cmaadmin (EDU)Hi this is my profile and bio information.HomeENKU GELAYEENKU GELAYE has been appointed vice president and dean of campus life at Emory University. Currently, she serves as vice chancellor of student affairs and campus life at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Gelaye earned a bachelor’s degree in print journalism from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville and a J.D. from the University of Georgia.April 8, 2019HomeThe Impact and Importance of HBCUs Emphasized at NAN ConventionSeveral presidents of historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) discussed the far-reaching influence of their institutions on American life during a panel held on Friday at the National Action Network (NAN) convention.April 7, 2019OpinionThe Significant Role Leaders Play in Influencing Employee Well-BeingThe idea of employee well-being is nothing new. Every organization, including colleges and universities, wants happy and healthy employees yet, few organizations actually take the necessary steps to support their employees’ well-being.April 7, 2019SportsDiligence and Determination Defines Asia SeidtWhen head swimming coach Lars Jorgensen was recruiting 2019 Arthur Ashe Jr. Female Sports Scholar Asia Seidt to the University of Kentucky he saw someone who could make an impact on the program.April 4, 2019SportsNSIA Looks to Diversify Intercollegiate SportsNow, more than ever, Sean T. Frazier says that institutions have to do a better job recruiting a diverse group of individuals to work in intercollegiate athletics.April 4, 2019SportsAshe Scholar Committed to Serving OthersDuring Khari Blasingame’s freshman year at Vanderbilt University, he was already speaking to academic support counselor Elizabeth Wright about graduate school. This year’s Arthur Ashe Jr. Male Sports Scholar has not wavered in his commitment to addressing systemic inequities in health care, and his long-term goal is to become a leader in health care administration.April 4, 2019African-AmericanResistance Strategies for Black Graduate Students in Higher EducationBeing a Black woman at a predominantly White institution (PWI), I experience simultaneously racialized and gendered encounters that leave me feeling anxious and incensed. The social justice spaces that I found in graduate school help me to navigate challenging experiences and to speak truth to power. I share this brief composition as a testament to the strategies of resistance that my peers, colleagues, faculty and I use to persist in higher education.April 4, 2019Latest NewsNational Action Network Convention Explores the Complex Legacy of Frederick DouglassDr. David Blight, a historian at Yale University, discussed his new book on abolitionist Frederick Douglass in a conversation with the Reverend Al Sharpton and Dr. Michael Eric Dyson of Georgetown University.April 3, 2019HomeTexas Initiative for Male Students of Color Issues First Policy BriefA major initiative in Texas to bolster the success of men of color in college continues to expand, and the inaugural report in what will be a series of policy briefs reveals some interesting data about where male Latino students in the state are performing best academically.April 3, 2019StudentsCollege Admissions is a Regressive Tax on Low-Income StudentsRecently, federal prosecutors charged dozens of wealthy parents with bribing college officials to ensure entry for their children into some of America’s most elite colleges and universities. As infuriating as those headlines may be, they are simply the byproduct of a college admissions industrial complex that risks cementing our social and career hierarchy based upon the accomplishments of 17-year-olds.April 3, 2019Previous PagePage 249 of 3225Next Page