UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Looking back at when he began his first job as a geoscientist, Penn State alumnus Enrique Perez said he saw how a formal alumni mentoring program could have benefited him.
"I'm from a low-income family in Georgia and I didn't have any relatives in the sort of career I was pursuing," he said.
Perez came to Penn State on a full scholarship as a participant in a program that gives high-achieving female or underrepresented college students the financial support they need to obtain two bachelor’s degrees at an accelerated pace. After attending Fort Valley State University, a historically black college in central Georgia, Perez came to Penn State to finish his bachelor's studies in geosciences. He then stayed at Penn State two more years to receive an M.S. in geosciences in 2010, receiving career advice along the way.
Perez believes that having a one-on-one connection with an experienced alum would have provided even more support and confidence as he entered into his career. Now, Perez wants to share his experience and expertise with graduating seniors — which is the main reason he joined the Graduates of Earth and Mineral Sciences (GEMS) alumni board last year.
"It's a way that I can contribute and give back to students who come from similar backgrounds. I can provide a different level of experience than other people, so I thought it was a great avenue for me to give back to others," he said.
GEMS is launching a formal college mentoring program, designed to provide advice and a welcoming network to graduating seniors. The pilot program will launch in 2017-18 and plans to pair 30 graduating students with alumni in the students' preferred career fields.
But this isn't the first time College of Earth and Mineral Sciences (EMS) alumni got involved in mentoring students.
Erik Pytlak, who received a bachelor of science in meteorology from Penn State in 1991, has been informally mentoring students throughout the past seven years he has served on the GEMS board. Now serving as president-elect for the board, Pytlak has been one of the main drivers of establishing the GEMS mentoring program.
"It's funny because some of the students who were my informal mentees at Penn State have graduated and are now colleagues. That's something I didn't expect when I began working with the GEMS board," he said.
Sharing experiences before a student comes to Penn State
The GEMS board has established a program that puts them in contact with prospective students. The alumni write letters every February to students who are offered admission into the degree program from which the alumnus or alumna graduated. Those letters highlight how beneficial the program has been, which can be a powerful statement for someone making a major decision like which college to attend.