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Rollins MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Four inspirational ideas that are behind everything we do, conveniently expressed in the form of posters 1000 Holt Avenue Winter Park, FL 32789

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Page 1: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

Rol

linsMAKE

TOMORROWHAPPENFour inspirational ideas that are behind everything we do, conveniently expressed in the form of posters

1000

Hol

t Ave

nue

Win

ter P

ark,

FL

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Page 2: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

Rol

lins First-year applications

5,000+ First-year enrollment530SAT Middle 50% (Critical Reading and Math only)1220-1360ACT Middle 50% (Composite) 25-30Weighted high school GPA average 3.7

TOP 100 Best College Value (Kiplinger)

85% of students receive financial aid

$50+ million in financial aid available every year

$35,000 average aid package awarded to students with demonstrated need

ADMISSION AND FINANCIAL AID

BEYOND ROLLINS

MORE THAN A FEW REASONS TARS LOVE WINTER PARK AND ORLANDO

RECENT INTERNSHIPSAlliance for Affordable EnergyBoeingCenters for Disease Control and PreventionESPNHispanic Business Initiative FundJP Morgan ChaseMarc Jacobs InternationalMGM GrandNBC UniversalOffice of Senator Elizabeth WarrenOrlando City Soccer ClubOrlando MagicSotheby’sSouthern Education Leadership InitiativeThe Travel ChannelUBS Financial ServicesUnited States Tennis AssociationUnited Way

RECENT JOBS TAKEN BY GRADUATESAmazonAppleBank of AmericaCenter for International Development, Harvard UniversityCoca-ColaEdelmanFlorida Hospital Innovation LabGoogleIBMLockheed MartinNikeOracleOrlando Economic Development CenterPeace CorpsVerizonWalt Disney Co.

RECENT GRADUATE SCHOOL PLACEMENTSBerklee College of MusicBrown University Columbia UniversityDuke UniversityGeorgetown UniversityHarvard UniversityJohns Hopkins UniversityNew York UniversityRollins Crummer Graduate School of BusinessUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of Notre DameUniversity of VirginiaVanderbilt UniversityYale University

NOTABLE ALUMNICherie Ramirez ’06PhD, Harvard University, Inaugural STEM Faculty Fellow, Center for Excellence in Teaching, Simmons College

Eddie Huang ’04J.D., Cardozo School of Law, restaurateur (BaoHaus), author (Fresh Off the Boat), host (Huang’s World), former sports and humor editor of The Sandspur

Charlie Freeman ’96Chief Operating Officer, Orlando Magic

Christopher Fitzgerald ’95Performer, first person to play both male leads during the 18-year run of Chicago, the longest-running musical revival in Broadway history

Steve O’Donnell ’91Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer, NASCAR

Kori Rae ’85Producer, Pixar (Up, The Incredibles)

Rodney C. Adkins ’81President, 3RAM Group. Formerly SVP, IBM Systems and Technology Group

Meg Gilbert Crofton ’75President of Worldwide Operations, Disney

Janis Hirsch ’72Writer and producer, Murphy Brown, Frasier, Will & Grace

Fred (“Mr.”) Rogers ’51Broadcasting pioneer, cardigan activist

Muriel Fox ’48Co-founder, the National Organization for Women

Donald J. Cram ’41Winner of the 1987 Nobel Prize in chemistry (and active in theater and choir at Rollins!)

@rollins @rollins @rollins @rollins

#RollinsLife

1 Walt Disney Co., Lockheed Martin, Siemens Energy, and more than 150 other international companies have major operations in Orlando.

2 The average temperature is 71 degrees.

3 Orlando ranks in the top 10 nationally for internships per capita.

4 James Beard-nominated restaurant The Ravenous Pig is located two blocks from campus.

5 Downtown Orlando’s pro sports and performance venues are a 15-minute SunRail ride away.

6 Orlando was named the No. 1 city in the U.S. for job growth for the third year in 2017.

7 Dozens of unique boutiques. Countless chic cafes. A bustling farmers market. All this and a whole lot more is right across the street from campus on Winter Park’s famed Park Avenue.

WAIT, WE’RE JUST GETTING STARTED. VISIT ROLLINS.EDU/CITY-BEAUTIFUL TO EXPLORE 43 MORE REASONS TO FALL IN LOVE WITH OUR CAMPUS AND OUR COMMUNITY. THEN SCHEDULE A VISIT AT ROLLINS.EDU/VISIT AND EXPERIENCE ROLLINS YOURSELF.

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MAKE THE WORLD BRIGHTER

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Forged in the classroom. Nurtured in partnership with expert faculty. Put to work in our community. This is where your ideas get ready to change the world. See for yourself. Schedule a visit at rollins.edu/visit.

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INTELLIGENCE IS A FORCE FOR GOOD

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We’re known for the intimacy of our discussion-based classes, but don’t expect to be tied to a round table all the time. From SeaWorld to our on-campus fine arts museum, all of Orlando is your classroom. See for yourself. Schedule a visit at rollins.edu/visit. R

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10:1 student-to- faculty ratio

17 average class size

50+ programs of study

$1.5 million awarded to students in Student-Faculty Collaborative Scholarship Program

TOP 10 institution for number of students studying abroad (International Education Open Doors Report)

6,000+ objects in the Cornell Fine Arts Museum

19 research labs

18 student-faculty lounges

15 instructional labs

377 seats in the Annie Russell Theatre—the longest continually operating theater in Florida

UNDERGRADUATE MAJORS (Most majors are also offered as minors)American StudiesAnthropologyArt HistoryArt (Studio)Asian StudiesBiochemistry/ Molecular BiologyBiologyBusiness (International)Business (Management) Business (Social Entrepreneurship)ChemistryClassical StudiesCommunication StudiesComputer ScienceCritical Media & Cultural StudiesEconomicsElementary EducationEnglishEnvironmental StudiesHistoryInternational RelationsLatin American & Caribbean StudiesMarine BiologyMathematicsMusicPhilosophyPhysicsPolitical SciencePsychology Public Policy & Political Economy

CLUB SPORTS Dance Team Equestrian Indoor SoccerPing PongSoccerSurfingTennisWakeboarding

INTRAMURAL SPORTS BasketballPing PongSoccerSoftballTennisVolleyball

GROUP FITNESS CLASSESAbs and CoreBarreBody WorksButi YogaInsanity!YogaZumba

23 Division II athletic teams

23 national championships

7 NCAA Presidents’ Awards for Academic Excellence

77,800 square feet of athletic training space in the Harold and Ted Alfond Sports Center

ACADEMICS THE CAMPUS COMMUNITY

ATHLETICS

Religious StudiesSelf-DesignedSociologySocial InnovationSpanish Theatre Arts

UNDERGRADUATE MINORS ONLY African & African American StudiesArchaeologyAustralian StudiesCultural Anthropology DanceFilm StudiesFrench GermanGlobal HealthJewish StudiesMiddle Eastern & North African StudiesNeuroscienceSecondary Education CertificationSexuality, Women’s, and Gender StudiesSustainable Development & the EnvironmentWriting

COMBINED MASTER’S DEGREE AND DUAL DEGREE PROGRAMSAccelerated Management Program (BA/MBA 3/2)Environmental Management/ Forestry (BA/MEM/ MF 3/2)International Business/ International Management (BA/BS Dual)

PRE-PROFESSIONAL PROGRAMSAllied HealthDentistryEngineering (BA/BS 3/2)LawMedicineOptometryPodiatryVeterinary Medicine

RECENT ROLLINS COLLEGE CONFERENCE COURSES 3D Foundations: Introduction to SculptureArt of the StartBad BreakupsCreative ComputingEconomics for LifeFight Club, God, and the BuddhaFood in a Changing World

The Future of Public Schools in AmericaLove and Sex in the Hebrew BibleMedia and ViolenceOttoman History/ MysteriesPhysics for Future Presidents

RECENT PROJECTS FUNDED BY OUR STUDENT-FACULTY COLLABORATIVE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM The Comparative Effects of Electoral Laws on Political ParticipationDeconstructing Jupiter: Solar System Perturbation Caused by Building a Dyson SphereFasting Effects on Local Steroid Production in the Brown AnoleIn Vivo Function of KLP-4Iron Catalysts for Michael Addition ReactionsPhotografting Biomolecules to Gold NanoparticlesPhylogeographic Analysis of Asterias forbesi Glacial RefugeThe Source of Social Power in Religious Communities

RECENT FACULTY-LED FIELD STUDIESArt and Myth in ItalyCancun and the American TouristCommunity Development in TanzaniaExploring the EvergladesGlobal Health: GenevaLively Arts in LondonMarine Biology Laboratory: MainePanhellenic GreeceRural Education in RwandaSystems Startup in Santiago, Chile

NCAA DIVISION II TEAMS Baseball (M)Basketball (M, W)Cross Country (M, W)Golf (M, W)Lacrosse (M, W)Rowing (M, W)Sailing (M, W)Soccer (M, W)Softball (W)Swimming (M, W)Tennis (M, W)Volleyball (W)Waterskiing (M, W)

NEARLY 2,000 students from 40+ states and 50+ countries

30% students of color

10% international students in most recent entering class

100+ student organizations

580+ campus events every year

3,400 hours completed by the Rollins community on SPARC day alone

AN ASHOKA CHANGEMAKER CAMPUS: promoting a culture of social innovation

SELECT CULTURAL ORGANIZATIONS Black Student UnionCaribbean Student AssociationCatholic Campus Ministries

Chinese Student OrganizationDesiHillelInterfaith CollectiveLatin American Student AssociationMuslim Student UnionRollins CoexistSpectrumVoice 4 Women (V4W)

SELECT PERFORMANCE ENSEMBLES Flute ChoirHorn EnsembleInstrumental Chamber EnsembleOpera WorkshopOrchestra Pep BandPercussion EnsembleRollins Brass EnsembleRollins College ChoirRollins Jazz Ensemble

String EnsembleWind Ensemble

RECENT COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT CLASSES Biology and Everyday LifeCaribbean Environmental HistoryDigital and Mixed Media PrintmakingIndividualism and Its DiscontentsInternational EconomicsJustice: Good and EvilLandscape of MusicThe Revolution Will Not Be TelevisedSpanish for Advanced CommunicationState of Florida’s ChildrenWriting for the Future

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College should be built on a human scale. It should feel like an authentic community. You should know—and value, and collaborate with—the people in that community.

Here’s another idea: College should be enterprising. And civic-minded. It should help make the world smarter, more effective, and more open to possibility.

And another: Winter Park would be a great place to put a college. It’s a friendly, cosmopolitan community on the edge of Orlando, one of the country’s most diverse, innovative, creative cities. Imagine.

If you go to a college that combines all of these ideas into one experience, you should develop profound habits of mind and transformative habits of the heart. You should gain the wisdom and the courage to be a worldly, responsible citizen and leader.

Welcome to Rollins. We’ve been putting good ideas to work in the world since 1885. We make tomorrow happen.

HERE’S AN IDEA:

Page 9: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

WHEN YOU DON’T SEE AN OPPORTUNITY, MAKE ONE

Computer science major Michael Gutensohn launched his career with back-to-back internships at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, one of the crown jewels of Central Florida’s booming aerospace industry. See for yourself. Schedule a visit at rollins.edu/visit.

Page 10: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

WHEN YOU DON’T SEE AN OPPORTUNITY, MAKE ONE

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Page 11: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

MORE THAN A FEW THINGS WE,D LIKE YOU TO KNOW

TOP PRODUCER OF FULBRIGHT SCHOLARS(CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION)

7CONSECUTIVE YEARS ON THE PRESIDENT’S HIGHER EDUCATION HONOR ROLL WITH DISTINCTION FOR COMMUNITY SERVICE

REGIONAL UNIVERSITY IN THE SOUTH FOR 20+ YEARS (U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT)

TOP

75%OF STUDENTS STUDY ABROAD

#1CITY FOR JOB GROWTH IN 2016 (U.S. DEPTARTMENT OF LABOR)

TOP 15MOST ENTREPRENEURIAL COLLEGE (FORBES)

1 OF 37ASHOKA CHANGEMAKER CAMPUSES WORLDWIDE

NO ONE KNOWS WHEN FOX DAY IS

Page 12: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

ROLLINS COLLEGE CONFERENCE (RCC)The first class you take at Rollins—and a kind of template for the work you’ll do in the next four years. Each RCC class is a discussion-based seminar in a specialized topic (recent examples: Language and Identity, The Science and Culture of Chocolate, Ancient Chinese Thought in Modern American Life). There’s an engaging professor, an upperclass student mentor, and roughly 16 of your peers in a class that’s built around your first-year residence hall. So you’re not just taking a class—you’re joining an intellectual community.

CREATING YOUR OWN CAREER PATH Lyndsey Goode ’12 was a theatre arts major at Rollins—which is another way of saying she was ready for anything. She’s been the technical director of a worldwide magic show and account manager for a production company. Now she works for Cuberis, a web design firm specializing in museum websites—the kind of business that didn’t exist a little while ago.

THE ROLLINS URBAN FARM Started by Andrew Lesmes ’15 as an independent study after he did an internship at Orlando’s East End Market. A still-growing example of academic and environmental enterprise: a student-run, self-sustaining market garden that sells its produce to the Rollins-owned Alfond Inn and the College’s food service.

STUDENT-FACULTY COLLABORATIVE SCHOLARSHIP A simple idea that gets transformative results. After your first year at Rollins, you and a professor can apply for funding to engage in a collaborative summer research project. You design it together, work on it together, make mistakes together, write papers and present them at conferences together. Rollins has already given $1.5 million to support dozens of projects.

STARTING A MAJOR THAT’S AHEAD OF THE CURVE Rollins’ Social Entrepreneurship and Business Program is the first AACSB-accredited program of its kind in the nation. It’s a cross-disciplinary, solutions-oriented incubator for change-making.

FIELD STUDY PROGRAMS The world in 1 to 3 weeks. Rollins offers about a dozen field studies every year—faculty-led, short-term courses that examine a topic by living and working in the middle of it. So a field study called, say, Environment & Development in Central America examines the effects of deforestation and population growth by spending a week in Costa Rica, talking to local planters, biologists, craftspeople, and government officials, exploring the Monteverde Cloud Forest Preserve, the La Selva Biological Station, the Maquenque National Wildlife Refuge, craft cooperatives, energy facilities, and more. Revelatory in every way.

NOT SOLVING THE NON-PROBLEM OF KIERKEGAARD Joshua Brown ’19, Lily Tawam ’19, and Professor of Religion Mario D’Amato spent a year examining the work of pioneering existentialist Soren Kierkegaard. (Sample famous quote: “Once you label me, you negate me.”) Their work led to a co-authored paper—and to new insoluble, inspiring problems.

IMMERSIONS A signature Rollins experience: spending a week (often during spring break) with a group of friends, faculty, and staff, doing hard, complex work that makes communities around the world healthier, safer, and more sustainable. Rollins sponsors roughly 20 Immersions every year; many are organized and run by students. Recent examples: installing water-filtration systems in the Dominican Republic, tutoring students at low-income schools in New York City, supporting environmental restoration initiatives in the Smoky Mountains.

THE BONNER LEADERS PROGRAM One of 60 colleges and universities in the Bonner Leaders Program, a national initiative that provides service-learning, leadership, and social justice opportunities (and scholarships!) to students who seek to alleviate social issues and find ways to work for change throughout their careers.

STUDYING PORTFOLIO OPTIMIZATION ON THE NEPALESE STOCK EXCHANGE And taking two years to do it, in collaboration with a faculty mentor. That’s what Raghabendra KC ’13 did. He’s now a PhD candidate at the Cambridge Judge Business School in England.

WINTER PARK INSTITUTE An ongoing conversation with some of the world’s most innovative thinkers, artists, and activists. Every year, the Institute’s guests take up residence at Rollins and offer seminars, lectures, readings, master classes, performances, open discussions, and exhibits. Recent guests: Candy Chang, Billy Collins, Leymah Gbowee, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Jaron Lanier, Maya Lin, Jon Meacham, Story Musgrave.

MAKING CHEMISTRY GREEN (AND WINNING A GOLDWATER SCHOLARSHIP) Over the course of two summers, Alyssa DeLucia ’18 interned in a molecular oncology lab at the Moffitt Cancer Center and joined a 10-week research program at Georgia Tech’s School of Chemistry and Biochemistry. Here’s one thing she discovered: She wants to make the chemical industry—an industry that affects nearly everyone on the planet—more environmentally friendly. The Goldwater Scholarship—one of the country’s most generous awards for undergraduate students in the sciences—will help her get there.

MORE THAN A FEW WAYS WE MAKE TOMORROW SMARTER

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GREAT COMMUNITIES ARE POWERED BY RELATIONSHIPS

Our res halls are far more than a comfy place to lay your head. They’re kinetic hives of community and collaboration, diversity and discourse, learning and laughter. See for yourself. Schedule a visit at rollins.edu/visit.

Page 14: MAKE TOMORROW HAPPEN Rollins · Development in Tanzania Exploring the Everglades Global Health: Geneva Lively Arts in London Marine Biology Laboratory: Maine Panhellenic Greece Rural

GREAT COMMUNITIES ARE POWERED BY RELATIONSHIPS

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CANDLEWISH One of the first and most memorable ways we come together as a community, inspired in part by our motto, Fiat Lux: Let There Be Light. A ceremony during orientation that connects our past, our present, and our future. A moment of belonging, of purpose, of light.

PINEHURST COTTAGE An independent-minded, community-oriented living and learning community in a handsomely renovated landmark building. Home to students from all majors and all backgrounds who share a dedication to social change. Also home to regular events like Professors on the Porch, Pancakes on the Porch, and the Pinehurst Porch Sessions. (They have a porch, by the way.)

IN THE MIDDLE OF NATURAL WONDERS Central Florida has a strong environmental movement, partly because the natural environment is stunning (and precious). A few examples: Wekiwa Springs State Park is 30 minutes away. Blue Springs State Park (with man-atees!) is 45 minutes away. And Canaveral National Seashore is under an hour away.

WINTER WITH THE WRITERS Every February, our Department of English hosts some of the country’s most important authors. They give readings, join discus-sions, and meet with students. Recent guests: Chris Abani, Ishion Hutchinson, Hillary Jordan, Luis Muñoz, Azar Nafisi, Charles Simic.

FOX DAY A day in spring—a day “too pretty to have class”—when the president cancels undergraduate classes. An excellent way to promote collective joy.

THE BUSH SCIENCE CENTER AT MIDNIGHT ON A RANDOM WEDNESDAY It’s busy! Not by coincidence, it was designed to encourage collab-oration; there are lounges, a cafe, and generous space for interaction between students and faculty. A social and intellectual hub.

AT AN ORLANDO CITY SOCCER MATCH The team is a newcomer to Major League Soccer—and already renowned for its passionate fan base. A living symbol of a young, cosmopolitan, fantastically diverse city.

IN EXTRAORDINARY REHEARSAL AND PERFORMANCE SPACES Like the 27,000-square-foot Keene Hall, home to our Department of Music. Or the 400-seat John M. Tiedtke Concert Hall, home to two rebuilt Steinway D Concert grand pianos and headlining venue for our departmental concerts and visiting artists. Or our recording studio, our chamber music rehearsal room, or our state-of-the-art 10-station keyboard and computer lab.

AMID THE HIDDEN GLORIES OF WINTER PARK A lush downtown, steps from campus and an integral part of our daily life, featuring boutiques, cafes, and the Charles Hosmer Morse Museum, home to the world’s largest collection of works by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Lake Virginia, on the edge of campus. Plus a regular farmers market, the Enzian Theater (home to the Florida Film Festival), and restaurants like Ethos (vegan), Prato, and The Ravenous Pig.

IN LOCAL CLASSROOMS We try to be good (meaning smart, collaborative, engaged) neighbors. A recent example: Sam Sadeh ’18 won a $1,100 grant through Google’s highly selective igniteCS initiative. He used it to help teach coding to students in a local after-school program. He developed a curriculum, recruited a small group of Rollins students, and worked with MIT’s child-friendly Scratch software.

THE SANDSPUR The weekly student-run newspaper. Established in 1894 with this charge: “Unassuming yet almighty sharp and pointed, well-rounded yet many-sided, assiduously tenacious, victorious in single combat, and therefore without a peer, wonderfully attractive and extensive in circulation; all these will be found upon investigation to be among the extraordinary qualities of The Sandspur.” In other words: It’s not just a newspaper; it’s a way of life.

THE MANY NEIGHBORHOODS OF ORLANDOA partial list: Audubon Park, College Park, Colonial Town, Milk District, Mills 50, Thornton Park. Each has its own vibe; each has great food and a lively social scene; all are worth exploring. Easily accessible with our campus ZipCar program or the city’s SunRail service.

ROLLINS COLLEGE DEBATE CLUB A championship-caliber team with a global travel schedule. Won the 2016-2017 National Parliamentary Debate Association Novice Championship Tournament. Seriously smart, highly entertaining.

ORLANDO TECH MEET-UP Which is the South’s largest gathering of tech entrepreneurs, and just one example of Orlando’s flourishing innovation culture. The city is home to more than 100 companies that are global leaders in tomorrow’s industries (modeling, simulation, virtual reality), plus major research and training facilities for the U.S. military.

AT THE HOME OF “THE BEST IN BASEMENT RADIO” By which we mean student-run WPRK, 91.5 FM, the oldest continually operating radio station in Florida. The lineup of shows is like an introduction to the unsung beauty of the Rollins community: Underground Rhythm District, Music of India, Acoustic Highway, Black Market Funk, Metal Train, Bargain Bin Bonanza, Roots Uprising, Out Loud Orlando!, Punk Rock in Your PJs, Rock En Español, Unorthodox.

MORE THAN A FEW PLACES WHERE WE BUILD GREAT COMMUNITIES

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RETHINKING THE WAY EDUCATION WORKS The core of a Rollins education is Rollins Foundations in the Liberal Arts. The program includes one intensive seminar, coursework in four 21st-century competencies (foreign languages, health and wellness, mathematical thinking, writing), and a cluster of classes in one of four areas of inquiry, which we call “neighborhoods” (because we’re friendly; because ideas are interrelated; and because the guy who invented Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood went here). The point is: We believe that a liberal arts education should change to meet the changing world.

HIRING PROFESSORS WHO ARE FASCINATING HUMAN BEINGS Dan Myers is a prize-winning flatpicking guitarist. He’s also a professor of computer science. He’s also the co-developer—with Neeraj Chatlani ’18—of an adaptive system for training new programmers in coding literacy, the ability to read and interpret programs. Which led to the two of them publishing an article in a national journal and presenting at a national conference. At Rollins, professors aren’t just a number—they’re flatpicking research colleagues.

SECOND STAGE SERIES A regular series of adventurous student-run (and designed, and performed, and marketed) theatre productions, held in our Fred Stone Theatre. Overseen by our very own Rollins Players, the series is free and open to all.

SPARC DAY One of your first days on campus is SPARC Day, a hands-on introduction to service in and around Central Florida, including students, faculty, staff, and alumni. It’s been part of our first-year orientation for more than a decade. Thoughtful, compassionate civic action has been part of our mission since 1885.

CREATING AN ORIENTATION CENTER FOR YOUR LIFE We’re renovating a major building at the center of campus (it’s called Mills). In the end, it will include

the Center for Leadership and Community Engagement, Social Entrepreneurship and Innovation Hub, Office of International Programs, and Center for Career and Life Planning—all built around a multi-story common area. So you can make literal and figurative connections between education and experience.

GOING INTO ONE OF THE WORLD’S MOST COMPLICATED HUMANITARIAN CRISES AND FINDING A WAY TO HELP Elise Letanosky ’07 is a protection manager for the Danish Refugee Council. She works in two Turkish cities north of Aleppo, Syria, a border region where hundreds of thousands of Syrians have fled. She works with refugees, with local officials, with community organizations, with donors—building networks of support for people in profound need.

ESTABLISHING A MAJOR GRADUATE BUSINESS SCHOOL IN THE MIDDLE OF A LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE Our Crummer Graduate School of Business is home to Florida’s top-ranked MBA program, the Center for Advanced Entrepreneurship, and the Edyth Bush Institute for Philanthropy and Nonprofit Leadership. They see business as an exploration of possibility, a collaborative, cross-disciplinary venture capable of producing profound social and economic change. Not coincidentally, we offer a 3/2 program with Crummer in which you can earn a bachelor’s degree and an MBA in five years.

INTERSESSION We took that slow week at the end of the break between fall and spring semesters and made it into an intensive seven-day semester. Students take one specialized class for the entire week. A sample of recent topics: A.I. vs. I.Q., Heroines in Sci-Fi Films, Introduction to Chinese Calligraphy, Job Market Boot Camp, and A Sociological Study of Orange Is the New Black.

GIVING AN UNEXPECTED ANSWER TO THE QUESTION, “WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO WITH THAT DEGREE?” Our graduates understand that their degree goes way beyond their major—and that their major can be incredibly flexible. Two examples: Jonathan Titone ’99 majored in philosophy; he’s a global market consultant at Northern Trust Corporation and the former executive director at the National Bank of Abu Dhabi. Laney Jones ’13 has released three albums with her band the

Lively Spirits (which features two other Rollins alumni), performed in the American Voices Festival at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and is generally considered a rising newgrass (post-bluegrass) star. Her major at Rollins? International business.

EMERGING LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE An empowering weekend that brings together new and seasoned student leaders. A time to learn new skills, meet new mentors, and make bold new plans. One of the many inspiring programs brought to you by our mighty Office of Community Engagement.

RUNNING A TOP 10 HOTEL IN THE U.S. (CONDÉ NAST TRAVELER), USING ITS PUBLIC SPACES AS A ROTATING CONTEMPORARY ART GALLERY, AND USING ITS PROFITS TO SUPPORT A SCHOLARSHIP FUND The hotel is The Alfond Inn. The art—more than 130 works from some of the world’s major living artists—is part of our Alfond Collection, overseen by our Cornell Fine Arts Museum. The full-ride scholarships are life-changing.

REIMAGINING URBAN TRANSPORTATIONPeter Martinez ’13 founded Orlando’s first bike share program—a vision that started as an undergraduate paper at Rollins. Now he runs his own transportation consulting group, Mode Split, helping cities around the country develop sustainable ways to move from place to place.

MORE THAN A FEW OPPORTUNITIES WE’VE SEIZED (IN A FRIENDLY, ENTERPRISING WAY)