New College of Florida: Investing in Sarasota’s Future
Guest Correspondence
SRQ DAILY SATURDAY PERSPECTIVES EDITION
SATURDAY JUN 13, 2026 |
BY MITCHELL RUZEK
William Lopez, NCF '26, Michigan State University DO / Ph.D. Program. Provided photo.
In recent years, questions have periodically surfaced about the role New College of Florida plays in the Sarasota community. Do students stay here after graduation? Does the college contribute meaningfully to the local economy? Are graduates prepared for successful careers and advanced study?
These are fair questions. They are also questions that deserve answers grounded in outcomes.
At its core, New College is an investment in people, students who go on to strengthen communities, advance knowledge, and contribute to the economy both locally and beyond. While discussions about higher education often focus on enrollment numbers, rankings, or headlines, the true measure of a college's value can often be found in the success of its students and the impact they make after graduation.
One important example is the growing number of New College graduates choosing to build their lives and careers in Sarasota. At least 20 recent students will remain in the region and have secured employment with local organizations. Using a conservative early-career salary estimate of approximately $42,500 annually, those graduates contribute nearly $900,000 in wages to the local economy each year through housing, dining, transportation, entertainment, and everyday spending.
More importantly, these graduates are helping local organizations thrive. New College alumni are contributing their talents at institutions and companies such as Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium, Sarasota County Government, Suncoast Venture Studio, Coastline Contractors and multiple Florida county school districts. These employers recognize the value of New College students, and those students, in turn, are choosing Sarasota as the place where they want to live, work, and contribute.
The college’s impact extends beyond those who remain local. This year alone, at least 30 New College of Florida Class of 2026 alumni have been accepted into highly selective graduate and professional programs across the country and around the world, many with substantial financial support. An excellent example of a New College of Florida Student is William Lopez who was accepted into Michigan State University DO / PhD program with full funding. This is a highly selective dual-degree pathway that trains future physician-scientists by integrating medical education with advanced biomedical research. Students earn both a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) and a PhD, preparing them for careers in academic medicine, research, healthcare leadership, and translational science.
Other 2026 New College of Florida graduates have been accepted into programs and will continue their education at institutions including Brown University, Columbia University, Georgia Institute of Technology, Notre Dame University, Wake Forest University, the University of Florida, George Washington University, the University of Miami, Drexel University, and several others.
These accomplishments are significant not because of institutional prestige alone, but because they demonstrate that New College students are successfully competing on national and international stages. They are earning opportunities to become physicians, researchers, attorneys, educators, scientists, and leaders whose work will benefit communities for decades to come.
New College is also actively strengthening its commitment to helping students pursue nationally competitive opportunities. The recent addition of Dr. Tyler Fisher, a Rhodes Scholar, has expanded support for students interested in prestigious fellowships and scholarships such as Fulbright, Marshall, Gates Cambridge, and Rhodes. These programs help develop future public servants, entrepreneurs, innovators, and scholars who address some of society’s most pressing challenges.
None of these outcomes occur by chance. They are the result of an immersive educational environment that combines rigorous academics with intentional career preparation and experiential learning. Through internships, employer partnerships, mentorship programs, career treks, professional panels, research opportunities, and scholarship support, students are encouraged to connect their intellectual curiosity with real-world impact.
At its best, higher education strengthens the community around it. New College’s contribution to Sarasota can be seen in the graduates who remain here, the employers who hire them, the students who earn opportunities at world-class institutions, and the civic and economic contributions they make every day.
Those stories may not always generate headlines, but they are helping shape Sarasota’s future and that is a value worth recognizing.
Mitchel Ruzek, Ph.D, is the Associate Vice President of Student Entrepreneurship and Engagement at New College of Florida.
William Lopez, NCF '26, Michigan State University DO / Ph.D. Program. Provided photo.
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