Jayla Dorsey ’24 Signs to Play Basketball at Huntington University
Jayla Dorsey ’24 was a dedicated member of the varsity basketball team all four years of her high school experience, and she credits her coach, teammates, and Hutchison community members for believing in her.
Though her high school career ended this past February, point guard Jayla Dorsey ’24 has a lot more basketball left to play. Dorsey signed to continue her basketball career at Huntington University, located just outside Fort Wayne, Indiana, about two hours north of Indianapolis. She said her decision came down to the connection she developed with the head coach of the Foresters, Darby Maggard.
“This school expressed how much they wanted me," Dorsey said. "Every conversation with Coach Maggard and her assistant coach was amazing. They answered all my questions and periodically checked on me, so I was set on them.” She said their relationship began a couple of years ago. “I met Coach Maggard during a team camp and again during elite camps when she was an assistant coach at a different university (University of Tennessee at Martin),” Dorsey said. “When she became head coach for Huntington, she invited me for a visit and I loved our conversation. This school just stuck with me. I see myself growing as a player there and my coach believes in me.”
She knows all about having a coach who believes in her from her time at Hutchison, where head coach Thomas Jones relied on Dorsey extensively throughout her four years of varsity basketball. Dorsey was a member of the 2021 state championship team and says that experience will stick with her forever. “The best memory of my time here at Hutchison will always be winning the first championship. No feeling was greater than holding that gold ball as streamers came down surrounded by a group that was basically my second family.”
“I’ll miss playing Hutchison basketball for Coach Jones. I’ll also miss my teammates, my friends, and the teachers and faculty who have supported me through all of this.”
Sting basketball requires a lot of time, a lot of energy, and a lot of sacrifice. Dorsey says she expects that learning how to balance those things while at Hutchison will help her have a smooth transition into college life. “Coach Jones has shown me how much work and time goes into basketball and how you’ll have to be even more dedicated for college,” Dorsey said. “The class schedules, the workload, and extracurriculars at Hutchison more than prepared us for college, and I think I will do extremely well at Huntington.”
Caroline Orr ’12 has built a unique career that merges her love for art with business acumen. After working at Sotheby’s, she now works as an art services specialist at Bank of America, where she helps collectors navigate the art market with strategic advice.
Hutchison Now highlights graduates early in their careers who embody how a Hutchison education can lead anywhere you can imagine. We spoke with Caroline Kyle ’15, a software engineer for Walmart Global Tech in Bentonville, Arkansas.
As part of a State of Tennessee initiative, the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development recognized how Hutchison has made a difference in local and state communities for over 100 years.
Tyler Jones ’25 hasn’t had the easiest journey. After a long road to recovery from a knee injury, she worked even harder and signed to play Division I basketball for the University of New Mexico.
Hutchison Now highlights graduates early in their careers who embody how a Hutchison education can lead anywhere you can imagine. We spoke with Meagan Thornton ’12, the lead pharmacist at CaryRx, a digital pharmacy based in Washington, D.C., that provides access to pharmaceutical services online.
On WREG’s “Live at 9,” Dr. Ring, Hailey Litzsey ’25, and Malie Youngblood ’28 exemplified our mission of empowering girls to become confident leaders who know how to use their voices effectively.
If you have ovaries, you can learn a lot from spending time with Vanessa Ross, CNM, MSCP, Class of 1991. Let’s say hormones are wreaking havoc with your life and your doctor dismisses the symptoms with “it’s all in your head.” According to Ross, you should respond with: “Yes. You’re right. My brain is literally changing, and my body is reacting. My symptoms are real.”
The youngest American to orbit the Earth and a St. Jude physician assistant and cancer survivor spoke with our fourth and fifth graders after they read her memoir.
For her myExperience capstone project, part of the Institute for Responsible Citizenship, Millie Malone ’25 held a voter registration drive where a representative from the League of Women Voters assisted our girls in registering.
Parents heard from Eraina Schauss, Ph.D., one of the nation’s leading experts in the field of pediatric mental health, about the evidence that supports Hutchison’s new cell phone policy.
Hutchison Now highlights graduates early in their careers who embody how a Hutchison education can lead anywhere you can imagine. We spoke with Elizabeth Gonda ’16, a care manager at Healthfirst based out of New York who serves over 130 people and helps them with healthcare.