Westmont Magazine Students Serve as Ambassadors to Alumni

A New Program Connects Students and Alumni to Learn More About the Westmont Experience and How to Build Stronger Ties With Alumni

How can Westmont better meet the needs of alumni? To answer this question, the alumni and parent relations office is sending students to talk to alumni one-on-one. During school breaks, these student ambassadors will sit down with alumni in their hometowns and ask them about their experiences while at Westmont and since they’ve graduated. At the same time, the students will discuss the college today.

“We want to engage alumni in active dialogue to learn about their lives and their perspective on Westmont,” says Teri Bradford Rouse, senior director of alumni and parent relations. “Alumni will have the opportunity to speak directly with some of our finest students and tell them what the college can do to continue playing a valuable part in their lives after they leave campus.”

The alumni office will use the information gathered to better serve alumni. “What we learn will help us form strategic plans, set goals, and discover ways to provide effective and relevant programs and communication to our alumni,” Rouse says.

During the next few years, some of Westmont’s most talented first- and second-year students will meet with more than 1,500 alumni. The program began during spring break in March 2013.

Emily Pihl ’16 belongs to the first group of ambassadors trained during the spring. “I wanted to see what life after Westmont is like and build relationships with alumni,” she says. The first time she visited Westmont with her brother, Zach ’14, she felt a sense of belonging. Connecting with alumni has deepened that feeling.

A native of Tustin, Calif., she has interviewed about a dozen alumni in Orange County, contacting them herself to set up meetings. She talks about her major in education, her minor in Spanish and her plans to teach elementary school.

But mostly she listens to experiences from alumni of all ages. She loved meeting a couple who knew Kenneth Monroe and John Page. She’s surprised at the range of professions she’s encountered and says she hears recurring themes. Alumni describe their time at Westmont as “life-changing,” they value the liberal arts, and they keep in touch with classmates and professors. “It’s been good to see how happy they are and how God has blessed them,” she says.

“Alumni engagement invigorates both campus life and the community of Westmont graduates throughout the world,” Rouse says. “I’m grateful for the many ways alumni share their time and talents with Westmont.”