Between Band Practices: Carrie Craig

For the third blog in this series, trumpet rank captain Carrie Craig speaks on her time as an undergraduate as she prepares for graduate school and her first year of leadership.

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Photo courtesy of Carrie Craig.

How long have you been in the MVs and what is your role?

So I did the MVs ever since freshman year, so I’ve done it for four seasons. I joined in 2020, the Covid season, and all four years of undergrad I was just a normal band member but this year, I’ll be returning for my fifth and final season as a trumpet rank captain! I’m very excited about that.

What made you decide to go for leadership as you’re starting your masters, instead of during undergrad?

You would think I’d have more time as an undergrad, but the truth is, I had a lot of programs that I was apart of and leadership roles in other groups, specifically I was president of a club, so I didn’t really think it was fair to say I could be in a leadership position and then also be president of a club and maybe have conflicts with that. That’s why I never did it as an undergrad, but I always really wanted to do it. Now, I’m out of leadership with other groups, so I am 100% MVs right now. I also just wanted to give back and help train the next generation of MVs. 

Photo courtesy of Carrie Craig.

What was your undergraduate degree? What’s your master’s in now?

Mechanical engineering and mechanical engineering. Double ME! I love being a mechanical engineer. It’s a tough major, it’s a lot of time commitment, but as long as you’re good at time management and communicate… people are very understanding. 

What extracurriculars outside of the MVs did you engage in?

I was on the Baja Team at Virginia Tech, which is a competition design team that builds a new small high performance offroad vehicle every year and then we go and race against other colleges in different dynamic events… to see who has the best car. It’s a lot of fun! In addition to that, I was able to restart a club at Virginia Tech that’s been gone for about ten years. I was already a member of [the Society of Automotive Engineers] to do Baja, so I was like “well, I’ll look into it.” Little did I know, I would get so involved! We started with just three students and we were really able to take it and run with it. Virginia Tech has a lot of car teams… and what we were seeing was, teams weren’t actually talking to each other. What we did with SAE was, we kind of gave all those teams a place where they could come together and talk about their problems, share trailers, we’ve done all kind of stuff… meeting people in the industry, touring labs… It was so cool to grow it from three people to sixty – it was overwhelming.

Photo courtesy of Carrie Craig

How would you say the MVs impacted your time at Tech?

It gave me my best friends, that’s probably the biggest way it changed my life. I met people I will stay in contact with for the rest of my life. It probably brought me out of my shell a lot too, because people were so energetic and welcoming and excited for you to be there, it’s just contagious. Everyone just wants the best for you and for you to succeed, it’s just such a refreshing environment to be a part of. Everyone has something to teach you, it’s just a big family. It’s awesome. 

How would you say being in another organization outside of the MVs has benefited you?

Those organizations for sure gave me professional contacts that are invaluable. I’ve met people in actual industry, and professors at tech – people who can help me going forward. It’s all these different connections and it’s really built a network for me. Everyone, if they see that you’re really applying yourself, especially doing multiple groups, that’s something that recruiters and professionals really look at in my experience.

Photo courtesy of Carrie Craig.

How have you managed your time?

A calendar. I learned how to make a really good color-coded calendar. Also, recognizing that you do have to be a person. Sometimes taking a step back is way more valuable than powering through. I’m going to go to band, and when I come back I’m refreshed – you flex a different muscle. That’s a big deal to my success as an undergrad, being able to have that break every day.

What advice do you have for folks who are new to the MVs?

Cherish your time here, because it’s going to go by very fast. It’s going to be hard sometimes. Recognizing that you’re not alone in it and that the MVs will give you the community and strength to push through it. I think it’s so important to have that.

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Carrie is a track geometry intern with Norfolk Southern.

Between Band Practices: Jaden Catalfamo

The first blog in this series, featuring trumpet rank captain Sarah Murray, showed that it’s possible to fully commit yourself to another organization – like VT Rec Sports – alongside the Marching Virginians. This week, we have an interview from piccolo rank captain Jaden Catalfamo, who shows that your time can be split even further, with just as much success. Let’s see what wisdom she has to share!

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Photo courtesy of Jaden Catalfamo

How long have you been in the MVs and what is your role?

This is going into my fourth season but this upcoming year will be my second year being a rank captain for the piccolo section.

What’s your degree program? How far into it are you?

So currently, I am pursuing a bachelor’s of science in neuroscience but my specific major is clinical neuroscience. I’m pretty much almost done. Technically I only have one semester left, it’s mostly prereqs that are left but everything else is just pharmacy school things. Spring semester [is] when I’ll be taking the remainder of my pharmacy school prerequisites, because some of them don’t necessarily line up with my degree program.

Is there a pre-pharmacy track you were able to enter into?

I kind of had to figure it out myself. I went onto multiple colleges’s websites and just looked at each prerequisite that they had. I had to create my own spreadsheet for what courses they required because some colleges are completely different. So that was pretty much all up to me.

Photo courtesy of Jaden Catalfamo

If you do engage in any extracurriculars outside of the MVs, what are they?

I am mostly involved in Hokie Ambassadors – those are the people who give those daily campus tours that you’ll see go around every day. Wthin that I am a mentor, so whenever the new training classes come around I usually mentor 2-3 different new guides. [I] help guide them throught the training process so they can give their own tours. Outside of that, I am also in Alpha Chi Sigma, which is a professional chemistry fraternity. Basically the whole point of this is to help develop my professionalism and to help get me ready for anything I want to do within the sciences, but it’s also a way for me to share my passion with other people who just so happen to like chemistry just as much as I do.

How would you say the MVs has impacted your time at Tech?

The biggest impact they’ve made on me I would say are the friendships, I’ve met all my best friends pretty much in the MVs. It’s created a sense of family… going to college, I was very much in my own little circle, but then I met the pix and whoever else is in band. It’s definitely deepened my sense of security when it comes to going to school. That’s something I’ll always be grateful for with the MVs.

Would you say that being in another organization outside of the MVs has benefited you? If so, how?

Photo courtesy of Jaden Catalfamo

Most definitely Hokie Ambassadors – becoming a mentor, I would say, strengthened the leadership qualities that I [can] work on in the MVs. It really put things into perspective for me, how I could actually apply the things that happened with that organization into the MVs. As for Alpha Chi Sigma, I would say, for me the big part of it was just trying to advocate for my littles. You have to advocate for other people in the MVs too sometimes because we’re one big family, we’re one big support system. Every single organization I’ve been in has contributed in some sort of way with the MVs.

How do you manage your time?

If I can get dates well ahead of time, then it’s easier for me to at least try and schedule whether I have to meet with mentees, whether I just want to spend some time with friends… I would say just – literally my Google Calendar has become my best friend for that. It’s always important to set time aside just for yourself and it took awhile for me to truly grasp that. I figured it, now, but  it took some time.

What advice do you have for new students both within and outside the MVs?

Honestly, don’t be afraid to branch out. With the MVs, it may feel very overwhelming, especially with how much time we spend at rehearsal, preparing for games… it can be a little overwhelming at first but if you have other passions that you want to pursue, then I highly suggest doing so, especially if you want to use your time in college wisely and want to enjoy it to the absolute fullest. I would recommend starting early – going to Gobblerfest, find what organizations you might want to join and just go from there, because you never know. There’s always going to be something for you, whether it’s the MVs or not.

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Jaden is from Virginia Beach, Virginia.