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George Washington University School of Nursing Associate Professor Sherrie Flynt Wallington went into DC communities and worked with Black fathers addressing the role they play addressing the disparities in maternal mortality.  Read this Q&A with Associate Professor Sherrie Flynt Wallington published in GW Research Magazine.

Dr. Erica Walls is Interim Director of GW's Human Services & Social Justice program (CCAS). Students in her courses complete projects in partnership with local nonprofit organizations.

In her course on Program Planning and Evaluation, students learn to gather and analyze data through interviews, surveys, and focus groups to inform practice. In her Social Justice and Public Policy course co-create a project with a community partner, such as collecting testimony for advocacy, tracking the progress of legislative initiatives, or managing public awareness social media campaigns. 

Students like the opportunity to apply the concrete skills that are important to this work, but just as important is having the opportunity to pursue their passions, learn who they are and who they want to be in this world. - Erica Walls

 

GW Law students learn client-centered and holistic lawyering skills in business law under Professor of Clinical Law Susan Jones’ leadership.

Jones was the recent recipient of the 2023 Transform Mid-Atlantic Justice, Equity, Diversity, & Inclusion – Civic & Community Engagement (JEDI-CCE) Award for her work expanding opportunities for D.C. business owners and community-serving nonprofit organizations owned and operated primarily by people of color and women and bringing her law students the skills and confidence to be great lawyers.  

With 35 years now under her belt at the GW Law School, Jones’ leadership roles have expanded tremendously since her start in 1988 as Director and Supervising Attorney of the Small Business Clinic (later renamed to include Community Economic Development), like her position as 2006 chair of Association of American Law Schools Section on Clinical Legal Education and numerous leadership roles within the American Bar Association. She has published extensively in her field, is the author of A Legal Guide to Microenterprise Development, and the co-editor of Building Healthy Communities: A Guide to Community Economic Development for Advocates, Lawyers and Policy Makers and Investing for Social Impact, Economic Justice and Racial Equity, books  published by American Bar Association.

Jones said her role as both a professor and scholar intertwine to help students as they represent small businesses and nonprofits that  make an impact on their community. She observed that students come out of her class knowing that they can be changemakers and “do well and good” as lawyers. 

“The clinic makes them very reflective about their own purpose and professional trajectory,” Jones said. 

Jones said her work comes naturally to her not only from growing up in New York City during the movements of civil, labor and women’s rights but also watching her mother’s work as a social worker and professor and her father’s work with youth gangs in lower Manhattan.

“This work is very organic to me,” Jones said. “It doesn’t feel like work, it feels like purpose.” 

Jones cites her parents’ impactful community work as the anchor for her commitment to corporate legal work supporting neighborhood small businesses and community-serving nonprofits. She said it’s critical for her students as budding lawyers to know their client’s business and provide comprehensive, holistic legal services and access to other helpful resources. 

Last fall, the clinic represented Global Consciousness Institute (GCI), a nonprofit that aims “to elevate global consciousness as a field of study, to transform education and economic practices and policies, and to provide strategic and energetic focus for the nurturing of change agents and leaders.” The student teams provided legal counsel and helped GCI incorporate as a D.C. nonprofit organization and gain federal tax exemption from the IRS. This case and many others familiarize students with corporate law and help them to gain hands-on practical legal experience and confidence as student attorneys.

Jones’s perspective is enhanced by her expertise as an executive leadership coach, committed to positive societal transformation and change. She said it’s amazing to see how her former students have grown into lawyer-leaders and how their clinic work has benefited the community.   

“I can walk around D.C. and know where we made a difference,” Jones said. 

2023-2024 Public Voices Fellow, AcademyHealth

Our congratulations to Nashman Center Faculty Affiliate, Dr. Colón-Ramos, on being selected to this fellowship. AcademyHealth is an organization whose mission is to improve health and health care for all by advancing evidence to inform policy and practice. The AcademyHealth Public Voices Fellowsship is a prestigious leadership program to accelerate the ideas and public impact of a core group of 20 of fellows. Dr. Colón-Ramos is a faculty member in the GWSPH.

Last Tuesday (9/14/23), the Nashman Center brought together local and regional researchers and practitioners to share effective practices and explore together how to sustain individualized education and high-impact tutoring once the recovery funds are no longer available.

The day included keynote remarks from Cindy Marten, US Department of Education Deputy Secretary, who shared her appreciation for the example set by the Nashman Center's programs engaging students as high-impact tutors, particularly the intensive training provided by the Math Matters program.

...continue reading "Event Recap: Nashman Center Hosts “Partnering to Sustain High-Impact Tutoring”"

Dr. Greg Squires, Research Professor and Professor Emeritus in the Department of Sociology at GW, was selected as the recipient of the 2023 Marilyn J. Gittell Activist Scholar Award sponsored by the Urban Affairs Association and SAGE Publishing. ...continue reading "Greg Squires Receives Urban Affairs Association Activist Scholar Award"

Join the Global Women's Institute in celebrating a decade of bridging research and action on March 9th in the Jack Morton Auditorium in the School for Media and Public Affairs building from 3:30-7pm. This event will have Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal and GW President Mark Wrighton as speakers. Click here to learn more and register. 

Dr. Leslie Jacobson, GW Professor Emerita of Theatre, has been running a weekly Theatre Workshop at Street Sense Media since late August. There is a performance on Sunday morning, at 9 a.m. at the Church of the Epiphany (on G Street NW, near the corner of 13th Street NW). Through prose, poetry, song, and music, eight writers/performers share insights about being houseless and the meaning of home. Perhaps there are some early risers who would like to come and see this first performance. It is free, and lasts about 40 minutes, followed by a short talk-back with the audience.

 

"Rayaan Ahmed has worked to bring mutual aid to students in Minnesota and Somalia as they are learning to address public service, social issues and other important life skills." Link to Article

Credit to Nick Erickson from GW Today for this article

...continue reading "Nashman Spotlights: GW Serves: Senior Teaches Youths to Prosper Together"

"From bike lanes to bus stops, the geography majors in David Rain’s capstone class are traveling throughout the District to understand curbside use. Their findings may inform public policy." Link to Article

...continue reading "GW News and Events: Out in the Streets: For Geography Students, D.C. is their Classroom"

"The Frank Sesno Newsmaker Conversation Series, supported by alumni Ted Segal and Meredith Perla Segal, will showcase leading voices in politics and culture." Link to Article.

Credit to GW Today for this article

...continue reading "GW Events & Opportunities: New SMPA Conversation Series Aims to Promote Civil Discourse"