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ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Goes to Work Day connects liberal arts students to Atlanta’s future

ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Goes to Work Day: Connecting Liberal Arts Students to Atlanta's Future

This spring, ºÚÁϳԹÏ꿉۪s second-year students stepped out of the classroom and into professional workplaces all across Metro Atlanta. Members of the Class of 2028 headed to some of the region’s most influential organizations—from global corporations to community-driven nonprofits.

It was the first-ever ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Goes to Work Day, a new initiative designed by the university’s Career Development office. It showcased one of the many ways that ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø connects its liberal arts mission to Atlanta’s dynamic economy.

As President Kathryn McClymond has emphasized in her recent LinkedIn reflection, Atlanta employers are searching for a particular kind of talent: critical thinkers, persuasive communicators, curious problem solvers, and adaptable learners. These are hallmarks of a liberal arts education, yet employers and students don’t always see the alignment clearly.

“Many students have a hard time envisioning themselves in a professional environment or understanding where to begin in their career development process,†says Karlie Burrell, interim director of Career Development. “Networking opportunities like these help students understand that nobody’s career development process is linear.â€

Alumni empower the next generation of leaders

Student using a stethoscope on a medical manikin baby.
Students explored Grady Memorial Hospital on ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Goes to Work Day.

Throughout the day, students toured workplaces, met professionals, observed real projects and asked the kinds of questions that transform uncertainty into clarity. For Ashley Reyes Rosales ’28, her visit to Grady Health System allowed her to explore a workplace community committed to caring for people. Learning about Grady’s mission and connecting with OU alumna and Grady Health Foundation President Joselyn Butler Baker ’91 reaffirmed her aspirations to pursue a career in pharmacy and contribute to medical advancements that can save lives.

“Grady allowed me to see how possible it is to contribute to that drive, as well as Joselyn’s enthusiasm for what she does, gave me motivation to push through all the obstacles and want to continue to pursue my aspirations,†said Reyes Rosales, a chemistry student.

At several career sites, ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø graduates stepped forward to greet students, eager to show how their own OU experience shaped their careers. At The Coca-Cola Company, five alumni—including Debbie Bachmann ’02, now director of customer marketing—took time to share their individual paths.

“I jumped at the chance to meet and talk with them,†Bachmann says. “I hope to see some of them again someday as an employee of The Coca-Cola Company.â€

More than 20 job sites spanned a full cross-section of Atlanta’s economy, including sponsors Atlanta Gas Light and The Coca-Cola Company. These employers all had alumni and employees ready to share their stories with students: Chick-fil-A, Inc., Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Emory University School of Law, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, EY, Grady Health System, Global Payments, The Nature Conservancy, Woodruff Arts Center, Atlanta Braves, Georgia Film Academy, Jonathan W. Johnson LLC, Academy Theatre, Global Payments, HiEd Success, Marsh & Oliver Wyman Actuarial, Inc., Georgia Swarm Professional Lacrosse, International Rescue Committee, and Cox Family Office.

The value of an ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø liberal arts education

While the industries varied, employers echoed a consistent message: today’s most critical workforce needs aren’t just technical, they’re human. They require the ability to analyze, adapt, collaborate, communicate and lead through ambiguity. ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø students, shaped by discussion-driven classes and interdisciplinary inquiry, arrive with these competencies already in motion.

Students sit on a red couch used for Chick-fil-A commercials.
OU students sit on the couch used in Chick-fil-A’s marketing.

These site visits also underscored a powerful theme: strong employer partnerships fuel strong student outcomes. At Chick-fil-A, Inc., students were greeted by several alumni who served on a panel discussion. April Tesmer ’99, a senior financial consultant and proud OU alumna, was one of those, and her message to the students was clear.

“From critical thinking and relationship-building to adaptability and service, so much of what I learned at OU continues to show up in my career every day,†she said. “I’m grateful for the opportunity to give back, pay it forward, and remind students that their education is not just preparing them for a first job, but for a lifetime of growth, impact, and purpose.â€

Tesmer’s experience reflects what many Atlanta employers already know. Liberal arts graduates bring versatility and depth to the workplace, qualities that matter more than ever in a rapidly changing economy.

National data support what Atlanta’s employers are seeing firsthand. Surveys from national college and employer associations consistently show alignment between the outcomes of a liberal arts education and the competencies employers consider most essential. Critical thinking, communication, and analytical problem-solving top the list year after year.

ºÚÁϳԹÏ꿉۪s own numbers reinforce that success: 92% of graduates are employed or enrolled in graduate school within a year of graduation.

A day with lasting impact

ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Goes to Work Day accomplished what it set out to do: help students make meaning of their education in real-world contexts, and help employers discover the talent developing in their own backyard.

This event is just one example of the university’s expanding commitment to integrate career readiness with the rigor and breadth of the liberal arts. Additional mentorship programs, employer partnerships, internship pipelines and alumni engagement initiatives continue throughout the year.

As President McClymond emphasizes, the qualities Atlanta employers most need—clear thinkers, strong communicators, adaptable problem solvers—are precisely what ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø students cultivate every day.

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