Smith Launches Undergraduate Fellows
Program
250 Freshmen Come Together for
Orientation
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Several Robert H. Smith School of
Business freshmen got to know their
classmates even before the fall semester
began Aug. 30. The approximately 250
first-year students played games, bonded
over meals and helped each other
complete a ropes course and climbing
wall as part of their orientation to the
Smith Undergraduate Fellows Program.
This is the inaugural year for Smiths
Freshman Fellows, students initial
opportunity to get involved in the
Undergraduate Fellows Program. Faculty
and administrators created the
undergraduate program to help downsize
the large university experience and
create small communities of scholars
within the Smith School of Business (read
more about the program in the spring
issue of Smith Business magazine).
New incoming Freshman Fellows are
grouped in cohorts of approximately 40
classmates according to enrollment in
BMGT 110, an introductory business
course. Students participate in Freshman
Fellows through their sophomore year, at
which point they can choose to
participate in up to two upperclassmen
fellows tracks in specialty areas such
as research, accounting,
entrepreneurship, supply chain and
investments, among other things.
Though the Freshman Fellows program
is not required, Pat Cleveland,
associate dean for undergraduate
programs, estimated 75 percent of
incoming freshman are participating this
year.
Fellows cohorts move through the
first two years of Smith completing
activities together, such as attending
field trips, lectures, classes, a
retreat, workshops, volunteer projects,
and dinner clubs. The program kicked off
with the activities at Freshman Fellow
Orientation, held Sunday, Aug. 27 and
Tues., Aug. 29. Students met their
cohorts and had a chance to get to know
each other through team-building
activities.
I met a lot of new people that I
wouldn't have had a chance to otherwise,
said Sarah Trippe, a Freshman Fellow
from New Jersey. Were starting out
bonding with Smith classmates.
Smith School sophomores, juniors and
seniors acted as orientation mentors for
the Freshman Fellows, organizing
activities and answering questions.
Smith senior Kirsten Cicale, a
participant in the Research Fellows
program and part of the QUEST program,
served as a mentor and said the program
offers a really good opportunity for
students to be introduced to the Smith
School in a relaxed, social atmosphere.
She said she would have participated had
it been offered when she entered Smith
four years ago.
Freshmen walk into Van Munching and
see the MBA [students] in their suits.
As a freshman you're probably
overwhelmed because you probably don't
even own one, Cicale said. This program
is a good way to get acclimated to the
Smith School climate.
Several fellows said they liked
having experienced Smith students as
orientation mentors. Eddie Tao, an
incoming freshman from Potomac, Md.,
said the small-group discussions during
which fellows could ask their mentors
questions about the Smith School,
classes, campus life or anything else
were very helpful.
Smith sophomore Marla Weintraub, with
help from a team of Smith student
mentors, organized activities for the
two-day orientation program. Activities
included group discussions, ice-breaker
games to get to know classmates, games,
and a turn climbing the ropes course and
climbing wall at the university's
Outdoor Recreation Center.
Students enjoyed simulating a supply
chain by assembling 20
university-related items from
marshmallows, licorice, M&Ms, pretzels
and frosting. They also played a game of
Clue, with small groups posing as
various universities mascots to solve
the murder of the Duke Blue Devil by the
Lady Terps.
The Freshman Fellows orientation
culminated with a dinner with Smith
School Dean Howard Frank in the atrium
of Van Munching Hall, followed by an ice
cream social. Next for the Freshman
Fellows: the annual
Smith Business Week, which includes
career workshops, a career fair and
networking event, opportunities to get
involved in student activities, and a
tailgate party before a Terps football
game a busy and exciting kickoff to four
years at the Robert H. Smith School of
Business.
Freshman Convocation will be held on
Friday, September 8, followed by
Business Week, the week of September 11.
Business Week Details
▓ Carrie Taschner, Office of
Marketing Communications