First Graduating Class of Ozanam Scholars Leaves Outstanding Legacy

May 05, 2011



John Wilson ‘11CPS has helped almost 1,000 Bread & Life clients obtain legal identification, giving them access to basic social services, employment and other opportunities. Fellow Ozanam Scholar Kaitlyn Miller ’11TCB, who is also enrolled in the five-year B.S./M.S. Degree  Program in Accounting, has developed a strategy to allow microfinance organizations serve greater numbers of needy applicants.

They are among the 31 outstanding students who belong to the Ozanam Scholars Program’s first graduating class. The Scholars will receive their undergraduate degrees on May 15 at the University’s 141st Commencement Exercises. 

Launched in 2007, the Program is designed to enable carefully selected students to combine hands-on community-based service, global education, scholarship and research.  As part of the Program, students are required to produce capstone projects that propose sustainable solutions for global poverty and social injustice issues. 

The Scholars featured here exemplify how the Program’s unique paradigm is meeting and even exceeding the University’s expectations  For example, in addition to John and Kaitlyn’s ground-breaking contributions, Megan Chadzutko ’11SOE and Molly Cronin ’11P are also responsible for capstone projects in their respective fields that improve the lives of the marginalized. 

Megan has designed a new, cost-effective, method that has proven effective in teaching vocabulary to at-risk students, while Molly has made a convincing case for the importance of  incorporating personal contact and social therapy to boost the well-being of nursing home patients.      

Noting that the Ozanam Program exposed her to diverse at-risk student populations she would not have otherwise encountered, Megan is grateful for the expertise she has gained in her field. “Thanks to my Ozanam experiences I have been accepted by a very selective master’s program in literacy and I have landed a highly desirable teaching position for next year,” she said.

Kaitlyn also credits the Ozanam Scholars Program with giving her the competitive edge  that helped her get a coveted summer internship at PriceWaterhouseCoopers. For her part, Molly found that she was so impacted by the Program that she has decided to devote her professional career to serving the disenfranchised. “The Ozanam Program has permanently instilled in me the desire to help those who are most in need,” she said. She plans on looking for a physician’s assistant position in emergency care in the Bronx after she graduates.

John, who will be going to law school in the fall, will be taking with him a valuable lesson gleaned from his capstone study. “I now know that systemic change cannot be accomplished from the outside,” he said. “To make a difference, you first have to personally know and understand the community you are trying to help.”

“John epitomizes what an Ozanam Scholar should be,” said Andrew Ferdinandi, Ph.D., who was John’s capstone mentor. “He is motivated, dedicated and emotionally mature and committed to the University’s Vincentian values.”

“We are extremely proud and excited by the work of every member of our  graduating class,” said Darren Morton, Associate Vice President of Student Affairs and Director of the Vincentian Institute for Social Action (VISA). “ The Ozanam Program is an essential component of VISA which was created to incorporate scholarship and service into the University’s Vincentian mission.

“Our Scholars’ capstone achievements illustrate the critical role the Ozanam Scholars Program will play in helping the University become known as a leading resource for alleviating global poverty and social injustice,” said Fr. James Maher, Executive Vice President for Mission.