By Stevie Goulette
When Sherry Jackson and Nadine Krimow were trying before college to decide what to do with their lives, the television screen had a lot of appeal.
“I thought I wanted to be the next Barbara Walters,” Krimow remembers.
But early plans can change as a college career unfolds, and the two Fisher Communication/Journalism graduates used internships as a way of discovering that television wouldn’t be right or them. But alumna Kristy Guerra did the opposite, using an internship as the stepping stone to what is now her full-time job.
Jackson wasn’t your typical college student. She is a mother of two and decided to hold off on college until she was slightly older and more focused. Jackson began her college career at Monroe Community College studying journalism. Tom Proietti, a professor at both MCC and St. John Fisher, urged his advisee, Jackson, to pursue her dream of being a journalist and to continue her college career at St. John Fisher.
Jackson did just that. She graduated from Fisher in 2009 and is now a communications coordinator for Partners + Napier. Nonetheless, her dream job at Partners + Napier did not fall in her lap. There were obstacles along the way.
“Starting off I thought I wanted to do the whole TV thing, standing in front of a camera and reporting,” Jackson states.
However, a helpful internship at Channel 10 in Rochester let Jackson realize that television wasn’t what she wanted to do.
“I have two children; I’m a mother I couldn’t deal with that kind of schedule,” Jackson remembers.
Jackson also applied to intern at Partners + Napier, and was turned down. However, a few months later a friend in the agency contacted Jackson about a 12 week program Partners + Napier was hosting called, “Brand Camp.” At this point Jackson had graduated and was no longer looking to intern; on the other hand, she knew this would be a good step. Jackson turned heads at her tryout for “Brand Camp” and was crowned head of “Brand Camp.”
“As an intern, I worked five days a week, 40 hours a week,” Jackson remembered. She did whatever was asked of her, feeling that “No job was too small.”
Jackson’s hard work and dedication paid off as she now is a copywriter/project manager for her team at Partners + Napier working with many wine brands such as Ravenswood and Robert Mondavi as well as Black Velvet whiskey. She said she enjoys the job because it involves a great deal of writing and creative expression.
Fisher alumna Nadine Krimow had a similar story. Krimow began her higher education at MCC, and finished at St. John Fisher, originally hoping to be a television journalist.
This was before she did her first internship at YNN, formally R News. Similar to Jackson, Krimow realized it wasn’t for her.
Krimow called herself “a fair weather kind of girl.” Standing outside in all kinds of conditions reporting the news wasn’t going to be her ideal job.
With the help of former St. John Fisher professor Jennifer Roberts, Krimow was able to decide what exactly it was she wanted to have a her career in.
Krimow remembers Roberts being such a young, energetic professor with real world experience. The class was encouraged to create real life projects to gain experience in the field.
“This helped me focus my concentration to public relations,” states Krimow.
Krimow began her career at Red Cross of Rochester in the disaster services sector of the organization. Here, Krimow was able to master her skills in crisis communications.
“Working for a non-profit you are hands on with everything you do. It becomes a great resume builder,” Krimow states.
After four years of being on call 24/7 and conquering Red Cross and its crisis communications area, Krimow was ready to broaden her horizon. Good references and a solid resume helped lead Krimow to her current position today as a public relations manager at Dixon-Schwabl.
Unlike the first two young professionals who began their college career interested in television, Kristy Guerra attended Fisher for four full years concentrating in public relations. Guerra helped Fisher start its chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America along with PRIVA Connections, which gave students the ability to deal with real life public relations situations.
Guerra’s internship with Bausch + Lomb landed her a full-time position with the company, where she is now a communications specialist responsible for internal communication and a great deal of online work with B+L’s global operations.
She’s already making a name for herself outside the company, too, being named by the trade magazine PR News in November to its “15 to Watch” list of prominent young professionals. Her supervisor nominated her without her knowledge, and she was surprised to receive the award.
All three said internships and networking were important to their setting their path into a career.
“It’s the small things, being appreciative- send “than you” cards, people will remember you,” Krimow states.
With the help of St. John Fisher and their own drive all three ladies we’re able to conquer the “real world” and begin a successful career for themselves.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Students Changed by Jamaica Experience
By Stevie Goulette
When the island of Jamaica is mentioned, most of us instantly think of the beautiful white sandy beaches, the tropical weather and the perfect honeymoon destination. However, the majority of us are unaware of the overwhelming poverty that the residents face. Inadequate food and housing and the lack of clean drinking water are prevalent.
In May of 2010 a few students from St. John Fisher College visited children in a Kingston, Jamaica suburb called Riverton Trucking & Disposal Cooperative Society in hopes of positively impacting their lives through reading, music, arts and crafts, and sports games. Little did they know that after the 10 day trip they would be leaving just as changed as the children they were there to help.
“Every day was a challenge,” senior Kelsey Defayette remembers about the trip. The challenges arose when the price of the service trip was announced. Not only would the Fisher students have to raise money for their own way down, between $750 and $800, but also raise enough money to create t-shirts for the 125 children campers for the week, and supply a hot lunch and snacks every day.
“The hardest thing we ever did was getting potential donors past the idea that JASY (Jamaican Advantage Thru Sports for Youth) was going to Kingston, Jamaica to help rather than going for pleasure,” Fisher Community Service Director Sally Vaughan states.
The idea for a service trip to Jamaica came across Vaughan’s lap four years ago from Fisher alum David McEneany. Vaughan remembers McEneany visiting her office with this wonderful idea to help the at risk youth in a very poor village near Kingston. St. John Fisher College administrators were not on board at first with this idea because the students would be helping in a very underprivileged community and the cost of liability was high.
“We were going to be on the other side of the barbed wire fence,” Vaughan declares.
After much convincing, Vaughan got the OK and was able to start pulling her team together through many of the community service organizations she runs on campus.
“I announced the project and formed an informational meeting; 12 juniors and senior students showed up and by the end of the meeting 10 were willing to sign up,” Vaughan states.
Group fund raising became an enormous obstacle to overcome. The group was given less than six months to raise enough money in time for the trip in May 2010. “Many of the students decided to forgo Christmas presents and instead ask for donations from family members around the holidays,” Vaughan remembers.
“It was all about sacrifice,” Vaughan says, and the group quickly learned upon arriving to Jamaica it would all be worth it.
The camp ran Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 or 5 p.m. The children were between the ages of 3-year-olds in diapers and 7-year-old youngsters. Fisher students had taken the time to plan out every detail of the day for the children at the camp but quickly learned that they were going to have to adapt; changing these kids was not going to happen in a week.
“The kids weren’t ever taught to share, or even knew what forming a line was,” Defayette remembers. The kids had survival skills, which is what they needed in order to live in the environment they were born into. They would come to the camp early in the morning by themselves and would leave at the end of the day the same way, alone.
One would think that these children were unhappy or felt abandoned, but this was all they knew. “The love the little kids had, they have nothing but they still love you so much,” Defayette remembers. “The kids could be playing with a rubber band ball, barefoot on broken glass and beer bottles, but they are still so happy.”
Senior Mike Thomas remembers his thoughts when stepping off the bus the first day at a town dump. “A little boy named Johnny came up and held my hand. I had never met him before, but this 5-year-old told me all I needed to know about this trip. These kids didn’t desire clothes; they didn’t desire food or any tangible gift. All they wanted was love. They certainly gave us love throughout the trip.” The children wanted to show off their huts and would take you by the hand lead you all around the dump, so proud of where they come from, Thomas added.
Every night the JASY group met for a couple hours to talk about the day’s activities and how everyone was progressing. Since the children were used to hitting or stealing in order to get what they wanted, it was difficult for the JASY team to work with them. Like Defayette, many of the students came to the meeting looking for help; keeping the children under control was a vital task for the group.
One of the members from JASY came up with idea to have the kids form a “choo choo train” with them holding onto each others shoulders “chugging” from station to station.
“It worked!” Defayette remembers. The Fisher students found that if they were able to incorporate fun and activities that got the children involved they were so much better off than trying to get the children to participate in mundane tasks.
By the end of the trip both the campers and the JASY team were truly inspired and changed. A highlight for Defayette happened on the last day when she was passing out sticker books to the children.
“The little girls got princess and castle stickers and the boys got snakes and frogs. One of the little boys wanted a castle for his frog so the little girl handed him one. They were sharing!”As the days dwindled and the camp was coming to an end, real friendships had arisen from these children and JASY crew members. Defayette remembers one little boy who was only 2 years old who came to her every morning, just to fall asleep in her arms.
“He felt safe,” Defayette declares. This was something most of these children were not used to.
As the bus pulled away from the camp for the last time everyone was in tears. The children were chasing the bus, because they knew the group was leaving and would not be back Monday for another camp session.
The impact the JASY crew made and received from these children were truly life changing, the group members came away believing. A new group of Fisher students, along with ones from Nazareth College, plan on making another visit to Kingston, Jamaica in May 2012.
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