Panelists Promote Internships and On-Campus Experiences Like Mock Trial and Model U.N.

UML alumni sit at tables listening to another alum. Prof. Ardeth Thawnghmung is standing Image by K. Webster
Political scientists, from left, Zayna Basma-Doyle '18, John Bright, Sheila Angelo '15, Catherine Abou-Khalil '20. MacKenzie Mahoney '16 and Prof. Ardeth Thawnghmung listen to state Rep. Tara Hong '22 during an alumni career panel for students.

05/05/2025
By Katharine Webster

听A member of New York Gov. Kathy Hochul鈥檚 advance team, a state representative, a lawyer, a Ph.D. student and a researcher spoke to a room packed with political science students about their career paths, successes and challenges at a recent event.

The students listened intently as five political science alumni and John Bright, a program manager at the International Institute of New England, also shared advice and answered questions.

Although each alum pursued a different career, Sheila Angelo 鈥15, MacKenzie Mahoney 鈥16, Zayna Basma-Doyle 鈥18, Catherine Abou-Khalil 鈥20 and state Rep. Tara Hong 鈥22 all cited the importance of internships they completed while they were still undergraduates, as well as other hands-on experiences like Mock Trial and Model United Nations.

Angelo, who joined President Obama鈥檚 events advance team 16 months after graduation and worked on two Bernie Sanders campaigns and in the Biden administration before taking her current job with Hochul, admitted that she wasn鈥檛 the strongest student during her time at UML. But and campaigning for former U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas proved transformative, she said.

鈥淚 got the confidence to know how to work those rooms where you have the real political types 鈥 and get what I want out of it, too,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I got those contacts. It just really set me up for success.鈥

Prof. Ardeth Thawnghmung, who organized and moderated the panel discussion, is the co-founder and president of SayDaNar, a mutual aid organization in Lowell for Burmese refugees and immigrants. Abou-Khalil, now a Ph.D. student at Boston University, interned there, as did Basma-Doyle.

Abou-Khalil said she worked directly with students in the Lowell public schools and their families as they struggled with language and cultural differences. That practical experience informs her current work with BU鈥檚 Forced Migration and Human Trafficking Initiative and BU鈥檚 Citizenship Hub, helping and advocating for displaced people, she said.

At SayDaNar, 鈥淚 began asking, 鈥楬ow can I address these issues?鈥欌 she said.

Students sit at desks and listen, facing left Image by K. Webster
Political science students listened intently and asked questions of the panelists.

Basma-Doyle, who went on to earn an MBA and a master鈥檚 in public policy at Brandeis University, now works as research director at the MassINC Polling Group and a senior research associate at The MassINC Policy Center. Her focus is education policy.

鈥淪ayDaNar is what stimulated my interest in education,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat really opened my eyes to how different communities interact with our educational systems, and a lot of times how they don鈥檛 work for certain communities of people. 鈥 Professors like Ardeth were able to connect us to the real world.鈥

Basma-Doyle said that she constantly uses the skills she learned as an undergrad at 51视频, from critical thinking and the ability to synthesize large amounts of complex information to qualitative and quantitative research methods.

鈥淓verything I鈥檓 doing in my current jobs, I learned in political science,鈥 she said, adding that those skills apply to a wide range of political and policy jobs. 鈥淭he skills you all are learning 鈥 are transferrable across sectors.鈥

Mahoney, a family law attorney specializing in cases involving domestic violence and mental health issues, previously provided free emergency legal services through nonprofit and government agencies. She also advocated for improved anti-violence legislation on Beacon Hill.

She encouraged students who want to go to law school to join the Mock Trial team, where she said she learned case analysis and the rules of evidence.

Honors College Dean Jenifer Whitten-Woodring and Zayna Basma-Doyle stand and talk Image by K. Webster
Honors College Dean Jenifer Whitten-Woodring talks with MassINC Polling Group research director and honors graduate Zayna Basma-Doyle '18, while state Rep. Tara Hong '22, center, speaks with a student.

鈥淚 show up to court, and I go up against men who are at least 30 years older than me,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 learned how to do that here.鈥

She also touted UML鈥檚 partnership with The Washington Center, which allows students to spend the summer or a semester in Washington, D.C., studying and interning for credit. Mahoney interned at the Department of Defense鈥檚 National Defense University, where she aided high-ranking foreign military officials who were in the U.S. for training. 听听

Hong, who ran for state representative in Lowell twice and won last fall, came to the U.S. from Cambodia with his family when he was 13 years old. He soon began volunteering and then working for the Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association. He also volunteered for political campaigns and interned for elected officials.

He urged students to get involved in their communities, work on campaigns, intern with elected officials and 鈥渂e a part of something.鈥

鈥淪peak up! We need more people like you to be out there 鈥 to be part of the democratic process,鈥 he said to applause. 鈥淵ou can effect change if you put your heart and soul into it.鈥

But all of the panelists also talked about how they benefited from their classes, as did 鈥12, the university鈥檚 new director of alumni relations, whom Thawnghmung asked to introduce himself. Conway worked on Sen. Mitt Romney鈥檚 presidential campaign and as former Gov. Charlie Baker鈥檚 deputy director of operations, among other jobs, before joining the UMass system.

鈥淵ou are receiving one of the greatest educations you can receive,鈥 Conway said. 鈥淎nd this degree, whether you head into politics or head into law or head into policy 鈥 is going to give you the background and tools you need to succeed.鈥

Conway recommended that students to tap the university鈥檚 network and reach out to the panelists with questions.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e also here to support all of you,鈥 he said.