Despite all of that national drama, things at the Johnson School are still clicking along. I just want to highlight my day yesterday, and a couple of things that made me feel great about where I am right now. Let me first say that I'd been fighting a general malaise since returning to school -- some form of inertia had taken hold, no doubt due to a successful summer of work and the realization that second year is a lot more relaxed than first. I admit I'd been throttling back on my effort, especially as far as my extracurricular involvement has gone.
Then, yesterday, the Park Fellows held the first of our semi-annual volunteer days at local farm Compos Mentis which doubles as a non-profit benefiting adults with mental health issues. The Compos Mentis program aims to get people back on their feet, and back into school or the workforce.
Last year, I remember what a pleasure it was to get out of the classrooms and breakout rooms of Sage Hall and do some manual labor for the benefit of others.
The other event that reinforced my desire to stay involved and work hard for the benefit of others was the (newly-formed, formerly known as Net Impact) SGE Club meeting. It took place at The Big Red Barn, a nice space reserved for Cornell graduate students, not far from Sage Hall. I just have to hand it to the leadership of the club, including Bailey Stoler, Kevin Johnson, Ryan Kelley, Andrea Findley, Kate Capossela, Britta Von Oessen, Casey Ryan and others for taking what was a largely untapped mass of potential energy and figuring out how to put it to work; it's really a testament to what good organizational design can do.
Instead of maintaining the club as it previously existed -- an umbrella organization for students interested in all things associated with sustainability -- the club's leadership put its collective heads together and took a look at how it could become more relevant. What they came up with is a system where members form affinity groups, based on their more specific interests, within the larger club. For instance, I'd been involved last year in attempting to start a class based on Creative Design for Affordability, a concept popularized by IDEO and the Stanford Design School. By the end of last semester, when I spent a lot of alone time beating down doors of administration and trying to build interest, I was left frustrated and prepared to let the idea die.
But thanks to this new system, an Accelerated MBA student, Charles Lo, began an affinity group based on this very concept. With another student so inspired by these ideas, I'm finding myself reenergized to achieve our goals of organizing the creative energy around Cornell to help business school students get their hands dirty designing new products, and also excited and proud to be a part of the larger SGE Club.
Cornell has been selected to host next year's national Net Impact conference, and it's amazing to see the school leadership focused on innovating and leading the way on how to organize and make a real impact at school, and in the world.