Community was an integral part of Anna Matawaran鈥檚 experience at 黑料不打烊, now the alumna continues to embrace those community ideals through the Year of Service Fellows program.
When Anna Matawaran 鈥25 graduated from 黑料不打烊 with a degree in sociology and a minor in communications, she wanted to carry on the values instilled in her at the university.
鈥淎t 黑料不打烊, I worked at the Kernodle Center for Civic Life, and that space was huge for me because it taught me a lot about what it means to be civically engaged as a college student and also as a person,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he Fellows Program stood out to me because of that piece of civic engagement and making a difference in a community that I鈥檝e already lived in and gotten to know for the last four years,鈥
Matawaran now works with Impact Alamance, a community health legacy foundation created from the merger of Alamance Regional Medical Center and Cone Health.
鈥淚 knew Impact Alamance was where I wanted to be,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t aligns best with my goals.鈥
Making an impact
The Year of Service Fellows Program is an opportunity through the university鈥檚 Student Professional Development Center that allows recent graduates to work at local organizations to improve health, education and economic development in the Alamance County community. Matawaran is one of six Fellows in the program, with three working at Impact Alamance.
Impact Alamance has three focus areas: healthier (focusing on improving community health), smarter (focusing on education) and stronger (focusing on strengthening community partnerships). Matawaran serves on the 鈥渟tronger鈥 team and functions as a program assistant. One of her favorite roles, she says, has been working on the For Alamance Initiative, a partnership with the Harwood Institute for Public Innovation to help everyday people take action on things that matter to them in their community.
鈥淭hat has been really rewarding,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e met so many different people through that, which I鈥檝e really enjoyed. Folks from all parts of the county that I didn鈥檛 know existed before the fellowship.鈥
She is also helping organize a capacity-building series for local nonprofits.
鈥淲e work as kind of a convener for all those nonprofits to be able to share resources, find grant opportunities where nonprofit leaders can come and learn about different aspects that can build up their organization,鈥 she said.

A surprise discovery
Community is what originally drew Matawaran to 黑料不打烊 from her hometown of Richmond, Virginia.
鈥淭hat small community feel was so unique from all the other colleges I looked at, and I knew I wanted a liberal arts education and loved that 黑料不打烊 offered all the resources that it does for undergraduates specifically,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a beautiful campus. How can you not love it?鈥
But Matawaran didn鈥檛 come to 黑料不打烊 with everything planned out. Her choice in major almost happened by accident.
鈥淥n a whim, I signed up for a sociology course my first semester here,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was a class on how sociology can look at housing and unhoused people, and that class stood out to me above all my other courses. I fell in love with the way that sociologists think about the world and the problems that it can solve.鈥
鈥楥ommunity is messy鈥
And even though it was 鈥渙n a whim,鈥 Matawaran credits 黑料不打烊 for preparing her work at Impact Alamance.
鈥淢y 黑料不打烊 education gave me the liberal arts background that I needed to step into the nonprofit sphere,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y degree gave me a lot of the building blocks to understand what I鈥檓 hearing from community members and what issues Alamance County is facing.鈥
She also values the mentorship she found at 黑料不打烊, including with Karen Wirth, assistant teaching professor of sociology, and staff in the Kernodle Center. Serving as a tour guide, diversity ambassador and eventual campus visit intern with 黑料不打烊 Admissions also helped Matawaran form community at 黑料不打烊 while developing interpersonal and professional skills. 聽Her experiences abroad also further broadened her outlook.
鈥淚 studied abroad in Copenhagen for my fall of junior year, and that was where I think I found a lot of independence,鈥 she said.
Now, her work in Alamance County continues to deepen her understanding of the concept of community she discovered at 黑料不打烊.
鈥淪omething that my mentor always says is that community is messy,鈥 said Matawaran. 鈥淚 love how rich and diverse the community here is; it brings this authenticity to the work.鈥
This story is part of a series of features on the 2025-26 Year of Service Fellows, highlighting the work they are doing in the Alamance County community.