Rural Raised, First Gen, Health Equity Nurse is Community College Student Advocate and Role Model for Phi Theta Kappa: Meet Susan Morris, RN

Susan, what is your personal narrative? What key moments in your life led you to where you are?

As I reflect upon where I am today, a nursing professional of 35 years, returning to graduate school in 2016 for a Masters in Organizational Leadership; married to my husband of 36 years with four sons and five grandchildren, pastoring the church where I grew up, working at a community college as an adjunct nursing instructor and coach, student advising for our Phi Theta Kappa honor society chapter and campus ministry, there are definitely key moments in my life that led me to where I am today. One of those moments happened before I was born.

I was born and raised in what is considered Appalachia Ohio, in a rural community with 4 siblings in a 2-parent home, my Mom a homemaker and my Dad a farmer. One key moment in my life, becoming a first generation college graduate, came through the denial of my Dad’s dream to go to college and study veterinary medicine. The son of a tenant farmer, my Dad was the top choice to become a farming partner with his father. As a result, my Dad’s dream was transferred to his children. It became an expectation that we would earn a college degree and become independent of the family farming tradition. As I excelled in school as my class valedictorian, the pathway was obvious - college-bound. My Dad’s dream came true as he watched his 5 children graduate from The Ohio State University, my older brother a Physical Therapist, myself a registered nurse, a sister who is a certified public accountant, another brother, also a physical therapist and the baby sister who studied early childhood education and is now a speech pathologist at our local school. All graduating debt-free through scholarships, grants, and parents who invested in us.

As a girl, growing up in the 1970s and 1980s, I unfortunately accepted the lids that were our societal norms. My pediatrician encouraged a vocation in medicine, but I could not see that same vision. I did not have the self-efficacy, the confidence to understand that I could do anything and I had the necessary support system. It was unusual for females to enter medical school, so I settled in to the path of becoming a nurse…that just seemed more comfortable, more within my reach. That changed as I walked the halls of a local hospital, interviewing for a scholarship to complete my nursing degree.

On the door were the words “Nurse Supervisor”. Since I did not understand the accompanying job description, I found it strange that it resonated with me. I would find out as I traveled my career journey that leadership was a gift and the seed was nourished through many opportunities that would be presented to me.

Fast forward. As I launched my 2nd career in higher education, becoming a student advisor for the Phi Theta Kappa honor society and campus ministry allowed me to ignite the passion to develop scholars and leaders. Certainly a key moment for all of us came with the onset of the COVID19 pandemic. I found myself helping my two senior (one college, one high school) sons find new coping strategies, helping to keep a college open, even leading a church through crises. Who I am is what I continue to learn that despite the circumstances, we can still navigate and help others navigate to their desired outcome.

You are closely involved in student life and advising students, what were your own experiences with mentors and advisors? How did this encourage and inspire you to support others?

As I began my career, my experience as a new graduate nurse was not a positive one. In those days it was not unusual for other nurses “to eat their young”. I was one of few RNs that had a BSN and it was not respected in those times, so I was challenged to prove myself worthy to be a nurse. There was also an unhealthy hierarchy in healthcare where the physicians were more highly thought of than the nurses and it was typical that medicine was male-dominated verses the female-dominated nursing profession. It nearly drove me from the profession. With a job change that came with a caring mentor, I persevered. That key moment in my life, even though negative, created in me a passion to mentor and support others to grow and become who they were intended to be. I never wanted another nurse to experience what I did as a new nurse.

These few key moments sparked my passion to care, support, mentor, lead and coach. Through the encouragement of others, seizing opportunities, taking risks, and staying spiritually grounded, I find myself passing on these values to others, help to reveal gifts and talents with which we were created, expecting them to go farther than they expect, without lids or limits. We are but destiny detectives, in the business of discovery. Our four sons have completed or are in the process of completing degrees in agriculture, law enforcement/management, exercise science/chiropractic, and business data analytics. Very different interests, but more importantly, all young men of value, who value others. It is not so much about what we do as who we are. Becoming closely involved in student life and coaching students has allowed me to cast a bigger net, take the positives and negatives in my own experiences of being mentored and assist students to discover their own path by finding the answers that are already within them.

(This is me with my son Brock as he graduated from SSCC with an Associates in Business, completing the Ohio Transfer Module, now at Miami University in Oxford OH. The pandemic nearly derailed his dream, but he found a new path through a community college, achieving things that would not have be otherwise available to him)

As an adjunct professor at Southern State Community College, how do you hope to create a more inclusive educational experience for future nurses?

I have observed that some of the most detrimental inclusivity barriers are self-imposed, when students accept the barrier as a label. As I work with students, feeling excluded comes out of a sense of self. Some that do not have a sense of belonging, discredit themselves through their attributes. I have had students say they were afraid they didn’t belong because of simply how old they are and most likely these feelings exist due to background, gender, ethnicity, race, orientation, how one identifies, even how intelligent one sees themselves. I have seen other inclusivity barriers come out of performance, a failed test score or a poor performance to apply skills in the lab or in clinical. The fact is that seeking help first requires humility. Once we work through the tears and fears, a student can deal with the heart of what went wrong, accept responsibility by developing strategies that can be implemented to improve metacognition and create a pathway to success. As I coach these students, we begin to uncover, through powerful questions, what holds them back, examine the situation and create solutions that allow them to release what is not serving them well, gain empowerment, increase their self-efficacy to gain confidence and overcome the obstacle that is keeping them from achieving the next level.

What challenges do nursing students face today? How do you support and uplift students regarding these challenges?

“The literature has a preponderance of evidence that ‘at-risk’ students need support to be successful in a nursing program” (Charbonneau-Dahlen, 2015; Fontaine, 2014; Harris et al., 2014; Schrum, 2015). As I piloted a student success coaching program for students who had a failing score on their first nursing exam, I found that the factors contributing to the student’s performance was multifaceted. In searching the literature, I found a preponderance of evidence that students need support to be successful in nursing programs. The challenges they faced cover all levels of Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs.

Our region, considered Appalachia Ohio, outpaces our State in the number of families below 50% or up to 199% of poverty guidelines. So from the very basics needs we have to consider what do our students really need and individualize a plan. Nursing students often juggle family, mental and physical health issues, full-time work, and other obligations while attempting to make academic studies a priority. To complicate matters, the pandemic has proven to exacerbate the existing struggles within our region in demographic shifts, labor market changes, and poverty with a widening debate over the value proposition for higher education. It is difficult at best to address these needs from a faculty standpoint in the classroom, but these factors affect learning, course and program completion, and first time NCLEX pass rates.

Research directs the goal to design student support strategies to address risk factors before they become a barrier as well as address any barrier that impacts academic success. (Merritt, 2021). Knowing that risk factors need early identification to prevent them from becoming a barrier (Schrum, 2015) and followed by individualized interventions that are paramount to supporting a student’s academic success (Mooring, 2016; Schrum, 2015; Watts, 2011).

We are working towards a plan to support and uplift these students which requires what I refer to as insulation. Through the coaching partnership, we discover the student success goals, their awareness and readiness, and support system available, and ways to engage faculty and institutional support. Helping to build self-efficacy and a pathway inspires hope for the future for which they are working towards.

What advice would you give to future Inclusive Inspirational Leaders?

Simply said, I have learned that I learn by asking powerful coaching questions - the answers are within them - always encourage, support, “meet” them where they actually are, not where you think someone should be or are supposed to be. They will have a sense of belonging because you create the environment for them to just simple “be”. Understand that everyone has a story that needs to be told. Everyone deserves the opportunity to defy the odds.

You will meet impressive Health Equity leaders and change-makers like Susan Morris at GlobalMindED 2022- June 22, 23, 24 in Denver. Those, like Susan, who forged brave equity paths themselves can best to lead our students now!

Watch The Role Universities Play in Creating a Diverse STEM Workforce

Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager Pharma Solutions, IFF, American Academy for the Advancement of Science IF/THEN She Can STEM Ambassador leads the conversation with Dr. Nathanial Brown; Professor of Math, Penn State University, Dr. Tamara Floyd Smith; Associate Provost, Tuskegee University and Professor of Chemical Engineering, Errika Moore; Executive Director, STEM Funders Network, and Kyra Welch; Psychology Student, Bethune Cookman University
Join us for 7th Annual GlobalMindED 2022 in Denver on June 22-24

The most diverse Ed/DEI, business, government, tech, health, STEM conference with First Gen to college students in attendance. We will have pre-conferences and the Inclusive Leader Awards Dinner June 22- Sign up to join for all or part below:
  
Please find the following information: 
  • Conference slated panel leaders, confirmed sessions, event details and tracks
  • PhD Project featured speakers; a sample of diverse leaders gathered and partners
  • Strong Student Voice- Students will be participating in the majority of panels
  • 65% of speakers and attendees are diverse, representing Native American, African/American, Hispanic, Asian-Pacific Islander, Ability Status, LBGTQIA+, Veteran and Military inclusive leaders 
  • Sponsors dedicated to creating a capable, diverse talent pipeline 
 
Conference registration: 
  • Option 1: Conference Pass - general admission is $495. This ticket includes admission to: Pre-Conference workshop on June 22; Welcome Reception (5-7pm) on June 22; two days of the conference on June 23-24. Register here and select "Conference Pass" option. 
  • Option 2: Conference Pass + Inclusive Leader Awards Dinner - general conference + dinner admission is $595. This ticket includes admission to: Pre-Conference workshop on June 22; Welcome Reception and Inclusive Leader Awards Dinner on June 22 (5-9pm); two days of the conference on June 23-24. Register here and select "Conference Pass & Awards Dinner (Individual)" option
  • First Gen Students to participate in the Student Leadership Program and attend the conference ($250). Register here and select "First Gen Fellow" option. 
  • Accommodations: hotel rooms are available at the group rate during the event: https://book.passkey.com/event/50206819/owner/3130/home
Complete Listing of Women's History Month profiles

WATCH WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH HEALTH, K-12, HIGHER ED AND STEM EVENTS
Watch Women Leaders for Health Equity

Carol Carter, CEO GlobalMindED leads the conversation with Dr. Anna Landau; Clinical Assistant Professor, Banner-University Medical Center, Dr. Timian Godfrey; Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Arizona, Dr. Tarnia Newton; Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Arizona, and Dr. Lisa Kiser; Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Arizona.
Watch Celebrating Outstanding K-12 Female Educators

Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO, Green Tech High Charter School leads the conversation with Yomika Bennett; Executive Director, New York Charter Schools Association, Dr. Plashan McCune CEO; Higher Learning LLC, Jade Tinner; Founder, One Unified Resource Foundation, and Madison Hays; Math Teacher, Madrid, Spain; Editor, GlobalMindED
Watch Taking the Cape Off: Getting Real with Women CEOs

Dr. Ryan Ross Associate Vice Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity, & Inclusion Colorado Community College System leads the conversation with Janet Salazar President, Foundation for the Support of the UN, Dr. Angie Paccione Executive Director, Colorado Department of Higher Education, Simone D. Ross CEO, Colorado Women’s Chamber of Commerce, Dr. Jessica Rothenberg-Aalami CEO, Founder, Cell-Ed, and Karen Ashworth-Macfarlane Co-Founder and CEO, Digame Spirits PBC
Watch Building the Talent Pipeline: Girls and Women in STEM

Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager Pharma Solutions, IFF and AAAS If/Then she/can STEM Ambassador leads the conversation with Danisha Allen; Senior Program Manager, VIZIO, Vitoria Moreno-Costa; Process Safety Management Engineer IFF Health & Biosciences, Claire Meaders; Assistant Teaching Professor, Cell & Developmental Biology University of California San Diego and AAAS If/Then she/can STEM Ambassador, and Samyukta Iyer Senior, Wheeler High School Center for Advanced Studies
Recap of Black History Month

GlobalMindED Black History Month Equity Events:
Watch The Long Tail of COVID: Impact On Health, Livelihood, and Wellness for African Americans

Dr. Monique Butler; Chief Medical Officer, HCA Healthcare, and Dr. Pierre Theodore; VP Global External Innovation, Johnson & Johnson lead the conversation with Dr. Sheila Davis; Director of Health Equity, State of Colorado, Dr. Stacie Walton; CEO, The Diversity Doctor, and student Olamide Ogunnika; Nursing Student, San Jacinto College
Watch Building the Talent Pipeline; Black Students In STEM
Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager, Pharma Solutions IFF and AAAS IF/THEN STEM Ambassador leads the conversation with Jason Raines; PD designer, STEM expert, Dr. Janne Hall; Adjunct Professor, Texas Southern University, Kwesi A. Vincent; STEM Educator, The Workshop School, and Sokhna Wane; Senior Computer Science Student, The Pennsylvania State University Building the Talent Pipeline; Black Students In STEM
Watch Why We Need More Educators of Color

Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO, Green Tech High Charter School leads the discussion with Michael Logan; Instructor, The Fortune Society, Dr. Makini Beck; Assistant Professor, Rochester Institute of Technology, Dr. Rita Carol Gaither; Educational Consultant and Founder, Pearl Resources, and Dr. Brent Mitchell; Executive Vice President, The Sonny Walker Group
Watch Black History Month: Relevance, Reality, and Celebration; Perspectives from Those Doing the Work

Dr. Ryan Ross; Associate Vice Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity & Inclusion, with Dr. Vern L. Howard; Chairman Dr. MLK Jr Colorado Holiday Commission, Kimberly Grayson; Principal, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Early College, and Omar Montgomery; Director of Equity, Culture, and Community Engagement, Cherry Creek School District
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative just launched the Science Diversity Leadership program, which aims to increase representation among early career faculty in the biomedical sciences and related engineering.  The grants are for $1M over 5 years and can be used for both research and outreach efforts. Applications accepted now through May 19, 2022.
See the website for details and application process.
GlobalMindED 2021 Year In Review

As COVID kept us inside and productive, we continued to pivot to meet the needs of our partners, constituents, colleges, and the students we serve. Here is a summary of our year and our outcomes:
     
  • Second Year Virtual - 2021 GlobalMindED Conference over 10 weeks with 226 diverse leaders. Launched with Earth Week in April and concluded in late June. Presented 46 sessions the majority of which were led by people of color featuring students/panelists. Sessions averaged 100 virtual registrants each and garnered 5,500+ views on YouTube.

  • Conducted 41 Virtual Equity Sessions with 205 diverse leaders which aired monthly in HealthTechSTEMK-12 Higher Education and Foundations and Funders with viewers including students, staff, faculty, and corporate partners attending to learn how to be more culturally responsive, direct and positive resolving some of our most difficult equity issues across the disciplines. Sessions averaged 80 registrants each and garnered 6,300+ YouTube views.

  • 2021 Inclusive Leader Awards (virtual). 2,500+ signed up to watch live and 1,000+ viewed on YouTube. These dynamic, diverse, inclusive leaders across 15 sectors, introduced by the 2020 winners are the mega role models for the students we serve. Watch the trailer and full event.

  • Served 400+ First Gen students nationally through individual students at 26 colleges and 10 college specific collaboratives (4 Hispanic Serving Institutions, 3 Historically Black Colleges, 1 Native American Serving college, and 2 state colleges serving primarily First Gen to college students). Some colleges selected the Strong Summer Start Leadership Programs, some chose self-directed KEYS to SUCCESS content, some selected coaching training and others deployed GlobalMindED professional mentors to guide their students in personal and business skills. Several college partners leveraged all these resources for their First Gen, diverse and minoritized freshmen virtually during COVID. The basis of these results provides the foundation for our work in 2022, delivering colleges the option of an integrated program that provides the bridge into college, leadership training, freshmen year success, and professional guidance from diverse business leaders serving as mentors.

  • Published our First Gen Student Leaders Speak report with Every Learner Everywhere in May. 25 First Gen GlobalMindED Ambassadors shared their insights for college presidents, policy makers and CEO’s – their needs, COVID impacted struggles, their hope for the future, and what services they want.

  • Published 365 daily newsletters of the diverse role models who are the examples for the students we serve, with cumulative views of 4,000,000+ readers in all social media channels.

  • Led 10 sessions virtually with partners from GlobalMindED’s network of leaders: Davos with FQ, the World Education Summit, the World Academy of Art and Science Future of Education Summit, Female Quotient Africa International Dinner, Points of Light Foundation Corporate Service Council Opening Session, United Nations 76th Anniversary, Pearson Gulf Region Training, ASU Remote, Grantmakers for Education annual conference, and launch of the Amazon Board Bound Diverse Board Series.

  • Virtual Events this year in all channels. 10,400+ registrants + 12,800+ YouTube = 23,200+ viewers.

Join us at our LIVE conference in June to connect First Gen, diverse, minoritized and poverty affected students to the “hidden curriculum,” role models, experiences, internships, and jobs. Our technology team is masterminding the AI to scale these programs.

We are grateful to our sponsors, individual donors, GlobalMindED Board members, Executive Leadership Council, and each of our committees and advisory teams who made the initiatives above possible, especially the expansion of college-specific student programs during COVID times. We also thank our business mentors who dedicated countless hours helping GlobalMindED students succeed by providing a much-needed professional bridge from academia to the world of work, inclusive leadership, and financial security.
Watch the Inclusive Leader Awards to hear their inspiring stories
and thoughts on what actions are needed now to create a more diverse, inclusive, just, and equitable future.
Watch "Closing the Equity Gap: How Global Leaders Can Take Action"
Panel Leader: Carol Carter, Founder and CEO of GlobalMindED with panelists Karen Worstell, Senior Cybersecurity Strategist, VMWare, Karen Ashworth-MacFarlane, Women of Wall Street and CEO/Co-founder, Digame PBC, Raquel Tamez, Esq. Chief Inclusion and Engagement Officer, Charles River Associates International, and Harini Gokul, Leader, Customer Success, Amazon Web Service.
Watch "Energizing, Invigorating, and Supporting K-12 STEM Students"
Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO, Green Tech High Charter School and Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager, Pharma Solutions, IFF & AAAS IF/THEN STEM Ambassador lead the discussion with Dr. Dana C. Giles; Principal, Pebblebrook High School, Jason Coleman;
Co-Founder/Executive Director, Project SYNCERE, Pastor Lyndrell Randle; STEM teacher, Green Tech Middle School, and Jennifer Makins; Director of STEM Education, Parish Episcopal School
Join our monthly equity events in STEM, Higher Education, K-12 Education, Health, and Board Diversity. See past sessions below.
Watch "Various Pathways to Get to a STEM Career"
Dr. Ryan Ross; Associate Vice Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity, & Inclusion, Colorado Community College System - an educator, speaker, and actualization coach and Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager, Pharma Solutions, IFF & AAAS IF/THEN STEM Ambassador - passionate about helping schools and organizations introduce STEM to children with Dr. Siobahn Day Grady; North Carolina A&T - advocates for more women and minorities in computer science, Toi Massey; Founder & CEO ANM Innovative Solutions - Her Speak series includes Success on Purpose and Think Like a Girl, Eric Knapp; DeKalb County Schools - brings classrooms, communities and corporations together, and Jason Pugh; Gensler, President of the National Organization of Minority Architects - passion for helping underserved communities.
Watch "Native American Education"

Ron Lessard, Executive Director for the White House Initiative on American Indian and Alaska Native Education, this year's Inclusive Leader Award winner, Julian Guerrero Jr.; enrolled citizen of the Comanche Nation, Director of the Office of Indian Education, U.S. Department of Education, and Dr. Donna Sabis-Burns, Ph.D.; Mohawk, Supervisory Education Program Specialist, Office of Indian Education, U.S. Department of Education join discussion lead by Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO Green Tech High Charter School
Watch "Courageous Conversations: The Real Indigenous Experience"
Dr. Ryan Ross; Assoc. V. Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity, & Inclusion, Colorado Community College System leads the discussion with Dr. Cheryl Crazy Bull; President and CEO, American Indian College Fund, Jameson D. Lopez; Asst. Professor, Educational Policy Studies and Practice, University of Arizona, and Jasmine Neosh; Undergraduate Researcher, College of the Menominee Nation, Sustainable Development Institute
Watch "Building Allies for Diversity in STEM"

Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager, Pharma Solutions, IFF & AAAS IF/THEN STEM Ambassador leads the discussion with Dr. Helen Tran; Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto, Dr. Indara Suarez; Assistant Professor, Department of Physics, Boston University, Dr. Sheryl Burgstahler; Director, Accessible Technology & DO-IT, University of Washington, and Anthony Newton; MSFT Alumni, Entrepreneur, Owner, Ancott
Watch "The Impact of Board Diversity"
Daryle Whyte; District Sales Manager, Amazon Web Services Startups at AWS leads the discussion with Sheldon Gilbert; Founder & CEO, Proclivity, Harini Gokul; Customer Success Leader (Global Cloud Strategy & Digital Transformation, Amazon Web Services, and Carol Carter; Founder & CEO, GlobalMindED
Watch Improving STEM Identities in Diverse Students
Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager, Pharma Solutions, IFF and AAAS IF/THEN STEM Ambassador leads this panel with Robert Koch; Board President of REACH, S&P Global Platts, Aisha Lawrey; Training & Certification Global Lead for Education Programs, Amazon Web Services, Dr. Eric J. Jolly; President and CEO, Saint Paul & Minnesota Foundation, and Maria Reyes; Dean of Industry and Public Service, Phoenix College
Watch Educated Mindset: Mental Toughness
Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO, Green Tech High Charter School leads the discussion with Keith L. Brown; Lead Consultant/Speaker, 2020 Enterprises and The I’m Possible Institute, SaJade Miller; Superintendent, Rocketship Public Schools, Texas, Olus R. Holder, Jr.; Executive Pastor, Fallbrook Church, and Erika Twani; CEO & Co-Founder, Learning One to One
Watch Facts Versus Fiction: Critical Race Theory and its Role in our Current Conversations on Race, Equity, & Justice
Dr. Ryan Ross; Associate Vice Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity, & Inclusion, Colorado Community College System leads the conversation with Omar Montgomery; Director of Equity, Culture, and Community Engagement, Cherry Creek School District, Regan Byrd; Founder and Principal Consultant, Regan Byrd Consulting LLC, and Dr. Dedrick Sims; CEO, Sims-Fayola Foundation
Watch "Mental Health and Resilience in Unscripted Times" Health Equity
Health Equity Session - Dr. Pierre Theodore; VP Global
External Innovation Johnson & Johnson leads the discussion with Liz Sweigart; Partner, PWC, workplace mental health advocate, Ron Lessard; Acting Executive Director, White House Initiative on American Indian and Alaska Native Education, Gurchaten Sandhu; President, UN GLOBE Program Officer of Non-Discrimination, International Labor Org. and Josh Lee; Principal, Life Sciences and Health Care, Deloitte Consulting
Watch "Building the Talent Pipeline:
Hispanic/Latinx Students in STEM"
STEM Equity Session - Paula Garcia Todd; Global Strategic Marketing Manager, Pharma Solutions, IFF and AAAS IF/THEN STEM Ambassador leads the conversation with Dr. Patricia Silveyra; Assoc. Professor
Environmental and Occupational Health, Indiana University, Mr. Aaron Cortes; Director, STEM initiatives, Center for College Access and Success, Northeastern Illinois Univ., Mr. Randy Blanco; Engineering senior, Penn State University, student officer SHPE, and Dr. Minerva Cordero; Senior Assoc. Dean, Research & Grad. Affairs, University of Texas at Arlington
Watch "Lifting the Hood on Disability Services—Time for a Tune Up!"
Higher Ed Equity Session - Get Comfortable Being Uncomfortable Moderated by Dr. Ryan Ross; Assoc. Vice Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity, & Inclusion, Colorado Community College System, Lesley Owens-Pelton; Director, Office of Disability Services, Susquehanna University, Catherine A. Carlson; Director, Office of Accessibility Services, Columbia-Greene Community College, and Emily Perry; Access & Equity Services Professional, Colorado Community College Online
Watch "New Beginnings: Starting School and Staying Safe in Uncertain Times"
K-12 Equity Session - Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO,
Green Tech High Charter School, Lashara Evans; Principal, Flower City School, Crystal Andrews; Principal
Chimneyrock Elementary, and Dr. Shango A. Blake; CEO, TRU SK Consultants share their experiences and insights.
To view the complete Reboot Resilience to Rebound Remarkable GlobalMindED 2021 events see below which we call The Best of GlobalMindED IDE Programs in One Hour or Less!
All GlobalMindED 2021 events are also on our YouTube channel
FIRST GEN WEEK
First Gen Role Models: What Does Success, Inclusive Leadership and Contribution Look Like?
Merritt McKenzie; President, Therapy / Applied Behavior Analysis Division, Aveanna Healthcare moderates the panel discussion with Zuleika Johnson; VP of Opportunity and Outreach, El Pomar Foundation, Vanecia Kerr; Chief Impact Officer, Mile High United Way, Kwesi Edwards; Board Member, Foundation for California Community Colleges, Lan Phan; Founder & CEO, Community of SEVEN, Anthony Newton; Microsoft Alumni Entrepreneur, Owner, Ancott, and Serita Liles; Senior Intern Coordinator, North Carolina A&T State University
What Industry Leaders Look for in Students/Graduates: Inside Secrets for Promotion Pathway Success
Ken Epps; CEO, ThreeNineteen moderates this panel with Ken McNeely; President, Western Region AT&T, Kathleen Schaum; Executive Director, University Talent Acquisition, KPMG, Guy Primus; CEO, Valence Community, Al Baker; Vice President, Siemens Enterprise Communications and Steve Zimba; Founder & CEO, Nulia
Where Are They Now? First Gen Leaders’ Insights as Young Professionals
Rocio Perez; Inclusion and Diversity Thought Leader and Trainer, Inventiva Consulting leads the panel discussion with Nima Shahab Shahmir; Application Developer, TC Energy, Betty Hailu; Research Assistant, George Washington University, Conner Sturgeon; Graduate Supervisor, Indiana University Residential Programs, and Amelia Mawlawi; Global Product Manager, HP
How to Be a Mentor and How to Be Mentored
Kwame Johnson; President and CEO, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta leads the panel with GlobalMindED Ambassadors and mentors Shannon Stone; Senior Relationship Manager, AMG National Trust Bank, Hector Ramos Diaz; Mathematics Student, University of Portland, Yonus Harris, Aerospace Engineering student, University of Michigan, and Phuong Dinh; Population Health Program, Manager, University of Colorado Medicine
GlobalMindED/Every Learner Everywhere First Gen Student Ambassadors: Freshman Year Success Secrets
Alicia Sepulveda, PhD; Academic Coach, University of Colorado, Boulder leads the discussion with Tomozia Graves; Peer Advising Assistant and recent graduate, Harford Community College, Hannah Petronek; Undergraduate Research Assistant, recent graduate West Virginia University, and Sochima Ifedikwa; Computer Science Student, Texas Tech Student, Texas Tech
HEALTH WEEK
Isolation to Compassionate Connection, How Organizations Support Their Employees in Crisis and Beyond
Liz Sweigart, PhD; Partner, PwC leads the discussion with Zachary S. Nunn; Director of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Social Impact, SurveyMonkey, Tilak Mandadi; EVP, Digital & Global Chief Technology Officer, Walt Disney Parks, Experiences and Products, Lizette Ojeda, PhD; Founder, Work-Life Lab, Texas A&M University, Lisa Giuroiu; Vice President, Pharma & Life Sciences, Susan G. Komen, and Conner Sturgeon; Graduate Supervisor, Indiana University
Emerging Covid Strong: Resilient Connections and the Indomitable Spirit
Dr. Paul Miller; Principal and CEO, Green Tech High Charter School leads the discussion with Dr. Marck Abraham; CEO, MEA Consulting and Principal, Buffalo Public Schools, Rina Patel; Founder & CEO, The Thinkers, Dr. Joe Martin; Founder and Creator, Real Men Connect, and Dr. Latoya Johnson; Special Education Coordinator, Green Tech High Charter School
Women and Alcohol: Epidemic in a Pandemic
Ann Dowsett Johnston; Bestselling Author: Drink: The Intimate Relationship Between Women and Alcohol, moderates the discussion with Lisa F. Smith; Author: Girl Walks Out of a Bar, Saumya Bharat; Biology student, Georgia State, University, Monica Swahn; Dean, Wellstar College of Health & Human Services, Kennesaw State University, and Harshita Yepuri; Graduate Neuroscience Student, Georgia State University
Growing the Diverse Talent Pipeline Across the Health Professions
Carol Carter, Founder, GlobalMindED leads this panel discussion with Merritt McKenzie; President, Therapy/Applied Behavior Analysis Division, Aveanna Healthcare, Dr. Connie Kim Yen Nguyen-Truong, Assistant Professor, Washington State University, Dr. Sameer Sood; Primary Care Physician, Strive Health, Dr. Dula F. Pacquiao; Professor Emerita, Rutgers University, and student Hana Mawlawi; Colorado School of Mines
NSF INCLUDES WEEK
Next Steps for Increasing Minority Representation in Engineering: Systemic Change
Dr. Miguel Velez-Reyes; Professor and Chair, University of Texas at El Paso, Dr. Peter Romine; Associate Professor, Electrical Engineering & Computer Engineering, Navajo Technical University, Nader Vadiee; Professor, Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute, Dr. Mohamed Chouikha; Executive Professor and Executive Director, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Prairie View A&M University
NSF Includes and Other Broadening Participation Initiatives
Dr. Don Millard; Deputy Division Director, National Science Foundation, Dr. Christine Grant, Associate Dean Faculty Advancement, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, NC State, and Dr. Tori Rhouloc Smith, Program Director, National Science Foundation
Diversifying Engineering - Deans’ Perspectives
Dr. Clay Gloster, Jr.; Dean of the Graduate College, North Carolina A&T State University moderates the discussion with Dr. Preselfannie E. Whitfield McDaniels; Dean, Div. of Graduate Studies, Jackson State University, Dr. Dana A. Williams; Dean of the Graduate School, Howard University, Dr. Oscar Barton, Jr.; Dean, School of Engineering, Morgan State University, and Dr. Stephanie G. Adams; Dean, School of Engineering and Computer Science, University of Texas, Dallas
Ubuntu: A Non-Western Perspective on How Collective Impact Can Broaden Participation in STEM
Moderator Dr. Kemi Ladeji-Osias; Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Morgan State University interviews Keynote speaker Dr. Ivory Toldson; President and CEO, Quality Education for Minorities Network
Diversifying Engineering: An Industry Perspective
Dr. Kenneth Connor; Professor EMeritus, ELectrical, Computer & Systems Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Danyel Wimberly; Senior Director, NetApp, Victor S. Gavin; Head of Federal Technology Vision and Business Development, Amazon Web Services, Robin Getz; Director of Systems Engineering; Analog devices, Toffee Coleman; Global Sales & marketing manager, Fluke corporation, Tim Shepard; Vice president, Business development strategy & operations, Lockheed Martin Space
Innovations in the Engineering Curriculum: K-12 College Pathways
Dr. Kamal Ali; Professor, Jackson State University, Dr. Brittany Chambers; Manager of Corporate Social Responsibility, Verizon, Dr. Vemitra White; Education Specialist, NASA Marshall & Stennis Space Flight Centers, Dr. Oludare Owolabi; Assistant Professor, Morgan State University, Dr. Adam Carberry; Associate Professor, Arizona State University, Dr. Medha Dalal; Postdoctorate Research Scholar, Arizona State University
Success and Education in Graduate Mentoring
Dr. Clay Gloster Jr.; Dean, North Carolina A&T State University ; Keynote Speaker: Howard Adams; Founder and President H.G. Adams and Associates
Women in Engineering: Increasing Representation
Dr. Cindy Ziker; Executive Director, Ziker Research, Panelist: Dr. Cheryl Talley; Professor of Psychology at Virginia State University, Panelist: Dr. Heather Metcalf; Director of Research and Constituent Relations, Women in Engineering ProActive Network, Panelist: Dr. Roberta Rincon; Assoc. Director of Research, Society of Women Engineers, Panelist: Dr. Rochelle Williams; Sr. Director of Programs, National Society of Black Engineers
Broadening Participation in the Engineering Pathway: Research on Critical Transitions
Dr. Cindy Ziker ; Executive Director, Ziker Research, Panelist: Dr. Steve Efe ; Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering at Morgan State University, Panelist: Dr. Pamela Leigh-Mack; Professor & Chair, Department of Engineering at Virginia State University, Panelist: Dr. Julius Davis; Associate Professor of Mathematics Education, Bowie State University
Creating a Climate for Post Pandemic Success for Minorities in Engineering
Keynote address by Dr. Gregory Washington, President of George Mason University
STEM Around the World: Student Led Success
Aaron Aaron Cortes; Northeastern Illinois University, Alexandra Agudelo Ruiz; Secretary of Education for Medellin, Columbia, Cüong Trän; NASA Electrical Power Systems Engineer, Dr. Alyssa Lenhoff-Briggs; Director of STEM Learning Ecosystems; Teaching Institute for Excellence in STEM, Jen Iriti; STEM Push Network, and Matthew Cua; Director of Innovation Help, NGO
ONE HE GLOBAL HIGHER ED WEEK
Person-Centered Learning: Teaching the Skills Needed to Support People
Olivia Fleming; Founder & Director of Partnerships, OneHE moderates the conversation with Dr. Erik Blair; Senior Lecturer, Higher Education Research and Practice, University of West London, Dr. Julie Hulme; reader in Psychology, Keele University, Cleo Keeling Ball; BSc (Hons) Psychology student, Keele University, and Emma Crabb; student, Keele University
Equity Unbound: Building Online Communities
Dr. Mia Zamora; Associate Professor of English, Kean University, Dr. Maha Bali; Associate Professor, American University in Cairo, Autumm Caines; Instructional Designer, University of Michigan
The Future of Higher Education: A Global Perspective
Olivia Fleming; Founder & Director of Partnerships, OneHE leads the conversation with Dr. Hilligje van’t Land; Secretary General International Association of Universities, Warren Kennard; Founder & CEO ConnectED, and Dr. C. Edward Watson; CIO and Associate VP, Association of American Colleges and Universities
Creating an Inclusive Community - New Faculty and Radical Empathy
Olivia Fleming; Founder & Director of Partnerships, OneHE leads the discussion with Dr. Terri Givens; Founder and CEO of Brighter Higher Education, Devin Gaines; Account Executive, SurveyMonkey, and Chantelle George; Founder and CEO of CG Consulting
Develop a Growth Mindset in Students: The Challenge and How to Meet It
Olivia Fleming; Founder & Director of Partnerships, OneHE leads the conversation with Dr. Steve Joordens; Full Professor University of Toronto, Scarborough, and Nadeem Abdi; 3rd Year Neuroscience Student, University of Toronto, Scarborough
HIGHER EDUCATION WEEK
Latinos as Inclusive Leaders in Higher Ed - Working with All People Creates the Strongest Latino Leaders
Jose R. Rodriguez; Partner (ret.), KPMG LLP leads the discussion with David Lopez; First Gen Student, University of Colorado Boulder, Dr. Donna Blancero, Provost and VP of Academic Affairs Bentley University, Jeffrey Vargas; President & CEO Generationology, Dr. Cristina Alfaro; Assoc. VP for International Affairs, San Diego State University, and Carlos Contreras; Sr. Dir. Americas, Global Partnership and Initiatives Intel Corporation
Infusing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Across the Curriculum: How and Now
Dr. Susan Swayze; Founder & CEO, Diversity Think Tank leads discussion with Nadia N. Butt; Doctoral Student, The George Washington University, Dr. Wendy Cukier; Founder and Director, Diversity Institute, Ryerson University, Dr. Terri Hinkley; CEO, Academy of Medical Surgical Nurses, and Dr. Arlen Meyers; President and CEO, Society of Physician Entrepreneurs
HBCUs Leading Innovation, Inclusivity, and Ingenuity: Defining the New Normal Post COVID
Dr. Glenda Baskin Glover; President, Tennessee State University leads the discussion with Bernie Milano; Founder, PhD Project, Cece Rodgers; Student, Tougaloo College, and Dr. Harold Lee Martin Senior; Chancellor, North Carolina A & T State University.
Inclusive HR Directors Improve Life for Higher Ed: Celebrating the Unsung Heroes on College Campuses
Dr. Ryan Ross; Associate Vice Chancellor Student Affairs, Equity, & Inclusion, Colorado Community College System leads the discussion with Christina Cecil; Chief Human Resources Officer, Colorado Community College System, Cheng Yu Hou; Chief Human Resources Officer, San Mateo County Community College District, Bill Dial; Chief Human Resources Officer, College of Southern Nevada, and Kyra Welch; Student, Bethune-Cookman
Native Higher Education Leaders: Transforming COVID Caused Challenges
Dr. David Yarlott, President of Little Big Horn College leads the discussion with Dr. Twyla Baker, President of Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College, Dr. Carma Claw, Assistant Professor of Management, Fort Lewis College, Dr. Billie Jo Kipp, Associate Director Research and Evaluation, Aspen Institute Center for Native American Youth, Dr. Joseph Gladstone, Professor of Business Management University of New Haven, and Dominik MorningDove, a current student from Fort Lewis College
K-12 WEEK
Building the Diverse Talent Pipeline in K-12, Master’s, and PhD: First Gen and Diverse Success
Dr. Tania Hogan; Director of Undergraduate Student Success, University of Colorado Denver leads the discussion with Richard Maez; IB Diploma Program Manager - Denver Public Schools, Dr. Maria A. Castro Barajas; Assistant Director, Pre-Collegiate Development, Univ. of Colorado Boulder, Dr. Robin Brandehoff; Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Colorado Denver, and Joselyne Garcia-Moreno; student, University of Colorado Denver
Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging in K-12: Moving the Big Rocks of Equity Forward
Jonathan Cooper; Superintendent - Mason City Schools leads panel discussion with Soroya Smith; DEI Learning Experience Designer - Mason City Schools, Kori Harris; Online Content Designer - Second Grade Teacher, Mason Early Childhood Center, Amie Switzer; 4th-grade teacher - Mason City Schools, Mariah Norman; Senior, Mason High School, and Bena Kallick; Co-Founder, Institute for Habits of Mind
Developing the Principal and Superintendent Diverse Pipeline in PK–12: Looking Ahead 
Dr. Mort Sherman; Associate Executive Director - AASA, The School Superintendents Association leads this panel discussion with Dr. Maria Ott; Executive in Residence, University of Southern California, Dr. Michael Conner; Superintendent - Middletown Public Schools, and Dr. Khalid Mumin; Superintendent - Reading School District. Includes Kid Superintendent video
Latino Leaders as Learning Changemakers: The Future of Work is Diverse, Inclusive, Just, and Equitable 
Adrian Rosado; President - Zion Leadership Group with Yecenia Tostado; Executive Director - Project Azul, Sixcia Devine; Business Development Specialist - Grow with Google, Alissa Santana; McNair Scholar, Senior, Business Major University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, and Jaime Ivan Lopez-Rivera; VP for Student Affairs - Antillean Adventist University, Puerto Rico. Register below Renay's story.
TECHNOLOGY WEEK
STEPS to Skills on the Go: Cell Phone Learning Advancing Equity for Adult Students
Waukecha Wilkerson; Director of Coaching, Cell-Ed leads the panel discussion with Vickie Hay; CalWORKs Coordinator, Student Success, Orange Coast College, David A. Croom; Asst. Director, Postsecondary Achievement, Aspen Institute, Portia Polk; Director of Learning and Advocacy, Generation Hope, and Rachel Mercott, Student, Cell-Ed STEPS
Driving Change through Intersectional Philanthropy: Increasing Representation and Leadership
Dwana Franklin-Davis; CEO, Reboot Representation leads discussion with Carina Weyer; Program Manager, F5 Global Good & F5 Foundation, Taliah Givens; Sr. Director, Student Professional Development, UNCF, Jamie Schwartz; Director of Major Gifts, American Indian College Fund, and Debbie Marcus; Senior Director, Break Through Tech, Cornell Tech
Student Leaders Speak To College Presidents, CEOs, and Government Leaders
Dr. Jessica Rowland Williams; Director, Every Learner Everywhere leads the discussion with GlobalMindED Every Learner Student Ambassadors Jair Flores; Student, Colorado State University Pueblo, Serita Liles; Student, North Carolina A&T State University, Hector Ramos Diaz; Student, University of Portland, and Kyra Welch; Student, Bethune-Cookman University
Advancing Equity in Highly Selective HS and College Admissions-Ed Equity Lab, Partners, and Students 
Alexandra Slack; Chief of Staff, National Education Equity Lab, leads this panel discussion with Asheley Siewnarine; Student Success Director - National Education Equity Lab, Di’Zhon Chase; Student, Columbia University, Michaell Santos; Student, The Bronx School for Law, Government, and Justice, and Favi Olmedo; Student, Bronx Career & College Prep. High School
Tech Empowering Students Before, During, and After Covid: Closing the Digital Divide
Dr. Michael Torrance; President, Motlow State Community College leads panel discussion with Elise Shea; Founder & President, Conversations Unbound, Robert Joseph; President, Team MindShift, Rishi Kanjani; Analyst, Data Insights, Salesforce, and Cala Estes; Director of Education, Blind Institute of Technology
The Benefits of Global Internships: How, Why, Where
Adrian Rosado; President, Zion Leadership Group leads panel with Mara Luna; Director, TRIO Upward Bound. Univ of Puerto Rico, Mitzi Damazo-Sabando; CEO, TinkerHouse Inc., Manila, Philippines, Tree Xu; Community Manager, Education First, Wuxi, China, Erika Aquino; Executive Director, Infinit-O Group Foundation, Raymond Cabrera; Director, TRIO Upward Bound, Univ. of S. Florida, Ayessa Weems; Student, TRIO Student Support, Purdue Univ. NW
EARTH WEEK
International Youth: Strategies for Inclusive, Just, and Equitable Climate Leadership 
Ash Pachauri; Co-Founder and Senior Mentor, Protect Our Planet Movement and Drishya Pathak; POP Movement, India lead this panel of international students including Summer Benjamin; POP Movement Peter Gruber International Academy, US Virgin Islands, Caroline Sandberg; Tahoe Expedition Academy, USA, Tsague Dongfack/Willy Endelson; POP Movement, Cameroon, Ricardo Delgado; POP Youth Mentor, Arturo Michelena Univ, Venezuela, and Zoe Ricardo Rivera; CEI Univ, México
How Environmental Justice and Equity Can Help Solve the Climate Crisis Part 1 
Courtney Knight; Founder and Managing Member, Capstone Capital Advisors and Susan Kidd; Executive Director, Center for Sustainability, Agnes Scott College lead discussion with Anamarie Shreeves; Environmental Education Programs Manager, West Atlanta Watershed Alliance, Eriqah Vincent; Network Engagement Director, Power Shift Network, Dr. Dana Williamson; EPA Environmental Health Fellow, Assoc of Schools and Programs of Public Health, and Gwendylon P. Smith; Exec Director, Collier Heights Association for Revitalization, Resilience, and Sustainability.  
How Environmental Justice and Equity Can Help Solve the Climate Crisis Part 2 
Dr. Kyle Whyte; Professor of Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council, leads panel discussion with Ka’illjuus / Lisa Lang; Executive Director, Xaadas Kil Kuyaas Foundation, Dr. Kelsey Leonard; Assistant Professor, Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo, Brittany Judson; Just Growth Consultant Partnership for Southern Equity, and AJ (Andrea) Grant; President, Environmental Communications Associates.
Student Leaders Speak 2021 Report Finds Shift to Remote Learning Hardest on BIPOC College Students

Diverse students felt they did not have a seat at the table when pandemic related decisions were made and call on college leaders to include them. The report is a joint initiative between Every Learner Everywhere and GlobalMindED with support from The Equity Project LLC


(DENVER, CO – May 6, 2021) — A new report based on data-driven surveys of 25 GlobalMindED Ambassadors representing a larger group of 102 students from 47 colleges in 22 states found that without exception, the shift from on campus learning to remote college instruction has most negatively impacted poverty-affected, first generation, Black, Latinx, and Indigenous students. Their voices are shared in the report, which concludes that college presidents, CEO’s and government leaders cannot solve problems for these students without including them at the table.

Student Leaders Speak 2021: Student Voices Informing Educational Strategies, conducted via surveys, interviews and informal feedback from mentors, illustrates a lack of national and collegiate preparedness to address the near-immediate shift from in-classroom to remote learning. Students reported a lack of access to an engaged faculty and essential technology while underscoring that their greatest support and strength has come from interaction and collaboration within their dedicated student community. Read the full report here: Student Leaders Speak to College Presidents, CEOs and Policymakers.

Highlights include:

  • Communities represented included BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color), first generation, living with disabilities, white poverty-affected, LGBTQ+, Veteran, Online, and ESL/Immigrant.

  • 100 percent acknowledged two or more barriers such as lack of internet access, lack of focused learning environment, no personal device, health concerns, unemployment, language barriers, learning from their beds/bedrooms and/or managing younger siblings.

  • 100 percent described absent or unavailable campus support systems beyond the instructor, equating the learning experience and cost of same as being grossly out of alignment.

  • 80 percent disapproved of the online learning experience, citing inconsistency in faculty ability to educate using technological tools and practices. In essence, the virtual environment was not mirroring or upholding the most important elements of the in-person environment, as some faculty were not adequately trained in the COVID-caused emotional/social needs of students.

  • 70 percent relied on peer support as compared to more formal support systems. Students were learning and growing by being together – something critical to note during times of both social and physical distancing.

The report calls on college administrators to implement actionable steps to ease the challenging demands of remote learning and smooth the transition from college to professional careers.

  • Colleges should do a better job of providing a platform for the voices of poverty-affected and first generation students to be heard.

  • Faculty needs to gain a better grasp of digital tools, technologies and strategies.

  • Advisors should recruit student coaches and peers to help newer students from diverse communities.

  • Policy makers must improve access to transportation, housing, child care, financing, lower tuition/debt and career opportunities for first generation/diverse students.

GlobalMindED Programs helps with:

GlobalMindED | 303-327-5688 | contact@globalminded.org | www.globalminded.org
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