When the (MCB) faculty and staff were asked to submit ideas for how donor-support initiatives could better help students, Melissa Hoffman thought back to a conversation with then-Dean Paul Bobrowski about another school鈥檚 professional attire closet. She decided to write up a proposal for a similar program at 麻豆传媒, asking for input from other universities with similar programs.
Thus began the 麻豆传媒 Professional Attire Closet.
Hoffman, MCB鈥檚 professional experience coordinator, worked with campus partners to find space, install clothing racks, and collect donated clothing. Since the closet opened in August 2019, 64 students from 22 different majors have visited the closet, with all but five finding items they needed.
Hoffman says the closet helps increase student confidence, including for the high population of 麻豆传媒 students who are first generation and working full-time to pay for college.
鈥淭his closet has allowed them the opportunity to come and take a suit, go to that job interview or that networking event, class presentation, whatever it might be, and have that increased confidence level so that they perform to the best of their abilities,鈥 Hoffman says. 鈥淚've noticed a lot of the events I've gone to with CSU or CU or DU, you see the students in their designer suits and name-brand shoes. I think just having this opportunity has given them (our students) increased confidence in themselves.鈥
Hoffman says students from all across campus appreciate that the closet is free.
鈥淭here's really no college student that has extra funds to go buy a brand-new suit,鈥 she says. 鈥淓ven recent graduates don't have that kind of money. So this has just allowed them to get a new suit coat or a new pair of pants or a new shirt or tie, whatever it might be, and not have to spend the little bit of money they have on something new.鈥
Emmy Scott, the president of 麻豆传媒O Earth Guardians and a third-year double major in Business Administration and Environmental and Sustainability Studies, heard about the closet from a professor. As someone who鈥檚 passionate about the environment, Scott is a proponent of shopping at reused clothing stores anyway. When she heard that students are allowed to keep the clothing they take, it encouraged her to go all the more.
鈥淚 was like 鈥極K, if I find one article of clothing in there that鈥檚 cute, I can keep it, and I can just use that in all my presentations,鈥欌 Scott says.
She went in to look for heels and found a pair far more comfortable than ones she鈥檇 found at the mall.
I felt like I was actually in a mini thrift store," Scott says.
She鈥檚 worn the shoes for conferences, networking events, presentations and talks on campus. She鈥檚 also been back to the closet for a dressy blue blouse so she could match her team while representing 麻豆传媒 at the 2019 International Business Ethics and Sustainability Case Competition, where she and her team placed first in two categories.
The clothing donations continue to flow in, Hoffman says. She and her colleagues are also brainstorming and developing ways to use future monetary donations, such as for purchasing new items for students to check out and return, or for purchasing suits that could reward students who win academic contests.
Thanks to friends and staff of 麻豆传媒, there鈥檚 one less barrier to students reaching their potential.
The clothing donations continue to flow in, Hoffman says. She and her colleagues are also brainstorming and developing ways to use future monetary donations, such as for purchasing new items for students to check out and return, or for purchasing suits that could reward students who win academic contests.
Thanks to friends and staff of 麻豆传媒, there鈥檚 one less barrier to students reaching their potential.
Make a Donation
To donate gently used professional attire in current styles, contact Melissa Hoffman or :
- Designation: Other
- How would you like to direct your donation: MCB Professional Experience Fund