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Call to Service
July/August 2010
by Ellen McGinnis ’82
Ellen McGinnis ’82 is a partner at the law firm of Haynes
and Boone, LLP.
When asked why I got involved with the Association of Yale
Alumni, I usually answer, “Because somebody asked me.” Jonathan Thalheimer ’79
called and asked if I would be the vice president of programs for the Yale Club
of Dallas. I said yes—and approximately 17 years later I am nearing the end of
my two-year term as chair of the Board of Governors of the AYA. Once I started
volunteering for Yale, I couldn’t stop. I’ve made many new friends and have
been intellectually stimulated and constantly inspired by the impact of the
university and its graduates on the world.
Jonathan called me to service, just as Yale alumni have
been called to service for over 300 years. In 1776, Timothy Dwight, later
Yale’s eighth president, described Yale’s role in this way: “We owe it to
inspire our students … to recognize that they are not to act like inhabitants
of a village … but like citizens of the world.”
When I started my AYA volunteer service, delegates from
classes, clubs, the Graduate School, and the professional schools assembled in
New Haven twice a year to attend a thematic “assembly.” They returned home to
convey what was happening at Yale to their constituencies. The AYA managed
reunions and assisted classes throughout the year. Back then, alumni usually
connected through affiliations with classes, clubs, the Graduate School, or the
professional schools.
In 2006, the AYA embarked on an effort that led to a
strategic plan, “Ambassadors for Yale,” approved by the Yale Corporation in
2007. Today, through the creative leadership and hard work of the AYA board,
staff, and hundreds of volunteers, the AYA is more ambitious in serving all of
our alumni. We not only reach out actively to Yale College and graduate and
professional school alumni, but we also support the establishment of shared
interest and identity groups (SIGs), like the Black Alumni Association, the
Latino Association, Yale Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Alumni
Network, the Life Sciences Association, and the Political Union Alumni Association,
to name just a few. We encourage alumni to connect to Yale in the way that
appeals to them.
In the last year, over 5,000 alumni came back to campus for
SIG reunions, and another 1,000 attended off-campus events, like the Yale in
Hollywood conference in Los Angeles, where 325 alumni of all ages and
experience came together to share ideas, network, and connect to each other
through their Yale affiliations. These events have engaged almost as many
alumni as attended Yale College reunions last year.
And we continue to help regional clubs and classes
flourish. We have focused club resources on the seven major cities (Boston,
Chicago, Los Angeles, New Haven, New York, San Francisco, Washington, DC) where
the majority of our alumni live. After successfully helping each of those clubs
to implement strategic planning and to strengthen local engagement, we are
turning to better support our next tier of clubs, in Maryland, Seattle,
Philadelphia, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Georgia, Colorado, and Westchester.
The heart of the strategic plan, and what draws all of our
efforts together, is a call to service. Alumni are called to serve each other,
Yale, and, through their communities, the world. This is especially manifest in
three new endeavors of the AYA. By the time you read this, Yale alumni all over
the world will have participated in the second annual Yale Global Day of
Service, on May 15, 2010. On the 2009 Day of Service, 3,500 Yale alumni and
friends at 180 sites in 13 countries worked in their local communities to give
back. Alumni in the Yale Global Alumni Leadership Exchange have traveled to
Australia, Japan, and, soon, Turkey, to educate foreign universities and their
alumni about alumni relations. The Yale Service Corps has brought alumni and
students together to build homes, provide medical care, and teach arts and
music to extremely poor communities in the Dominican Republic, Monterrey,
Mexico, and Brazil.
All of these accomplishments are volunteer-driven. Many of
them were conceived by volunteers who motivated other volunteers and the AYA to
make it happen.
When you talk to a Yale alum about Yale, she will often
say, “Yale changed my life.” It’s true for me. I’m proud and grateful to have
been a part of the AYA as it engages alumni to change lives.
Thanks, Jonathan. |
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