St. John’s Graduate Takes on Archaeological Challenges at Cambridge

October 27, 2006

They say that all roads lead to Rome. In the case of Jesse Van Hoy ’06C, the road from Rome led to Cambridge.

After studying for a semester at the St. John’s Rome Campus his junior year, Van Hoy became so enthralled with the Eternal City’s museums and antiquities, he began researching graduate degree programs combining these two fields. Less than two years after his return to the United States, the young graduate hurdled the Atlantic once again — this time to the University of Cambridge, Kings College — and is now enrolled in a year-long master’s program titled “Archaeological Heritage and Museums.”

Throughout the year, Van Hoy will be trekking through primordial sites such as Avebury and Stonehenge and exploring archaeological sanctuaries such as the British, Ashmolean and Pitt Rivers Museums. His classes revolve around the formation of cultural identity, the legal status of noteworthy heritage sites and the shifting character of museums in a post-colonial world.

A history major from Beacon, NY, Van Hoy graduated from St. John’s with a 3.99 GPA, summa cum laude honors and the Silver Medal award — bestowed each spring to the senior with the second-highest GPA of his class. But the 22-year-old scholar says it was his semester at the St. John’s Rome Campus that ultimately caused him to blossom into a complete student, deepening his awe and curiosity about the infancy of mankind.

“Rome exposed me to a world that had previously only inhabited the pages of textbooks and the depths of my imagination,” says Van Hoy. “The juxtaposition of ancient and modern made me wonder about humanity’s dialogue with the past. Going to Rome was the best decision I made at St. John’s.”

The St. John’s Rome Graduate Center offers undergraduates the opportunity to study abroad for a semester and administers a complete course load for graduate students enrolled in the M.B.A. and Government and Politics M.A. programs.

The ‘Write’ Stuff
Though Van Hoy’s application to Cambridge was spawned by his time spent in Rome, it was signalized by his time spent at the St. John’s Writing Center. Calling his senior-year role as tutor for the Writing Center “my other truly formative experience at St. John’s,” Van Hoy recalls the impact it had on his academic growth.

“The time I spent in the Writing Center was invaluable. It became my home away from home,” he recalls. “It allowed me to improve my own writing skills and realize that knowledge is useless without the ability to express it in a coherent and compelling manner.” The Cambridge scholar then reflects on his one-on-one work with the many St. John’s students whose primary language was not English. “The University prides itself on an amazingly diverse enrollment, so it felt good to help these [ethnic] students in a meaningful way,” he says.

Since Van Hoy’s departure, the Writing Center has undergone a marked transformation. Beginning this semester, the Center is now the feature component of the newly formed Institute for Writing Studies, which operates on both the Queens and Staten Island campuses and oversees the new First-Year Writing Program (devoted to the quality and cohesion of all introductory English and writing courses) and is in the process of finalizing the new Writing Across the Curriculum Program (designed to improve students’ writing in courses other than English).

This summer, St. John’s hired 15 full-time faculty members with extensive writing backgrounds, and the University plans to hire several more before the start of the 2007-08 academic year.

“It’s very exciting to see capital resources invested in the Writing Institute,” notes Van Hoy, who enjoys tracking the developments of St. John’s while abroad. “This will benefit the entire student body and increase the University’s profile in the professional world as a school that produces top-quality writers.”

And top-quality scholars, according to a few of Van Hoy’s former professors who have little doubt about the impact he will make in Britain.

“Jesse has the imagination and work ethic to be a huge success as a British postgraduate,” says Konrad Tuchscherer, Ph.D., Associate Professor of History and Director of the Graduate Admissions Assistance Program (GAAP), who taught and mentored Van Hoy at St. John’s and received his own Ph.D. from the University of London. “With his St. John’s education behind him and such wonderful opportunities unfolding in front of him, Jesse is on track to make a mark on the world.”

The St. John’s Graduate Admission Assistance Program was instituted in 2004 to serve as a resource for juniors and seniors preparing to submit applications for graduate schools, competitive scholarships and fellowships.

In Fine Company
The University of Cambridge is generally considered one of the world’s most academically prestigious universities, and the museum program is highly selective; last year it admitted approximately one-third of its applicants, and half of the Americans currently enrolled matriculated from Ivy League schools. But despite his claims of being “intimidated” by the prospect of applying to Cambridge, Van Hoy now finds a way to take it all in stride.

“I’d like to think that I can serve as an example that you don’t need an Ivy League institution in order to get to where you want to go in life,” he says. “I’m happy I chose St. John’s. If you take advantage of its opportunities, it can be a stepping stone to the upper-echelons of higher education.”