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After Macalester: Wise Words from Alumni

Diane Saber

Macalester alumni advise recent graduates through the Career Connections working group, helping them navigate uncertainties after graduation.

    By Talia Bank ’23

    With a mission of connecting students and alumni with opportunities to explore and advance their career interests, the Alumni Board鈥檚 Career Connections working group offers alumni panel discussions, an internship database, and career-oriented clubs. Now the group is developing a collection of advice from alumni aimed at recent graduates.

    Diane Saber 鈥78, who has chaired the working group for the past year, leads this new project. Her trailblazing career as an environmental microbiologist has taken her around the world and paved the way for new milestones in renewable energy. Saber got her start as a biology and geology double major at Macalester, later earning a MBA and a PhD in microbiology. She traces many formative experiences to her time at Macalester, from studying abroad in London and Florence to learning the value of nurturing her artistic side, along with her deep love of science. We spoke with Saber about the group鈥檚 goals and how recent graduates can benefit from their work.

    Vision

    鈥淧eople sometimes think about Career Connections in terms of hiring other Mac people for jobs where they work. But that鈥檚 only one part of it. You have to establish yourself within a corporation before you can bring in your cohort, so that approach can be limiting. Your first couple of years post-graduation are supposed to be a foray into the unknown. You have to explore yourself as well as the job universe before you come to terms with what you are going to do next. We think our working group can be helpful in navigating those uncertainties.鈥

    In the Works

    鈥淲e鈥檙e creating a document of advice for students who are one to ten years out. We鈥檝e cast a really wide net, asking for perspectives from all classes, whether you鈥檙e out a year or sixty. The advice that comes back鈥攊t鈥檚 so good. Some of it has to do with a specific career, some of it is just the nuts and bolts of getting a job. My slant was more on understanding your 鈥榳hy.鈥 The expression goes, 鈥楶eople don鈥檛 buy what you do, they buy why you do it.鈥 Finding out your personal 鈥榳hy鈥 is your own journey. That is where you find the connections to what you do in your life.鈥