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Ana Menendez on education funding

From ACWWS Talk Di Tings: With Ana Menéndez (Part 1) · · Talk Di Tings

“It is an absolutely amazing program, funded very generously by the Mellon Foundation — we're very grateful for their support — and it's a big grant to promote the humanities and to support transfer students from Miami-Dade who are pursuing humanities degrees.”

Ana Menendez
Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer, WATSCO INC
Policy Impact education fundinghumanitiesphilanthropyhigher education

On , Ana Menendez, Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer at WATSCO INC, spoke about education funding during ACWWS Talk Di Tings: With Ana Menéndez (Part 1) on Talk Di Tings.

ACWWS Talk Di Tings: With Ana Menéndez (Part 1)
Watch on YouTube at 6:29
ACWWS Talk Di Tings: With Ana Menéndez (Part 1)
Talk Di Tings
Watch on YouTube at 6:29
Ana Menéndez, author of "Loving Che", "In Cuba I was a German Shepherd", "The Last War" and "Adios, Happy Homeland".
Ana Menendez

About Ana Menendez

Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer · WATSCO INC

Ana Menéndez, author of works including "Loving Che" and "In Cuba I was a German Shepherd," discussed her career and financial philosophy in a September 2019 interview on the ACWWS Talk Di Tings podcast. She described her role as director of the Humanities Edge program at Florida International University, a Mellon Foundation-funded initiative supporting transfer students pursuing humanities degrees. Menéndez stated that she took the job because she felt strongly about supporting immigrant students and the arts, noting that on the first day, nearly every student raised a hand when asked if they had a parent born outside the U.S. She said the program has required significant imagination to build and has been creatively fulfilling, even though it has taken time from her writing. Menéndez also offered advice on personal finance, saying she aims to help artists become self-sufficient. She recommended that young people save aggressively before having dependents, and advised against borrowing for pleasures, using the example of an $800 purse to illustrate how interest costs accumulate over time. She said she grew up with conflicting ideas about money, hearing that "poverty is a crime" and "money is the root of all evil." Menéndez credited her journalism background as the best education for her writing, and said living in India stripped her of vanities and provided an education beyond tourism. She noted that she writes about Miami only when outside the city, as distance helps her treat the place as a fictional construct.

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