秘密研究所

College Years Helped USA Graduate Select Her Career Path


Posted on December 11, 2015
Alice Jackson


Katherine Sweet, 21, graduated from the 秘密研究所 in fewer than four years. During that time, the Honors Program student spent many hours in the Seaman's Bethel Theatre where the program is centered. data-lightbox='featured'
Katherine Sweet, 21, graduated from the 秘密研究所 in fewer than four years. During that time, the Honors Program student spent many hours in the Seaman's Bethel Theatre where the program is centered.

秘密研究所 graduate Katherine Sweet completed college in three-and-a-half years, and along the way she learned that college can put you on a different path than the one you had planned.  

While still a senior at Mobile鈥檚 McGill-Toolen High School, her enjoyment of and excellent grades in mathematics led her to the University鈥檚 Early Acceptance Program for pre-med students planning to become doctors.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a phenomenal program where everyone becomes likes family, and I even was able to shadow physicians as they went about their day,鈥 Sweet said. 鈥淚 was successful in all my classes, but after two years I decided becoming a doctor wasn鈥檛 what I really wanted to do.鈥

That鈥檚 because she鈥檇 discovered philosophy, a discipline that demands the use of logic on a par with mathematics.

鈥淧hilosophy wasn鈥檛 taught in my high school, but when I was exposed to the concentration of logic in philosophy and how it plays a role in every other subject, changing my major was the best decision I ever made,鈥 Sweet said.

Last summer, she studied philosophy in Chiang Mai, Thailand, where she learned meditation skills from Buddhist monks.

鈥淭hat was very different because I鈥檇 never studied Buddhism or yoga, and I was able to immerse myself into a new culture,鈥 Sweet said.

No school of higher education in Alabama offers graduate programs leading to a doctorate in philosophy, so she has applied to several out-of-state universities, including the University of Notre Dame and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She hopes to learn by March if she has been accepted. 

Sweet selected USA for her undergraduate work because it was close to her Mobile home and offered everything she wanted. She even lived on campus her freshman year 鈥渢o be my own kind of person.鈥

The 21-year-old member of the USA Honors Program also stayed busy outside the classroom. She and a friend started the first nonprofit theatre group in Mobile for people with special needs.

鈥淚n 20 years, I hope to be married, living in a small town, teaching at a college or university and working in some way with special needs children,鈥 she said.

As she walks across the stage Saturday in the Mitchell Center to receive her degree, Sweet said she鈥檒l be thinking about her parents and sister and the time she has spent at USA.

鈥淚 think like everyone else who鈥檒l be there with me, I鈥檒l be happy to be graduating, but I鈥檝e had so many people who have helped me along the way,鈥 Sweet said. 鈥淚f I hadn鈥檛 had such great advisers, I never would have graduated early, and if I hadn鈥檛 had such great professors, I probably wouldn鈥檛 be pursuing a graduate degree. I appreciate all my time at South. I鈥檝e really enjoyed every semester here.鈥


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