Diversity


SHRM Case Competition and Career Summit

2015 SHRM CASE COMPETITION AND CAREER SUMMIT
Prepare.Engage.Succeed.

The SHRM Case Competition and Career Summit (formally the SHRM Regional Student Conference) has been revolutionized for 2015! This year’s event will bring students, student chapter advisors, faculty members and HR professionals together in a meaningful way. Whether you want the opportunity to hear from in-the-know keynote speakers, sit down with a local HR practitioner to get your individual workforce/professional questions answered, or compete in the coveted SHRM case competition, this event is sure to change your perspective on what it means to be a member of the HR community.

This conference will take place March 20-21, 2015 in Baltimore, MD.

Interested students should contact William Burk, President of UConn SHRM Chapter at uconnshrm@gmail.com


PEAK Leadership Conference – Freshman & Sophomores

The Peak Leadership Conference is an interactive, three-day event that exposes college freshmen and sophomores to Prudential’s dynamic career paths and diverse, inclusive culture.

Students will have the opportunity to learn more about Prudential career paths in IT/digital, asset management, finance, marketing, accounting, and more. All travel and lodging expenses are covered by Prudential.

Applications are being accepted from now through December 15th. Students can learn more at www.prudential.com/peakleadership

The Peak Leadership conference will take place at Prudential’s corporate headquarters in Newark, NJ from May 17-20, 2015.

Because Prudential is committed to the power of an inclusive workplace, students who are Black, Hispanic, Native American, LGBT, female, as well as veterans and students with disabilities are encouraged to apply.


Goldman Sachs Scholarship for Excellence Program

The Goldman Sachs Scholarship for Excellence Program is an integral part of our diversity recruiting effort, helping to attract Black, Hispanic/Latino, and Native American undergraduate students to careers at Goldman Sachs.

The scholarship is a reflection of our Business Principles and is awarded to recognize outstanding students and the achievements they have made. Upon acceptance of a summer internship offer, SFE recipients will be awarded up to $15,000* and have a leadership opportunity as a GS Campus Ambassador on their respective campuses.

Application Checklist:

To be considered for the Scholarship for Excellence, you must complete the following steps:

1. Complete an application online using our events portal at www.goldmansachs.com/careers and selecting ‘Interviews’ under Event Type.

2. Please explain which one of our fourteen Business Principles you identify with the most. Business principles can be found by using the following link, http://www.goldmansachs.com/who-we-are/business-standards/business-principles/index.html.

a. Applicants may choose one of the following mediums for submission: 450 word essay, 2 minute video, or slide presentation.

b. You may submit an essay or slide presentation via the online application. Slides should be in PDF format. Videos submissions should be emailed to GoldmanSachsSFE@ny.email.gs.com.

3. Invited candidates will travel to Goldman Sachs for an in-person evaluation of the Business Principle presentation.

Deadline: The application deadline is Sunday, November 16 by 11:59 p.m.

Questions?

For questions regarding the application process, please contact GoldmanSachsSFE@ny.email.gs.com.


National Black MBA Association, Inc. – Westchester Greater Connecticut Chapter Scholarship

The Westchester/Greater Connecticut Chapter of the National Black MBA Association is offering scholarships to outstanding minority students pursuing undergraduate and graduate management/business degrees, while demonstrating strong leadership abilities and a commitment to their communities. This year the program awards scholarships ranging from $1,000 for undergrads and $2,000 for master’s candidates.

Please note the deadline to apply is December 15, 2014.

Please click the link to apply –

 



Students Engaged in Academic Leadership (SEAL) Cultivates Academic Success, Professional Development

SEALHasudin Pehratovic ’15 (BUS) says that the SEAL program has taught him to, “Never take anything for granted and always give back.” And if that’s not enough, the accounting major adds that the program has helped him with everything from questions of dining etiquette—’The bread plate goes on the upper left, the water glass on the upper right,’ he says with a smile—to introducing him to key UConn faculty and administrators as he explores career opportunities in his chosen field.

Pehratovic, who was born in Bosnia and came to Connecticut with his family in 2000, is one of 21 juniors and 13 sophomores who make up the first two cohorts enrolled in Students Engaged in Academic Leadership (SEAL), developed through UConn’s Office of Diversity.

Aimed at students who are the first in their families to attend college, admission to SEAL is through a competitive application process offered to first semester sophomores. Those accepted stay in the program from the second semester of their sophomore year through their senior year providing they maintain GPA requirements and are actively engaged in required activities. During this time, they receive stipends of approximately $500 per semester as they are exposed to networking and mentoring opportunities, internships, and organized team-building exercises.

Jeffrey Ogbar, vice provost for diversity, explains the genesis of the program at UConn this way: “The University does a great job of providing support for various groups of students: The Honors Program, Leadership Legacy through the Office of Student Activities, opportunities such as Upward Bound, Upward Bound-STEM, and McNair Scholars, that are federally-sponsored initiatives for individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds. We reach out to a wide variety of students.”

“But we found we were missing an important group – and that’s students who are the first in their families to attend college. This group, which we refer to informally as First Gen, has a disproportionately high dropout rate, particularly between their sophomore and junior years. We wanted to do something positive to reverse that trend.”

Ogbar explains that this is not a situation unique to UConn. Although overall our graduation rates are significantly better than the national average—with an 83% six year retention rate—on a national level only 26% of First Gen students graduate with a bachelor’s degree within eight years.

Reasons given for a high attrition rate include the fact that these individuals may lack a support system that includes parents who have experienced college and who support the idea of higher education. These students tend to be older with additional work and family responsibilities. And in some cases they come from a lower socio-economic status which makes paying for higher education more difficult.

“UConn’s SEAL program is aimed exclusively at first generation college students regardless of their race, ethnicity, or economic status,” says Ogbar. “As long as applicants have a GPA of at least 2.5 and are committed to developing their leadership and academic skills, they are welcome to apply.”

Kelly Sanchez ’15 (CLAS) and Shantel Honeyghan ’15 (CLAS), both members of the first cohort chosen last year, agree with Pehratovic that SEAL has provided a variety of important opportunities.

A native of Jamaica who lives in Hartford, Honeyghan was first introduced to UConn through the Teacher Preparatory Studies Program at Bulkeley High School. This initiative, which partners high schools with the Neag School of Education, is designed to encourage talented students, particularly from minority groups, to become teachers.

She says, “When I first came to UConn I thought I wanted to major in education because I had so many positive experiences with faculty from Neag when I was in high school. But, somehow I wasn’t confident in my choice. I took a close look at myself and evaluated my interests and now I have a double major in English and Human Development & Family Studies. I’ve decided that I want to get a master’s degree—and eventually a Ph.D.—in higher education and student affairs.

“Part of my decision is the example set by Dr. Ogbar, by Dr. Price in the African-American Cultural Center, and by others I’ve met through SEAL and my exposure to leadership activities. Diversity and multi-culturalism are very important to me and I hope I can give back by eventually working in an office of diversity initiatives or an office of civic engagement.”

Like her peers in the program, Sanchez who hails from New Haven, gives SEAL high marks for exposing her to leadership opportunities and introducing her to individuals on campus who serve as mentors and role models.

“I knew from the time I was in high school that I wanted to major in psychology and when I went for my interview [for the SEAL program] I met Michelle Williams and she has been a wonderful mentor for me – being there when I need her and encouraging me to every step of the way. What I didn’t anticipate was how much I would be inspired by Professor [Guillermo] Irizarry‘s course in Puerto Rican & Latin American studies. As a result, I now have a double major in Psychology and Latin American Studies and I hope, someday, to work as a clinical psychologist.

Williams, associate vice president for research and associate professor in the Department of Psychology, and Irizarry, associate professor of Literatures, Cultures & Language, are examples of the types of relationships forged between students and campus leaders envisioned by Ogbar and SEAL program administrator Seanice DeShields, director of diversity initiatives in the School of Business.

“We’re really encouraged by the progress of this program,” says DeShields. “We have only lost one student so far—and that’s because of a transfer to another school—and the collective GPA of students in the program is over 3.3 and on the rise. We’re really excited about the future and the number of First Gen students who will be graduating from UConn in years to come.”

SEAL is currently funded by a five-year grant from the Coca-Cola Foundation.

Pictured: Jeffrey Ogbar, vice provost for diversity, left, Shantel Honeyghan ’15 (CLAS), and Hasudin Pehratovic ’15 (BUS). (Peter Morenus/UConn Photo)


The Value of a Day’s Work: Panel Addresses Pay Equity

Women make up 48% of Connecticut’s labor force, and yet in 2011, Connecticut full-time working women earned just 78% of what their male counterparts earned, according to a research brief on pay equity by the Connecticut General Assembly Permanent Commission on the Status of Women (PCSW).Continue Reading


38th NABA Eastern Region Student Conference Prepares Students for Corporate World

Six members of the UConn chapter of the National Association of Black Accountants (NABA) attended the organization’s 38th Eastern Region Student Conference (ERSC) on October 10-13, 2013. The conference featured two and one-half days of workshops, seminars and interview sessions designed to better prepare minority students for careers in accounting and financial management disciplines. Continue Reading


Colloquium Announcement: Bridging the Gap between Business and Human Rights

Multinational corporations can deeply influence human rights. Inspired by the United Nations Guiding Principles of Business and Human Rights, the UConn School of Business, together with the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, the UConn Human Rights Institute, and the Northeast Utilities Chair in Business Ethics, bring you the following events to facilitate participation of business in the human rights dialogue:

Workshop: Converging Interests of Business and Human Rights*

May 15, 2013 1:15 – 2:45 pm
Student Union, Room 304B
Executives in Residence: John Sherman, General Counsel Senior Advisor and Secretary of Shift Project;
Kate Emery, CEO The Walker Group and reSET (Social Enterprise Trust)

How can business entities incorporate the principles of human rights into their organizational practices? This workshop will explore the barriers and opportunities for civil society groups to embed human rights values within the internal structure of organization. Participants will examine the impact of linguistic barriers, organizational culture, and the profit-making motive of corporations as factors that impact the understanding of human rights in business practice.

*Sponsored by the World Affairs Council of Connecticut

Book Discussion: An Analysis of “Just Business: Multinational Corporations and Human Rights” by John Ruggie, Ph.D.

May 15, 2013 3:00 – 5:00 pm
Student Union, Room 304B

John G. Ruggie is the Berthold Beitz Professor in Human Rights and International Affair at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and the United Nations Secretary General’s Special Representative on Business and Human Rights. His new book “Just Business: Multinational Corporations and Human Rights” tells of how the UN Guiding Principles were developed and discusses how firms can operationalize those principles in a competitive marketplace. This session will discuss Professor Ruggie’s new book and explore its implications for advancing respect for human rights in business enterprises.

For more information about these events, or to RSVP, please contact Michele Metcalf, Program Manager, at michele.metcalf@business.uconn.edu


Office of Diversity & Inclusion Hosts Promising High School Prospects

Eighteen high school students from Murry Bergtraum High School in New York recently spent a day at the UConn School of Business learning about college opportunity and all that the University of Connecticut has to offer. Office of Diversity Program Specialist Michael Mallery and students O’Rayne Clarke and Begum Abadin delivered presentations on college readiness and life in college. Afterwards, the students and counselors explored the UConn Student Union and got a chance to dine inside.

Student mentor and advisor of the Financial Women’s Association Mentoring Program, Beth Dorfman, a legal attorney with Bank of America, said, “I want to thank all of you for the outstanding job you did in welcoming our high school sophomores and juniors in our program and exposing them to UConn’s business school and college life. I can only imagine how much work went into making such a program come to life. You should know that your efforts exceeded our expectations and that meetings like the one we had, have a deep impact on the students.”

The School of Business Office of Diversity Initiatives Program Director Seanice Austin was very pleased with meeting the young students from New York.