Q: What does this award mean to you?
A: "My experience at WGU did, truly, change my life. I didn’t realize until my closest friends pointed out to me the confidence and assurance I developed and demonstrated having completed my degree. WGU allowing me to share my experiences, hoping other adult learners might be encouraged to complete their degrees, is very rewarding. I am an enthusiastic advocate for the difference that a WGU degree can make in the lives of adult learners."
Q: What has been your greatest professional accomplishment?
A: "As a fundraising professional, I was part of a team of people that raised more than $40 million for the Beverley Taylor Sorenson Center for the Arts on the campus of Southern Utah University. The Beverley Center opened in 2017 and is home to three theatres and administrative spaces for the Tony Award-winning Utah Shakespeare Festival where I spent 10 years working in marketing and communications. The Southern Utah Museum of Art (SUMA) with its dynamic and engaging Stillman Sculpture Court is also part of this community gathering place. It fills my heart and soul with joy and satisfaction as I see hundreds of theatre goers experiencing Shakespeare under the stars, and children with their parents pondering the bronze figures. The Beverley Center has changed the character of our campus and community and will impact arts experiences in Cedar City, Utah for decades."
Q: What does success look like to you?
A: "Success is getting it done. Whatever the goal, whatever the challenges enroute that need to be overcome, getting it done represents success to me."
Q: What challenges have you overcome to get here today?
A: "My greatest challenge was acknowledging that a college degree would make a difference. I had a successful career, was enjoying my work, and felt as though I could accomplish anything I wanted. All that was true. But I learned there could, indeed, be more. I was diagnosed with breast cancer midway through my studies. My focus on learning and achieving distracted me from the cancer, my treatment, and my recovery."
Q: What does earning your degree from WGU mean to you?
A: "I worked in higher ed for more than 17 years before taking the steps to complete my degree. Time was the issue, even more than money. As a full-time working professional, I didn’t have time (6-8 years) to spend in a traditional university classroom earning six credits a semester. WGU, with its competency-based model, allowed me to apply my lifetime of learning and experience to complete my degree in 17 months. WGU has meant time and money. A degree at my pace and salary increases of more than 30% since my graduation."
Q: What advice do you have for your fellow Night Owls?
A: "You can do this! Be confident and persistent. Make the extra minutes and hours to expand your learning. Use the resources WGU makes available such as the preassessments so you can focus your studies on what you need to learn, not what you already know. Call on your course mentors to make the best use of your time. When you finish your WGU degree, you will gain confidence you didn’t know you were missing. That confidence will empower you to be your best self."
Q: Who is your inspiration?
A: "As I reflect on this question today, commencement day at SUU, my greatest inspiration would be my parents. My mother was an immigrant from Denmark in 1951, post WWII. Her courage brought her to a new country at the age of 17 where she learned a new language, pursued education, worked to raise the money to bring her mother and brother to American where she met my dad and raised a beautiful family. My father was a military man and instilled in me a love of God and country. He and my mom started their life together shortly after completing his Army basic training. While working and raising a family, he continued his education ever so slowly but ever persistent as time and money would allow. I remember attending his graduation when I was 13, along with three of my siblings. My dad was 36. Throughout my life, they have always been great examples."
Q: What does the future look like for you?
A: "I look forward to continuing to do the work I love as long as I love it! Retirement is likely within 5-7 years. As I consider what that might look like, I anticipate my time will be filled in service to community and family. I like to contribute positively and work to make a difference, however small. I also know that learning will continue to be part of my endeavors and I will be a life-long proponent of adult learning."