What Are You Doing This Summer?
HS & College
Students Speak Out
by Sarah N. Lynch
This summer, Barnard College
junior Hannah Elmer was able to find a way to exercise
her passion for both plants and medieval history—a
subject area where it can be difficult to find work
as an undergrad.
When Hannah’s not busy
doing landscaping for a woman in Connecticut, she spends
her time once a week in a rare book room at Columbia
University helping to catalogue secondary sources and
create a computerized bibliography for the British
Library in London.
All of the secondary source materials that Hannah catalogues
pertain to medieval and renaissance manuscripts. By helping
the British Library to create a searchable database,
it will assist other medieval studies students with their
research.
“I am a medieval studies major and I really enjoy
manuscripts and books,” Hannah said. “Having
done little research papers here and there, I know that
it’s a total hassle to try and get information
on a lot of these manuscripts. The job needs to be done
and there are very few opportunities for any kind of
medieval studies work out there as an undergrad…I’m
not qualified to teach or curate at a museum, so my options
are limited and this is one that fell into my lap,” she
said.
Hannah is the first person
to volunteer to help the British Library. She said
that by doing the project, it would also help her next
semester when it’s
time to do research papers.
“I think that I’ll at least know the places
where I should go for secondary sources if I were doing
a paper on a specific manuscript. I’ll know how
to use my tools better,” she said.
Hannah said that working the other days doing landscaping
provides a nice contrast to her volunteer work at Columbia.
“I’ve done some painting and right now,
I’m working on a design for this woman’s
yard,” she said. “It’s a nice contrast
to being inside and reading all the time and it’s
fun.”
“I’m using some
of my creativity and love of plants to come up with
a good design for her yard.”
Hannah said that she and her boyfriend would also be
taking a three-week vacation in her home state of Washington
where the two will go backpacking in the Cascades.
But Hannah is not the only one doing her fair share
of traveling this summer. Joann Corsetto, who just graduated
Dover High School in Morris County and will be attending
Rutgers University in the fall, recently went on her
first trip abroad.
Because her sister is studying
in Venice, Joann’s
mother decided it was a great excuse for the whole family
to visit Italy. “The architecture of course was
amazing,” Joann said. “The buildings were
so beautiful and we went to a lot of different churches.” Joann
said her favorite part of the trip was traveling everywhere
by gondola. “It’s public transportation,” she
said of the boats. “It was the best way to see
the most stuff in the least amount of time and you can’t
go speeding down the water. It was a leisurely kind of
ride, and I love being on the water.”
Although Joann could make
out some of the Italian thanks to studying other romance
languages in high school, she said the language barrier
at times proved to be difficult. She tried to give
herself a crash course in Italian on the plane ride. “It was a long flight, so I had
a lot of time to study and I picked up stuff as we went
along,” she said. “It was a constant adventure
just trying to figure out what’s going on around
you.”
In addition to traveling this
summer, Joann is also working as a camp counselor at
the Dover Recreation Department in New Jersey. “Basically I’m guiding the
kids through activities and making sure everybody is
participating,” she said.
But most importantly, Joann
is getting ready for her first year of college. “I’m leaning towards
majoring in English, but I’m undecided now,” she
said.#