Class of 2023 Graduate Profile: Janelle Racine

Janelle Racine and her daughter.
Janelle Racine and her daughter.

At 19 years old, Janelle Racine was struggling in college, with a 1.7 GPA and at risk of losing her financial aid, she dropped out. At the time, she couldn鈥檛 see how a college education was going to help her. Instead of continuing her pursuit of a degree in environmental science, she got a temporary job as a technician at a factory. At the factory, her lab skills and work ethic earned her a full-time job, and over the next 10 years she worked her way up to an administrative role.

It was then, in 2019, when she started back at the Mount, taking one class at a time. As a working mother to a four-year-old girl, with a husband who was working overnights, she decided she wanted more.

鈥淚 decided it was time to do something just for me, to prove I wasn鈥檛 just a mom and could be something more,鈥 Racine says. 鈥淧lus, I was hoping that the classes I was taking would help me move up in my job, earning me better hours or money and allowing me more time with my daughter.鈥

This time Racine was working toward a degree in business administration and was enjoying her classes, especially Strategic Management with Professor Elmer Eubanks. Her courses opened her eyes to the fact that her employer was over-utilizing and undervaluing her work and gave her the confidence to resign and get a better job, closer to home.

鈥淭he Mount helped me repair my self-esteem and realize my true value,鈥 Racine continued. 鈥淭aking classes, the time away from my family, and the work I put in actually helped me to free up time and be a better person for my family.鈥

As a non-traditional student, Racine could see the knowledge she was gaining through a different lens than she had as a twenty-year-old. She could see how she would apply the lessons she was learning in her career, not just as theory, and it made her a better employee.

Racine is graduating May 17th with her Associate Degree in Business Administration with High Honors and is the recipient of the Business Administration Career Curriculum Award.

Racine tells us, 鈥淚 used to think 鈥榠t鈥檚 just the Mount鈥, 鈥榠t鈥檚 just an associate degree鈥. We are programmed by society to be hard on ourselves and to always want more to feel good enough. We are told to lose more weight, make more money, get a bachelor鈥檚 degree, then an MBA, on and on. When you don鈥檛 do these things, you feel like you aren鈥檛 good enough, that you鈥檝e settled. When I was 19 and dropped out of college, I felt like I had failed.

鈥淏ut I hadn鈥檛 settled. It turned out to be what I needed to do to figure out what I truly wanted, to learn how to live for myself and not society鈥檚 expectation of what I should want.

鈥淚 no longer say 鈥榠t鈥檚 just鈥 to anything. Because it鈥檚 not 鈥榡ust the Mount鈥, it鈥檚 hard work, homework, exams, team projects and so much more. It鈥檚 not 鈥榡ust a 2-year degree鈥, it took me four years, one class at a time. Nights and weekends, away from family and friends, working toward a goal. And it鈥檚 not 鈥榡ust an associate degree or certificate鈥 it鈥檚 a symbol of my dedication and hard work and it can鈥檛 be taken away.鈥