Reflections Magazine Issue #77 - Fall 2012 | Page 29
Column
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from the alumni office
Why we do what we do.
And why it matters.
Siena Heights University 2012-13
Alumni Association Board of Directors
Michael Kirk Lane ’05, President
Mary Small Poore ’76, Vice President
Carlene Staton ’06, Secretary
Dennis Reeder ’78, Past President
Maricruz Avitia ’06 (Southfield)
Mary Beaubien, OP ’55
Christopher Foerg ’94, ’12
Diane Porretta Fox ’89
Mary Kloeckner Halley ’89
Katie Hatch ’07
Rob Hemmig ’07, ’09
Manuel Joe Hoskins, III ’03, ’06 (Monroe, Southfield)
Leslie Love ’93
Bethany McCaulley ’06
Michael P. Morgan ’83
Nick Oliverio ’05
Jacob M. Pifer ’03
Wendy Kirkbride Rusie ’99
Denise M. Washington ’00, ’05 (Battle Creek)
Andy Switzer ’13, Student Representative
At Fall Convocation, Religious Studies
Professor Ian Bell spoke to a standing-room only
crowd in St. Dominic Chapel. Convocation is
the official kick-off of each new academic year
and the speech by each year’s Eileen Rice Teaching Award winner is always a highlight.
In an address titled “Why We Do the Things
We Do,” Professor Bell talked about why he is so
deeply committed to Siena Heights—and what
makes this place so special.
It all comes down to mission and identity.
Siena Heights is a Catholic university
where “faith and reason walk hand in hand,” he
said: Unlike many colleges, where education is
considered strictly intellectual, Siena Heights
actively encourages students “to ask questions
about faith and religion,” without judging or
forcing the answers. “The encounter with one’s
faith—be it Catholic, Protestant, Jewish, Muslim
or other—is not only tolerated but encouraged.”
We want you to become more competent, purposeful and ethical, Dr. Bell told the
students; and to do so in an environment that
respects the dignity of all. Why? Because “we
desire good things for you”—a good life and the
kind of success that is defined not by wealth
or possessions but by whether the human community is “better off because of the choices
you make and the actions you take.”
He ended with a plea: “Take your identity
and mission seriously. Embrace questions of
meaning. Explore the arts. Examine the workings of the world. Become a better thinker. If
you do this, you will be able to define yourself
not in terms of what you do, but in terms of who
you are.” And, he added, “You will know why
you do the things you do.”
After Convocation, I found myself asking:
Why do I do what I do? Why, like Dr. Bell,
do I consider Siena such a special place?
Answers came easily: Where else could I
catch a lecture over lunch that linked the 18th
century Federalist debates with today’s presidential politics? Where else could I stop, on an
errand, and spend 10 minutes spellbound by
an art piece exploring history and women’s hair?
Where else could I slip into a poetry reading,
stand in awe of young athletes propelling themselves over a high bar, and hear “The Great
Gates of Kiev” on the piano as I left work—
all in one day?
Siena is special to me because I can be a lifelong learner just by going to work. And because
I can see—in the lives of our alumni—the difference that Siena Heights makes.
One recent example: When the Adrian
Schools Educational Foundation presented
awards this fall, all three recipients of the Outstanding Teaching and Mentoring Award were
Siena Heights graduates: Cammy DiPietro ‘87,
Dawn Huggins ‘93 and Ryan Bills ’02. And another alum, Linda Hooker ’72, was named Michigan Art Education Association High School
Art Teacher of the Year. All four alumni were
lauded for innovation in the classroom, respect
for their students, and going the extra mile.
Why do ݔ