(Photo by Lee Pellegrini)

Meet this year's Finnegan Award winner

Francis (Fran) Hodgens receives Ļć½¶Šć's highest undergraduate Commencement honor

Known on campus as ā€œMr. Ļć½¶Šć,ā€ Francis (Fran) Hodgens is the recipient of the 2024 Edward H. Finnegan, S.J., Award as the graduating senior who best exemplifies the Universityā€™s motto, ā€œEver to Excel.ā€ The Carroll School of Management grad was presented with the honor by University President William P. Leahy, S.J., at Commencement on May 20.

Hodgensā€™ undergraduate years have been defined by superlatives, including a perfect grade point average. A member of the Gabelli Presidential Scholars Program, he has been both a peer leader and mentor, and has shared his time and talents through extracurricular pursuits both on and off campus. He is admired by faculty for his curiosity and drive, as well as for his humility and kindness.

ā€œIn Fr. Finneganā€™s name and spirit, this award was created for a senior devoted to others, without seeking special recognition in return. This closely describes Francis (Fran) Hodgens,ā€ wrote Carroll School Senior Associate Dean of the Undergraduate Program Ethan Sullivan in his nomination letter. ā€œHe is regarded as the unique student who consistently is at the top of his class, yet always raises the horizon of others.ā€ Ģż

Ļć½¶Šć is a school where you live and grow alongside friendly, driven, and reflective classmates. It is impossible to leave Ļć½¶Šć without grappling with complex, challenging questions; you have to learn how to disagree constructively. Knowing when to change your perspective, when to double down, and why having an opinion matters are part of the experience that arenā€™t encapsulated in a single course or in a Ļć½¶Šć brochure.
2024 Finnegan Award winner Francis (Fran) Hodgens

Hodgens majored in accounting for finance and consulting and business analytics. In September he will join Boston Consulting Group, regarded as one of the three most prestigious firms in the management consulting industry.

ā€œI am immensely grateful for the amount of time and care my professors and mentors put into nominating me for this award,ā€ Hodgens said. ā€œI feel honored, and profoundly lucky, to win it. There are too many people at this school to name who I have witnessed putting in hundreds of hours of work to make Ļć½¶Šć the best it can be, without the expectation of anything in return.ā€

Coverage of Commencement 2024 stage work.
Francis "Fran" Hodgens '24 (CSOM), winner of the Finnegan Award.

Finnegan Award winner Francis (Fran) Hodgens of the Carroll School of Management, flanked by Fr. Leahy, at left, and Board of Trustees chair John Fish. (Lee Pellegrini)

When he arrived as a freshman, his goals were ā€œto pursue things that were difficultā€”since accomplishing hard things is rewardingā€”and to have as much fun as possible along the way. Ļć½¶Šć is where joy and achievement intersect. Without the football tailgates in the fall, or Ļć½¶Šć studentsā€™ boundless energy on Marathon Monday, this school would not be the same. I would argue that Ļć½¶Šćā€™s culture of joy in traditions is what helps students achieve the heights of success they do. I have been able to reach higher than I ever thought possible when I entered this school.ā€

Beyond excelling in his coursework, the Hopedale, Mass., resident successfully represented the Carroll School in several case competitions at Ļć½¶Šć and beyond, was an undergraduate research fellow for three professors, a teaching assistant, and was active in the Fulton Leadership Society (FLS). His mentors in that organization ā€œplayed an unparalleled role in shaping my Ļć½¶Šć experience. Within my first few weeks on campus, my Ļć½¶Šć family started to assemble. Upperclassmen FLS mentors became my Ļć½¶Šć older siblings. Having dinner in a seniorā€™s on-campus apartment is revolutionary to a freshman.ā€

ā€œFranā€™s enthusiasm for learning is so far aboveā€”and beyondā€”that I have no words for it,ā€ according to Professor of the Practice of Business Analytics Stephanie Jernigan, who taught him in two classes and supervised one of his research assistantships. ā€œHe is motivated by boundless curiosity, and more importantly, he infects others with his enthusiasm. It is such a generosity of spirit to not just excel, but to make those around him excel just a little bit more, too.ā€

The admiration is mutual: Hodgensā€™ favorite class was Jerniganā€™s Business Statistics, and he singles her out as a favorite professor.

ā€œAt Ļć½¶Šć, I found professors immensely approachable, and course syllabi frequently contain personal phone numbers, in case you want to grab coffee. I have been fortunate to use the Carroll Schoolā€™s ā€˜Take Home Professorā€™ program to prepare a meal with my friends for our professors. Some of my warmest memories are laughing together around a dinner table.ā€ Ģż

Hodgens holds the Carroll Schoolā€™s Kevin M. Eidt Memorial Scholarship, awarded annually to a student who, over their first three years, demonstrated academic achievement, character, leadership, and school spirit similar to Eidt, who died in 1997 during his freshman year.

A popular Student Admission Program tour guide and panelist, Hodgens won praise from Associate Director of Undergraduate Admission Chris Oā€™Brien. ā€œAs a leader in SAP, he has made a true impact. He is universally liked, respected, and definitely appreciated by all of us in Devlin. Fran will be missed.ā€

Hodgens also embraced Ļć½¶Šćā€™s ethos of service to others through involvement in community outreach programs. He was a volunteer instructor for English as a Second Language adult learners,and, through a state grant, organized and implemented the FinFit Financial Literacy Program initiative for public schoolchildren in his hometown. During the summer of 2021, via a Ļć½¶Šć Advanced Study Grant, he completed an independent research project on the efficacy of property valuation systems in Greater Boston.

Ģżā€œĻć½¶Šćā€™s Jesuit identity is the foundation upon which the rest of the school is built. Ļć½¶Šć is not a four-year job training program,ā€ he said. ā€œĻć½¶Šć is a school where you live and grow alongside friendly, driven, and reflective classmates. It is impossible to leave Ļć½¶Šć without grappling with complex, challenging questions; you have to learn how to disagree constructively. Knowing when to change your perspective, when to double down, and why having an opinion matters are part of the experience that arenā€™t encapsulated in a single course or in a Ļć½¶Šć brochure.ā€

Asked what makes Ļć½¶Šć feel like home, he replied that ā€œEveryone cares about youā€”whether it be your classmates, professors, administrators, alumni, or dining workersā€”and that feeling touches every piece of the Ļć½¶Šć experience. Although the student body is larger than the entire population of the town I grew up in, classes and clubs provide family-sized groups that foster a sense of purpose and belonging on campus.ā€

Three Ļć½¶Šć students

Finnegan Award finalists Zarah Lakhani, Medhi Kayi, and Anna Laytham (Lee Pellegrini)

Finalists for the 2024 Finnegan Award

Mehdi Kayi, Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences
Major: Philosophy/Minors: Global Public Health, biology

Resident assistant; Winston Center for Leadership and Ethics Jenks Leadership Program, winner of its Joseph G. Bonito Servant Leadership Award; Muslim Student Association; Medical Humanities Journal contributor; Massachusetts Department of Developmental Services mentor; Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program; Bowman Scholar; Alpha Sigma Nu.

Zarah Lakhani, Lynch School of Education and Human Development
Majors: Transformative Educational Studies, Applied Psychology & Human Development/Minors: Design Thinking & Innovation, Management & Leadership

Student Admission Program tour guide and panelist; undergraduate research assistant; Design for ImpACCt mentor; spearheaded the startup Vitaliti to create a mold spore monitor, winning honors in various design competitions; Experience Reflection and Action peer mentor; founder and president of Care for Chemo nonprofit; Ļć½¶Šć Splash co-director.

Anna Laytham, Connell School of Nursing
Major: Nursing

Undergraduate research fellow; Ļć½¶Šć Lean on Me; Taiwanese Cultural Club; CSON Keys to Inclusive Leadership in Nursing program; CSON Nursing Professional Development Seminar leader; Dana-Farber patient ambassador; Dominican Republic Nursing Service Immersion trip; Alpha Chi Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing and ā€œSpirit of Sigmaā€ award winner.

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