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U-M visit inspires Detroit high school students to consider health care careers

Two dozen students from Detroit’s Cody Medicine and Community Health Academy were welcomed to the University of Michigan to learn about the roles of health care providers and potential career opportunities.

Hosted by the U-M School of Nursing (UMSN), the students toured UMSN’s high-tech Clinical Learning Center and spoke with nursing students and faculty about the many career paths for nursing.

“Most people think of nurses at the bedside in hospitals,” UMSN Dean Patricia Hurn told the students. “That’s a big piece of what nurses do and it’s important. But, nurses can also do research, they can work in communities and they can work all over the world. Nurses represent the largest number of health care providers and are considered the most trusted. That means nurses have a lot of opportunities to make a difference.”

The students also went to Michigan Medicine for a visit that included a tour of the Survival Flight helicopter, and educational sessions on nutrition, fitness and physical therapy.

The visit builds on a growing partnership between UMSN, Project Healthy Schools and local schools. During the academic year, UMSN students in a community health course were assigned to Cody, and several other Detroit and Ypsilanti schools.

“I love working with high school students because they have so much potential and are eager to learn,” said 2018 BSN graduate Emma Gell, one of the UMSN students who worked at Cody. “During the tour, they asked thoughtful questions throughout the day. By showing nursing as an option for anyone and a career path that provides endless opportunities, we can continue to grow the nursing profession.”

The Cody students are part of a National Academy Foundation program. They are learning communities within high school systems in high-need areas to ensure students are college and career ready through partnerships in education, business and community.

UMSN recruiters spoke with the students to give them tips on a strong college application.

“Exposure to nursing career paths at this age allows the students ample time to enroll in math and science coursework that will give them the foundation to be successful in a nursing curriculum,” said Katie Martin, a UMSN recruiting coordinator. “We encourage prospective students to engage in job shadowing, volunteering, and informational interviews in order to deepen their understanding of this career path and use this knowledge to strengthen their application.”

UMSN Clinical Instructor Judi Policicchio, who teaches UMSN community health courses and organized the visit, also serves on the Cody Medicine and Community Advisory Board.

“When my students started working with the Cody classes, only nine students were enrolled in each class and none wanted to become a nurse,” said Policicchio. “After the first week, students started asking their principal and counselor if they could enroll in the class. After this visit, three-quarters of the class said they are interested in pursuing a career in nursing. I think this partnership will enrich both schools for years to come. ”

On Tuesday, May 8, six faculty members, Sara Ahbel-Rappe, Elizabeth R. Cole, Nicolai Lehnert,  Franc Nunoo-Quarcoo, Allison Steiner and Robert Joseph Taylor were honored at the 2018 Harold R. Johnson Diversity Service Award ceremony for their contributes to the development of a culturally and ethnically diverse University of Michigan.

Learn more about the recipients

 

 

The end of the academic year often brings excitement for summer – warmer weather, travel, a break from lectures – but for just over 10,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional University of Michigan students, this year ends with graduation.

In addition to U-M’s official Spring Commencement, that took place Saturday, a number of departments, organizations and affinity groups on campus hosted cultural celebrations for their graduates.

This year, the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives facilitated the first Asian/Pacific Islander celebration. The event was held on Sunday in the Michigan Union.

In the continuing effort to cultivating a diverse, equitable and inclusive environment on campus, the University of Michigan has launched a new website, undocumented.umich.edu, to serve as a supportive resource for undocumented and DACA students.

“We hope that the website reinforces the university’s commitment to welcoming students of all ethnicities and nationalities, and help them find a safe and supportive community at the University of Michigan,” says Hector Galvan, Program Manager for the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives.

Earlier this year, Robert Sellers, Vice Provost for Equity and Inclusion and Chief Diversity Officer, appointed Galvan to serve as a point-of-contact for DACA students who enter the institution and would benefit from ongoing support and guidance throughout their journey at the University of Michigan.

The website features four core components – supportive services, community support, external funding, and parent information – and aims to provide undocumented and DACA students with a support network of current support staff and other undocumented and DACA students allies at the University of Michigan.

Six faculty members whose service contributes to the development of a culturally and ethnically diverse University of Michigan community have received 2018 Harold R. Johnson Diversity Service Awards from the Office of the Provost.

The recipients are:

• Sara Ahbel-Rappe, LSA.

• Elizabeth R. Cole, LSA.

• Nicolai Lehnert, LSA.

• Franc Nunoo-Quarcoo, Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design.

• Allison Steiner, College of Engineering and LSA.

• Robert Joseph Taylor, School of Social Work.

“Faculty members at the University of Michigan continue to play a vital role in the success of furthering our diversity, equity and inclusion efforts,” says Robert Sellers, vice provost for equity and inclusion and chief diversity officer. “This year’s recipients epitomize this role and have made significant and lasting impacts — not just in their respective fields, but across our entire university community.”

Established in 1996, the award is given in honor of Harold Johnson, dean emeritus of the School of Social Work. The awards will be presented during a ceremony and dinner on May 8, and each honoree receives a $5,000 stipend.

The following profiles have been compiled from information submitted in nomination letters.

Sara Ahbel-Rappe

For more than a decade, Ahbel-Rappe, professor of Greek and Latin, LSA, has been a leader in diversifying the Department of Classics and the field at large, wrote Artemis Leontis, professor of modern Greek and chair of the department.

In a field marked with a lack of diversity and representation from historically underrepresented groups, Ahbel-Rappe “put her brilliant mind to work to plan how to bring equal opportunity to students with diverse backgrounds so as both to diversify Classics and to push its study outside its comfort zone,” Leontis wrote.

For the graduate program in classics, she added new structures to build bridges and bring in more underrepresented students. She got the department involved in the Michigan Humanities Emerging Research Scholars Program, and played an instrumental role in the creation of the department’s new Bridge Master of Arts in classical studies degree program, which she directs as well.

The Bridge program is a fully funded, three-semester program that assists students — particularly those from non-traditional backgrounds, diverse cultures or first-generation college students — in developing the ancient Greek and Latin language skills needed to pursue a Ph.D. in classical studies.

Ahbel-Rappe has mentored diverse undergraduates, and worked to extend the boundaries of the university classroom to prisons. She has brought undergraduate students into correctional facilities to study with those incarcerated, taught a prison educational exchange class at Macomb Correctional Facility and is part of UM-Dearborn’s Women’s College Program, a volunteer collective of U-M faculty that teaches at Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility.

She helped create the Working Group on Social Justice for the Society of Classical Studies and she has fought for LGBT rights, including testifying before the state Legislature regarding a plan to take away benefits from same-sex partners of public employees.

Elizabeth R. Cole

Elizabeth R. Cole, professor of women’s studies, of Afroamerican and African studies and of psychology, and associate dean of the Department of Social Sciences, LSA, was the “main architect” of LSA’s diversity, equity and inclusion strategic plan and led the college in the initial implementation of several of its DEI initiatives, wrote Fiona Lee, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, associate dean for diversity, equity and inclusion and professional development, and professor of psychology, LSA.

Cole chaired the Faculty Diversity Taskforce during LSA’s DEI strategic planning process and she played a major role in the creation of a new associate dean position in the college dedicated to DEI.

She also played a key role in the integration of the National Center for Institutional Diversity into LSA, “providing a catalyst” for the college to engage in DEI scholarship, wrote Lee, also an associate professor of organizational behavior and human resource management, Stephen M. Ross School of Business.

With the U-M ADVANCE Program, Cole created “Faculty Career Workshops,” where faculty learn more about various topics, including grant writing, book publishing, teaching skills, etc.

“Many important norms and advice faculty receive about career advancement are communicated through informal networks,” Lee wrote. “These networks are generally more accessible to members of dominant, majority groups.”

She was also a founding member of the Next Prof program, a multiday professional development workshop aimed at recruiting underrepresented scholars in science, technology, engineering and math.

Cole also spearheaded the LSA Collegiate Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, in which the university recruits scholars whose research, teaching or leadership demonstrates a commitment to the principles and values of DEI.

“Under Dr. Cole’s leadership, LCPFP promises to produce transformative change that will reshape the LSA faculty for years to come, as well as the discourse around the importance of diversity in higher education,” Lee wrote.

Nicolai Lehnert

Lehnert, professor of chemistry and of biophysics, LSA, has worked to recruit students from historically underrepresented and underserved populations to pursue studies in science, technology, engineering and math.

He created and leads the Detroit Research Internship Summer Experience program, or D-RISE, which brings students from Detroit’s Cass Technical High School to the university for seven weeks over the summer to perform research in the laboratories of faculty members in chemistry.

The goal of the program is to increase underrepresented minority participation in the sciences, wrote Robert Kennedy, Hobart H. Willard Distinguished University Professor of Chemistry and chair of the Department of Chemistry.

Since its inception, the majority of students who have participated in the program have been accepted to U-M. While 75 percent of participants from the 2014-16 programs are now attending U-M and the remaining students attend Harvard University, Stanford and Wayne State University, all of these students are entering STEM areas.

“The students all commented on the strong impact of this experience in giving them hands-on experience with real science, further motivating them to pursue STEM careers,” wrote Kennedy, who is also a professor of chemistry, LSA; professor of pharmacology, Medical School; and professor of macromolecular science and engineering, CoE.

As chair of the Department of Chemistry’s Diversity Committee, Lehnert is the department’s liaison for the NextProf Science Workshop, which is focused in part on helping underrepresented minority scientists to learn about the faculty application process.

In this role, Lehnert selects the chemistry workshop participants and their hosts, and organizes programming.

Lehnert participates in the university network for first-generation college students, for which he has sat on panels and offered mentoring to students. Lehnert also serves as a member of the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program Director Search Committee.

Franc Nunoo-Quarcoo

Nunoo-Quarcoo, professor of art and design, Penny W. Stamps School of Art and Design, is the chair of the school’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee and helped initiate and found the Stamps in Color student group, which aims to increase the creative, social and professional opportunities of Stamps’ artists and designers of color.

As a Stamps in Color coordinator, Nunoo-Quarcoo has brought influential artists to speak at the school, sponsored a schoolwide trip to Kehinde Wiley’s exhibition and lecture at the Toledo Museum and partnered with North Campus units on MLK Symposium events.

As the programming liaison for the U-M GalleryDAAS, Nunoo-Quarcoo has promoted the creative work of African-American artists and coordinated events that have been visited by thousands of U-M students and faculty.

As part of the school’s DEI strategic planning committee, he helped lead the development and implementation of the plan’s goals, connecting students, faculty and staff and improving the climate for diverse community members who might feel overlooked or isolated, wrote Endi Poskovic, professor of art and design, Stamps School.

Along with taking the time to meet with students from nontraditional backgrounds, Nunoo-Quarcoo traveled to Sudan with U-M students and faculty to help develop a visual identity and communication strategy for two United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization World Heritage Sites.

“Professor Nunoo-Quarcoo’s diligent efforts in promoting diversity have had a profound influence on the lives of our students, colleagues, faculty and staff, and the communities across the campus and beyond,” Poskovic wrote. “His ability to engage students about the role of diverse cultural environments reflect his own commendable knowledge of and sensitivity to culture and history that go beyond conventional wisdom.”

Allison Steiner

Steiner, associate professor of climate and space sciences and engineering, CoE, and associate professor of earth and environmental sciences, LSA, has made significant contributions to developing a diverse and inclusive workforce at U-M and in her field at a national and international level.

As a graduate student, Steiner co-founded the Earth Science Women’s Network with five other female students to provide peer mentoring and networking to other women in earth sciences.

With funding from the National Science Foundation, Steiner led the network’s growth to its eventual development into a nonprofit. The network now has 3,000 members in 60 countries at varying stages in their careers, and involves large research universities, small liberal arts colleges, government agencies and research organizations.

“Not only did ESWN help thousands of students worldwide achieve their dream of a career in earth sciences — already an exceptional result — but it helped transform the culture in the field of earth sciences itself, so that it is now considered normal to have successful women in science and serving in leadership positions,” wrote Enrico Landi, professor of climate and space sciences and engineering, CoE.

Steiner has served on several university committees dedicated to improving the culture, diversity and inclusion of CoE and U-M, most notably serving as a member and chairing the CoE Dean’s Advisory Committee on Female Faculty.

As chair, her leadership led to the school’s revamping of its child care policy to allow female faculty who have given birth to request one extra semester of modified duties in addition to the one term faculty receive for a new birth or adoption.

Steiner collaborated with Lola Eniola-Adefeso, professor of chemical engineering, of biomedical engineering and of macromolectular science and engineering, CoE, and chair of the Dean’s Advisory Committee for Faculty of Color to find candidates supporting DEI for department chair positions.

As a Rackham Diversity Ally, she has supported student-run, DEI events and led Diversity Town Halls for students to give feedback.

Robert Joseph Taylor

Throughout his career, Taylor, Harold R. Johnson Professor of Social Work, Sheila Feld Collegiate Professor of Social Work and professor of social work, School of Social Work, has shaped scholarship on African-American families and mentored minority students and junior professors.

An engaged and dedicated teacher, Taylor spends great time mentoring doctoral students, postdoctoral scholars and junior faculty. He has organized and administered summer programs on research methods and academic success for junior faculty and doctoral students since 1998. As the head of the Investigator Core for the National Institutes of Health-funded Michigan Center for Urban African American Aging Research, he provides mentorship to doctoral graduates and doctoral candidates interested in aging research on older African Americans.

For three years, Taylor conducted Graduate Student Workshops, which were in part sponsored by the Minority Fellows Program of the Council for Social Work Education, which is the major diversity scholar pipeline program for social work.

Taylor still communicates with previous summer workshop participants, sending weekly notices about grants, publishing opportunities and research news items.

Along with mentoring doctoral students from across U-M, Taylor also is committed to mentoring assistant professors from around the country, often developing collaborative research projects that have resulted in published work.

“Many of the doctoral students that he has mentored have gone on to academic careers and have received tenure and promotion at their institutions,” wrote School of Social Work Dean Lynn Videka, the Carol T. Mowbray Collegiate Professor of Social Work and professor of social work. “To assist their development and launching their careers, he has secured grants for many of his doctoral students … and used his discretionary funds to support students’ participation in conferences.”

Just over a year ago, the Women’s Studies Department launched its new Gender & Health program–and with 72 undergraduate majors and counting, it has already made quite an impression on campus.

Utilizing an interdisciplinary, feminist approach to the study of health practice, policy, and theory, Gender & Health is the first program of its kind in the nation. Students learn firsthand how well-being and medical care vary across segments of the population and are encouraged to regard health as both a social and biomedical phenomenon. “Gender & Health is an opportunity to look at healthcare topics and experiences [as] you wouldn’t in your chemistry or physics classes,” comments senior Brittany Gates. “It’s really opened my mind.”

All Gender & Health students begin the program in WS 220: Perspectives in Women’s Health. This is a course that–as graduate student instructors Kayla Fike and Harley Dutcher put it–is designed to help students unlearn everything they have been told about health. “In the first class, we try to set the stage by discussing how many of the things you thought were true…come from a particular perspective,” says Fike. “And that perspective influences which ideas are taught and emphasized over others.” Recognizing these biases proves both challenging and rewarding for students. “It can feel scary to hear: ‘these are the assumptions you’re making, and this is the footing you’re starting on,” says Dutcher. “But doing so opens possibilities for students to develop new career interests, to consider new ways of looking at the world.”

Indeed, the opportunity for intellectual and personal growth fostered during Perspectives inWomen’s Health continues throughout the Gender & Health curriculum. In courses such as  WS 328: Women, Agency, and Sexual Safety and WS 400: Women’s Reproductive Health, students develop knowledge and skills necessary to create a more equitable and just healthcare system. As junior Miloni Shah notes: “I can truly say that from this major, I have a more distinct vision for myself in the medical field, one that [will] encourage women’s advocacy and promote cultural competency.”

Upon graduating from Michigan, Gender & Health students will enter the world prepared to lead efforts of bridging health expertise and feminist practice. To learn more about the Gender & Health curriculum, student experience, and guiding principles, check out the video above or click here.

This story was originally published the University of Michigan Women’s Studies Department. 

Shannon Moran earns MLK Spirit Award for inclusivity efforts

For years, Chemical Engineering PhD student Shannon Moran searched for a mentor who mirrored herself. She had female engineering students in her classes and female engineering professors, but it wasn’t until 2012—after Moran had entered the workforce and joined the Boston Consulting Group—that she found an out LGBTQ mentor.

Now, Moran is a mentor for LGBTQ engineering students at the University of Michigan and the architect behind several inclusive programs across campus and the United States. Her extensive efforts earned her a 2018 Martin Luther King Spirit Award for her work to expand LGBTQ visibility on campus and beyond.

“I want to be the mentor I wish I’d had for LGBTQ students who are drawn to engineering, but hesitate to pursuit a degree because they don’t see anyone like them,” says Moran, who is a member of the Glotzer Group. “The world was a very different place in 2013. There’s tremendous momentum around LGBTQ inclusivity efforts, but academia is still catching up.”

Moran began building the foundations of her LGBTQ inclusivity efforts in 2013, when she became a small-group mentor and curriculum coordinator for Out for Undergrad (O4U). The national, volunteer-run nonprofit hosts annual weekend-long professional conferences for outstanding LGBT undergraduates, and soon asked Moran to redesign its engineering conference.

She added networking and communications workshops, mentorship sessions and TED-style talks. The changes were a hit among participants. One attendee shared that “before this weekend, I’d relied upon the vague hope that it was statistically improbable that I was the only LGBT engineer. Now I know 200 of them.”

In fall of 2015, Moran brought her community-building passion and program development skills to U-M as a first-year graduate student. Moran’s extensive efforts earned her a 2018 Martin Luther King Spirit Award for her work to expand LGBTQ visibility on campus and beyond.

She played a key role in shaping the Chemical Engineering Peer Mentor program for graduate students, which aims to improve the department’s inclusivity and retention of its diverse student population.

Moran was a member of the program’s inaugural mentee class, then became a peer mentor the following year. She also led the creation of a program curriculum, which provided peer mentors with tools and resources to prepare their students for the candidacy exam.

“What’s unique about this program is not only does it promote inclusivity and academic excellence among the first-year class, it also provides peer mentors a unique leadership experience,” Moran says. “Many PhD students would not get an opportunity to navigate managing and motivating a diverse group until they enter the workforce. I want to change that.”

Her efforts reach beyond the Department of Chemical Engineering. Currently, she is developing a pilot program that matches out U-M graduate students with undergraduates, helping to fill a mentoring void for LGBTQ students.

This story was originally published by Michigan Engineering

Joel Begay’s work with Native communities has provided him valuable insight on how to partner with communities in a way that does not exploit them. The MPH student aspires to help fill gaps around minority health data by collecting and analyzing data while helping tribal governments, health professionals, and other government agencies interpret the data to ultimately improve Indian Country.

This story was originally published by the University of Michigan School of Public Health.