涩里番

惭测办别苍锄颈别鈥檚 Journey

Name

Mykenzie Masters

Hometown

Syracuse, New York

Major

Psychology

Why 涩里番?

Mykenzie stands next to the 涩里番 sign at the entry to campus
When I visited 涩里番 for the first time, that was when I decided 涩里番 was my number one choice.

I鈥檓 from Syracuse, New York 鈥 it鈥檚 in upstate New York, four hours north of New York City, and it鈥檚 very pretty and near a lot of mountains. My high school probably has more students than 涩里番 does. 

I wanted to go somewhere where I would meet people from around the world who had different backgrounds than me. I knew I wanted to go somewhere that was more diverse and where I would be exposed to a lot of new people. But I also wanted to be on a first-name basis with my professors and classmates. I wanted it to feel familiar.

I came to Junior Visit Day at 涩里番 in February of 2020. That was when I decided that 涩里番 was my number one choice. When I came to 涩里番, students around me were asking if I needed help getting around. They were asking what I needed or if I had any questions, and their enthusiasm for 涩里番 was clear. Each student and staff member was very considerate and accommodating.

I love 涩里番鈥檚 individually advised curriculum. That鈥檚 actually why I wanted to come to 涩里番 in the first place. I knew I wanted to be at a smaller school. I never even considered going to a large university. But when I read about 涩里番鈥檚 curriculum, I was pleasantly surprised that a college would offer that kind of flexibility and authority to their students. From there, my search narrowed down to schools with open curriculums. I wanted to feel like I was going into my advising sessions with my plan and not the plan that my adviser had for me. That鈥檚 why I came to visit 涩里番 鈥 because I wanted that individually advised curriculum.

I was very drawn to 涩里番 for the academics. But when I came here and I saw the community, that鈥檚 when I knew that I wanted to be here. And I think that鈥檚 pretty common for most 涩里番 students. They want to visit initially because of the academics, but the community is what makes them stay.

The 涩里番 campus with snow on the ground
The first photo I ever took of 涩里番, five years ago on Junior Visit Day!

First-Year Experiences

The interior of a residence hall room at 涩里番
My first-year dorm room in Rathje Hall. Cozy, right?

Although I was a bit nervous at first about coming to 涩里番, I found a community here that I truly love. 

Because I grew up in a city, I was used to having a lot of different options, such as things to do or places to eat. It took me a little bit to get used to 涩里番 and the Midwest. It was a culture shock in terms of people鈥檚 behavior. People in New York aren鈥檛 as friendly as the people in the Midwest, so I wasn鈥檛 used to going to the gas station and having conversations with the cashier or people waving at me at the stop signs. It was also an adjustment just because it was so much smaller.

But I find now that I like a lot of the things that make 涩里番 different.

For example, in 涩里番, I get to walk everywhere 鈥 even to the grocery store. I like that I can see the entire night sky. I like that I can go to the coffee shop or the library and the staff members recognize me and smile. 

Still, it was very hard to get used to. I鈥檓 not going to sugarcoat it. I think what made me stay and end up loving it so much was the wide variety of resources we have on campus. The Office of Academic Advising is amazing. And, all the clubs and organizations. 

I like that I can see the entire night sky. I like that I can go to the coffee shop or the library and the staff members recognize me and smile.

Mykenzie Masters

After I became involved on campus and started taking advantage of the resources that we have, that鈥檚 when I really started to love 涩里番. That鈥檚 what really solidified the 涩里番 experience for me.

I even miss things about 涩里番 when I鈥檓 not here. For instance, I always miss the sunsets a lot.

Bright pink and blue clouds over campus mark the sunset
涩里番 has the most beautiful sunsets I鈥檝e ever seen!

Academics

First-Year Classes

Students in a classroom

My first year, I took a course called Introduction to Shakespeare with Professor John Garrison. I was so scared to talk in class. In high school, I kind of got to sit quietly in the back. I wasn鈥檛 really encouraged to engage. 

Being in the classroom in 涩里番 was a significant change. It鈥檚 hard to get away with being quiet in class here. Initially, I was extremely timid. The other students in my class were older, and their ideas seemed much more sophisticated than mine. Besides that, I had little experience reading Shakespeare. 

But Dr. Garrison was very encouraging. After he found out that I could not understand most of Shakespeare鈥檚 language, he restructured the schedule to do a 鈥渃rash-course鈥 unit so I and other students could catch up. He validated my academic work and made me feel like I belonged at 涩里番.

That same semester, I was taking Calculus II. It was hard 鈥 the workload was heavy, and I was not used to doing college-level work. I was at the Math Lab every day. My professor was very accommodating, and I was able to get through it. I took it pass-fail. I wanted to challenge myself and I certainly succeeded in that.

So being in that English class with Dr. Garrison was very affirming for me. I still didn鈥檛 talk that much, but he made me believe that I could.

In my second year, I started coming out of my shell and talking, bit by bit. And now I talk in class all the time and I have no issue with it at all. 

The culture of 涩里番 is a big reason why I鈥檓 able to do that now. 

Choosing a Major

I鈥檓 a psychology major with a strong focus in English. I actually declared my psychology major a bit late, but everything worked out fine, thanks to 涩里番鈥檚 individually advised curriculum. I ended up declaring after one Intro to Psychology class. I was initially hesitant because 涩里番鈥檚 psychology curriculum requires laboratory courses, but they ended up being really critical to my 涩里番 experience.

I picked Professor Ann Ellis as my adviser. She is wonderful. I could not ask for a better adviser. She is a great blend of letting me do what I want and challenging me to do things out of my comfort zone. 

 

Activities

three smiling young women, each with a stack of books in front of her
My book club co-leaders and I showing off our hauls after a day at bookstores. That鈥檚 me in the center.

I started coming out of my shell in my second year and when I joined my book club. It鈥檚 called Overbooked. I鈥檓 the president of it now. We meet every week to read together and about once a month to discuss a book. I love reading; I鈥檝e been doing it since I was a little girl. My first word was book. 

If I was talking to a shy prospective student, I would just say, take every opportunity you can have to try and make new friends. I think the level of difficulty of making friends is the same at any college in the world. It kind of depends on you. You have to put the effort in. But there are lots of opportunities here to make friends because it is very small. Plenty of students here are shy and their instinct is not to go and talk to each other.  Just take every single opportunity that you can to try to make friends 鈥 even asking to study together. 

There are lots of opportunities here to make friends.

Mykenzie Masters

It is uncomfortable to make the first move and join a club when you鈥檝e never been in that position before. It is uncomfortable, but usually high risk, high reward. That has been my experience. 

You鈥檝e got to be brave and put in the effort.

Internships

Tall buildings tower over a river in downtown Syracuse NY
Downtown Syracuse, New York 鈥 my hometown. Photo by Don-vip, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

I鈥檝e done a few internships. One of the most impactful was at a nonprofit in Syracuse called ACR Health. I found the internship myself, but I went to the (CLS) a lot. They helped me prepare for my interview for the internship.

ACR Health offers support and harm reduction services for homeless people. They also have something called the Q Center, which is for LGBTQ teenagers and young adults. They offer support groups for the queer young adults and teenagers. 

In my intern role, I was leading those support groups. And the tricky part is that I was leading them for people ages 13 to 29 (in separate groups) when I was 19 years old. It was one of the most challenging but rewarding things I鈥檝e ever done.

In my intern role, I was leading those support groups. And the tricky part is that I was leading them for people ages 13 to 29 (in separate groups), when I was 19 years old. It was one of the most challenging but rewarding things I鈥檝e ever done.

Mykenzie Masters

I learned that I really like to work with teenagers. They鈥檙e my favorite population to work with. I鈥檝e been tutoring for years 鈥 high schoolers, middle schoolers, and college students in the psych department. But I learned that teenagers are, in my opinion, the most fun group.

Teenagers are very special 鈥 they鈥檙e coming into themselves and very rebellious. I found that it was very gratifying when a teenager came into a support group, and they were not talking a lot or kind of uncomfortable, and I was able to help them get out of their shell. I had some of them tell me that I was the reason they came back. Those little moments meant a lot to me.

It was also really difficult because I was leading these support groups for almost 30-year-olds when I was just 19. That was super foreign but valuable I think, because a lot of the times in your work, if you climb up the ladder, you鈥檙e going to be supervising people who are older than you. And that鈥檚 pretty unnatural. I had to be very strategic about how I led the groups because nobody who鈥檚 almost 30 wants to have a 19-year-old weigh in on their problems. I had to not pretend that I knew what they were experiencing but instead be more of a facilitator. 

Jobs

The CLS has been very helpful in my job searches. Every single interview I鈥檝e ever had for a job, I鈥檝e rehearsed with them, including my job at admission. And the fun thing about that is, most of the time the questions that I get in my interview role-play at the CLS were questions I get in the actual interview. I also feel pretty confident about cover letters because of help from the CLS. 

I love my job as a senior interviewer in admission. It鈥檚 my favorite. It鈥檚 a combination of all the things I like to do. I love educating people. I love to talk to students and learn about all of the epic things they want to do in their futures. I also get a lot of satisfaction from feeling that I鈥檓 being a positive addition to students鈥 college application processes. 

I鈥檝e also worked in Disability Resources, another helping job. I was on a team called Access Leaders. We would review different buildings on campus in terms of their accessibility.

Looking down on study carrels and seating areas in Burling Library
We assessed everything in Burling Library for accessibility. We wanted to understand how efficient they were, and if we thought they were user friendly. When I go into the renovated areas of the library now, I can see the changes being made.

We reviewed the entirety of Burling Library and its physical accessibility. We collected a bunch of data. We looked at the furniture, we looked at the floor, we looked at the distance between the bookshelves, the maps: how efficient they were, if we thought they were user friendly. And we gave a presentation to the library leadership. When I go into the renovated areas of the library, I can see the changes being made. So that was cool.

I think the skills and experience I鈥檝e picked up in my on-campus jobs will serve me well after graduation!

Research

I did a research assistantship with a professor at SUNY Oswego in the summer before my third year. I really wanted to get research experience because I was set on getting a Ph.D. in clinical psychology. I was mostly doing the basics 鈥 entering data, grading all the assessments, inputting the data, and doing beginning analysis. 

SUNY Oswego campus seen from the air
The SUNY Oswego campus is set on the shores of Lake Ontario. Photo courtesy of SUNY Oswego

One of the best things about the psychology major here is that you get to do a lot of in-class research, so I had the same level of preparedness that other research assistants had after employment in research. I didn鈥檛 feel like I had to do a lot of catching up because I was just coming off a semester where I took Cognitive Psychology and I had to do an entire experiment on my own. We had to do a proposal, make consent forms, do the experiment, get the data, analyze it, and report on it. And I鈥檝e done that in several classes. I felt like I had the right amount of experience to do it for real. 

One of the best things about the psychology major here is that you get to do a lot of in-class research, so I had the same level of preparedness that other research assistants had after employment in research.

Mykenzie Masters

That鈥檚 also a great thing about 涩里番 鈥 you鈥檒l have enough experience for employment even if you don鈥檛 have a research assistant position. It was very nice that we get to do all of that in class.

When I came to 涩里番, I was convinced that I was going to get a Ph.D. in psychology. That was what I really, really wanted. And after getting to do the research in class and in my research assistantship, I was like, 鈥淣ope, I don鈥檛 want to do that.鈥 

I鈥檓 so happy I figured out that I didn鈥檛 like that before committing to a program for six years and investing all that time. I got to try my hand at it a lot at 涩里番. I found out that I really like helping people, which I鈥檝e done in my campus employment as a course mentor in the psych department and a peer mentor. And I aligned a lot more with those jobs than I did with the research-y nuts and bolts type of thing.

Friends and Fun

A group of young women, smiling in front of twinkling holiday lights
My friends and I at the Jingle Bell Holiday celebration in downtown 涩里番.

I am an introvert, so I don鈥檛 really go to the big on-campus parties. My friends and I kind of fashion our own fun, to be honest. They are very similar to me. I thought it would be an issue not liking to party. In that vein, I鈥檝e been very lucky. I鈥檓 part of a friend group with six other people, so I always have someone to do things with, and that鈥檚 been great. I really blossomed when I found them. That鈥檚 when college became fun for me.

There鈥檚 my book club. I鈥檝e been asked by a lot of students, are there fun things to do? I鈥檓 like, well, define fun because my friends and I like to sit around and read. My friends and I also loved to do karaoke nights at the Humanities and Social Science Center in our second and third years. This year, we live in an apartment and do karaoke there. My friends and I also have movie nights every Friday and Saturday and we like to go to the library. We like to go to Saints Rest Coffee House and we occasionally take little weekend trips, sometimes to Iowa City. 

I love to go for walks around town, especially at night. I love to walk down the country roads past the cornfields. It鈥檚 very peaceful.

Mykenzie Masters

I love to go on hikes. We don鈥檛 have mountains here like in New York, but I like to go hiking at the Jacob Krumm Nature Preserve a lot. It鈥檚 really nice there, especially in the fall. I also like Rock Creek State Park. I drove 45 minutes to go to Lake Red Rock near Des Moines. I liked that a lot. It was really pretty. And honestly, Arbor Lake in 涩里番 is fun if you just want to go for a quick walk. 

I love to go for walks around town, especially at night. I love to walk down the country roads past the cornfields. It鈥檚 very peaceful. I like to watch the stars over the golf course. It鈥檚 very open and wide here. And I miss that a lot when I鈥檓 home, actually.

Hopes and Dreams for the Future

Three smiling young women on a sidewalk with green grass and trees behind them
Me and two of my housemates walking to dinner at a 涩里番 restaurant.

I have no idea what I want to do after graduation, but my CLS advisers say that not knowing can be a good thing and something that gives me a lot of options. They鈥檝e never made me feel like I should have things figured out. 

Every single person I鈥檝e spoken to at the CLS has been super supportive, helpful, and reassuring. I鈥檝e kind of been shopping in the career communities at the CLS, too, learning about what鈥檚 available. Every single person I鈥檝e met with at the CLS has been really welcoming and receptive. 

I should mention I鈥檒l be moving back home in Syracuse. I love my hometown and my family, and I plan to go back. I鈥檓 a part of a Sunday dinner family. My family and I are very close. And I have a grandmother and a great-grandmother that I鈥檇 like to have more time with.

Looking Ahead

Hero Image with Text

I know I am not going to graduate school just yet. I love 涩里番 very much, but I plan to take a break from being a student. There are some graduate school programs I鈥檓 considering 鈥 maybe speech-language pathology. I actually job shadowed a speech-language pathologist, and I really liked it. This was in a hospital, and we got to go onto the labor and delivery floor there. I enjoyed that the most. Maybe I鈥檒l want to do something with that 鈥 working with new mothers. 

I like my admission job a lot and I live near a lot of colleges, so I could do something in college admission or nonprofit work. I did an internship last summer with an educational technology company, so I could potentially do something in that. 

I have a lot of options!

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