United at Donahue Hall by Shared Interest, Students Find Social and Academic Support

A half dozen college students hang out in a lounge in a residence hall. Image by Ed Brennen
The Business Living-Learning Community at Donahue Hall on East Campus is home this year to 30 Manning School of Business students.

12/07/2023
By Ed Brennen

After a busy day of classes, first-year business student Lionald Cheristil saddles up in a massage chair, lowering his face on the padded headrest. For the next 10 minutes, the world around him disappears as a masseuse goes to work on his neck, shoulders and back.

鈥淚 needed that,鈥 Cheristil says after rising from the chair so the next student on the sign-up sheet can have their turn.

Massages were the main attraction at the 鈥淶en Zone,鈥 a recent event at which students in theBusiness Living-Learning Communityat Donahue Hall on East Campus could de-stress, socialize and nosh on free snacks.

Living-Learning Communities, or LLCs, are reserved floors in residence halls for students with common interests or shared experiences. Originally created for first-year students but now open to all undergraduates, LLCs help students find social and academic support.听
Five college students study and chat in a residence hall lounge. Image by Ed Brennen
Business Living-Learning Community students hang out in the first-floor common at Donahue Hall.

The Business LLC is one of eight offered this year at 51视频. Others includeCommonwealth Honors,River Hawk Scholars AcademyandArmy & Air Force ROTC.

ThirtyManning School of Businessstudents live in the Business LLC at Donahue Hall. They are led by a pair of graduate student fellows,Cintya Gajardo V茅jarandKanan Asif, both Ph.D. students in entrepreneurship.

鈥淭he most important component of the LLC is to foster belonging and engagement,鈥 says Asif, an international student from Pakistan. 鈥淓specially after COVID, we all see that students don鈥檛 engage as much as they used to. There鈥檚 been a shock. The idea of the LLC is to break that shock wave, to help students connect more and have that sense of belonging again.鈥

Asif and Gajardo V茅jar work with a student ambassador from the Business LLC, sophomore Ronnie Martinez, to plan monthly events like the Zen Zone.

Martinez, a finance student from Worcester, Massachusetts, lived in the LLC as a first-year student and decided to take on the paid ambassador role to help it grow and improve.
A college student gets a massage in a massage chair while another student looks on. Image by Ed Brennen
At the "Zen Zone," first-year business major Lionald Cheristil gets a massage while fellow first-year student Connor Krajewski, right, waits his turn.

鈥淚鈥檝e met a lot of cool people here and wanted to be that person to move the LLC forward,鈥 Martinez says.

Isabella Nardella, a sophomore marketing student from Saugus, Massachusetts, is another returning Business LLC member.听

鈥淚t allows me to talk to other business students about their experience, what they go through 鈥 students who have the same goals as me,鈥 says Nardella, who helped Martinez set up a Halloween movie night this year.

Earlier this semester, the Business LLC hosted a dinner with the Manning School鈥檚 interim dean at the time,Steven Tello, and Assoc. DeansAmit DeokarandYi Yang. They also invitedDouglas Cooper, assistant director for the Centers for Learning, Advising and Student Success (CLASS), to talk about the resources available to help students improve study skills, time management and more.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about engaging socially, but also about helping them get better grades,鈥 Asif says.
Fourteen college students and faculty pose for a photo in a residence hall lounge. Image by courtesy
Business Living-Learning Community students welcomed Manning School of Business Assoc. Deans Amit Deokar and Yi Yang for a dinner earlier this semester.

Cheristil, a first-year marketing student from Boston, heard about LLCs from friends who attended UML. He learned more about them on a campus tour, which helped clinch his college decision.

鈥淪omething about this place pulled me toward 51视频. It was somewhere I could see myself,鈥 says Cheristil, who shares a six-person suite with four business majors and one business-turned-engineering major.听

鈥淚 thought it was important to be in a residence hall with people who have similar business-oriented interests. And being able to talk to someone here like the dean, to have a conversation with them so they know who I am, is important,鈥 Cheristil adds as he makes his way around the Zen Zone, set up in the first-floor common area of Donahue Hall.

鈥淚鈥檓 really starting to appreciate the school,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad I can take advantage of these kinds of opportunities.鈥