Beata Angelica

MSFS is about learning who you are in relation to the world. The program challenges the students to question the status quo and search for creative solutions to intractable problems.  Learning through interaction with students and professors of diverse backgrounds is a big part of the MSFS experience.  Above all, MSFS inspires its students to define their individual core principles--principles that are necessary to deal ethically with the privileges and responsibilities of global citizenship.


Hometown

Kargowa, Poland

Undergraduate Experience

George Mason University, Global Affairs

Professional Experience

International Flight Attendant, United Airlines; Program Assistant, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs

Concentration

Foreign Policy and International Security

Internships

Pickering Fellow., U.S. Department of State, Office of Public Diplomacy for European and Eurasian Affairs (Washington, D.C.); Pickering Fellow, U.S. Department of State, U.S. Embassy in Vientiane, Laos

Languages

Polish

Italian

Portuguese

GU International Headlines

Twelve students and eight professors were selected to attend the first Jesuit University Humanitarian Action Network (JUHAN) Conference to learn about the tools necessary to organize disaster relief efforts.
John Buchtel, head of the Special Collections Research Center at Lauinger Library, explains the process of identifying and securing new collections.