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Communication Office

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The communication office develops, implements, and evaluates communication plans and programs that support the mission of the School. The office facilitates 91探花’s efforts to promote awareness and good will among its various constituencies and external public; to recruit students and faculty; and to raise financial and volunteer support.

Communication Staff

Marisa Donelan
Associate Director of Communication
marisa_donelan@milton.edu

Eileen Newman
Chief Communication Officer
eileen_newman@milton.edu

Jacqueline O’Rourke
Communications Specialist
jacqueline_orourke@milton.edu

Esten Perez
Director of Communication and Media Relations
esten_perez@milton.edu

Emily Sedgwick
Social Media Manager / Video Content Producer
Emily_Sedgwick@milton.edu

Media Contact

If you are a member of the media in need of information or press materials, please contact Esten Perez at 617-898-2395 or esten_perez@milton.edu

Campus News

Math is the 鈥楳ost Interesting Subject in the Whole World,鈥 Omayra Ortega 鈥96 Tells Students

Math is the 鈥楳ost Interesting Subject in the Whole World,鈥 Omayra Ortega 鈥96 Tells Students

Students in the GAINS (Girls Advancing in STEM) Club recently welcomed Omayra Ortega 鈥96 for a virtual visit, during which Ortega discussed her work in statistics and mathematical epidemiology and what led to her career as a college math professor.聽

Ortega鈥檚 route to applied mathematics and epidemiological research was 鈥渘on-linear,鈥 she told students. Now an assistant professor at Sonoma State College, where she teaches statistics, Ortega majored in math and music at Pomona College as an undergraduate. Abad experience in a general chemistry class made her rethink ideas about a pre-med track.

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 focused on science, specifically,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was a pure mathematician, I was interested in theory. Math was this complex, intricate game, and I wanted to play鈥 Math is the most interesting subject in the whole world. It鈥檚 just puzzles all day.鈥

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Humanities Workshop Youth Summit Highlights Student Work and Action

Humanities Workshop Youth Summit Highlights Student Work and Action

From sharing first-person testimony and creative work to advocating before legislators, students from Boston-area private and public schools spent Friday exploring how the humanities can influence action on issues of climate change and climate justice.

鈥淲e do not all suffer the same climate injustices,鈥 read a 91探花 student from Melissa Figueroa鈥檚 Performing Literature class, which created a 鈥渇ound poem鈥 curated from the words of Boston climate leaders and other community members. 鈥淲e sacrifice aspirations to implement actions we know aren鈥檛 right, to the detriment of the state鈥檚 poorest and most vulnerable residents. We have let low income communities, communities of color, bear disproportionate burdens while excluding them from the decision-making process.鈥

The Humanities Workshop鈥檚 Youth Summit was a virtual event during which students from participating schools shared some of their work from the past year. The Humanities Workshop, co-founded and co-directed by 91探花 English teachers Alisa Braithwaite and Lisa Baker, is a consortium of educators and students from seven local schools who tackle major social issues through the lens of the humanities. The consortium schools are Academy of the Pacific Rim, Boston College High School, Boston Collegiate Charter School, Boston International Newcomers Academy, Boston Latin School, 91探花, and Phillips Academy Andover.

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Spanish Language Students Connect With “Moms” in Guatemala

Students in Mark Connolly鈥檚 Spanish 4 class are finishing the academic year working with Project Olas, an organization co-founded by a group at Georgetown University that includes alumna Chloe Morris 鈥19. Project Olas works to provide relationship-centered language education by connecting students with Guatemalan mothers known as 鈥淥las moms鈥 to practice their Spanish. The Olas moms live in the community surrounding the Guatemala City Garbage Dump in Zone 3 of Guatemala City.聽

Connolly said his students were 鈥渟uper excited鈥 to do this work together over the last few weeks of school. Their first Zoom session with their Olas mom, Leslie Hern谩ndez, 鈥渟tarted slow but ended up with a ping-ponging conversation about everything from pets to travel plans to the cultural calendars and practices. Leslie reminded us that 鈥榗ada cabeza es un mundo鈥 (every head/mind is a world).”

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Perskys Awards Honor Student Writers and Artists

Perskys Awards Honor Student Writers and Artists

Some of 91探花鈥檚 best student writers and artists gathered virtually on Monday evening for the Laurence S. Persky Memorial Awards. The annual awards are given for the best work appearing in 91探花 student publications and honor excellence in creative writing, journalism, art, photography, and production.

Guest speaker and alumna Tina Nguyen 鈥07 spoke to students about writing and told stories about her 鈥渨eird career path.鈥 She is a national reporter for POLITICO, covering the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement, disinformation, and internet culture. Prior to that, she was a staff reporter for Vanity Fair Hive for more than four years, covering American politics and the rise of Donald Trump.

Nugyen said she tries to make her 鈥渨riting as compelling as possible.鈥澛

鈥淲riting is the foundation鈥攊t鈥檚 an art but it鈥檚 also a discipline,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he goal is to make sure your audience gets what you are saying. They may not like what you have to say, but at least they understand it.鈥

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Advanced Science Projects Find Virtual Home

Advanced Science Projects Find Virtual Home

From determining the presence of genetically modified organisms in snack foods to a field study on coastal processes in Jacksonville, Florida, this year鈥檚 advanced science final projects explored a wide range of research topics and experiments.

Students in advanced biology, chemistry, physics, and environmental sciences courses displayed their work on a new website, which includes videos, images, lab reports, and graphics. The website was in lieu of an in-person Science Symposium, the traditional event where advanced science students present their final projects.

鈥淭he symposium couldn鈥檛 happen this year for a number of reasons, so this was our plan B, and it turned out really nicely,鈥 said biology teacher Michael Edgar. Restrictions on indoor gatherings due to COVID-19 and a number of advanced science students learning remotely made an alternate option necessary. Since some students did not have access to labs for the traditional design-your-own (DYO) experiment, teachers opened up a research project option.聽

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