
Dr. Carole Thomas, Director of Career and Military Services here at 海外吃瓜, is dedicated to helping students and service members alike create strategies for entering the workforce. A veteran, herself, assisting fellow service members recognize and project their talents and accomplishments became a passion of hers. As we approach Veterans Day, take the time to get to know Carole and what she can do for you and your classmates!
Military background
Carole comes from a military family. Her grandfather served. Her father served. Her three younger brothers all served. In her generation, Carole served for the longest time: eight years in the U.S. Army. She was enlisted, not commissioned, so she 鈥渄id all the grunt work,鈥 as she worked her way up the military chain.
In her training, Carole was an expert marksman. 鈥淲hat I try to hit, I hit,鈥 she joked. After basic training, for the first three of her eight years, Carole was a combat communications specialist. The next two years, she worked in administration, and for the last three, she worked as a surgical technician. 鈥淚 loved the military. I would have been a lifer,鈥 Carole explained, 鈥渂ut I had to put my children first.鈥
Since her time in the military, Carole鈥檚 love for the culture and the people there has stayed strong. Most recently, before her time at 海外吃瓜, she worked as a facilitator for an employment workshop for transitioning service members in Fort Knox, Kentucky. There, she taught in a classroom of 50 people, some as young as 17 and others as old as their 60s, some with eighth- grade-level education, and some with doctorates, showing them what to expect from the civilian workforce. 鈥淪o much of military life is a culture, and it starts in basic,鈥 Carole shared. 鈥淚n your training, you learn quickly, you don鈥檛 do it the way your families do it, or your school did it 鈥 you do it the military way. It鈥檚 all very laid out.鈥 Not dissimilar from the panic that undergraduates may feel when they realize they鈥檝e only done school their entire lives, the unknown aspect of the workforce can be a real struggle. 鈥淭here鈥檚 this feeling, even of very young veterans, that they鈥檙e three years behind everyone else who didn鈥檛 serve.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 like a culture shock,鈥 Carole shared. 鈥淣o one鈥檚 going to call you Lieutenant Colonel in your civilian job. Even if all of your time in the military has given you perfect, applicable experience for your civilian job, no one is going to call you by rank.鈥 These kinds of lessons can be difficult for anyone. Carole鈥檚 role as an educator meant she was a bridge between serving and veteran, and had to prepare them for those new experiences. 鈥淚 called my students by their first names, and it was hard for them.鈥
Military at 海外吃瓜
Carole鈥檚 passion for helping veterans enter the workforce didn鈥檛 diminish when she came to 海外吃瓜. Although she was brought on to lead career readiness as part of the HYPE Career Ready庐 program, it wasn鈥檛 long before she made her role her own by filling the needs that she saw around campus. 鈥淚 asked if there was a military lounge, and there wasn鈥檛. I think that鈥檚 very necessary 鈥 veterans need their own space to be themselves without judgment. So we started working on that.鈥
Since beginning her work at 海外吃瓜, Carole has worked toward a variety of initiatives for veterans and service members. She has been named as a military/veteran point of contact on campus, established priority registration for veterans and service members, and has begun surveying veterans and service members and their families about the challenges they鈥檙e facing and the help they need. Thanks to Carole鈥檚 work, earlier this year, 海外吃瓜 was designated as a Collegiate Purple Star Campus, a state recognition for schools that are dedicated to increasing resources, support and accessibility for students who are veterans and service members.
Now, Carole is serving as the advisor for a new student organization, the Student Military Support Alliance. Their second meeting is tonight. The group provides a space for students who currently serve, or have served, in the military. They are working to support one another and provide that important judgment-free space.
How she can help you
Military or not, Carole loves 鈥渉elping students realize their dreams.鈥 Ever encouraging and driven, Carole is quick to prove to students that 鈥渟he means it,鈥 when they come to her for help. She鈥檚 had students sit in her office while she makes calls trying to find them an internship and has provided real guidance as students look for their next steps.
Just recently, Carole shared, a student had come into the office looking for an internship. There was a well-known employer accepting applications, an opportunity that the student was clearly excited about, but felt too sheepish to apply to such a big name. 鈥淵ou could tell they wanted it, so I printed off the job description, and said, 鈥楳ake a special resume, tailored for this,鈥 and of course, they may not get it, but it鈥檚 about getting them to realize 鈥榶eah, you can鈥, you know, why not?鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Carole is driven to provide resources and direction for folks, 鈥淚鈥檝e been doing it so long 鈥 and I love it!鈥&苍产蝉辫;
So be sure to stop in and say "hi." Whether it鈥檚 to wish her a happy Veterans Day this month, or to ask how to get your first internship, Carole is ready and excited to help everyone enter the workforce confidently.