• Apple News
  • Apply
  • Multimedia
  • Newsletter
  • Photo Gallery
  • Student Media
    • NewsWatch
    • Rebel Radio
    • The Daily Mississippian
    • The Ole MIss
Saturday, March 7, 2026
No Result
View All Result
The Daily Mississippian
  • News
    • All
    • ° Associated Student Body
    • ° Breaking News
    • ° Campus
    • ° National
    • ° Oxford
    • ° Prepping for Primaries
    • ° State
    UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

    UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

    New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford

    African American Studies Program hosts annual Black History Month open mic night

    ‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

    ‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

    New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford

    19 students selected for UM’s Columns Society

    Mississippi lawmaker looks to clear the haze on ibogaine

    Mississippi lawmaker looks to clear the haze on ibogaine

    Jones touts success in State of the ASB Address

    Jones touts success in State of the ASB Address

  • Arts & Culture
    • All
    • ° Events
    • ° Features
    • ° Listicles
    • ° Reviews
    Bouré executive chef uncorks new menu

    Bouré executive chef uncorks new menu

    Bruno Mars delivers nothing new on ‘The Romantic’

    Bruno Mars delivers nothing new on ‘The Romantic’

    Half-Assembled Trio transcends typical saxophone sounds

    Half-Assembled Trio transcends typical saxophone sounds

    Echoes of excellence: honoring Black musical heritage

    Echoes of excellence: honoring Black musical heritage

    Aminata Ba named 2026 Truman finalist

    Aminata Ba named 2026 Truman finalist

    Who has the cheapest groceries in Oxford?

    Who has the cheapest groceries in Oxford?

  • Sports
    • All
    • ° Baseball
    • ° Basketball
    • ° Cross Country
    • ° Football
    • ° Golf
    • ° Rifle
    • ° Soccer
    • ° Softball
    • ° Tennis
    • ° Track & Field
    • ° Volleyball
    Inside Evan Thornton-Sherman’s rise as a Rebel track star

    Inside Evan Thornton-Sherman’s rise as a Rebel track star

    Ole Miss Men’s Basketball snaps 10-game losing streak

    Ole Miss Men’s Basketball snaps 10-game losing streak

    Rebel Baseball head coach Mike Bianco continues historic career in 26th season

    Rebel Baseball head coach Mike Bianco continues historic career in 26th season

    Ole Miss Women’s Basketball drops last two regular season games

    Ole Miss Women’s Basketball drops last two regular season games

    Ole Miss Softball finishes 4-0 in weekend tournament

    Ole Miss Softball finishes 4-0 in weekend tournament

    Ole Miss Men’s Golf excels — even without La Sasso

    Ole Miss Men’s Golf excels — even without La Sasso

  • Opinion
    • All
    • ° Ask a Philosopher
    • ° Diary of a Black Girl
    • ° From the Editorial Board
    • ° Lavender Letters
    • ° Letters to the editor
    • ° Magnolia Letters
    Life with Lenora: Antiques host stories and souls

    The people behind the trend: the impact of Black fashion

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    From Beijing to Oxford: Microdramas aren’t killing movie culture

    From Beijing to Oxford: Microdramas aren’t killing movie culture

    Don’t let romance be your oxygen

    Don’t let romance be your oxygen

    Restore Mississippi’s right to referendums!

    Restore Mississippi’s right to referendums!

  • Special Projects
    • All
    • ° It's a Whole New Ball Game
    • ° Jordan Center Symposium
    • ° Rising Tides & Temperatures
    • ° Winter Storm Fern
    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

  • About Us
    • Applications
    • Advertise
    • Archives
    • Classifieds
    • Contact
    • Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26
    • Editorial Board
    • Tips & Corrections
  • Print / e-Editions
  • News
    • All
    • ° Associated Student Body
    • ° Breaking News
    • ° Campus
    • ° National
    • ° Oxford
    • ° Prepping for Primaries
    • ° State
    UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

    UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

    New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford

    African American Studies Program hosts annual Black History Month open mic night

    ‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

    ‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

    New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford

    19 students selected for UM’s Columns Society

    Mississippi lawmaker looks to clear the haze on ibogaine

    Mississippi lawmaker looks to clear the haze on ibogaine

    Jones touts success in State of the ASB Address

    Jones touts success in State of the ASB Address

  • Arts & Culture
    • All
    • ° Events
    • ° Features
    • ° Listicles
    • ° Reviews
    Bouré executive chef uncorks new menu

    Bouré executive chef uncorks new menu

    Bruno Mars delivers nothing new on ‘The Romantic’

    Bruno Mars delivers nothing new on ‘The Romantic’

    Half-Assembled Trio transcends typical saxophone sounds

    Half-Assembled Trio transcends typical saxophone sounds

    Echoes of excellence: honoring Black musical heritage

    Echoes of excellence: honoring Black musical heritage

    Aminata Ba named 2026 Truman finalist

    Aminata Ba named 2026 Truman finalist

    Who has the cheapest groceries in Oxford?

    Who has the cheapest groceries in Oxford?

  • Sports
    • All
    • ° Baseball
    • ° Basketball
    • ° Cross Country
    • ° Football
    • ° Golf
    • ° Rifle
    • ° Soccer
    • ° Softball
    • ° Tennis
    • ° Track & Field
    • ° Volleyball
    Inside Evan Thornton-Sherman’s rise as a Rebel track star

    Inside Evan Thornton-Sherman’s rise as a Rebel track star

    Ole Miss Men’s Basketball snaps 10-game losing streak

    Ole Miss Men’s Basketball snaps 10-game losing streak

    Rebel Baseball head coach Mike Bianco continues historic career in 26th season

    Rebel Baseball head coach Mike Bianco continues historic career in 26th season

    Ole Miss Women’s Basketball drops last two regular season games

    Ole Miss Women’s Basketball drops last two regular season games

    Ole Miss Softball finishes 4-0 in weekend tournament

    Ole Miss Softball finishes 4-0 in weekend tournament

    Ole Miss Men’s Golf excels — even without La Sasso

    Ole Miss Men’s Golf excels — even without La Sasso

  • Opinion
    • All
    • ° Ask a Philosopher
    • ° Diary of a Black Girl
    • ° From the Editorial Board
    • ° Lavender Letters
    • ° Letters to the editor
    • ° Magnolia Letters
    Life with Lenora: Antiques host stories and souls

    The people behind the trend: the impact of Black fashion

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    ‘What you do matters’: ASB can only accomplish so much

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    From Beijing to Oxford: Microdramas aren’t killing movie culture

    From Beijing to Oxford: Microdramas aren’t killing movie culture

    Don’t let romance be your oxygen

    Don’t let romance be your oxygen

    Restore Mississippi’s right to referendums!

    Restore Mississippi’s right to referendums!

  • Special Projects
    • All
    • ° It's a Whole New Ball Game
    • ° Jordan Center Symposium
    • ° Rising Tides & Temperatures
    • ° Winter Storm Fern
    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

  • About Us
    • Applications
    • Advertise
    • Archives
    • Classifieds
    • Contact
    • Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26
    • Editorial Board
    • Tips & Corrections
  • Print / e-Editions
No Result
View All Result
The Daily Mississippian
No Result
View All Result

Seniors prepare to step into the world

Violet JirabyViolet Jira
April 22, 2022
Reading Time: 5 mins read

Across the nation, undergraduate seniors are watching their final days of college life set on the horizon. At the University of Mississippi, graduation is a mere 13 days away. Next month, hundreds of thousands of college seniors across the country will toss their caps to the sky and step into a world that is just beginning to gain its footing again. 

Graphic by: Violet Jira

State and local governments have begun to treat COVID-19 as endemic. Mask mandates have been dropped and businesses are bringing their employees back to the office. No matter what their next step is — graduate studies, family life, professional school, entering the workforce, etc. — all of them are braving a new world. 

Most of the students who will move their tassels this year graduated high school in 2018, in a world that is a far cry from the one we live in today. Their college experience is sliced neatly in half: before and after. Like all of us, these seniors are unwittingly overfamiliar with what it means to transition. 

For MyKayla Williamson, the transition started long before the pandemic did. 

“I am a first-generation college student from the small, rural southeast Mississippi town Waynesboro,” she said. 

Waynesboro, east of Laurel and south of Meridian, has a population that is just one-fifth that of Oxford’s. 

“Coming from a smaller, more rural space, I was navigating an entirely new social sphere. My first-year experience was filled with learning curves and adjustments. Nevertheless, I persisted,” she said. “ I realized early on that being a first-generation student from a lower-income home posed challenges.”

According to a report published by the U.S. Department of Education, a plethora of research shows that first-generation students face challenges in accessing and completing post-secondary education. Being the first to attend college, they cannot benefit from their parent’s experience attending college. 

In absence of the “cultural capital” that the non-first-generation students that surrounded her had, Williamson paved her own way, quickly adjusting to the new environment and excelling. 

“I joined clubs and organizations and sought out constructive programs that would provide mentorship. I learned to view myself as malleable and open to new experiences and critiques,” she said. “By the close of my sophomore year, I held leadership positions in many clubs and organizations that I joined as an eager freshman.”

Williamson’s sophomore year ended just as the pandemic began to tighten its grip on the nation. The smoke around the novel virus had cleared, revealing an impending crisis: COVID-19 was not just another flu.

By the end of spring 2020, the University of Mississippi had swiftly ceased in-person operations. Classes and finals were moved online. Students moved out of their dorms solemnly, with no fanfare. 

On the other side of the state, in Starkville, Kerrigan Clark was wrapping up her freshman year at Mississippi State University. 

“As for my experience overall, I think it was a tad underwhelming. I think that the pandemic had a really big impact on it due to the fact that a lot of things were canceled or moved online, and you just couldn’t get the full experience,” she said. 

Like all of us, though, Clark found that living and being a student through the pandemic taught her a thing or two. 

“I think one thing it really taught me was adaptability,” she said. “I was forced to learn new ways of doing things such as learning or just enjoying life overall.”

Williamson, too, marks the pandemic as having a distinct impact on her enjoyment of her college experience. 

“COVID-19, of course, changed this newfound sense of belonging,” she said. “I was thrusted into a world of not speaking to many of my classmates that I was used to seeing simply because we never thought to exchange numbers or social media.”  

Fast forward a few years later and both Williamson and Clark have more than overcome the challenges that greeted them at the onset of their college careers. 

Williamson will be attending Cornell University to pursue a master’s in archaeology. 

“I am fortunate to have the support of the prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program in this endeavor,” she said. “I am the first student in Cornell’s MA in archaeology program to have the NSF Fellowship. I hope to make an impact in historical and African diaspora archaeology.” 

Clark, too, is continuing her education with the hopes of making an impact. 

“After graduation, I plan to continue my education at MSU pursuing a master of public policy and administration,” she said. “I hope to eventually get a job as a policy analyst and work for a nonprofit in the south.”

Clark, who is finishing her third and final year at MSU, is graduating a year early with the class of 2022. Her decision to do so was largely influenced by funding — college is expensive, and finishing early often means saving money in the long run. However, Clark believes there is value also in taking things slow.

“If someone is thinking about graduating early, I would probably tell them to reconsider. I think back over the past three years, and they went by so fast. So fast that I felt like I was always busy and I sometimes feel like I missed out on some ‘college experiences,’” she said. “Yes, school is so important, but I think I put my mental health on the backburner because I was so focused on getting to the next step to get out. And now that I’m about to be out, I’m honestly pretty anxious about it.”

Many people see graduating college as the first true step into “the real world,” as the entrance into a life devoid of flex dollars, spring break and date parties. It’s the first time you’re really alone in the world, without a safety net to be grateful for when you fall. 

“In some ways graduation will be a step into adulthood with the gain of independence and confidence that come with having a bachelor’s degree,” Elizabeth Swindell, another member of the University of Mississippi’s class of 2022, said. “I am, however, apprehensive to transition into this new stage of life and constantly wonder if I am as prepared as I should be. It will also be difficult to have an ‘in between’ year before grad school which will stall my becoming an ‘official’ adult.”

Swindell, like many seniors, will take a gap year between graduation and professional school. After a year in Dallas, she will return to school and continue working towards her goal of becoming a physician’s assistant. Despite her anxieties about the future, she can look back on her time well spent at the university and offer a token of sound advice. 

“I wish someone had emphasized how much of a growth experience college is. I think a lot of times professors, other adults and peers put too much pressure on students to be the perfect, well-rounded student when that isn’t where anyone starts,” she said. “College is for making and fixing mistakes and learning how to do better the next time.” 

Many might say that perhaps, that is the essence of life in general. 

Tags: GraduationNewsseniorstop story
Previous Post

Masks no longer required on OUT buses

Next Post

Men’s Golf finishes 12th in the SEC Championship

Violet Jira

Violet Jira

Related Posts

UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry
News

UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

March 3, 2026
New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford
News

African American Studies Program hosts annual Black History Month open mic night

March 3, 2026
‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs
News

‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

March 3, 2026
New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford
News

19 students selected for UM’s Columns Society

March 3, 2026
Mississippi lawmaker looks to clear the haze on ibogaine
News

Mississippi lawmaker looks to clear the haze on ibogaine

March 2, 2026
Jones touts success in State of the ASB Address
News

Jones touts success in State of the ASB Address

February 25, 2026
Load More

In Case You Missed It

Inside Evan Thornton-Sherman’s rise as a Rebel track star

Inside Evan Thornton-Sherman’s rise as a Rebel track star

3 days ago
Ole Miss Men’s Basketball snaps 10-game losing streak

Ole Miss Men’s Basketball snaps 10-game losing streak

4 days ago
UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

UM students discuss China’s international strategies with guest speaker Senior Master Sergeant Amanda Scurry

4 days ago
New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford

African American Studies Program hosts annual Black History Month open mic night

4 days ago
‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

‘The Irish Goodbye’: University of Mississippi professor debuts her book of micro-memoirs

4 days ago
New job blues: working students face learning curve in Oxford

19 students selected for UM’s Columns Society

4 days ago
The Daily Mississippian

All Rights Reserved to S. Gale Denley Student Media Center 2019

Navigate Site

  • Apple News
  • Apply
  • Multimedia
  • Newsletter
  • Photo Gallery
  • Student Media

Follow Us

Republish this article

Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Unless otherwise noted, you can republish most of The Daily Mississippian’s stories for free under a Creative Commons license.

For digital publications:
Look for the "Republish This Story" button underneath each story. To republish online, simply click the button, copy the HTML code and paste it into your Content Management System (CMS).
Editorial cartoons and photo essays are not included under the Creative Commons license and therefore do not have the "Republish This Story" button option. To learn more about our cartoon syndication services, click here.
You can’t edit our stories, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style.
You can’t sell or syndicate our stories.
Any website our stories appear on must include a contact for your organization.
If you share our stories on social media, please tag us in your posts using @thedailymississippian on Facebook and @thedm_news on X (formerly Twitter).

For print publications:
You have to credit The Daily Mississippian. We prefer “Author Name, The Daily Mississippian” in the byline. If you’re not able to add the byline, please include a line at the top of the story that reads: “This story was originally published by The Daily Mississippian” and include our website, thedmonline.com.
You can’t edit our stories, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style.
You cannot republish our editorial cartoons, photographs, illustrations or graphics without specific permission (contact our managing editor Michael Guidry for more information). To learn more about our cartoon syndication services, click here.
Our stories may appear on pages with ads, but not ads specifically sold against our stories.
You can’t sell or syndicate our stories.
You can only publish select stories individually — not as a collection.
Any website our stories appear on must include a contact for your organization.
If you have any other questions, contact the Student Media Center at Ole Miss.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Special Projects
  • About Us
    • Applications
    • Advertise
    • Archives
    • Classifieds
    • Contact
    • Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26
    • Editorial Board
    • Tips & Corrections
  • Print / e-Editions

All Rights Reserved to S. Gale Denley Student Media Center 2019

-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00