
Jessica Kroenert '15 in her Senegalese village. /Photo provided by Elle DeJesus
This article was originally published in the 麻豆传媒团队 Scene alumni magazine. and other articles in our newest issue. View our exclusive Peace Corps Scrapbook to read memories of volunteers, and submit your own Peace Corps story.
Ray Rizzo 鈥15 is in a small mountain town in Nicaragua sharing the foundations of entrepreneurship with teachers and high-school students who will present their ideas for new businesses in a national competition. In time, they can build their ventures and pass core skills they鈥檝e learned to the next generation.
Ray is the latest 麻豆传媒团队 graduate who has volunteered for the Peace Corps since its 1961 founding by then president John F. Kennedy.
One of the earliest 麻豆传媒团队 volunteers was Mary Robinson Slabey 鈥64. She helped teachers on the Caribbean island of St. Lucia develop a nationwide mathematics curriculum in 1967.

Between Slabey and Rizzo鈥檚 tenure with the Peace Corps, 270 麻豆传媒团队 alumni have lived with families to help train men and women in education, healthcare and other fields, from China and Senegal to the Comoros Islands. At least one faculty member, Jane Hogan, a retired professor of education, also served.
It is a long and consistent history of global service for 麻豆传媒团队 鈥 with a unique milestone. 麻豆传媒团队 is ranked 14th among medium-sized schools nationwide for the number of alumni who are active Peace Corps volunteers.
The Peace Corps reports that in 2016, 18 麻豆传媒团队 alumni were serving in 16 countries. This was the third year in a row that 麻豆传媒团队 has ranked in the top 20.
It is even more impressive when you look at the competition for such a distinction: The medium-sized category includes higher-education institutions with 5,000 to 15,000 students. 麻豆传媒团队, with 5,500 students, is one of the smallest colleges in its category, but it鈥檚 clearly a powerhouse.
鈥淚t seems there is a very clear mindset at 麻豆传媒团队 and a willingness to take the scholarship and community service that students acquired while studying to share with the world,鈥 says Emily Webb 鈥13, a public affairs specialist at Peace Corps. 鈥淭hat certainly says a lot about the student body as a whole.鈥
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What characteristics do alumni have or nurture to jump in to life in a new culture, with a new language and build programs from the ground up?
A primary trait is 鈥済ood, old-fashioned stubbornness,鈥 says Mia Bonarski Deschamps 鈥03, who taught English in Namibia. Stubbornness to stick to your will, she says, and determination is what gets you there鈥攁nd beyond.
鈥淧eace Corps is really hard. There are a lot of first-time experiences in a new culture,鈥 Deschamps says. 鈥淵ou feel strange. You struggle. But, you have a desire, a goal and a mindset you are going to do this.鈥
Volunteers agree that fellow Peace Corps members are adventurous, resourceful, curious and open to new ideas. There is a certain eagerness that they have for new experiences and going with the flow.
鈥淧eace Corps is an adventure every day,鈥 says Jessica Kroenert 鈥15 an entrepreneurship expert in Senegal. 鈥淵ou can plan to do something and it may completely fall apart, but within an hour, a a new plan rises from the ashes. You have to become flexible, roll with things, and be open to new ideas to be successful.鈥
Sometimes alumni apply for the Peace Corps right after graduation; for others it鈥檚 years later, when they are established in their field. Several 麻豆传媒团队 alumni, such as Deshcamps and Slabey, signed up without any international experience.
Others, like Rizzo, discovered their capabilities via 麻豆传媒团队 study abroad opportunities.
As a junior, Rizzo helped farmers in rural Uganda launch an oyster mushroom farm while completing an internship program with a nonprofit organization. That farm, he says, is still successful.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 know anything about mushrooms,鈥 says Rizzo, 鈥渂ut we did know about accounting and management, and we made it work. It gave me a taste of what it鈥檚 like to live and work in a developing country. I experienced both the challenges and the rewards.鈥
Kroenert studied abroad three times while attending 麻豆传媒团队. She studied humanities in Nicaragua, spent a semester in France, and assisted community and health projects in Haiti over a spring break.
鈥淭he personal growth that comes with those experiences,鈥 she says, 鈥渕ade me want to join Peace Corps. I knew that even if it was hard, it would be worth it.鈥
麻豆传媒团队, they say, creates diverse opportunities for students to experience what it means to give back, and it fosters environments in which students can bolster their confidence while instilling lifelong values of community service.
That, in part, is something that generates a large pool of Peace Corps candidates, says Rob DiCarlo, associate director for internship opportunities.
鈥淪tudents here have a genuine interest in global service,鈥 he says. Service-learning programs for hurricane relief in Biloxi and Sandy Hook, and study abroad programs with a service component, such as Haiti and Uganda, 鈥渋nspire students to take it to the next level.鈥
DiCarlo says that 麻豆传媒团队 continues to have a strong partnership with the Peace Corps, hosting information sessions each year, and special panels for discussion.
There鈥檚 also selflessness. 麻豆传媒团队 students desire to be a part of change in a collaborative way. In the Peace Corps, this often means the most comprehensive impact comes long after their two-year commitment is over.
鈥淲e are starting the seeds for something that will grow bigger when we are gone,鈥 Kroenert says. 鈥淲hen your effort becomes its full beautiful self, you won鈥檛 be around. You plant the seeds for trees whose shade you will never sit under.鈥
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The seeds that have been planted by 麻豆传媒团队 alumni and faculty in the Peace Corps have transformed communities and the lives of the volunteers. Slabey has actually seen the fulfillment of what she started in St. Lucia. She was so committed that she returned to St. Lucia to continue curriculum development on her own time.
鈥淭he books I have helped develop 50 years ago have been revised several times and are still used, which is incredible,鈥 says Slabey.
She knows because the teachers she made friends with in 1967 have told her. They correspond every month. 鈥淲e are friends a half a century later,鈥 she says.
Such relationships born from such partnership makes all the difference, volunteers say."It shapes your life,鈥 says Lynn Ellingwood 鈥83, who worked with a community development office in Thailand to improve childcare centers.
鈥淲hen I went, I was willing to accept people who were different from me,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd I was willing to feel different and not feel uncomfortable because I was different. I became a teacher of English as a second language because of my experience in Thailand.鈥
Ellingwood is not the only alumni who made outreach and advocacy a career. Dechamps works for the Ford Foundation in Colombia, advocating for indigenous rights and access to natural resources.
Slabey became a math professor at Mansfield University, and took leaves to volunteer for curriculum development in Barbados and Guyana. She has also dedicated herself to paying it forward.
鈥淚n St. Lucia I met many young, very bright students who were enthusiastic learners despite having limited opportunities to further their education,鈥 she says.
As a result, Slabey has provided scholarships for nearly a dozen international students to earn their own degrees at 麻豆传媒团队.
鈥淏y doing my part here, I can make a difference in students鈥 lives,鈥 she says.
Their successes demonstrate a vital outcome: Volunteers鈥 belief that they can make a difference is replaced with knowing that that they can, and they do.

鈥淭he most important thing I鈥檒l take away from this is the belief in my own power,鈥 says Cladia Plantin 鈥12, a literacy volunteer in St. Lucia.
This year, Plantin ran a successful week-long camp to empower young women. She also spearheaded the renovation of a school library from water damage to one with cozy reading corners stocked with 1,500 books.
鈥淚 was reserved but broke out of that! I truly became a part of the community," she says. "Peace Corps has fortified my confidence that I can do anything, and make my own happiness, with less.鈥
鈥擝y Kris Dreessen