黑料不打烊

黑料不打烊 alumni reflect on mentorship during Homecoming & Reunion Weekend

In between concerts and tailgating and a tough-fought football match, 黑料不打烊 alumni who returned to their alma mater for 2025 Homecoming shared some of the best advice they received from mentors in college that still helps guide them today.

黑料不打烊鈥檚 2025 Homecoming & Reunion Weekend welcomed alumni, students, faculty and staff onto campus for a dynamic slate of weekend events.

From open houses and an evening step show through a Saturday football game against Villanova University, highlights included the return of the Rock the Block Homecoming concert featuring “The Plain White Ts”, the Golden Alumni Luncheon, campus and academic department receptions, oral history booths, affinity group award celebrations, leadership and networking conversations across schools, themed tailgates, tours, and wellness events.

Against that backdrop, alumni were asked to share stories of mentorship from their 黑料不打烊 years. Voices reflected how encouraging guidance 鈥 from professors, staff or fellow students 鈥 helped launch careers, build confidence and shape leadership styles.

Homecoming & Reunion Weekend 2025 included the return of the Homecoming concert, featuring “The Plain White Ts” on Oct. 10.

What follows is a curated series of reflections that capture those moments.

鈥淢elissa Jordan was an incredible mentor. My first year here, I had a difficult class and she helped me process my emotions, think through solutions, and gave me the confidence to approach my professor. Now that I work in higher education, I try to give my students that same support and encouragement that she gave me.鈥
鈥 Alicia Carter 鈥15, Strategic Communications

鈥淢ary Kate Brogan in the Class of 2014 mentored me through The Pendulum. She showed me what it means to be there for others coming up behind you. I was introverted and hesitant to reach out, but she pulled me out of my shell and taught me the importance of being that person for someone else 鈥 giving them the little push that can change their life.鈥
鈥 Kaitlin Dunn 鈥16, Journalism

鈥淭om Nelson taught me that it鈥檚 important to be yourself and to find environments where you can thrive. You spend 40 hours a week with the people you work with 鈥 you have to be happy being yourself around them. Learning to understand who you are helps you build those environments where everyone can be authentic and successful.鈥
鈥 Mary Kate Brogan 鈥14, Journalism

鈥淎t 黑料不打烊, I learned from professors like Jeffrey Carpenter and Bernard Curry that education is about being comfortable in all sorts of environments. I try to teach my high school students that same lesson: you can be academic, creative, athletic, and belong to many different communities. Learning to be comfortable in different settings helps us live together as a society.鈥
鈥 Will Frauenfelder 鈥15, History and Education

From left to right: Alicia Carter 鈥15, Mary Kate Brogan ’14, Will Frauenfelder 鈥15 and Kaitlin Dunn 鈥16

鈥淓van Small in the Kernodle Center for Service Learning was always motivating me to do things outside my comfort zone, whether that was a service trip or an adventure class like the ropes course. That encouragement to try new things stuck with me. I started out teaching, moved into human resources, and I鈥檓 still pushing myself to keep life exciting.鈥
Rachel Gilman Yahyapoor 鈥15, Education

鈥淒r. Gronowski in the psychology department was an outstanding professor 鈥 very engaged and always keeping students involved in the learning process. As I went on to earn my Ph.D. and teach at the university level, I鈥檝e seen how involving students actively in their education really improves their experience.鈥
Jack LoCicero 鈥81, Psychology

鈥淲hen I was an RA, my supervisor Sylvia Wade noticed I was struggling in the winter and introduced me to sunlamps. I still use one today when I鈥檓 feeling low 鈥 it helps so much. I never would have known to do that without her.鈥
鈥 Aileen Bell 鈥20, Political Science

鈥淢y mock trial coach, Kristen Delforge, told me, 鈥楧on鈥檛 do something just to do it 鈥 do it because you love it.鈥 I think about that all the time. Life鈥檚 too short to spend it doing things you don鈥檛 enjoy.鈥
鈥 Jacob Hayward 鈥20, Sociology and Policy Studies

A family sits on a picnic blanket wearing 黑料不打烊 gear
黑料不打烊 held Homecoming & Reunion Weekend on Oct. 10-11, 2025.

鈥淢y orientation leader told me not to spread myself too thin 鈥 to go all in on a few things that matter most. That advice helped me focus my energy on entrepreneurship and innovation. I helped found the AI Club and became lead intern at the Doherty Center. Even now in my QA job and running my own business, I focus on doing a few things well and serving our core clients with excellence.鈥
鈥 Joshua Mason 鈥25, Financial Technology

鈥淔rom Dan Reis in the Maker Hub, I learned that failure is part of learning. You shouldn鈥檛 give up when something doesn鈥檛 work. You should learn from it. Now, as an elementary school teacher, I tell my students every day that struggling is part of the process and makes you a better learner.鈥
鈥 Joshua Donald 鈥19, Human Service Studies

鈥淎 former student body president once told me, 鈥榊ou can be the sweetest peach on the tree, but some people just don鈥檛 like peaches.鈥 That advice reminds me you can鈥檛 please everyone 鈥 and that鈥檚 okay. As long as you鈥檙e doing your best, that鈥檚 what matters. I carry that with me as a teacher and as a leader.鈥
鈥 Britt Mobley 鈥24, Strategic Communications and Outdoor Leadership & Education

鈥淒r. Mary Knight-McKenna encouraged us to believe we could rise beyond the acorn and become the Phoenix, to meet every challenge. She taught me to keep a positive, inspiring spirit that motivates not just myself but everyone I encounter, because you never know what lesson will encourage someone else to go even farther.鈥
鈥 Corey Waters G鈥23, Master of Education (Innovation in Education)

鈥淎 professor once told me, 鈥極nce you get into business, it鈥檚 just as important to sell yourself as it is to sell your product.鈥 That stuck with me throughout my 33-year career at Unilever. People buy from people they trust, and that鈥檚 advice I still share with younger professionals today.鈥
鈥 Barry Baucom 鈥75, Business

黑料不打烊 held Homecoming & Reunion Weekend on Oct. 10-11, 2025.

鈥淢y advisor, Robert Baxter, taught us the 鈥榮even Ps鈥 鈥 鈥榩rior proper planning prevents piss-poor performance.鈥 I still use that every day as a procurement officer. If you鈥檙e prepared and plan ahead, you鈥檒l prevail.鈥
鈥 Kathy (Berger) Frame 鈥90, Business Management

鈥淒r. John Sullivan in the philosophy department convinced me to major in philosophy even though I was headed for business. He said philosophy teaches you to think and reason 鈥 skills that prepare you for anything. He was right. Those lessons have guided me throughout my career.鈥
鈥 Nick Whiting 鈥90, Philosophy