There is no meeting this Friday, as many of our members travel to SanDestin for our District 6900 Rotary Conference. That said, we do have a special visitor coming to Dunwoody on Friday - Captain Sean M. Minton, a former Rotary Global Grant Scholar who studied in London. He has provided us with an update on "Team Minton" - and Kathy and Fred Brandt are planning to meet the team for an informal breakfast on Friday. Enjoy the update that follows here - and if you'd like to join Kathy and Fred tomorrow morning, give them a call today for the details.
Update from Team Minton ...
I just completed two years as a brigade public affairs officer for the “Spartan Brigade,” 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division (think Abrams tanks and Bradley Fighting Vehicles). I was out at the forefront of messaging my brigade, or unit, as the most modernized as we received the upgraded combat platforms.
Right now, Amy and I are currently undergoing a permanent change of station from Fort Stewart, Georgia, to Alexandria, Virginia, to attend the Georgetown University School of Continuing Studies. I was selected by the Army Public Affairs Center last year to obtain a Master of Professional Studies in Public Relations and Corporate Communications. As a result of the program, I will most likely have a follow-on assignment in the Pentagon in either the Army or the Department of Defense Public Affairs office where I would generate communication planning and advise senior military leaders and policy makers.
I am thankful for this opportunity to get another master’s degree. I was encouraged by more senior public affairs officers to apply to the fellowship, but I was skeptical I would be eligible due to my time in London conducting a Rotary Global Grant Scholarship. As it turned out, my time in London with Rotary was seen as a positive and not a negative, and I was awarded one of the six slots to Georgetown for calendar year 2023. My Georgetown classes start May 22 for the summer term.
We are new homeowners in Alexandria, but we are in the midst of some needed renovations to make it a modern home. Amy and our 21-month-old son, John David, are the ultimate troopers as we uproot our lives and move three states away. However, this assignment promises more family time as I study the academic side of public relations. Also, with a second child due this August, a predictable schedule could not come at a better time.
My time in London attending King’s College London, tying
in with the Rotary Club of London, and starting up the Rotaract of Club of
London affects my perspective on the world every day. My time abroad gave me a
deeper understanding and more diverse perspective on global issues of peace and
conflict prevention/resolution, listening to others from around the world and
hearing their views. Today, more than ever, we have to listen to know how to
address the problems of our time. This was by far the greatest lesson that the
Rotary Global Grant Scholarship gave me, and I am blessed to have been given
the opportunity.