May 26, 2020 | BY Joe Lacdan , Army News Service
Army Second Lt. Lauren Shappell faced her first challenge as
a military leader before she was commissioned.
Halfway through the spring semester of her senior year at
the University of North Carolina, the school's administration told students to
return home during the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in March.
Shappell, serving as a battalion commander for 70 cadets in
her ROTC unit at Chapel Hill, had to adjust her communication and interaction
with fellow students using virtual tools and online apps. Some cadets lived in
different time zones, and others couldn't always make it to assigned online lab
meetings.
"People had different situations, and I was kind of
being empathetic to that," she said. "It was a lot of flexibility, a
lot of communication with my senior class."
President Donald J. Trump honored Shappell and about 20
other college and high school students in a White House ceremony May 22,
praising the newly- commissioned officer for her efforts during the semester.
"I'm very flattered," she said before the
ceremony. "It's an opportunity of a lifetime."
Shappell hosted Zoom meetings with her battalion for the
remainder of the spring, made online announcements addressing the concerns of
her fellow cadets and offered encouraging words.
"It definitely challenged me," Shappell said.
"I feel like I grew a lot in that position."
Now Shappell hopes to make the same impact on her Army
career as a member of the Medical Service Corps at Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
Before assuming her new duties at Campbell, she will travel to Joint Base San
Antonio for training.
Earlier this month, Shappell graduated with a bachelor's
degree in biology without an in-person commencement. Shappell said the school
hopes to have a formal ceremony for the class of 2020 in the fall.
Shappell is no stranger to adjusting to changing
circumstances. As a military child, she and her family had to shift their
lives, moving to Turkey and Germany when her father changed duty assignments.
At age 4, she learned to speak Turkish while her father served as a battalion
commander at the NATO Joint Command Southeast in Izmir, Turkey.
As a high school student, she later became interested in
following in the footsteps of her father, Steven, a retired Army colonel and
veteran of 33 years, and her mom, Cynthia, who served as an Army psychiatrist
at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
While maintaining a 3.69 GPA in college, she became one of
UNC's top cadets, earning distinguished military graduate honors. She is a
semifinalist for a Fulbright scholarship, and the former lacrosse and field
hockey player also excelled in military courses and physical fitness.
"I put a lot of pressure on myself to have good grades
for grad school," Shappell said. "I took [ROTC] seriously, basically,
and I invested myself in academics and extracurriculars like going abroad and
studying languages."
Shappell originally planned to enroll in medical school to
work as an Army doctor, but after taking an overseas trip to East Africa, she
now hopes to eventually work in public health. She expanded on her interest in
foreign languages and other cultures at UNC by taking two years of both Swahili
and Turkish.
After earning James Madison University's "Project
GO" scholarship, she learned about the social and economic effects of
colonialism in east African countries. The Virginia native traveled to places
such as Zanzibar City on Tanzania's eastern island, Unguja, where she witnessed
the impact of social injustice on Maasai people.
"It definitely changes your perspective," Shappell
said. "It really broadened the scope of what I knew to be different ways
people live, … and these are ways people make a living, and how they are
threatened by environmental changes or policies."
She revisited learning Turkish at UNC, and before her junior
year she traveled to Bulgaria to take part in the Army's Cultural Understanding
Language Proficiency Program for cadets. There, she taught Bulgarian soldiers
English to help them qualify for NATO positions.
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