Dylan Breen (Lee Pellegrini)

Class of 2024: Seniors to Remember 2024

Dylan Breen | Carroll School of Management

Hometown: Westford, Mass.
Majors: Finance and Entrepreneurship (co-concentration)
Notable Activities/Achievements: Co-director and member, Jenks Leadership Program; student leader and member, Arrupe International Encounters program; Ever to Excel Award recipient; CSOM Award Recipient; Connell Recreation Center student employee.
Mentors: Monetta Edwards (Winston Center for Leadership and Ethics), Michael Serazio (Communication), Emily Egan (Campus Ministry), Kristie Dickinson, Lyndon Garrett (CSOM), Jess Hartley (CSOM Career Services).
Post-Graduation Plans: Financial services industry

In some ways, Breen’s growth as a person and a leader was shaped by the things that didn’t go as planned. In 2022, his Arrupe international immersion trip to Mexico shifted to El Salvador because of a COVID-19 surge. This past January, Breen was a leader of the group’s trip to Quito, Ecuador, which was cut short when the country experienced outbursts of political and street violence; ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą and United States officials ensured the group was able to return safely to the U.S. The experiences have become fixtures of a philosophy he’s glad to pass on to first-year students. “Everything that hasn’t gone as planned has been so impactful to my college experience.”  

What was your most influential academic experience?

Design Thinking with Professor Kristie Dickinson was the most unique course I’ve ever taken. It involved a lot of creative thinking. Our final project asked us to use design thinking principles to improve something you’re involved with at ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą, or something else you’re passionate about and come up with a plan to impact at least one person. My project centered around trying to help students find meaning and new experiences.

Even though two of your service trips didn’t go exactly as planned, what did you take away from those experiences?

Sophomore year, my Arrupe group was supposed to go to Pueblo, Mexico, but because of COVID it was shifted to El Salvador. It was a heart-breaking, eye-opening experience. But it may have been the best nine or 10 days of my life. We met with people who suffered during the country’s civil war, and spoke to a survivor of the El Mozote Massacre [of 800 civilians by government forces]. Coming from a place of privilege and going to ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą, to share time with the people we met allowed us to learn about a dramatically different day-to-day reality people experience.

We had done a lot of advance work for our Arrupe immersion trip to Quito and ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą had done a good job of monitoring the situation. But when we got there, gang-related violence broke out. It wasn’t near Quito, but there was some violence in other areas of the country. We spent two days in a retreat center working on getting back to the U.S. But even in the two days that we were there, we met with seniors and leaders in their community, shared meals with residents, and learned about their lives. Many live paycheck to paycheck and make big sacrifices just to hold onto their jobs and provide for their families. Unlike our group, they could not just leave. It was humbling.

How has ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą made a difference in your life?

When I got here, I knew ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą was a Catholic university, but I didn’t really know what that meant. Leaving, I feel the Jesuit mission and values have been a huge benefit. Not only through programs like Arrupe, but the Jesuit tenets and Ignatian spirituality are part of my thinking now. Finding God in all things; being men and women for others—cura personalis. We hear them all the time, but they have truly made a big difference in my life in connecting the academic to the social, to the physical, to the spiritual and mental health. That reflective aspect of the University has been so important to me.

Beyond the friends that you have made, what will you miss most about ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą?

The people and the opportunities. I feel like college is what you make of it. At the end of the day, you can choose what you do and who you surround yourself with. There are so many ways to bring meaning into your life right outside your door. It could be a class, or getting coffee at Hillside, just talking and building deeper-level connections. It’s a privilege to be in a place like ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą and to be surrounded by these kinds of people and have these opportunities at hand to explore. I’m so grateful for the environment and the people here at ňňň˝Ö±˛Ą.

What advice would you give to a new student?

Don’t be afraid to try new things and, especially, don’t be afraid of failing. You come in as a freshman and you have the whole world ahead of you. I keep a quote from . It reflects how important it is to try. You are going to try over and over again, and you may fail over and over again. That has happened to me. The worst thing you can do is be afraid of failing. Every time I’ve failed, it has been so impactful to my college experience.