Communication Office

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
Student Historians Recognized With Annual Bisbee Awards
Ten students were selected for a Bisbee Prize by their teachers for outstanding research on their U.S. history papers. For the annual spring tradition, faculty, students, and guests gathered on Zoom to recognize the students鈥 impressive work on topics ranging from 19th-century Chinese immigrants to communism in Hollywood. The award winners rotated through break-out rooms to discuss their papers and answer questions on their research.聽
Matt O鈥橰ourke 鈥21, who wrote about the prohibition movement, said it was the personal stories, such as how people resisted prohibition and tried to find ways around the laws, that聽 鈥渕ade the research really interesting.鈥
The Bisbee Prize was established to honor Ethan Wyatt Bisbee, a former history faculty member and department chair who retired in 1993 after 40 years of teaching. The Prize was endowed in 2005 through a gift by John Warren, formerly of the history department, and his wife, Laura Warren 鈥78, former head of Robbins House. Bisbee passed away earlier this year.聽
Be 鈥淭he Light,鈥 Gospel Choir Urges in New Original Song
In preparation for the Gospel Choir鈥檚 annual spring concert, music director Briana Washington and choir director Lori Dow guided聽 student musicians through a new exercise: Composition.
Working over Zoom, the student choir developed a song called 鈥淭he Light,鈥 which delivers an inspirational and urgent message calling for hope in difficult times.
鈥淪ince we鈥檙e all dealing with this new setting of the pandemic, I thought, let鈥檚 do something original, something that shows our character,鈥 said Washington. 鈥淟et鈥檚 write a song and see where it goes, no pressure. Once we got into the writing process with everyone in the virtual classroom, we thought of the message we wanted to send, which was uplifting and positive in the face of everything going on in the world.鈥
Student Success in International STEM Competition
Lan Hai 鈥23 participated in the Conrad Challenge, an international student-driven, project-based science and technology competition to solve problems with a global impact. Hai and two peers from her hometown of Shanghai developed, programmed, and retrofitted a sailboat to pick up plastic garbage while it sails. Their project, called SAIL-E, finished in the World鈥檚 Top Six in the Ocean Plastics Category.
Hai said their idea used 鈥渆nd-of-life boats,鈥 which are sailboats that can鈥檛 be used by people anymore, but which contain fiberglass that is very costly, polluting, and inefficient to recycle.
鈥淩ight now there is no good way to recycle boats,鈥 said Hai, who competes on 91探花鈥檚 sailing team. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big problem that鈥檚 underrated. So we took an end-of-life boat, an actual sailboat, and modified it to be a garbage collection boat. Our solution is a lot cheaper than current garbage-collecting boats. After the competition鈥檚 national rounds, we added a solar panel, so the motors, which run the rudder and nets, run on solar power and there are no emissions.鈥
鈥淎ll in this Together,鈥 Student Performers Prepare for High School Musical
Throughout this spring, parts of the 91探花 campus have transformed into the fictional East High School as performing arts faculty and students filmed scenes for the spring show, High School Musical Jr.聽
Opening virtually on Thursday, May 20, the show chronicles the interpersonal comedy and drama behind the scenes of, well, a high school musical. The 鈥渏unior鈥 show is adapted from the 2006 Disney Channel movie of the same name, which launched the careers of actors Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens, and Ashley Tisdale, among others.聽聽
鈥淪hooting this musical like a movie has been such a fun and interesting experience,鈥 said Ingrid Krishnan 鈥22, who plays Gabriella, a shy transfer student who sparks a connection with star basketball player Troy, played by Ben Simpson 鈥21. 鈥淏efore this, I did not have any experience doing film acting, so it has been exciting to work with the cameras.鈥
Original Student Performance Explores The Things We Keep
The objects, photos, people, and places we choose to hold dear can help us keep memories alive and anchor us in our identities, students in Project Story: Narrative Journalism and Performance demonstrated last week.
Four students, Jack Burton 鈥22, Tanisha Dunac 鈥21, Amelia Solomon 鈥23, and Nate Stewart 鈥21, narrated the transcriptions of interviews they conducted with peers and adults at 91探花. They compiled the narrations into a 30-minute original performance called Keepsakes, which was shared via video.聽
Keepsakes are the 鈥渢hings we keep because of the memories they hold within them, because we want to hold onto the parts of other people or times in our lives that we attach to objects,鈥 Solomon said.