Alumni
Maile Speakman L&C ’10 is in a PhD program in American Studies at Yale University.
Madelyn Bèl-Elska L&C ’12 wrote her Hispanic studies thesis about mixed-race students’ experiences
Julie Peterson L&C ’12 earned her master’s degree in history and is now working in a museum.
Megan Scott-Busenbark L&C’16 taught in Toledo, Spain after graduation. She returned to the U.S. to work for the Office of the Public Defender in Orange County, California, and is now applying to law school.
Julia Withers L&C’16 worked at Oregon Humanities and is now living in California.
Tyler Wayne-Patterson L&C’16 moved to Chicago as part of Teach for America.
Lena Novak L&C’ 17 wrote her senior SOAN thesis about labor camps in Portland, OR, and migrant shelters in Mexico. After graduation, she participated in a border studies program on the US-Mexico border, then moved to Honduras for a year to teach bilingual education. After this linguistic experience, Lena moved to Dallas, TX for two years to participate in the Readers to Leaders program. Now, she is enrolled in
Ethnic studies allowed Lena the chance to take whatever courses she wanted. She enjoyed the intimate class space and getting to know other students in the program that had overlapping interests. She especially enjoyed taking Race and Ethnicity in the U.S., Colonialism in Latin America, and the ES Colloquium.
Favi Schetman L&C ’17 went to teach in Valencia, Spain, after graduating. She is now in a master’s program in migration studies at the University of Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona.
Lani Felicitas L&C ’18 is currently working in organizing and advocacy work.
Maya Litauer-Chan L&C’19 stayed in the Portland community, starting an internship with Emerging
Maya is “really glad that Ethnic Studies exists and encourages people to take advantage as ES gave her the tools to make an analysis and advocate for people of color in spaces where that isn’t happening on an institutional level.” Some of her favorite courses include African-American History and Crime and Punishment. She especially enjoyed being a co-chair for the Ray Warren Symposium.
Maggie Siddens L&C ’19 worked with the Columbia River Correctional Institution’s Liberation Literacy program and their newsletter Phoenix Rising. In March of 2020, she moved to New York City, NY where she worked for the nonprofit foundation Trail Blazers, an organization that makes outdoor educational
Ethnic studies informed her decision to sit on the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion committee for Trail Blazers, a team of fifteen people who consider the language of the program and refine their mission statement to reflect the values of equity. She also uses ES lessons about freedom schools and linguistic justice to structure her lesson plans and make space in her educational sessions for multilingual youth. Her favorite courses include the History of Race and Ethnicity in the U.S. and the Social Life of Money and Exchange.
JahAsia Jacobs L&C ’20 graduated in December of 2020. She hopes to continue her studies about Black
Ethnic studies provided JahAsia with the skills to identify how everyday forms of inequality are historically rooted and take shape across national and cultural contexts.
Calling all ethnic studies alumni! What have you been up to since graduation? Start an interesting job? Discover a hidden talent? Used your liberal arts experience and degree to better the world? Adopt a cat? We’d love to know!
Ethnic Studies is located in Miller Center on the Undergraduate Campus.
MSC: 63
email ethnicstudies@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-7378
fax 503-768-7379
Director Magalí Rabasa
Ethnic Studies
Lewis & Clark
615 S. Palatine Hill Road
Portland OR 97219