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A Letter to the Class of 2014
Class of 2014 ā
Now itās our time!
Senior ChallengeĀ has been a tradition at Marquette for over 25 years. In 1987, a group of seniors gathered to discuss the senior class gift to the university. They wanted to instill a permanent program to further grow the participation of graduating seniors ā and created Senior Challenge.
For the past several decades the focus of Senior Challenge has been on seniors supporting their fellow classmates in the form of scholarship aid. Today, this tradition continues. Seniors are asked to support what helped them #BeTheDifference, especially the scholarship aid they have received.
Senior Challenge is the tradition of paying it forward. Past graduating seniors, now alumni, continue to show their support for current Marquette students and our mission to ābe men and women for others.ā Help us continue this tradition.
Marquette has supported us these past four years. Marquette has welcomed us and made us feel at home. Class of 2014, it is our turn to carry on the tradition.
Give yourĀ giftĀ today and help make this yearās Senior Challenge the best yet! Because we are the best and brightest class Marquette has seen! Because, WE ARE MARQUETTE!
To make a gift, please visit marquette.edu/seniorchallenge.
The Next Generation
Seniors,
When we graduate on May 18th, 2014, there will be a lot that will differ about us. Ā Some of us will leave here with a Bachelors of Science in Mechanical Engineering, and others will gain a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology. Some of us will enter the workforce soon, and others will go on to pursue post graduate degrees, yet there is something that unifies us: We have all benefitted from an academic program at Marquette. As we leave, why not make a difference for those who want to attend this university?
One of the various ways that you can continue to make a difference in the lives of future generations of Marquette students is by giving back to your College Scholarsā Fund. Whether in Arts & Sciences, Business Administration, Communication, Education, Engineering, Heath Sciences, or Nursing, your $20.14 donation can impact a studentsā time at the university that has given us so much. Here are some examples:
Allowing a first generation student to fulfill his aspirations of becoming a broadcasting journalist through the College of Communication
Giving the oldest of four children the ability to major in Accounting and lessening the financial burden on her family.
Permitting a Economics and History student in the College of Arts and Sciences gain legislative experience while interning at Les Aspin Center for Government in Washington, D.C.
Allowing a Pre-Dental Scholar in the College of Health Sciences the ability to earn their undergraduate degree and attend the only dental school in the state of Wisconsin, Marquette School of Dentistry.
These are just some of the ways that giving to the Scholars Fund of your respective college can make allowĀ future students to attend this university , without worrying about if it is affordable or not.
Seniors, as we have less than fifty days before graduation, ask yourself ā How would you like to help the incoming classes #Be The Difference?
Sterling Hardaway, Artsā14
Senior Challenge: Who We Are and Why is it Important!
Photo: We asked the seniors to describe their Marquette Experience in 1 word.
You may have noticed Facebook getting busy recently with upcoming Senior Challenge events, or heard your friends discussing the epic kickoff event at Buckheads on National Marquette Day, still others have never heard of us at all.
We are different from Senior Week. Yes, we plan fun events for the greatest senior class there has ever been! However, we are on a different mission: to #BeTheDifference.Ā
95% of us receive some type of financial aid to attend this University. Ever wonder where that aid came from? It is men and women āmen and women for others,ā being men and women for us, the students. Reinforcing an important lesson with us that has been intertwined into all areas of our education here since day 1.
So who are they? They are members of our Marquette family! Alumni, who at one point in time sat in the same seats in which we currently sit. They know how special and unique our family is, the Marquette family, and they want to see all of their family members be successful. Something my Papa always said comes to mind right about now, āYou lucky guys!ā He was right! We are lucky and so fortunate to be apart of a family and community so special!
#TuitionRunsOutDay begins tomorrow. It is our way of saying āthank youā to those Marquette family members who have provided that aid which allows us to continue with the rest of our school year. Without them, campus would not be what it is today.
So how is this relevant to Senior Challenge? Senior Challenge is one of the oldest student run initiatives on campus, and consists of current seniors working to #BeTheDifference. We, as soon to be alumni, have a great understanding of what our aid has done for us, and how we have benefitted from it. We have seen the growth of our campus, not just in numbers of students, but in building renovations, new facilities and even completely new buildings added to the Marquette skyline in the last four years. All of which helped to improve as young professionals. New facilities and programs that made classrooms more innovative and interactive, all of which allowed us to be better students and in turn be better āmen and women for others.ā
This is all made possible thanks to the members of our family. Remember all the way back to the first week of Orientation? Yes, I realize it feels like a ways back, but remember how everywhere you went you were greeted with a smile and āWelcome to the Marquette family!ā That is because we are all instantaneously welcomed and like other families, youāre stuck with us.
As we continue to countdown the days to āgrown-up lifeā think about your role in this family. Senior Challenge is our first opportunity to give to the future members of our family. While you may never see the recipient of your gift, think back to when I asked you if you knew who provided your aid. Most of you responded with an, āI donāt knowā as I did. When you give, think of what is still to come from our family, just as the alumni have before you. We must continue the legacy of being āmen and women for others.ā So give today and #BeTheDifference our family needs us to be.Ā
-Kathleen Keller, A&S'14

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A Community of Difference
Photos provided by Spencer Bonahoom.Ā
I arrived at Marquette with more uncertainty than I had ever felt before. I was unsure of what my major would be, unconfident about how I would make friends, and wondering what an Indiana boy like me was doing moving to Wisconsin and away from everyone I ever knew. Looking back on my four years here, there is one common thread that erased the uncertainty and made Marquette home: community. It took me a little while to find mine here, but once I did it spread like wildfire.Ā
It took me until the end of my freshman year, but I first truly found community when I was selected as a Team Leader for Orientation Staff. As a still-shy freshman trying to find a group of people to become close with, the energy and enthusiasm of the students I met on O-Staff was immediately contagious. I not only met a couple of people who would soon become some of my best friends, but I began to feel truly comfortable and at home for the first time at Marquette.
Soon after I found community in O-Staff, I started to realize that there were similar groups like that all around Marquette. I joined another when I became a part of the Kappa Sigma Fraternity, where I found a group of brothers that would be there for me any time I needed someone to lean on. Around the same time, I became a Tour Guide, joining a crazy, slightly dysfunctional, passionate family of ambassadors for Marquette. Through joining both of these groups I found people who I started to spend a lot of my time with, and before I even knew it all uncertainty I once had was gone. I felt confident and secure; I honestly felt that Marquette University was now my home.
However, it wasn't until I started regularly attending Tuesday night mass at St. Joan of Arc Chapelā that I found the true meaning of community. Unlike the other organizations I had been a part of, this community was fluid, changing from week to week.Ā It was a collection of students that no one needed to be a "member" of to experience. It was this realization that made the biggest difference to me and helped me realize how truly special Marquette is. Whether it is through a social organization, a club sport, a service group, or any number of other interactions, students here all find their own community. That is what makes the entire university special: we all find our own place, and it is always with open arms that we are accepted into new groups of people. It's that welcoming spirit of everyone at Marquette that made the difference in my time here and has made more four years so special. That same spirit bonds us all as one, united Marquette community that I am blessed to be a part of.Ā
-Spencer Bonahoom, Bus. ā14
And I Thought Change was Unlikely...
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Photos provided by Katie Popovich.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā When I arrived on campus as a freshman, I was sure of what my time at Marquette would consist of. I anticipated graduating with a Spanish degree in four years and earning my Doctorate of Physical Therapy degree two years later. I expected to gain a lot more knowledge, but I did not believe I would change much in any other ways. I truly thought that at 18 years old, my character was permanently defined. Now, four years later, I can see how wrong and naive I was back then. During these past four years I became a member of so many wonderful organizations, I gained extremely strong friendships, and I developed an overwhelming sense of love/obsession for Marquette University. Being a Golden Eagle for four years has definitely changed my character in a positive way.Ā
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā The part of Marquette that really helped me transform into who I am today is the Office of Student Development and the programs that fall under its control. Thanks to the Office of Student Development, I was a member of Orientation Staff for three years. O-Staff helped me to come out of my shell and it helped me develop my leadership skills. I was fortunate enough to work as the Family Coordinator on the Orientation Planning Team this past year and the experience will forever be my favorite part of my four years here. I have also enjoyed being a part of the S.T.A.R program as both a participant and as a Retreat Leader. Both O-Staff and S.T.A.R. influenced my decision to work as a Program Assistant for Family Programs and the Center for Community Service this year, and the position has allowed me to interact with students and also become more involved with service, a goal I had set for my senior year.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Reflecting on my past four years, not every decision I made was the wisest; however, my decision to become involved on campus, especially within OSD is one that I will never regret. My involvement in organizations showed me a whole other side of Marquette I never imagined as a new freshman. Yes, I will be receiving a Spanish degree in a few months, and yes, two years later I will have my Doctorate of PT. However, when the time for me to leave Marquette comes, I know that I will be leaving with so much more than just my degrees.Ā
-Katie Popovich, A&S ā14, DPT ā16
Transferring for another shot!
Photos provided by Meredith Donaldson.
I decided to transfer after my freshman year of college and I came across Marquette. I had never been in a city. I was really confused when I thought the cab driver was kicking me out as he dropped me off in the middle of the street! (Unbeknownst to me, heād dropped me off in front of Raynor.) I probably looked like such a freshman! As the brief cloud of confusion lifted, I knew that I didnāt just want to be here, I needed to be here. Marquette has since provided me with unique experiences, a Jesuit education, a passion for service and a perpetual will to succeed.
I have done a lot in my seemingly short years here at Marquette.
Iāve been blessed with the opportunity to help start a Division 1 team from scratch. Iāve been a member of SAAC (student-athlete advisory committee) for three years. Iāve started a new organization. Iāve committed myself to service. Iāve had two knee surgeries and a broken back. Iāve encountered adversity. Iāve encountered heart-break. Iāve found my passions. Iāve met life-long friends. Iāve learned how to fail. Iāve learned how to succeed. Iāve adapted. Iāve learned that a smile can make someoneās day. Iāve fought for my beliefs. Iāve been disappointed. Iāve cried tears of joy. Iāve determined who I am. Iāve determined who I am not.
But most of all, Iāve been given the chance to ābe the differenceā.Ā
The opportunity to be a student-athlete at Marquette has had an incredibly transformative impact on who I have become. The word āstudentā comes before āathleteā for a reason and Marquette has shown me why. Marquette has taught me to not just be a student of the university, but to be a student of life. I have learned to never be content or settle for mediocrity. Iāve learned to be a student in the classroom, in the community and on the field. Iāve learned to never take no for an answer; Iāve determined that if there is a will, there is a way. My experiences here as a student-athlete are the reasons that I will be successful in whatever path I choose to pursue.
Being a student-athlete has taught me to work hard, and when I think Iām working hard, to work harder. It has shown me the importance of being loyal, it has shown me how to be disciplined, to work until I canāt anymore, and most of all, to be respectful. These traits will allow me to foster long-lasting, meaningful relationships, a successful career, and most importantly, a fulfilled and gratuitous life.
My experiences at Marquette have developed me into the woman that I want to be and more. Despite the impact being a student-athlete has had on me, the most important thing that Marquette has instilled in me is not in the form of a lecture, or a drawn up play, but in developing a sense of understanding. Iāve learned the importance of consistently treating people with respect because you never know what battles people are fighting behind the smiles. This University has driven me to be gracious, appreciative and humble.
The single most influential moment in my time at Marquette hit me like a brick wall. It occurred as I stood in the AMU waiting for my bagelā¦
I finally understood the meaning of āSee written on the forehead of everyone you meet today āMake me feel important.ā -Father Naus.
-Meredith Donaldson, A&SĀ