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Campus & Community

Women in Leadership Initiative Announces Spring 2021 Speakers, New Program Dates

Thursday, February 11, 2021, By News Staff
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Women in Leadership

黑料不打烊鈥檚 Women in Leadership Initiative (WiL) today announced its Spring 2021 calendar of events and programming. Offerings include opportunities to learn from experienced leaders from diverse fields within and outside of higher education. These leaders will offer insights that can serve as vital guidance in navigating challenges facing higher education during and beyond the pandemic.

鈥淩elationship building, professional development and career advancement benefit from increased opportunities for candid and constructive conversations,鈥 says WiL steering committee member Michele Wheatly, special advisor to the Chancellor and professor of biology. 鈥淲e look forward to offering WiL programs to members of the campus community that inspire meaningful insights, diversity of thought and self-reflection, with the goal of individual and collective growth.鈥

The WiL Initiative seeks to build strong leaders that can adapt rapidly to change and adopt new skills to keep teams and organizations moving forward. All members of the 黑料不打烊 and SUNY ESF campus communities are invited to participate in these events. Following participation in events, individuals will be asked to contribute their thoughts, interests and goals to help guide the development of future programming.

Questions about spring 2021 programming may be submitted to Kim O鈥橞rien at聽womeninleadership@syr.edu.

New Programming

INSPIRE Event: International Women鈥檚 Day Celebration

March 8 | 11 a.m.-noon ET

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Neeli Bendapudi

Speaker: Neeli Bendapudi, Ph.D., president, University of Louisville

The keynote speaker for the International Women鈥檚 Day Celebration is聽 Neeli Bendapudi, 18th president of the University of Louisville. Bendapudi will share her personal journey to the highest level of leadership in higher education and her thoughts on the meaning of International Women鈥檚 Day during a pandemic. The forum will be held via Zoom and features the keynote address and Q&A. The event is open to University faculty, staff and graduate students.

Register for the .

Updated Programming

INSPIRE Event: A Focus on Women Veterans and Military-Connected Women 鈥 Celebration Event and Speakers Confirmed

Shared Reading Experience: Spring 2021
Celebration: March 23 | 3-5 p.m. ET

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Cynthia Pritchett

The WiL seeks to reach out to pioneering women in fields that are traditionally male. The initiative will offer a shared reading opportunity for women and nonbinary staff, faculty and students with 鈥淎shley鈥檚 War: The Untold Story of a Team of Women Soldiers on the Special Ops Battlefield鈥 by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon. Participants will be provided with a copy of the book to read during the spring semester and come together for a shared celebration in March.

The celebration event will include:

  • A book discussion (3-4 p.m. ET) for participants in the shared reading experience facilitated by Command Sergeant Major Cynthia Pritchett, U.S. Army (retired), a 36-year active service veteran who is the first female to serve as the command senior enlisted leader or a combatant command in a time of war.

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    Jennifer L. Gotie

  • A virtual 鈥淔ireside Chat鈥 (4-5 p.m. ET), open to the campus community, about working and teaching leadership in diverse and dynamic environments. The chat features women leaders and will be facilitated by Maureen Casey, chief operating officer of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families.聽Panelists:
    people sitting in a group

    Lynda M. Granfield

    • Lieutenant Colonel Jennifer L. Gotie, U.S. Army, Civil Affairs; professor of military science and department chair, 黑料不打烊
    • Colonel Lynda M. Granfield, U.S. Army (retired)
    • Command Sergeant Major Cynthia Pritchett, U.S. Army (retired)

Register for the聽.

Academic Track: Pathways through the Pyramid: Academic Women, Hierarchies and Silos 鈥 New Date, Panelists Confirmed

Feb. 18 | 4-5:30 p.m. ET

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Denise A. Battles

Due to the delayed start of the spring semester the panel, originally scheduled for Feb. 8, has been rescheduled for Feb. 18.

Institution-level leadership requires experience leading others, managing resources, making strategic decisions and responding to crises.

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Kami Chavis

What roles鈥攁nd the experiences they provide鈥攑repare women and nonbinary faculty to step into institution level leadership? Is there only one pathway to the top?

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Menah Pratt-Clarke

Panelists:

  • Denise A. Battles, Ph.D., president, SUNY Geneseo
  • Kami Chavis, J.D., vice provost, professor of law and director of Criminal Justice Program, Wake Forest University
  • Menah Pratt-Clarke, Ph.D., vice president for strategic affairs and diversity, Virginia Tech
  • Lynn Perry Wooten, Ph.D., president, Simmons University
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Lynn Perry Wooten

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Graduate Student Track: Empowering Early-Career Academics: Equity and Opportunity in a Post-Pandemic Professoriate 鈥 New Date

Co-Sponsored by the Graduate School, Women in Leadership, Women in Science and Engineering, and BioInspired
March 19 | 2-3:30 p.m. ET

Due to the delayed start of the spring semester the workshop, originally scheduled for Feb. 5, has been rescheduled for March 19.

厂辫别补办别谤:听Leslie Gonzales, associate professor, Department of Educational Administration, Michigan State University

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Leslie Gonzales

Research has highlighted the differential impact of COVID-19 on the career trajectories of women and BIPOC currently in faculty roles as well as those in the pipeline to the professoriate. This workshop will offer graduate students the opportunity to consider strategies to promote completion and entry into a post-pandemic higher education landscape.

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Ongoing Registration is still open for the following spring activities:

Inspire Events

Trends in Women鈥檚 Leadership in Higher Education During and After the Pandemic(s)

Feb. 23 | 1-2 p.m. ET

厂辫别补办别谤:听., director of programs and research for聽.

This online, interactive synchronous session鈥攄eveloped and delivered by a Black woman postsecondary leader鈥攅xplores how women鈥檚 leadership has progressed during the pandemic(s). The co-created learning space is for all, with the experiences of womxn foregrounded.

Womxn leaders may be noting changes in their own leadership and that of their colleagues. The time we are in鈥攖he triple pandemic鈥攊s a disruption that has rocked the foundation of who we thought we were. This session will allow time to discuss what happened and how and where womxn are thriving in this environment of frequent change. The talk鈥檚 objectives are to recognize the pandemics鈥 impact on womxn and encourage and empower participants and other womxn leaders.

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Academic Track

Strategic Conflict Management for Faculty

March 2 | 10:30 a.m.-noon ET

Facilitator: Tina Nabatchi, director of the Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration (PARCC) and professor of public administration and international affairs in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs

Conflict is an essential aspect of leadership, and the most effective leaders learn to be comfortable with conflict and strategic in how they deal with it. This workshop will first introduce a situational model of approaches to conflict and when to choose a particular approach. Equally important is managing the emotion of conflict and maintaining the ability to both listen and assert a point of view. The session will include participation in short listening and assertion exercises, plus address patterns of communication that may be risky in a conflict situation. Exercises and sample scenarios have been selected based on common conflicts faced by faculty in academia.

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Leading Interdisciplinary Teams: The Good, the Bad and the Hairy

April 9 | 1:30-3 p.m. ET

Panelists:

  • Marcelle Haddix, Dean鈥檚 Professor and chair of reading and language arts in the School of Education;
  • Lisa Manning, director of BioInspired 黑料不打烊 and Kenan Professor of Physics in the College of Arts and Sciences;
  • Vivian May, director of the Humanities Center and professor of women鈥檚 and gender studies in the College of Arts and Sciences; and
  • Janet M. Wilmoth, professor and chair of sociology in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and director of the Aging Studies Institute

Leading an interdisciplinary team provides first-hand opportunities to develop the kind of skills and perspectives often needed in senior-level positions. They also open doors to leveraging a wide array of resources (human, financial and physical) toward a common end. Join women leaders from research clusters and interdisciplinary institutes and centers to explore the benefits and challenges of leading large-scale, mission-focused initiatives.

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Steering Committee

Steering Committee members for the Women in Leadership Initiative are Maureen Casey, chief operating officer of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families; Sue Cornelius Edson, executive senior associate athletics director/communications; Elisa Dekaney, associate dean for research, graduate studies and internationalization and professor of music education in the College of Visual and Performing Arts; Alexandra Epsilanty, associate vice president for international advancement; Marie Garland, assistant provost for faculty affairs; Catherine Gerard, director of PARCC and associate director of executive education programs in the Maxwell School; LaVonda Reed, associate provost for faculty affairs and professor of law; Dara J. Royer, senior vice president and chief marketing officer; Margaret L. Usdansky, research associate professor in the Falk College and director of the Center for Learning and Student Success; Michele Wheatly, special advisor to the Chancellor and professor of biology; and Candace Campbell Jackson, senior vice president and chief of staff to the Chancellor.

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