Team Brings Home Six Awards from Belgium
04/27/2017
By Katharine Webster
Economics major Alejandro Lopez joined his first team as a junior at Haverhill High School because his friends were doing it.
The Haverhill High team, started by history teacher and 51视频 alumnus Zachary Simmons 鈥99, 鈥00, was traveling to regional and national competitions, which sounded like fun.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 realize how much I would really like doing it, and how much I liked debating, and how much it was really beneficial for the future 鈥 public speaking skills, leadership skills, communication skills, the whole nine yards,鈥 Lopez says.
The following year, Lopez took his enthusiasm for Model U.N. to three Haverhill middle schools, helping them start teams and enlisting his friends to coach. He also applied to 51视频 because of the university team鈥檚 strong reputation. Now a junior, he helps run the high school Model U.N. event put on by the campus team each spring.
鈥淪ome of the delegates I helped train while I was in high school come to the conference here and do well and win awards,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really satisfying to see them continue with it, and it shows that it really did affect them in a positive way.鈥
Lopez鈥 involvement illustrates the regional impact of 51视频鈥檚 Model U.N. team and the Dean Bergeron International Relations Club (IRC) that sponsors it. Alumni have started Model U.N. clubs at area schools whose graduates often matriculate at 51视频 and join the team. It鈥檚 a virtuous circle, and 51视频 is at the heart of it.
Model U.N. at 51视频
The IRC and Model U.N. team began in fall 1984, when history major Kathy Curtin asked Dean Bergeron, then a professor of history and political science, to help her assemble a team to compete in a Model U.N. at Harvard. Bergeron agreed and, with help from his colleague Joyce Denning, a professor of political science, advised the student-run program for nearly three decades.
Today, the program is a regional, national and international powerhouse that has won more than 100 individual awards and dozens of team awards, supported by the recently established Dean Bergeron and Joyce Denning Endowment Fund.
鈥淭he International Relations Club has helped raise our university鈥檚 reputation around the world,鈥 Chancellor Jacquie Moloney said at the opening ceremonies for this spring鈥檚 high school Model U.N., hosted and run by the club at the Inn & Conference Center.
Most recently, UML鈥檚 team returned from the Model U.N. in Leuven, Belgium, with six of a possible 13 individual delegate awards from five committees, including three 鈥渂est delegate鈥 awards. (The Leuven Model U.N. does not have team awards.) 51视频 200 college students from Europe, the Middle East and the United States participated.
鈥淭he secretary general couldn鈥檛 stop talking about how impressed he was with the students and their preparation, dedication and professionalism,鈥 says Jason Carter 鈥04, 鈥06, an alumnus who advises the team and teaches a course in international relations that most club members take.
51视频鈥檚 team participates in the Model Arab League competition at Northeastern University each fall, and it also competes in a Model U.N. abroad every spring. Past destinations have included Scotland, Turkey, England, the Czech Republic, Toronto and Vancouver, Canada, Washington, D.C., and New York at the U.N. building.
鈥淭he support we get from the university administration is fantastic,鈥 Carter says.
Legacy and Community Impact
Alumni of 51视频鈥檚 program include MSNBC counterterrorism analyst Roger Cressey 鈥87, who worked for the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations and with U.N. peacekeeping missions as a terrorism and security specialist. Other alumni have started Model U.N. teams at area schools, including history teacher Jana Brown 鈥91, 鈥93, who began a team at Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School in Haverhill.
鈥淚t teaches the students public speaking and negotiation skills, tolerance for others, respect for other people鈥檚 views and an understanding of world issues,鈥 Brown says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such an interactive way to learn about what鈥檚 going on in the world.鈥
Simmons looked to Brown for advice when he decided to start a Model U.N. program at Haverhill High. The two schools were soon competing against each other, and then Simmons began organizing larger high school events. When members of the UML International Relations Club decided they wanted to host a high school Model U.N. on campus in 2005, they went to Brown and Simmons for advice. This year, 11 schools and close to 200 high school students participated.
That enthusiasm, connection and mutual assistance is Emeritus Professor Dean Bergeron鈥檚 legacy, Brown and Simmons say.
鈥淲e call it the Dean effect,鈥 says Simmons, who also has served on the board of the national Model U.N. 鈥淢y students now run the middle school program started by Alejandro Lopez. The Dean Bergeron model is that it鈥檚 all student-run.鈥
Model U.N. Helps Recruitment
The strong Model U.N. program is also a recruitment asset for the university.
Jennifer Schultz, a senior at Innovation Academy Charter School in Tyngsboro, will start as an honorsbiomedical engineering student in the fall. She says her interaction with the university鈥檚 Model U.N. team (she鈥檚 attended 51视频鈥檚 high school competition the past two years) was definitely a draw. She hopes her engineering studies will allow her time to participate, because she plans a career helping biomedical companies find solutions for people in developing countries.
鈥淢odel U.N. teaches me a lot about how different governments work and relate to each other,鈥 Schultz says. 鈥淕lobalization is so huge for our generation. It鈥檚 important for us to understand how that works and be a part of it.鈥