The Coat of Arms Issue 48.5

Page 1

Volume 48, Number 5

Menlo School, Atherton, California

Thursday, May 12, 2022

The Coat of Arms serving Menlo's upper school since 1973

Taking the Road Less Traveled: Seniors Explore Unconventional Post-Graduation Paths by ERICA FENYO

College sweatshirts abound and students rush to update their Instagram bios as seniors receive their acceptances and decide which university to attend next year. However, not all Menlo students choose the “standard” path following attending a high school: gap years, overseas universities, boarding schools, military academies and community colleges also entice some Menlo students. Aside from the usual enrollment in four-year universities, gap years represent Menlo students’ second most prominent choice. Some register for programs while others design their own path. Senior Meera Rajagopal plans to participate in a semester-long program in Europe at the start of her gap year and end with a road trip encompassing California’s national parks. “I’m doing a program called ‘Art History Abroad,’ so you go to six European countries with like 18 kids, and you spend the morning going to certain art installations and museums and learning their history. Then you spend the second half of the day doing art,” Rajagopal said. “In the first semester, I’ll have a program with kids my age, but the second semester will be more like me learning how to be with myself, so I’m nervous for that. […] I’ve set goals for the gap year, and that’s a goal that I have: to be more comfortable by myself.” Senior Tessa Frantz also chose a gap year to have time away from school and learn

more about herself. “I don’t have [my gap year] very structured, which I think is good for me, but I definitely want to backpack and travel,” she said. “The main reason why I want to take a gap year is that I just want to travel on my own and see parts of the world that I haven’t seen before and also just kind of get away from the normal viewpoints and conversations that I’m always having in this area,” Frantz said. Alumna Elisabeth Westermann, ‘21, deferred her admission from Stanford University to attend St. Clare’s International College in Oxford for a year. “I wanted to do something productive that would allow me to live in a new place. One goal for my gap year was to have a stronger humanities background before college,” she said. “Through my classes, I have been able to explore topics like Victorian literature and the Enlightenment in a lot of depth, and that learning experience has been fascinating and transformative,” Westermann said in an email to The Coat of Arms.

Even though she feels homesick at times, Westermann believes her year at Oxford will give her a better sense of direction when she starts as a freshman at Stanford. Although less common, some Menlo students also enroll at foreign colleges. This fall, senior Samantha Floyd will attend the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. “I’ve always wanted to go to school abroad […], experience a lot of cultures and just get out of the bubble,” Floyd said. “I think a big thing that pushed me to think about going abroad was kind of the whole political

situation in America after the 2016 [election].”

College Paths, pg. 5

Staff illustration: Sophie Fang

Menlo Community Shares Culture and Traditions at the Global Expo by ABIGAIL BECKER

Community members, Menlo students and families gathered to celebrate culture and traditions during the 2022 Menlo Global Expo on Sunday, April 24. Menlo usually hosts the Global Expo every two years, but this is the first time the event has occurred since 2019 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. This year, over 50 countries across five continents were represented. According to Global Expo co-organizer Usha Nesamoney, the goal of the

showcase was inclusivity by representing Menlo’s diverse community and giving people an opportunity to share meaningful traditions. At the event on the Loop, booths displayed colorful art, aromatic food and posters adorned with the rich history of the respective countries. Menlo students and parents ran the booths, talking with event-goers interested in learning more about the country. Menlo student attendees each received a Global Expo “passport” where they could answer

questions from each booth to earn Community Engagement credits. Over 15 student groups showcased their talents on the main stage. A few students, for example, performed a lion dance with drums. There was also a Bollywood dance, a classic ballet folklorico, performances by the Upper and Middle School choruses and a fashion showcase of Tongan attire designed by junior William Mahe. “Since [the Global Expo] is about celebrating and displaying different cultures, I got permission to

display my [designs] there,” Mahe said. At the Norway booth, junior Katrina Golob presented a variety of traditional foods, including Norwegian waffles with strawberry jam and meatballs with lingonberry jam. According to Golob, much of Norwegian culture revolves around its cold climate: heavy food and heavy clothing.

Global Expo, pg. 4


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