NEWS: 黑料社在线观看入口 Class of 2023: 鈥淯ntil We Meet Again鈥

May 15, 2023

On Sunday, May 14, 黑料社在线观看入口 celebrated the Class of 2023 at a joyful Commencement ceremony celebrating the accomplishments of Olin鈥檚 18th class of graduates.

During the ceremony, Olin awarded its second-ever honorary degree to Dr. Shirley Malcom, Olin鈥檚 featured Commencement speaker, in recognition of her exemplary contributions as a respected leader in the scientific community. 鈥淒r. Malcom truly personifies the Olin spirit: asking good questions, believing that innovation is possible, and changing the world for the better,鈥 said President Gilda Barabino during the degree presentation.

Class of 2023 Group Picture

Members of the 黑料社在线观看入口 Class of 2023 pose for their class photo on May 14, 2023. Photo by Kristie Dean.

Dean of faculty and professor of anthropology Caitrin Lynch led the procession of graduates into the tent and welcomed in-person guests and remote viewers. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to wish a Happy Mother鈥檚 Day to all mothers and treasured family members celebrating with us, as well as to those we are keeping in our thoughts who could not be here today,鈥 she said.

Special guests at the ceremony included president emeritus Rick Miller and Bill Norden, founding trustee and former board chair. Other honored guests included trustees Al Bunshaft, Chee Chew, Lee Edwards 鈥07 and Scott Harris, as well as Stephen Spinelli, president of Babson College.

Students preparing for commencement

5 Class of 2023 Graduates walking on campus

Grad hats

Students smiling at camera

Olin graduates posing for photo

Making lifelong friends...

Beverly Wise speaking at Commencement

Beverly Wyse P鈥15, Chair of the Olin Board of Trustees, welcomes the graduates and their families on behalf of the board. Photo by Kristie Dean.

What difference will you make?

In her welcome remarks, Beverly Wyse P鈥15, chair of the Olin Board of Trustees, asked the graduates, 鈥渨hat difference will you make?鈥 and shared a quote from Nelson Mandela: 鈥淭here is no passion to be found in playing small, in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.鈥

She continued, in her own words, 鈥淚f you can find what you most want to impact, what you most want to be a part of, then you will find a gift more important than your education鈥 you will have purpose.鈥

President Gilda Barabino speaking at commencement

President Gilda Barabino addresses the Class of 2023 and their families, faculty, staff and guests at the 18th Olin Commencement Ceremony. Photo by Kristie Dean.

Seek inspiration from those who have gone before you

President Gilda Barabino congratulated the Class of 2023 for all they accomplished together. 鈥淵ou have shown determination, perseverance, and caring toward one another,鈥 she said.

Barabino shared the story of 鈥渉idden figure鈥 Gladys B. West, whose research laid the groundwork for today鈥檚 global positioning systems (GPS). 鈥淎s Olin engineers I believe each of you will have your own personal opportunity to make an impact, just as Gladys West did. How you handle these opportunities will determine your path.鈥

鈥淏egin to trust your own internal GPS,鈥 she urged. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e earned that trust. But never be afraid to re-calculate. Going back and getting it right is vital in work, in life, as friends, as professionals, as parents鈥 We wish you safe, successful, and meaningful travels!鈥

Rob Martello speaking at commencement

Rob Martello, professor of the history of science and technology, speaks to the audience on behalf of Olin faculty and staff. Photo by Kristie Dean.

The Olin Paradigm

Rob Martello, professor of the history of science and technology, was nominated by the Class of 2023 to speak on behalf of Olin faculty and staff. He addressed 鈥渢he class that walked with Olin during the pandemic.鈥 Recognizing the challenge of navigating college during the onset of a global pandemic, Martello emphasized to the graduates, 鈥淲e do not take you for granted鈥攜ou are our heroes.鈥

Martello spoke about paradigms鈥攕pecifically, the 鈥淥lin Paradigm.鈥 Paradigms are worldviews or mindsets we use to make sense of our reality and shape the way we see things, he explained. The Olin Paradigm, said Martello, is 鈥淣ot something to take for granted.鈥

He signed off, 鈥渦ntil we meet again.鈥

Isabel Serrato speaking at commencement

Isabel Serrato, Class Commencement Speaker, addresses classmates on May 14, 2023. Photo by Kristie Dean.

More than just engineers

Nominated by her peers to give remarks on behalf of the Class of 2023, Isabel Serrato touched on the things about her classmates she will remember and miss the most, especially 鈥渢he supportive community of unique and fantastic individuals that is our class and 黑料社在线观看入口.鈥

鈥淟ooking out into this crowd, I don鈥檛 just see a group of engineering graduates,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 see artists. Organizers. Volunteers. Climbers. Dancers. People that love doing the crossword. Musicians. Amateur radio enthusiasts. I see complex, interesting, engaging individuals. I see people.鈥

鈥淲hen we were rather forcefully separated at the beginning of the pandemic,鈥 she remembers having virtual lunch with classmates between QEA and ModSim, holding club and project team meetings across world time zones, volunteering for virtual Candidates Weekends and virtual school tours. 鈥淓ven while we were apart, we kept the Olin spirit together.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e seen how this class can make wonderful, positive changes in the communities we are a part of, and I鈥檓 so excited to see what everyone does after graduation,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e should celebrate everything that makes our class unique, and everything that makes us special. Because, yes, we鈥檙e an engineering school. But we're a lot more than just engineers.鈥

Shirley Malcom at commencement

Dr. Shirley Malcom, Senior Advisor and Director of the SEA Change initiative at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), delivers an inspiring address as Olin鈥檚 featured 2023 Commencement speaker and receives Honorary Degree. Photo by Kristie Dean.

Leave things better than we found them

Dr. Shirley Malcom addressed the graduates as Olin鈥檚 featured commencement speaker. She imparted invaluable words of wisdom learned over a lifetime dedicated to STEMM and social justice, and influenced by her coming of age during the convergence of the civil rights movement and the Space Race.

Malcom was born in the late 1940s in Birmingham, Alabama, the heart of the Jim Crow South. She described herself as an 鈥渦nlikely scientist.鈥 Growing up, 鈥淚 saw no women in science or engineering.鈥 Later at the University of Washington, 鈥淚 was almost always the only Black woman, and sometimes the only woman.鈥

While benefitting from the increased access to science and math education spurred by the Space Race, Malcom, at the same time, lived through the horrors and upheaval of the civil rights struggles of the 50s and 60s.

As Malcom made her way through college, 鈥淚 appreciated the privilege I had been given to leave the South for an education. Study in science and engineering is challenging enough without also dealing with the assumptions and expectations of others about who I was and what I was and was not capable of becoming.鈥

鈥淓ven then, I knew we needed more inclusion and fewer naysayers,鈥 said Malcom. 鈥淚 knew that things had to change, that change was coming and that I had to be, wanted to be, an instrument of the change I wanted to see.鈥 She urged the graduates to continue to, in the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., bend the arc of the moral universe toward justice, and to channel their energy to make the world better.

Malcom concluded with this message to the Class of 2023: 鈥淚 am thrilled by the idea that eighty-seven Olin-educated graduates are moving out into the world; graduates with very different lenses and perspectives, able to apply these wherever you land, to make an impact and to make change happen.鈥


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