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Grove Scholar Profile: Maya Clay

Posted on: December 2nd, 2022 by
Maya Clay

Maya Clay

— By Bailey Durfey, M.A. Higher Education, class of 2023

The start to Maya Gaberil Clay’s college journey was a bit different. After graduating high school in May 2019, Maya was packing up to attend basic training starting her military career while others prepared to start college. After returning to her hometown of Louisville, MS, from basic training, Maya recounts being home for 14 days until the world essentially shut down from Covid-19. However, this did not stop Maya from beginning her college career. Maya began summer school classes that following June and has been in school ever since working for her degree in Allied Health.

Maya’s father is a big part of why she is passionate about becoming a nurse. Maya remembers in detail how nurses made a large impact on her experience with her father’s illness. They always took the time to comfort and explain anything to her family about how her father was being treated. Prior to his death, her father always wanted Maya to open her own clinic and finish her degree. She is determined to fulfill his wishes. Maya also revealed that kidney disease and hypertension runs in her family, so she says, “If I can advocate for someone, help find a cure, help make people feel better, or educate someone,” on these impactful diseases, then she will feel satisfied with her medical career.

In addition to passion for family, Maya has a passion for taking care of our troops. Whether on the battlefield or home front, caring for our troops so they can get back to their families motivates Maya to serve as a medic for the National Guard.

After attending the MOST conference at the University of Mississippi, Maya realized that Ole Miss was her place. After being asked why she loves the University, Maya explains, “Ole Miss is home. The people here really take care of you.” Her involvement with Grove Scholars not only provided her with a community, but is also helping her finish her degree earlier than anticipated. She stated that the continued support of Dr. Flora has made a large impact on her and allowed her to make connections that are helping her achieve her goals.

Along with being a Grove Scholar, Maya is involved in many on and off campus organizations. She is a member of Esteem and the UM pre-nursing society. She holds positions as the membership recruitment and retention co-director for the Black Student Union, the standards chair for the University of Mississippi Gospel Choir and the treasurer for the Student Veterans Association.

After finishing her degree, Maya hopes to attend nursing school and one day open her own clinic. She wants to open free clinics in rural areas of Mississippi to provide healthcare for people who need it the most. Maya is enthusiastic to begin her healthcare career and plans to live by this quote as she works towards her goals, “Help as many people you can, in every way you can, while you can.”

Grove Scholar Profile: Shalini Patel

Posted on: December 2nd, 2022 by
Shalini Patel

Shalini Patel

— By Bailey Durfey, M.A. Higher Education, class of 2023

Shalini Ashok Patel, a native of Oxford, MS, is a Psychology and Spanish double major with two minors in Chemistry and Neuroscience. After graduation, Shalini plans to attend medical school with the goal to become a neurosurgeon. Back when she began thinking about her future in healthcare, she did not know much about mental illness. After learning of her aunt’s diagnosis of schizophrenia, Shalini reflected on the lack of knowledge surrounding the disease and felt called to research more about the illness. After diving into schizophrenia research, Shalini became fascinated by how mental illness lacks physical effects observed by the normal eye. As she continued to learn, she found holes in information and research surrounding mental illness, holes she wants to fill in with her own research.

Back in high school, Patel had the opportunity to shadow in a few departments within the hospital. When speaking about her experience shadowing different surgeries in the hospital, she said, “I never wanted to leave.” She found it exciting and fun, and immediately realized that she wanted to be surgeon.

When Shalini first came to college, she had no idea what to expect, and was worried about how she was going to do. Thankfully, Grove Scholars provided an opportunity for her to take classes at the university in the summer before her freshman year. This experience allowed her to understand what college classes were like and see how they were structured. When asked about this experience, Shalini says, “I was very grateful to take the college classes before school started, and it gave me a head start into understanding how to be successful in college.”

Shalini credits FASTrack, Grove Scholars, and Jumpstart throughout her collegiate experience, describing how the continued support and encouragement influenced her time at the University of Mississippi. Not only did the faculty and staff help her through her first year and beyond, but she also found a tight knit community with the Grove Scholars. She was able to make friends before school even began and those relationships have continued throughout her time on campus.

Along with being a Grove Scholar, Shalini is a member of the homecoming committee for SAA, a Teaching Assistant for Biology 103 labs, an NSLS member, a Provost Scholar, the treasurer for the Psychology Club, a Biology 160 & 162 mentor, and works at the National Center for Physical Acoustics. She also has been the social event chair for Women in Cybersecurity, ASB freshman council member, a RASA peer mentor, and has worked at the Diversity and Community Engagement Center at UM. When Shalini reflects on her time as a student here, she is filled with gratitude at being able to be a part of the Grove Scholars family. With graduation looming in May, she is eagerly anticipating beginning medical career and see what the world has in store!

Grove Scholar Profile: Jon’na Bailey

Posted on: November 4th, 2019 by
Jon’na Bailey

Jon’na Bailey

— By Paris Payne, Journalism ’21

Growing up in the small town of Pickens, Miss., Sophomore Jon’na Bailey has always longed to outgrow her tiny setting. With only a handful of medical professionals in the area and most of them being Family Nurse Practitioners. Bailey decided to put her all into becoming a pediatrician.

Jon’na Bailey’s determination drove her throughout high school and continued on into college.

Bailey has been coming to the University of Mississippi campus ever since 2012 when her brother attended the university. In addition to following in her brother’s footsteps, the welcoming environment and smiling faces helped solidify Bailey’s decision to attend Ole Miss.

“It’s just always felt like home. Everybody was so welcoming. When we came for my brother’s orientation, people were constantly helping us and showing us where to go. And I never got that feeling when I went to any other campus in Mississippi,” Bailey said.

She jumped right into campus life, getting involved in organizations all across campus.

In addition to being a Grove Scholar, Bailey has served as a member of IMAGE and the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA). She is currently a community assistant, logistics manager for the ASB Outreach Board, FASTrack peer leader and an UM Connect mentor.

Through Grove Scholars’ internship program, Bailey was given the opportunity to shadow Dr. Morgan McLeod this summer. She worked alongside Dr. McLeod at Wallace R. Conerly Critical Care Hospital and Winfred L. Wiser Hospital for Women and Infants, as well as, other smaller clinics in the surrounding area.

The experience gave Bailey a taste of the medical life she had dreamed about. She saw everything from vaccinations to amputee patients, and she observed diligently alongside medical students and interns.

“I thought I wouldn’t enjoy the hospital as much as I did, because hospitals are a bit faster paced. But I honestly enjoyed [the hospital] more. It was consistent every day, and you’re going to have more than one patient every day.”

Bailey credits being a Grove Scholar with helping her get the opportunity to shadow Dr. McLeod.

“Being a Grove Scholar is like being a part of this smaller Ole Miss family,” Bailey said. “It’s filled with people who have experienced or are experiencing the same thing as me. It has provided me with friendships, opportunities and connections.”

Bailey remains enthusiastic on her journey towards medical school as she works to complete her undergraduate degree in Biology.

Pittman Gift Sparks George Hall Renovation

Posted on: November 4th, 2019 by

A Place to Thrive

SEPTEMBER 9, 2019 BY BILL DABNEY

Every time Renvy Pittman travels to the University of Mississippi she makes a point to visit her favorite students – the entering freshmen selected to participate in the Grove Scholars program.

In 2014, support from Pittman – a Los Angeles, California, resident and UM alumna – provided scholarships and programming to 12 students interested in pursuing degrees in science, technology, engineering or mathematics (STEM). These students became the first Grove Scholars, and the program has been near to Pittman’s heart ever since.

Now, the Jackson, Mississippi, native wants the scholars to have a space of their own. With a recent $175,000 gift, Pittman enabled renovations to begin at George Hall – the newly designated home for the FASTrack Learning Community and Grove Scholars on the Oxford campus.

“My hope is that this gift will help create beautiful spaces toward which students will gravitate and feel comfortable spending time together, interacting with each other and with FASTrack and Grove Scholars staff,” Pittman said, adding that offices for FASTrack and Grove Scholars staff were previously located in three buildings.

“An additional goal of the renovation is to create an optimal working environment for the staff,” she said. “We feel the more time the students are close to the staff, the better we will be able to support them. In George Hall, we can bring everyone together.”

The building, named for the late U.S. Sen. J.P.Z. George, was constructed in 1920 and repurposed in 1949 to be a men’s dormitory. It was converted in 1973 to house the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders and the Speech and Hearing Center, which have recently relocated to UM’s South Oxford Center.

“We had been waiting for a building to become available in the center of campus and George Hall fits the bill,” Pittman said.

Second- and third-story renovations began in the spring and will be used for the current academic year, giving students temporary spaces for both independent and group study. First floor renovations – scheduled to begin in 2020 – will provide a colorful, welcoming place for students to enjoy comfortable communal furnishings and state-of-the-art technology.

“Almost all of the first floor will be devoted to space for students, particularly the open community space. This is what we are most excited about,” said Maura Scully Murry, director of FASTrack Learning Community.

“Our primary focus is to help first-year students transition successfully into college,” she continued. “This new space helps us connect students so they feel an immediate sense of belonging and academic purpose. Now, we are just across the street from our Living Learning Community in Burns Hall with new opportunities to integrate the academic experience with students’ daily college lives.”

FASTrack serves over 400 new students annually who benefit from smaller and enhanced classes, individualized advising and mentoring, and a community of supportive peers. FASTrack encompasses an array of unique program options including Grove Scholars Program, Living Learning Community, student leadership opportunities, Ole Miss Opportunity (OMO) support, and FASTrack summer scholarships.

Holly Reynolds, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts, shares Murry’s enthusiasm for centralizing the programs: “We greatly appreciate Renvy’s generosity in supporting our scholars through the years and particularly her interest in establishing a place they can call their own. This will mean the world to them.”

The Grove Scholars program has received support from Pittman over the past six years, serving nearly 100 students in that time. Grove Scholars helps improve students’ chances of graduating. It all begins with a summer bridge program for incoming first-year participants to take a math and science course for academic credit. Students, all of whom continue in the program through graduation, also are offered tutoring, social events and exposure to labs and lectures on campus.

To participate, students who have an interest in STEM or health-related professions must first qualify for Ole Miss Opportunity (OMO) – a program for lower income Mississippi students who have a high school GPA of at least 3.0.

“Most students experience a significant culture shock when arriving at college for their first year,” said E. Gray Flora IV, director of Grove Scholars and senior academic mentor for FASTrack.

“Grove Scholars assists in the transition to college by bringing students on campus the summer before their freshman year and surrounding them with support from staff and a group of highly motivated peers. This pivotal time spent on campus in the summer allows students to feel more comfortable socially and academically at our university before the larger wave of students arrives in late August.”

Flora said Pittman’s gifts to the university will benefit countless generations of scholars.

“Her vision and generosity are extraordinary and, quite frankly, they’ve been transformational in the lives of so many young Mississippians. She has laid the groundwork for those in our program to flourish, and we are all just so grateful to her,” he said.

“It’s one thing to say, ‘Yes, you can have access to the University of Mississippi,’ but it’s another thing to give OMO recipients equitable resources to really be able to thrive at a major public university. That is what Ms. Pittman does for our students.”

An interior designer and an active member of the UM Foundation board of directors, Pittman is also involved in many areas of her community, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In her free time, she enjoys spending time with her two grandsons.

To help support the FASTrack or Grove Scholars programs, contact Denson Hollis, executive director of development, at 662-915-5092 or dhollis@olemiss.edu.

To learn more about the FASTrack Learning Community, go to https://fastrack.olemiss.edu/.

For more information and student profiles, visit Grove Scholars online: http://grovescholars.olemiss.edu.

Grove Scholars Profile: Janeisha Simpson

Posted on: February 25th, 2019 by

— By Anne Watkins Tyson, IMC ’19

“When I first got to Ole Miss, I was unsure. But, now I can’t imagine myself anywhere else.”

Janeisha Simpson, a senior from Lexington, Mississippi, is thankful to be a student at the University of Mississippi where she can be a part of the Grove Scholars program.

She began her studies as a Biology major, but she is now a Psychology and Nursing major. “Psychology is just more interesting to me,” she remarks over coffee in a campus café. She loves interacting with people, especially kids, and wants to do this everyday as a career.

Janeisha remembers telling her parents she knows she wants to work with kids. This desire was confirmed in a developmental psychology course at Ole Miss. “It is what made me fall in love with my major. It was all about children and their brains,” she says. “When they are so young, you get to know them, help them and have an effect on how they grow up.”

After Janeisha’s college application was received by the previous director of Grove Scholars, she received a call asking if she was interested in summer school.

She smiles at her coffee as she remembers her answer, “Sure, why not?”

The summer before her college career began, she was honored to meet the Grove Scholars, old and new, learn the background of the program and become acclimated with the community that would soon become her biggest supporters.

The Grove Scholars were encouarged to think of themselves as trees in the grove on campus. Once one tree has grown, you want to plant another tree. And then, you want to show that tree how to grow. “The upperclassmen have all been here for us. Now, we want to pass the motivation and the encouragement to the younger people in the program,” Janeisha says. Just like her heart for molding children into the best they can be, she has a heart for leading those younger than her in the program.

At first, Janeisha planned on going to a community college after graduating from her high school, Holmes County Central High School. But that changed when she came to a visitor day on the UM campus. She was smitten and has not looked back.

“I am so happy that I chose Ole Miss, but I am happier that Ole Miss chose me.”

Along with Grove Scholars, Janeisha also has leadership roles and involvement across campus. She belongs to the University of Mississippi Minority Association of Pre-Medical Students, I.Team, College Corps, Black Student Union and is on on the executive board of Esteem. When she first got to Ole Miss, Janeisha reflects that she was painfully shy. “Grove Scholars, though, opens you up because it brings you around people who are interested in fields like you, yet we’re all different. It has opened me up to many different avenues. I have gotten to make so many different connections through all of my fellow Grove Scholars.”

When asked about what her biggest takeaway from Grove Scholars is, she answers that “we’re just one big family.”

Janeisha describes the fellowship of Grove Scholars by painting a picture of their meetings. They share news about their community, what is going on in their lives, what is going on across campus and pieces of advice. In these meetings, the Grove Scholars are also encouraged in their endeavors by Gray Flora, the Director of the program, and by different speakers who are involved in their STEM and health-related professions.

“These skills and things that we are learning are not just for our classes. We are being pushed to go out and to follow our dreams. We are constantly motivated as Grove Scholars… Looking back, I really don’t know how it happened. But, I am so grateful that I am a part of the Grove Scholars program.”

Grove Scholar Profile: Jessica Cole

Posted on: July 25th, 2018 by

April 30, 2017 – By Anne Watkins Tyson, IMC ’19

“I’m known as the bee girl. I just love bees,” Jessica Cole describes. Since starting at the University of Mississippi in the fall of 2015, she has discovered her passion for bees, science, research and teaching.

Jessica has always been drawn to science. She reminisces, “Science was always my love. And, you never forget your first.”

Cole is a Biology major with a Professional Writing minor. She discusses why she has always loved science while sitting on a picnic table outside of what has become her Ole Miss home, Hume Hall. She describes her field as attractive because you’re always learning something new.

Although Cole attended the Mississippi School of the Arts her junior and senior year of high school, living away from her hometown of Meridian, Mississippi, she figured that it would be an adjustment entering the University of Mississippi and transitioning from her high school major in Theatre to a major focused on science.

Cole credits the Grove Scholars and FASTrack programs with helping her integrate into the cohort lifestyle she wanted and needed in college.

“Even if we [Grove Scholars] don’t have the same major, we’re all tracking together during our time in school. We learn a whole lot from each other by talking about similarities and classes and life,” Cole says. When Ms. Cole is not interacting with her fellow Grove Scholars, she is serving her fellow students at writing consulting at the University of Mississippi Writing Center.

Gray Flora, Director of Grove Scholars, helped Cole find her niche at Ole Miss. She believes that if it were not for him, she would not be this path that makes her so excited and passionate about learning, researching and exploring a future in science. When asked what Grove Scholars means to her, Cole answers, “It means having someone who actually cares about my future. It is being able to communicate with like-minded people who care.” Her advisers help to make sure she is on track to graduate, but the Grove Scholars’ staff cares about all she wants to do and accomplish, even after graduation. “It’s awesome. Even if you’re awkward like me, Gray Flora looks out for me and connects me with the right people to talk to about anything and everything.”

Beginning in the Fall of 2018, Cole will attend the University of Vermont to pursue her PhD in Biology. “I’m going to grad school for bees,” she exclaims. “I really don’t think anyone ever feels prepared for grad school; yet, I know that I have all the tools I need now, to start grad school. I just won’t know how I’ll be using them until I get there.”

When asked what her dream job is, there is not a breath before she answers. She wants to be a professor at a university and have her own bee research lab. “That’s the dream,” she smiles.

“I want to make a difference in at least one student’s life in realizing her or his path. I want to help someone find their way because I am so happy now that I’ve found my way.”

Grove Scholar Profile: Myrical Taylor

Posted on: March 9th, 2018 by

March 9, 2018  | By Anne Watkins Tyson

Myrical Taylor

Myrical Taylor. Photo by Anne Watkins Tyson

Myrical Taylor grew up in Clarksdale, Mississippi, a small town in the Mississippi Delta where 40 percent of the residents live below the poverty line and where most students who graduate from her high school, Coahoma County High school, remain close to home.

Taylor was determined to change this course. Since she was a little girl, Taylor has wanted to be a nurse, and she loves to travel. She knew that college was her first step. She is so sure of her desire to be a nurse that when she goes to the doctor, she asks for a nurse practitioner.

“I like to see what I’ll be doing one day.”

Coming to Ole Miss was an easy decision for two reasons. First, both of her older brothers graduated from Ole Miss, so it was natural for her to follow their footsteps. Second, Grove Scholars reached out to her during her senior year and asked if she wanted to start college early. She said, “Of course!”

Taylor is now a senior majoring in Psychology, with a minor in Sociology. Her next step is nursing school, which she hopes to enter in the fall.

Taylor graduated from her county’s public high school with 60 other students. She describes her high school experience as enjoyable, but that she did not receive all the resources that many of her peers at Ole Miss received. She feels like she had to work twice as hard as others when she arrived at Ole Miss; but, since her freshman year she has had the resources, the mentors and the encouragement to do the work.

Taylor has traveled often in the past year and had many eye-opening experiences, especially in large cities where she came face to face with many homeless people.

“This made me realize that I want to use my skills and my education to work together with different people in creating facilities to help homeless people. They don’t just need medical help, though. Many need psychological help.”

Taylor never thought that her passion would be homelessness. She now has a different perspective on where her education will take her than when she began her journey at Ole Miss. She wants to help homeless people get off the street, help with their illnesses and help to make their lives better.

The Grove Scholars program has been a great backbone for Taylor. “It has given me a sense of community,” she says. “We all come from the same type of environment.”

She talks about how significant it has been to be a part of Grove Scholars, a small and close-knit community in the much larger community of Ole Miss. From Grove Scholars community meetings to the many resources at her fingertips to one-on-one meetings with Director Gray Flora to the other endless opportunities, Grove Scholars has helped to keep Taylor on her track to success.

Taylor was not used to being a part of such a big place. In comparison, the University of Mississippi and Oxford are much larger than Clarksdale.

“Just like what could have happened to me at Ole Miss, homeless people can be swept under the rug in big cities. I want to help them find their place in their community.”

After graduation, Taylor will head to Memphis, TN where she will enroll at the University of Tennessee Health Sciences’ Accelerated Nursing program.

Grove Scholar Profile: Deshauntra Green

Posted on: May 22nd, 2017 by

MAY 25, 2017  |  By BRITTANEE WALLACE (BA IMC ’17)

Photo by Anne Watkins Tyson

Deshauntra Green, a junior from Fayette, Mississippi. Photo by Brittanee Wallace

Afternoon light pours into Coulter Hall, a second home for chemistry students like Deshauntra Green.

“Over the course of the three years I’ve been here at Ole Miss, I have been given such a sense of community.”

A Fayette, Mississippi native, Deshauntra is a junior Forensic Chemistry major. She minors in Math and is a part of the Grove Scholar program.

She gravitated to Ole Miss when she heard about the Forensic Chemistry program and how it was nationally recognized.

Then, on Deshauntra’s way home from orientation, she got a call from one of the deans of the College of Liberal Arts, offering her a chance to go to summer school before her freshmen year as a Grove Scholar.

“Sure, why not?” she answered.

While taking her summer courses, Deshauntra undoubtedly fell in love with Ole Miss.

Fellow members of the Grove Scholars were the first people she met at Ole Miss.

“They have become my best friends. We relieve stress together. We get each other.”

Gray Flora, current Direct of the GS, is a mentor to all of the Grove Scholars, gearing the students towards success. The class above Deshauntra’s class are her peer mentors.

“We are a ‘family’ and it has been beneficial to me in so many ways. I turn to my mentors for everything: how to apply for jobs, how to handle a program, how to deal with scholarships, how to plan our schedules, how to balance the load, etc.”

She dreams of becoming a toxicologist for either the DEA or the FBI.

“It just so happens that most Grove Scholars are really involved all around campus.”

Involved is an understatement for Deshauntra. In addition to being a Grove Scholar, she is a peer mentor for FASTrack, President of the Ole Miss chapter of the National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers (NOBCChE), Teaching Assistant for the Chemistry department, and works at the Jackson Avenue Center Mathematics Lab.

Deshauntra wants to see Grove Scholars’ profile raised on campus. “We were chosen. It has been an honor to be a Grove Scholar.”

Grove Scholar Profile: Tiara Mabry

Posted on: May 22nd, 2017 by

MAY 25, 2017  |  By BRITTANEE WALLACE (BA IMC ’17)

Photo by Anne Watkins Tyson

Tiara Mabry, Graduate of the Grove Scholars Program from Tupelo, Mississippi. Photo by Brittanee Wallace

Tiara Mabry’s leadership has established a lasting legacy on the campus of the University of Mississippi. She entered the university with her sights set on pursuing a career that allowed her to promote wellness practices, and established many connections by becoming very involved on campus.

The Tupelo native hit the campus involvement scene confidently her freshman year. Some of her activities include MedLife member, Green Grove ambassador, and University of Mississippi M.O.S.T. Mentor. Mabry says that becoming involved helped enhance her interpersonal skills, but she does encourage future Grove Scholars to assess their time commitments.

“Make sure the things you are involved in are the things you are invested in,” Mabry said.

She has been invested in Grove Scholars since the summer of 2013 where she served as president. As president, Mabry developed leadership skills and identified resources to assist her in the refining of her interest in patient care.

Mabry is the eldest of her siblings and she cared for them since they were young. She credits her grandparents for instilling her with empathy for people.

“I have a lot of grandparents. One of my grandmothers used to work with mentally handicapped, my other grandmother works at the women’s hospital, and my other grandmother works in the battered women and children’s shelter in Tupelo. The desire to help others runs deep in my family,” Mabry said.

Mabry has chosen midwifery as her vehicle for steering patients toward positive experiences with healthcare. Tiara was admitted into the nursing program at the University of Mississippi and will complete this program next July. After receiving her Bachelor of Science in Nursing she plans to pursue a masters degree so that one day she is able to open her own clinic.

Grove Scholars has played an integral part in shaping Mabry’s leadership skills and as vice president of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Incorporated she’s had ample opportunities to exercise them. She encourages young Grove Scholars to establish connections and take advantage of resources offered through the program.

“Good vibes and positive energy. In college you’re already stressed out about so many different things it’s important to remember that there is some good vibes and positive energy out there and if you just pass a little love around it would be so much easier,” Mabry said.

 

Grove Scholar Profile: Jontae Warren

Posted on: March 29th, 2017 by

MARCH 29, 2017  |  By BRITTANEE WALLACE (BA IMC ’17)

Jontae Warren

For as long as he can remember Jontae has loved science. Photo by Brittanee Wallace

Jontae Warren hears the soft voice of his grandmother wishing him a good night. Moments later, tiny footsteps make the wood floor creek as an exhausted pre-schooler sneaks into the kitchen. He grabs his bedtime essentials: milk, cookies, and a Bill Nye the Science Guy picturebook.

Although his late night readings have cultivated into the reading level of a junior pharmacy student, the common theme of his passion since boyhood is simple; A love for science.

A Booneville, Miss. native, Jontae, has been attending the University of Mississippi every summer since he was in the 8th grade.

“Ever since I grew up I always knew that I wanted to be something in the science area. It started out very general when I was little I would say, I want to be a scientist, mix something, invent something, but then as I got older I started being more specific,” Warren said.

As a young boy, Warren wanted to be a gastroenterologist, but as he learned more about the duties of that career his interest shifted to genetics. Having another change of heart, he decided upon his current major as a pharmacist because he could still help people absent the responsibility of surgery.

Jontae Warren’s summer involvement drove him to Ole Miss.

“ Well when I started coming to summer academy I was going into the 8th grade, after my junior year of high school I came to summer college, and then jump start and it just so happened that the major I decided to go under they (Ole Miss) had one of the best ones.”

His involvement with summer programs has not ended as a full-time student, but instead expanded. He serves as a summer college counselor, and continues his involvement with Grove Scholars. He also actively serves in several student organizations and honor societies: PediaRebs, Phi Delta Chi, University of Mississippi Gospel Choir, Phi Kappa Phi, Gamma Beta Phi, NSC (national society collegiate scholars), Grove Scholars, Golden Key, Competition corp-high school academic competition, and Provost Scholars.

With such a high level of campus involvement and academic responsibilities Warren says that Grove Scholars has played an integral part in his success at the University of Mississippi.

“Grove Scholars is a community, I have people that I can talk to if I have an issue or an accomplishment to share. Gray (Grove Scholars advisor) is very good at having people come and speak to all of us. He tries to find someone that is geared toward all of our majors to help us see what is out there in the world.”

Warren looks forward to exploring the pharmaceutical world as he completes his last semester of his undergraduate degree and continues work on multiple research projects. His white coat ceremony is in August and he knows that his family, friends, and grove scholar cohorts will attend.