天美传媒

Olympic gymnast, Aly Raisman in conversation with Adelphi鈥檚 NCAA Senior Woman Administrator for Athletics, Emily Dorko 鈥13, MBA 鈥15

Throughout our 125-year history, many of Adelphi鈥檚 women leaders were the only women in the classroom, boardroom or corner office鈥攁nd had to blaze a trail for the women who followed in their respective fields.

This sentiment also held true for the alumni and guest speakers at the Fifth Annual Women鈥檚 Leadership Conference. Usually held in November, the conference was moved to March 26, 2022, to coincide with Women鈥檚 History Month. Themed 鈥125 Years of Women in Leadership鈥 in honor of the University鈥檚 milestone anniversary, the event celebrated the school鈥檚 long history of educating and developing leaders. From Adelphi鈥檚 beginnings as an all-women鈥檚 college in 1912 to the formation of one of the first dance departments at an American university in 1938 (under the guidance of dance legend Ruth St. Denis), and the training of WWII nurses in 1943 to Christine M. Riordan, PhD, becoming the 10th and first woman president of Adelphi, the University continues to support and prepare women leaders鈥攐f today and tomorrow.

More than 350 mostly female participants attended this hybrid event. Professionals from a wide field of industries shared valuable expertise in powerful networking presentations and conversations. The fifth conference, held in the newly renovated Ruth S. Harley University Center and via livestream, included a kickoff and four breakout sessions, as well as a dinner where the headline keynote speaker was author, advocate and gold-medal-winning Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman.

天美传媒 will continue our mission of creating stronger futures for women and finding ways the University can be the catalyst for meaningful change. A new strategic plan,Momentum 2, will guide the University through 2027 as we build on our illustrious past educating the women leaders of tomorrow. One way that the University plans to continue to do that is with this daylong Women鈥檚 Leadership Conference, focusing on helping the women鈥攁nd men鈥攊n the room take away valuable skills they can apply to their careers.

President Riordan credited the audience for making the choice to attend. 鈥淲hat I love about this conference is for all of us to accept the challenge of helping pave the way, not only for ourselves, but for all women and to really become dedicated servants to helping women succeed in life and in their career.鈥

Fight for the Changes You Want

The day began with an armchair conversation titled 鈥淟eadership Lessons Learned: A Conversation With Trailblazing Women鈥 and featured LeeAnn Black 鈥83, chief operating officer at Latham & Watkins, as the moderator, who is also a co-chair of the event; President Riordan; Marjorie Magner, a founding member of Brysam Global Partners; and Trustee Carmen Ortiz 鈥78, JD, 鈥12 (Hon.), a partner at Anderson & Kreiger LLP. The panelists focused on empowering other young women leaders to fight for the change they want to see.

Magner, who spent 45 years in financial services, said that what matters is not the job titles she had or the work she did, but the reality that she was in the minority for so many years.

鈥淚 hated that and I made commitments all through my career that I would do everything I could to see that it was not the way it would be in the future,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y mission was that for each generation of young women it would be easier, faster and more fulfilling, and they would have the opportunities that were not available to me without a fight.鈥

Four Inspirational Breakout Sessions

The kickoff was followed by four breakout sessions held simultaneously throughout the afternoon.

鈥淪hattering Expectations鈥: Moderated by Thomas J. Ward Jr. 鈥93, Adelphi鈥檚 assistant vice president for career development and strategic partnerships. Panelists: Trustee Emerita Lois Schlissel, JD, counsel and former managing attorney at Meyer, Suozzi, English & Klein PC, and one of the event co-chairs; Elizabeth Daitz 鈥02, JD, assistant commissioner of the Suffolk County Police Department; and Malika Grayson 鈥11, PhD, program manager at Northrop Grumman.

鈥淐aring for Every Body (and for Ourselves)鈥: Moderated by MaryannForbes, PhD 鈥99, interim dean of the College of Nursing and Public Health (CNPH). Panelists: Chelsea(Wollman) Imbriano 鈥14, registered nurse in the Neurosurgical Intensive Care Unit at North Shore University Hospital; and CNPH assistant professors Marissa Abram 鈥08, PhD 鈥17, and Deborah Ambrosio-Mawhirter 鈥81, MS 鈥96, EdD.

鈥淎t the Forefront of Change鈥: Moderated by Manoj Pardasani, PhD, dean of theSchool of Social Work at Adelphi. Panelists: Christine Tiedemann, a New York state鈥揷ertified holistic health coach; and Lynda Perdomo-Ayala 鈥78, administrative department head at the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University and a founding member of 天美传媒鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Giving Circle.

鈥淐limbing the Ranks鈥: Moderated by Jacqueline Jones LaMon, JD, Adelphi鈥檚 vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion. Panelists: Nicholas Iadevaio, MBA 鈥00, vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion at L鈥橭r茅al USA; Joseph Moscola, MBA 鈥06, executive vice president of enterprise services at Northwell Health; and Trustee Humera Qazi 鈥93, managing director at Morgan Stanley, also a conference co-chair.

The event ended with the headliner Raisman, America鈥檚 third-most-decorated female Olympic gymnast, who was the team captain for the gold-medal winning U.S. Women鈥檚 Gymnastics teams in 2012 and 2016. Emily Dorko 鈥13, MBA 鈥15, Adelphi鈥檚 NCAA senior woman administrator for athletics, led the conversation. Raisman spoke about her experiences as a gymnast, the need for self-advocacy and her courage in surviving sexual abuse. Among the many tips she shared was this: 鈥淧ut your mask on before assisting others. Being a good leader is prioritizing yourself. I鈥檓 better when I鈥檓 happier.鈥

History of the Conference

It is exactly these honest and moving conversations by the speakers and the impacts they had on the attendees that were the goals of the Women鈥檚Leadership Conference when it was just an idea six years ago. At that time, Qazi, who has been a member of the 天美传媒 Board of Trustees since 2016, was serving as co-chair of KPMG鈥檚 Network of Women for Long Island. She says it was the school鈥檚 history of being traditionally more heavily weighted toward women that made her question what leadership opportunities besides clubs were available on campus. That鈥檚 when she suggested to President Riordan that they start a women鈥檚 leadership conference that reflects women鈥檚 leadership, not just for students, but faculty, staff and the community. She says the president and others ran with it from there.

That first year the event was held in one room with about 70 people. Qazi said it has steadily grown since then, not just in terms of participation, but also in the nature of conversations taking place, the number of panels and the types of guests now attending, especially keynote speakers. 鈥淭here weren鈥檛 any that first year, but look at the gravitas of the event that we just held and having an Olympian gold medalist come be the keynote,鈥 she added.

One of the ways the University has been growing the conference has been engaging local high schools and applicants, which can serve as a pipeline for leaders on Long Island and beyond. Participants include Adelphi鈥檚 Hispanic Community Partnership Program and Prize for Leadership recipients. Organizers have also been cross collaborative, partnering with the Center for Student and Community Engagement and Center for Career and ProfessionalDevelopment, engaging both female staff and students. With the momentum from this successful fifth year, the goal is to put Adelphi on the map as a change maker in this area, that, as Qazi said, 鈥渄raws attention to Adelphi and raises our presence in the region. Hopefully someday we can get it to a national level.鈥

Qazi added, 鈥淭he intent really is to amplify our women, to give our women at Adelphi the awareness that they can reach for higher, they can reach for better, they can be equal. My foremost goal was to share stories, share experiences that others have had who have come before us so that our younger women can hear them and know them and be inspired. At the core, that鈥檚 what I hope we can achieve through this.鈥

Save the Date

The Sixth AnnualWomen鈥檚 Leadership Conferencewill be held on Saturday, March 25, 2023.

What Attendees Are Saying

Current students and alumni attended the breakout sessions. Here鈥檚 what some of them had to say about how the speakers inspired them.

  • 鈥淢y greatest takeaway was that you have to do the best you can, there will always be challenges that discourage you, but you have to remember what you are working toward. Every great leader has failures, and it鈥檚 about embracing those failures and learning from them, as they motivate you to continue pushing onward.鈥鈥擝ianca Viana, junior, nursing major and Levermore Global Scholar
  • 鈥淏oldness is a personal value, not being afraid to take risks and make headway. That鈥檚 what a lot of the women had to do in their own life and struggles. It鈥檚 something I want to do in both my career and in my personal goals of navigating the University and meeting people. It鈥檚 good to learn from leaders and their own experiences so I can become my own leader as well. I benefited from listening.鈥鈥擩onathan Brill, junior, social work major
  • 鈥淚 learned the value of the ability to listen 鈥 and that it鈥檚 important to identify mentors, that it鈥檚 okay to not navigate everything alone, and to find people who can help you.鈥鈥擡ilean Calderon 鈥15, MA 鈥18, family medicine residency coordinator at Good Samaritan Hospital
  • 鈥淚 learned you have to be assertive, but you have to show empathy to your co-workers and your team. I just learned so much about all the inequality toward women in the workplace and that it鈥檚 in every industry, unfortunately. But their stories were all so inspiring because they all rose above everything and they鈥檝e definitely paved the way for people like me.鈥鈥擱emy Wang 鈥22, journalism and public relations major

At the Helm of the Women鈥檚 Leadership Conference

We have our conference co-chairs and our Steering Committee to thank for making the Women鈥檚 Leadership Conference a resounding success.

Conference Co-Chairs:

  • LeeAnn Black 鈥83, Chief Operating Officer, Latham & Watkins
  • Trustee Humera Qazi 鈥93, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley
  • Trustee Emerita Lois Schlissel, JD, Counsel and Former Managing Attorney, Meyer, Suozzi, English & Klein PC

Steering Committee:

  • Trustee Loretta Cangialosi 鈥80, Retired Senior Vice President and Controller, Pfizer Inc.
  • Anita D鈥橝mico, PhD 鈥84, Vice President of Products, Synopsys Inc.
  • Hatice Dalton 鈥94, MBA 鈥96, Managing Director, Deloitte & Touche
  • Nicholas Iadevaio, MBA 鈥00, Vice President of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, L鈥橭r茅al USA
  • Chelsea (Wollman) Imbriano 鈥14, RN, Neurosurgical Intensive Care Unit, North Shore University Hospital
  • Joseph Moscola, MBA 鈥06, Executive Vice President, Enterprise Services at Northwell Health
  • Lynda Perdomo-Ayala 鈥78, Administrative Department Head, Renaissance School of Medicine, Stony Brook University
  • Carolyn 鈥淐ari鈥 Quinn 鈥87, Executive Director, Northwell Health, Cohen Children鈥檚 Medical Center
  • Christine Tiedemann, NYS Certified Holistic Health Coach

Trailblazing Women in Adelphi鈥檚 History

Frances Perkins, professor of sociology, 1910鈥1912

Perkins dedicated herself to social justice after witnessing the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. She became President Franklin D. Roosevelt鈥檚 secretary of labor, the first woman presidential cabinet member in U.S. history. It was in large part due to Perkins鈥 insistence that the New Deal included progressive reforms such as unemployment assistance, child labor laws, a minimum wage and Social Security insurance.

Annie Marion MacLean, PhD, professor of sociology, 1906鈥1916

Dr. MacLean was one of the first women to pursue a career in sociology. Her research, including her 1910 groundbreaking study,Wage-Earning Women, painted comprehensive pictures of the conditions and disparities facing working women.

Ruth S. Ammon 鈥42 and Carol A. Ammon, MBA 鈥79, 鈥10 (Hon.), DNP

The Ruth S. Ammon College of Education and Health Sciences celebrates the life and legacy of Ammon 鈥42, a gifted teacher and an inspiration to her daughter, 天美传媒 Trustee Emerita Carol A. Ammon, MBA 鈥79, 鈥10 (Hon.), DNP.

Betty Forest 鈥47, PhD

As an undergraduate, Dr. Forest was encouraged by her mentor, Mildred Montag, EdD, to continue her studies. Dr. Forest earned her master鈥檚 and doctorate degrees and practiced as a nurse before becoming a nurse educator. In 1965, she became the founding director of the nursing program at Quinsigamond Community College in Worcester, Massachusetts, and continued as director until 1990.

Mildred 鈥淢illie鈥 Loughlin Kahane 鈥49

One of the University鈥檚 original U.S. nurse cadets, Kahane became the first executive director of the Alaska Board of Nursing. A trailblazer in her community health nursing field, Kahane credited her scholarship with enabling her to earn a degree and fulfill her career aspirations, and she established several endowments in her lifetime.

Christine M. Riordan, PhD

Dr. Riordan is the first woman to serve as president of 天美传媒. She is an internationally recognized expert on leadership development, team building and diversity and inclusion, and is recognized for her groundbreaking initiatives to personalize and transform the higher education experience.

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