference for a New York area consortium of Medievalist scholars this month. He called them a natural-born teacher.

Equally important, he said, is Grissom’s commitment to addressing issues of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and disability.

“They have a really remarkable way of finding connections between those political commitments and the work that they do, and of making sure that there’s always a conversation between the kinds of questions that we care about today and how that impacts the kind of work that they take on,” he said.

 

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The Rev. Mark Suriano, GRE ’23: A Deeper Sense of Self in the Church https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/the-rev-mark-suriano-gre-23-a-deeper-sense-of-self-in-the-church/ Tue, 16 May 2023 13:33:56 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173316 Courtesy of Mark SurianoFor the Rev. Mark Suriano, pursuing a doctorate of ministry in Fordham’s Graduate School of Religion and Religious Education was an opportunity to explore his spirituality— and how he could put that spirituality into practice as the pastor of First Congregational United Church of Christ in Park Ridge, New Jersey.

“I was looking for a degree in Christian spirituality. I started with the certificate program in spiritual direction, and then I ran out of classes and I was still interested,” he said with a smile.

He pursued a master’s degree at GRE, still not planning on going for a doctorate. But the opportunity to dive deeper into areas such as practical theology and spiritual direction was appealing to him.

“I was able to explore interests I had without feeling too constrained,” he said. “The great surprise for me was all the work we did around the field of practical theology.”

A ‘Transformative’ Practical Theology Class

Suriano said that the practical theology class he took, taught by religion professor Thomas Beaudoin, Ph.D., was transformational.

“He, in his own gentle and persistent way, got all of us to think differently about our ministry,” he said. “I can’t really say enough about how that semester changed my ministry here at the church and my ideas around it.”

Beaudoin said he teaches students to use practical theology to examine and understand their own lives and spiritualities.

“The ultimate curriculum is the student’s life, and so theology matters in part because we need to learn how to reckon with our lives—our lives individually and our lives together,” he said.

Beaudoin said that as a part of the program, Suriano was able to reckon with his unique spiritual background. He came to Fordham after decades in church ministry, which started when he was ordained a Catholic priest before he joined the United Church of Christ in 1993.

“He was interested from the beginning in using the language of Christian spirituality, to hold together his Protestant and his Catholic heritage and commitments,” Beaudoin said.

A Queer Vocation

Beaudoin said that one way Suriano did this was through his study of queer theology and his eventual thesis, “A Queer Vocation: Growing into Power.”

Suriano said that studying queer theology helped him develop a sense of “how I as a queer person have a voice in the church, that I may speak to the church in a way that is powerful and meaningful,” he said.

He called his thesis a “great intersection between some personal work and also some work about the church itself, including the congregation I serve.”

“I began to explore, just briefly, in my thesis about how for queer people in the church there is this connection with Christian spirituality and how to find our place in the church that isn’t centered around the debate over whether or if we should be there,” he said, but instead centered around some of the unique gifts that queer people can bring.

Past, Present, and Future

Beaudoin said when Suriano was able to “engage wholeheartedly in queer theories and queer spirituality,” it “really opened him up to a new horizon.”

“There was something noble and challenging and nourishing about this idea of queer vocation, and he really claimed that in three ways: as a way to make sense of his heritage; and then queer vocation as a way to understand what he’s about intellectually and spiritually now; but then also as a hopeful path to and through retirement in ministry.”

Beaudoin said that it was rewarding to see Suriano, who had already accomplished so much before coming to the program, “say an even deeper yes” to his life, vocation, and intellectual project.

“He’s so thoughtful, and he’s so reflective,” he said. “Also it’s humbling—it puts me in the role of perpetual student to be in the presence of students like that. I get to learn from his example as he goes deeper.”

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Mishal Ahmed, PCS ’23: Studying Health Informatics From London https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/mishal-ahmed-pcs-23-studying-health-informatics-from-london/ Mon, 15 May 2023 14:42:44 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173265 Photos courtesy of Mishal Ahmed and John ChelsomFrom her home in London, Fordham student Mishal Ahmed was able to develop an electronic health record system for an orphanage in Benin, Africa, as her capstone project for her online master’s program in applied health informatics. Now she’s ready to take what she learned and help more people around the world. 

“Rather than just reading and learning from theory, I want to practice it,” said Ahmed, 27, who will earn her master’s degree from the School of Professional and Continuing Studies this May. 

Enabling Telemedicine with Free Software for Developing Countries

Ahmed was born and raised in Karachi, the largest city in Pakistan. In 2014, she moved to the United Kingdom. She earned her bachelor’s degree in nutrition and health from the University of Roehampton. Initially, she wanted to pursue her master’s degree in dietetics and become a dietician. But when her son was born, it became difficult for her to pursue her original goal.

Mishal Ahmed poses for a group photo with four other people.
Fordham students in the applied health informatics master’s program with PCS Dean Anthony Davidson at Oxford University in April 2022

Instead, she entered the inaugural cohort of Fordham’s master’s program in applied health informatics. The program, which welcomed its first class in 2022, teaches students how to create cost-effective information systems for hospitals and health care providers. 

“What we teach in the program is how to make effectively free software for health records. Without these electronic health records, it’s very difficult to do telemedicine, which can significantly help to deliver health care in developing countries,” said the program’s director, John Chelsom, Ph.D.

Helping an African Orphanage with Electronic Records

For Ahmed’s capstone project, Chelsom connected her with international relief organization Humanity First, which put her in touch with an African orphanage that wanted to convert its health records from paper into electronic files. 

“An electronic health record is an online record of a patient’s personal information and medical history data that can be updated over their lifetime. Whenever a child enters the orphanage or is adopted, they need to fill out forms and submit them to the government. The orphanage wanted to make those forms electronic so they’re more safe, secure, and easily shareable, and all the data is in one place,” Ahmed said. “To actually install the program on their computers, we [Chelsom and I] will need to visit the orphanage … and I’m planning to continue working with them after graduation.” 

Balancing School with Motherhood, Thanks to an Online Program

Mishal Ahmed stands with her husband and their 2-year-old son in front of a waterfall.
Ahmed with her husband and their son

At Fordham, Ahmed developed her information and technology, artificial intelligence, and programming skills. Although she never had a permanent physical campus, she participated in two Fordham-hosted residential workshops at St. Edmund Hall, the oldest residence at the University of Oxford, where she met some of her American classmates in person for the first time, as well as other professionals from around the world. And thanks to her online coursework, she was able to care for her family while pursuing her education. 

“I did my household chores in the morning, put my baby to sleep in the afternoon, and attended lectures from 2 to 5 p.m. Sometimes my son woke up in the middle, but it was possible for me to continue my studies because I was at home, where it’s easier for me to manage him,” said Ahmed, who lives in London with her husband, their 2-year-old son, and her mother-in-law. “For people like me who have children or dependents to look after, studying or working online is a great opportunity.” 

This spring, she will travel to Fordham’s main campus for the first time with her family for Commencement. She plans to use her new degree in a field related to data management, where she hopes to make a difference. 

“I want to create something that will help people in the real world,” Ahmed said. 

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Michelle Kogolo, GABELLI ’23: Marketing on Her Mind https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/michelle-kogolo-gabelli-23-marketing-on-her-mind/ Wed, 10 May 2023 15:35:08 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173133 Photo by Rebecca RosenMichelle Kogolo, GABELLI ’23, got her first taste of marketing when she was working in finance administration at an ophthalmology insurance firm in New York City. She was invited to participate on a team to brainstorm ideas for a philanthropic marketing campaign for hearing aids.

“I was blown away about the psychology of it, the science of it, knowing what target you’re going for, and what you want the brand narrative to be,” Kogolo said. “I thought it was super interesting and tied back to my undergraduate minor in psychology. And then I just couldn’t get it off of my mind.”

After doing some research, Kogolo, who earned her bachelor’s degree at Rutgers University, decided to pursue an MBA in marketing. She chose Fordham partly because her older brother graduated from Fordham College at Rose Hill, and also because the Gabelli School most closely aligned with her values. “It checked all the boxes,” she said. “I resonate with the culture, the community, and the Jesuit values, and how [the school]is a change maker at the forefront of ESG. All of that meshed with what I want to do.”

Now, with graduation around the corner, Kogolo will soon take what she’s learned in the full-time MBA program to her position as a marketing associate at Morgan Stanley. The opportunity materialized after she completed a summer internship in the firm’s global brand marketing division.

“I was so thankful and honored to have the opportunity to complete a summer internship with Morgan Stanley,” she said. “I worked with an amazing team and I’m so excited to go back.”

As Kogolo reflects on her years at the Gabelli School, she said she is grateful for the experiences she had to develop leadership skills, including serving as the vice president of the Black & Latinx MBA Association and as vice president of events for the Student Advisory Council.

Traveling to London for her capstone project was especially memorable as it was Kogolo’s first trek outside of the U.S. In addition to gaining consulting experience with Shopify, Kogolo enjoy sightseeing with her classmates.

“It was so much fun, I didn’t want to leave London!” Kogolo said. “As a marketer, it was instrumental to my career to see a different culture and to meet different people and understand their mindset.”

Kogolo works with the Office of Academic Advising and Student Engagement as a graduate assistant and volunteers with Girls Inc. of New York City and She Runs It, a mentorship program for women. She said she admires the women leaders at the Gabelli School, including Dean Lerzan Aksoy, Ph.D. “She is an inspiration to all of us. You can tell by her passion that she really cares about her students.”

One of four children, Kogolo and her siblings are first-generation college graduates. She credits her mother, a Nigerian immigrant, for making her academic success possible.

“My mom is an extraordinary woman. As a single parent, she worked three jobs just to make sure that all of us got a proper education because she wanted the best for us,” she said. “She’s the one who gave me the drive and ambition to discover my purpose and my calling.”

—Claire Curry for Fordham Business Magazine

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Will Lanier, LAW ’23: Advocate for Change https://now.fordham.edu/colleges-and-schools/school-of-law/will-lanier-law-23-advocate-for-change/ Wed, 10 May 2023 14:56:53 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173095 Photos by Taylor HaWill Lanier is committed to becoming a lawyer who helps the underserved. Thanks to his Fordham law degree that he’ll earn this May, he’s almost there. 

At Fordham, I learned not only how to interpret the law but also how to be a lawyer and a leader for everyone,” said Lanier

His path to law school was unconventional. He studied theater and media communications during his undergraduate years and then moved from his native Texas to New York to pursue a job in public relations, but later realized this wasn’t the right career move. Lanier went on to found a nonprofit focused on LBGTQ+ health and wellness, where his community could safely exercise and “celebrate their queerness” together. After building the nonprofit, he realized he wanted to continue helping his community, but on a larger scale. 

“The only logical next step for me was to go into law, where I can help effect change for not just one person, but millions of people,” he said. 

Using the Law to Help Underserved Communities

Lanier’s first visit to Fordham Law took place in 2020, on the day the University shut down due to the pandemic. The building was empty, except for Lanier and a kind admissions counselor who gave him a tour, but that was all it took to convince him to enroll at Fordham. 

A man stands while holding his hands in front of him in a courtroom.
Lanier in the law school’s moot courtroom

Lanier served as a student leader, including as president of the law school’s Student Bar Association and as a New York State Pro Bono Scholar. In the latter role, he worked with the NYC Anti-Violence Project on cases for several clients, including a gay man who was seeking asylum in the U.S. 

“The few times I was able to meet him, he was always very nervous and shy. But the minute the judge said ‘We are granting you asylum,’ his whole demeanor changed,” Lanier said. “During our post-asylum work, he has been so happy and joyful. You can see on his face that he feels safe. And to know that I was a small part of that huge change in his life is something that I will always remember.” 

After graduation, Lanier will become an associate at international law firm Clifford Chance, where he will work in white-collar litigation and criminal defense.  

Later in life, he’s thinking about serving in the political realm, where he can develop better legislation for the LGBTQ+ community, help formerly incarcerated people to return to society, and protect people from falling into homelessness, using the law as a tool. 

“Will is older and more experienced than many law students,” said adjunct professor Jerry Goldfeder, who taught Lanier last year. “I’ve come to see a real sense of his maturity and centeredness that I have no doubt will enable him to be a successful attorney.” 

Life Lessons From Illness

Lanier said his past personal challenges will also inform his career as a lawyer. He has lived with ulcerative colitis since he was 18 and was diagnosed with colon cancer when he was 28. Lanier said these challenges have taught him to be resilient, cherish life, and keep an open perspective. 

“You never know what someone’s dealing with,” said Lanier, 37, who is now nine years in remission, engaged, and father to a shiba inu named Cash. “Meet everyone with compassion, assume positive intent when someone’s speaking to you, and always have an open heart.”

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Miguel Sutedjo, FCRH ’23: Using Music to Tell Global Stories https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/miguel-sutedjo-fcrh-23-using-music-to-tell-global-stories/ Wed, 10 May 2023 11:39:07 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173082 Miguel Sutedjo, FCRH ’23. Photo by Natalie Huntoon.Combining creativity with intellectual pursuits has always been a goal for Miguel Sutedjo. That’s why the Fordham College at Rose Hill senior became a double major in international political economy and music, and a double minor in English and Mandarin. True to form, his next step also combines more than one of his interests; he’ll be teaching English in Taiwan on a Fulbright scholarship.

Composing a New Musical

Sutedjo has applied this combo approach to his research and musical works, including composing the book, music, and lyrics, for Fly Me Away, an original musical featuring a teenage jazz pianist named Frank and his father who move from Shanghai to New York City.

“He does in a single day, more than most people do in a month,” said Eric Bianchi, an associate professor of music and one of Sutedjo’s mentors.

The idea to write a musical came to Sutedjo in high school, when he realized “that there just wasn’t a lot of Asian representation in the musical theater canon.”

He began working on it in his free time, until he developed it as his honors thesis. His work intensified junior year, when Sutedjo participated in Fordham’s partnership with Juilliard. Jake Landau, one of his instructors there, told Sutedjo that he would be a perfect fit for a program he was leading that summer.

“I was able to secure funding from the Fordham undergraduate research grant, which allowed me to participate in this two-week intensive in Italy—the New Voice Composers Studio at the Narni International Vocal Arts Festival—which was really cool,” Sutedjo said. “I was able to workshop and premiere two new pieces of mine at this international music and arts festival.”

Uplifting Voices

Miguel Sutedjo during a performance of “Fly Me Away” (Courtesy of Miguel Sutedjo)

At the center of Sutedjo’s work is a desire to share and uplift the stories of Asian Americans, particularly after witnessing and experiencing marginalization, and microaggressions against the community.

“I’ve been able to find my voice and realize this is something that not only can I do, but it’s needed—if I was feeling that way when I was 14, I’m sure there’s a lot of other young Asian kids who also feel that way,” said Sutedjo, who is Indonesian American of Chinese descent.

Sutedjo said this work is particularly important now as many Asian Americans have experienced discrimination over the past few years.

“In order to combat these stereotypes, you need to tell a much wider array of stories that portray Asians not as a monolith, not as a stereotype, but really as a diverse array of people with individual stories,” he said.

The Power of Connections

Sutedjo knows how impactful representation can be. When he was an actor (and later assistant music director) with Fordham’s theater club Mimes and Mummers, the group brought in Dennis Yueh-Yeh Li, a director of Taiwanese descent and the director of performance, storytelling, and community at the Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA) in Lower Manhattan.

“He was the first Asian director that I’ve ever worked with and that was a very cool experience for me to see someone that looks like me in that position of theater leadership,” he said.

Sutedjo participated in a couple of projects helmed by Li, and eventually their connection led to Fly Me Away’s debut at MOCA, with support from Fordham’s undergraduate research community and honors program.

Miguel Sutedjo and the cast of “Fly Me Away” (Courtesy of Miguel Sutedjo)

A Debut Reading at the Museum of Chinese in America

“We were able to bring on an all-Asian cast and creative team alongside two Fordham musicians,” Sutedjo said. “We had a full stage reading, and roughly 90 people came to each show, which was a great reception.”

Sutedjo said that he plans to use the feedback to revise the production before its next iteration.

“Most musical projects don’t go that far,” said Bianchi, who is also a musician. “To watch somebody who’s 21 do that, it’s astounding by any count.”

Fly Me Away was also recognized at Fordham, as he received the Fordham College Alumni Association Research Symposium Award for the production.

Advancing the Music Department

Another mentor, music professor Nathan Lincoln-Decusatis, said Sutedjo’s unique talents and skill sets have not only benefited him, but they’ve also helped the music department explore new areas, such as “music as research.”

“Research can be in the performing arts, and Miguel opened the door for the future at Fordham, because he was the first one to really think of harnessing the resources of the research community,” he said. “And now that’s a precedent. Miguel was the trailblazer for that.”

Global Perspective

Sutedjo said that he hopes to use this Fulbright to immerse himself in teaching and his own heritage, and use those experiences in the future.

“Being able to live abroad in Taiwan for a year, absorbing the language, I think will not only help me connect with my heritage, but also it allows me to tell a greater range of stories through having that lived experience,” he said.

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Amy Syper, GSE ’23: Combining Movement and Psychology to Help People Heal https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/amy-syper-gse-23-combining-movement-and-psychology-to-help-people-heal/ Tue, 09 May 2023 18:58:06 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173038 Growing up, Amy Syper struggled with the transition to high school, her parent’s divorce, and her body image. She sought help through counseling, and the support and healing she experienced inspired her to pursue a career assisting others in the same way. This May, she’ll graduate with a doctorate in counseling psychology from the Graduate School of Education.

“I think my own experiences with counseling were really transformative,” Syper said, adding that she enjoys being able to “be part of people’s lives and help them through really difficult experiences.”

Now, studying at Fordham, Syper found that the support from peers and professors combined with the well-rounded curriculum and hands-on practicums have set her up to do just that. 

“When I interviewed at Fordham, I felt connected to the people. I felt like I could build a community with professors and with the other students,” Syper said. 

Using Dance Therapy in Body Image Work

Syper plans to combine her counseling work with another form of therapy that’s been meaningful in her own life—dance. Discovering dance as a teenager taught Syper to connect with and appreciate her body. And in college at the University of North Texas, she studied modern dance and double-majored in psychology and dance. 

In addition to her studies at Fordham, Syper’s working to become a dance/movement therapist through a program at the 92nd Street Y, where she’s learning how to help people connect with their bodies in meaningful ways that assist their healing processes. Syper works with teens and young adults with body image issues and eating disorders and finds it’s often beneficial to incorporate elements of dance therapy into her talk therapy sessions.

With clients, Syper helps them assess: “How do I know if I’m anxious? How do I know if I’m upset? What are the cues my body’s giving me? And how can I connect with my body? … How do I use that information to identify what’s going to make me feel better moving forward?”

‘A Gifted Therapist’

Currently, Syper’s wrapping up a year-long internship at University of Colorado Boulder’s  Counseling and Psychiatric Services (CAPS) as part of her Fordham Ph.D. program. Similar to a med student’s residency, the position gives her hands-on clinical experience wherein Syper conducts individual therapy sessions, co-leads graduate student process groups, and serves as an eating concerns case manager.

“She’s a very talented, gifted therapist who, at an early stage of her career already has very defined interests and expertise,” said Elizabeth Parsons, Syper’s clinical supervisor in Boulder. In particular, Syper is highly organized and adept at building a strong rapport with clients quickly, Parsons said.

“[Syper is] very effective in helping clients understand their own patterns in a way that they can shift them … she really meets people where they’re at,” Parsons said. “She’s very aware as well of social justice issues and able to connect with people across a lot of identity variables.”

A Holistic Approach, Mirrored at Fordham

At Fordham, Syper found the same support and holistic approach to her as a student that she fosters in her professional work. 

“Fordham really provided the opportunity for us to acknowledge what comes up for us as therapists when we’re holding the weight of all the things our clients are sharing, and we’re going through these really difficult experiences alongside them—like when a global pandemic happens, we’re also experiencing that,” Syper said. “[Or if] they’re experiencing body image concerns, and I have had body image concerns, how do I work through that so I can take care of myself and I can be the best support for my clients.”

Recently, Syper successfully defended her dissertation, “Mind-Body Connection, Self-Esteem, and Social Support as Predictors of Recovery from Anorexia Nervosa,” and also published a study about the mind-body connection in the American Journal of Dance Therapy, titled “Dance/Movement Therapy for Individuals with Eating Disorders: A Phenomenological Approach.”

After graduation, Syper will complete her 92nd Street Y program and plans to work in a clinic or treatment center that serves young adults with eating disorders and body image concerns as she continues to find ways to incorporate dance therapy into her work.

—Meredith Lawrence

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Lois van Weringh, GABELLI ’23: A Finance Graduate from Amsterdam https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/lois-van-weringh-gabelli-23-from-amsterdam-to-credit-suisse/ Tue, 09 May 2023 18:56:33 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173065 Lois van Weringh got her first job at 12 when she started her own babysitting business in Amsterdam. First, the young entrepreneur made up flyers and posted them around her neighborhood. After a week with no leads, she started knocking on doors.

“I rang every single doorbell and said, ‘It’s me!’ I ended up getting five babysitting jobs,” van Weringh said. “I always wanted to work and pay for my own things.” 

Hard Work and an Immersive Commitment 

Through high school, she ran her own digital marketing business and worked as a grocery store cashier. Then she landed a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity as an au pair for an American family with two young boys and homes in New York, Massachusetts, and California. The position led her from the Netherlands to the States and ultimately, to Fordham, where she will graduate with a B.S. in finance from the Gabelli School of Business this May. 

Despite her struggles with the English language, van Weringh managed her way through the college application process, including the written essay—the first she ever wrote in English. She committed to Fordham without stepping foot on campus, moved into her dorm herself with two suitcases in tow, and paid her way through her freshman year with her earnings.

From day one, van Weringh immersed herself in campus life. She’s been a resident assistant, freshman advising mentor, and teaching assistant for the Gabelli School’s Ground Floor class.

Smart Woman Securities: ‘We All Want Each Other to Succeed’ 

She also joined Fordham’s Smart Woman Securities (SWS) chapter, serving as an equity research analyst and then as chief investment officer on the executive board, training analysts and managing a $500,000 virtual portfolio. Van Weringh said she found her place in SWS. 

“We all want each other to succeed. It’s not a competitive environment. We know we can all succeed at the same time. That’s something I don’t think you see at other business schools.”

Van Weringh is among 25 finance majors selected to oversee Fordham’s $2.1 million Student Managed Fund and she now serves as one of three managing directors. In the honors thesis program, she is one of 20 students chosen to undertake an alternative investment research project. 

About her many extracurricular activities, the soon-to-be graduate said, “I wanted to take advantage of every single thing Fordham had to offer. And I did that.”

One of the ‘Best and Brightest’ Business Majors

Her hard work and determination have earned her several scholarships and awards, including the Faber Award, Woolworth Award, Alpha Sigma Nu, Boyle Society, and Dean’s List with First Honors. This year, Poets&Quants named her one of the best and brightest business majors in the Class of 2023. 

Soon, van Weringh will join Credit Suisse as an investment banking capital markets and advisory analyst. The full-time job offer came after she showcased her talents in a selective 10-week summer internship at the firm. “I look back on a great summer and I’m excited to go back full time,” she said. 

As her college years come to a close, the senior said it is bittersweet: She is sad to leave but ready to start her next chapter. She is grateful for the opportunities she’s had to learn and grow at the Gabelli School and for the support she’s received along the way. 

“The professors really care about us,” van Weringh said. “They go out of their way to help. They just want the best for you.”

—Written by Claire Curry for Fordham Business Magazine

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Salif Zongo, GSS ’23: ‘School for me is like a vessel of knowledge’ https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/salif-zongo-gss-23-school-for-me-is-like-a-vessel-of-knowledge/ Tue, 09 May 2023 18:24:47 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=173053 Education—and the mental and physical doors it opens—have always inspired Fordham social work student Salif Zongo to keep learning. Growing up in a small town in the Koudougou region of Burkina Faso, West Africa, Zongo walked nearly nine miles barefoot to get to school, sometimes fording a nearby flooded river to return home. This spring, he’ll graduate from Fordham’s Graduate School of Social Service with a master’s degree in social work.

Education is a rare privilege in his hometown, and many students quit because it’s too challenging to get to school, but Zongo persisted because he believes knowledge is a potent tool, he said.

From Burkina Faso to Manhattan: A Long Journey for Higher Education

“School for me is like a vessel of knowledge,” Zongo said. “School is something that I always look up to, to have a place where people can better themselves and learn and grow and even possibly learn about the world and different things in life.”

Zongo was accepted to the University of Ouagadougou, in Burkina Faso’s capital, but couldn’t start the program because of a lack of funding and study materials. In 2013, he came to the U.S. on a Diversity Immigrant Visa—a lottery-selected program available to people from countries with low U.S. immigration rates. Looking back now, Zongo says his journey to Fordham feels like a dream.

When he arrived in the U.S., Zongo spoke three languages—French and two local languages, Moore and Dioula—but not English. After struggling to find enough work, he enrolled in remedial English at John Jay College, where he eventually earned his bachelor’s degree in International Criminal Justice, graduating cum laude in 2018.

Understanding Vulnerable Communities

Zongo’s background and experiences prepared him well to become a social worker, and left him with an intrinsic desire to help others and to give back, said Linda White-Ryan, associate dean of GSS. 

“It gave him an in-depth understanding of many of the vulnerable communities, the people that social workers assist,” White-Ryan said. 

While at John Jay, Zongo also received the prestigious DAAD scholarship to study at the Berlin School of Economics and Law. He now speaks five languages, adding German and English to his repertoire.

After graduating, he worked in various community organizations helping vulnerable New Yorkers access services and health care. In 2021, he received the Mayor’s Graduate Scholarship—which encourages full-time NYC government employees to pursue higher education—and enrolled in Fordham’s MSW program.

Working with Undocumented and Unhoused New Yorkers

The program’s helped him hone his skills and passion for helping the city’s underserved communities. While at Fordham, Zongo worked full-time as a Community Health Worker at Bellevue Hospital, an outgrowth of the contact tracing work he did through the Public Health Corps early in the pandemic. His job is to help social workers and doctors make sure they’re offering complete services to patients.

“As a CHW, my role is to effectively interact with undocumented and homeless people and to identify complex barriers to primary care,” Zongo said. “My second role is to provide formal, trauma-informed care tailored to the patient-oriented care goals while addressing substance use, mental health, housing progression, and chronic disease.”

At Fordham, Zongo’s particularly enjoyed the humanitarian and mental health classes he’s taken, including his Integrated Behavioral Health, Health Care Policy and Advocacy, and Suicide Assessment and Treatment classes, because they’ve bolstered his cultural understanding and prepared him to better serve people he works with in the future.

“He’s developed a very strong skill base and developed social work competency at a really superior level,” White-Ryan said. “We are proud he’s a graduate of Fordham…he’s a shining example of this program.”

After graduation, Zongo will continue in his Community Health Worker position and study toward a Master of Public Health degree at Columbia University this fall. He plans to spend his life making sure overlooked and underserved populations have access to good health care.

Meredith Lawrence 

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Afsana Asha, FCLC ’23: On a Path to Healing https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/commencement-2023/afsana-asha-fclc-23-on-a-path-to-healing/ Mon, 08 May 2023 13:47:47 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=172958 Photo by Patrick VerelThe Bronx is Afsana Asha’s home, but when it came time to choose a college, Fordham College at Lincoln Center beckoned her south.

“I’m a city girl at heart, and I really love the Lincoln Center area. You have Central Park, a variety of restaurants and theaters, and a lot of diversity here,” she said.

Med-School Bound

She also knew that she wanted to go into medicine. She had lost her father, Mohammad, during her senior year in high school to complications from a stroke, and the experience inspired her to pursue a career where she could help prevent similar tragedies.

At Fordham, she joined the pre-health track and chose natural sciences as her major, where she took classes such as animal physiology, neurochemistry, and neuropharmacology. She is applying for medical school in the spring, and looking for research assistant positions in the meantime.

The kindness of medical staff that she encountered while her father was undergoing treatment is part of what inspires her.

“I want to be that kind of positive light for families that are going through it,” she said.

Fellowships in Science and Humanities

Last summer, she participated in a University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry Undergraduate Research Fellowship, where she conducted research on mortality rates for patients undergoing pancreatic cancer surgery.

Though she majored in the sciences, Asha also enjoyed her humanities classes at Fordham. As part of a Teagle fellowship in 2021, Asha did a project tying the themes in Toni Morrison’s Beloved and W.E.B. Du Bois’ Souls of Black Folk to contemporary issues of racial injustice that were exacerbated during the COVID pandemic.

Her favorite course at Fordham was Faith and Critical Reasoning, which she took with Leo Guardado, Ph.D. It helped her see how theology can apply to scientific concepts such as artificial intelligence, she said.

“I also come from a Muslim background, so even though Fordham is a Catholic institution, I appreciate the fact that he took the time to go through the sacred text of each religion, and just made it all really easy to understand,” she said.

Prioritizing Mental Health

Just as important was the help she got when the road to graduation got a little bumpy. Her return to in-person classes after the pandemic was accompanied by notoriously hard classes such as organic chemistry, genetics, and anatomy.

Last year, Asha found herself battling anxiety and insomnia. She decided to prioritize her mental and physical health by going to University Health Services, working with a psychiatrist, and asking for accommodations for testing and assignments from Fordham. She still made the Dean’s list three years in a row.

“Looking back, I’m very grateful because things are just gonna get harder going forward. There are always going to be things that pile up. It was just really a learning experience, and because of last year, I’m in a much better mindset this year,” she said.

Hope to Spare

Deborah Luckett, Ph.D., a senior lecturer of biology, had Asha in her Concepts in Biology course as a first-year student and again this year in Science, Technology, and Society’s Values. She has no doubt that Asha will thrive.

“She’s going be my doctor whether she realizes it or not,” she said laughing.

In addition to drive and good grades, Luckett said Asha possesses a keen ability to pay attention to others.

“If you don’t really know Afsana and you’re talking to her, you may think she’s not listening, but she can say word for word just about anything you just said,” she said.

“She’s very dedicated, she loves what she does, and she loves being around people. If she’s caring for a person who is very ill, they will never feel neglected and will never feel like there is no hope. Because she will have hope for both of them.”

 

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