Alijah Jenkins
I am a 19-year-old adventurous, outgoing, and open-minded person, who values kindness, compassion and love. Many of my friends would say I'm wise beyond my years, I say life has gifted me with valuable learning experiences. I believe we deserve all that we strive for, and we have so much responsibility over our own lives. I use each day as an opportunity to obtain all that I want from this experience. If I could tell someone one thing, it would be to live the life you have deeply with a kind presence.
Anthony Castro
I am a tenured mathematics professor at San Bernardino Valley College and an alumni of CSUSB. I received my bachelor's in mathematics with departmental honors and a presidential letter of excellence for maintaining a 4.0 in all my upper division mathematics classes my senior year. I received my master's in applied mathematics from UCR. I enjoy sharing the beauty of applied mathematics with my students and creating a love for the subject.
Arcky Vielma
My name is Arcadio Vielma, but I go by Arcky, and I am a Father, Husband, Veteran, and MBA Cybersecurity Focused graduate with five years of experience within cybersecurity. I graduated from California State University San Bernardino in 2018 with a Bachelor of Science in Information Systems and Technology - Cybersecurity Intelligence. I will be graduating this May with my master’s degree. While in my MBA program, I was selected for the National Science Foundation Cybercorps Scholarship for Service and became an MBA Student Ambassador. Additionally, I was nominated as the President of the Cyber Intelligence and Security Organization (CISO), cybersecurity club at CSUSB for the 2020/21 academic year. Also, during my time, I have earned the CSUSB Gold Level President’s Volunteer Service Award, MISSA’s 25th annual Information Technology Competition 1st place award, and four cybersecurity industry-recognized certifications. I am proud to have been the creator of the CISO Cyber Mentorship Program and for my volunteer service with the Cybersecurity Center in helping to teach over a thousand girl scouts over the years ranging from middle to high school about cybersecurity.
Eloy Garcia
Eloy Garcia is the creator and host of LPDcast, a podcast that provides skills, habits, and resources for the leadership, personal, and professional development of First-Generation students, People of Color, and the LGBTQIA+ community. He is currently studying Organizational Communication, Gender and Sexuality Studies, and Native American Studies at CSUSB. Eloy is currently writing his first book titled, Perseverance Pays Off: Skills and Habits for First - Generation Students to be Successful in Life and Higher Education, which is inspired by the work he does on LPDcast. He is the current president and co-founder of the LGBTQIA+ student organization at CSUSB called The Pride Pack and enjoys working at Coyote Radio station. He plans to continue writing, working in radio and studying to become a professor of communication and LGBTQ studies.
Flannery Wilson
Flannery has a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of California, Riverside. She teaches French, Italian, and Visual Media and works part-time as an actress. Her book on Taiwanese cinema can be found on Amazon.
Graciela Moran
Graciela Moran is a 23-year-old first-generation Mexican woman and college student. She is the daughter of Alicia and Antonio Moran immigrants from Colima, Mexico and resides in Fontana CA. She is a fifth-year student at the California State University San Bernardino (CSUSB) pursuing a B.A in Global Studies. Graciela is the student body President and CEO of the Associated Students Incorporated the student government at CSUSB. Graciela is the fourth woman in seat in the past 2 decades. Graciela has transformed what it means to be a student leader, leading with love and striving to radicalize higher education. Graciela advocates for students on a local, state, and federal level making sure the community is heard. She is a governing member at the California State Student Association (CSSA), CSSA’s Southern Regions Civic Engagement Officer. She is also a recipient of the Minerva scholarship established by WICL, with members from the California Legislative Women’s Caucus.
She is an international and national award-winning member of CSUSB’s Model United Nations program with the HRC, WHO, ECOSOC and UNDP with her work focusing on human rights in developing countries and underrepresented communities. She also is a researcher for CSUSB’s Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism and independently working on her Senior Honors Project: Factors Influencing Women to Join Violent Political Movements. Although these are a couple of her accomplishments, she began her work advocating for women’s rights and survivors of sexual assault as she believes that the work is not done yet. As Graciela has survived cancer in her undergraduate career and a sexual assault survivor, she plans on pursing her master’s in public administration or public policy in the Fall 2021 to continue the work for equitable rights in the San Bernardino county and radicalize higher education.
Jaquet Dumas
Jaquet Monique Dumas, PhD is committed to educating those around her. She has served as a classroom teacher for over ten years, BTSA coach for new teachers, Principal and Full time faculty in Master's Program for teachers. Her research agenda is dedicated to finding ways to best serve African American students and their families. After years of being committed to serving in urban schools she could not settle for what our public school system could do alone. Her latest endeavor is pioneering “Black Schooled”, a non profit organization that provides supplemental education and resources for African American students grades 4-8. Her hope is that our community can come alongside families and traditional education settings to win in academics, business, and life - like we have never seen before.
Larry Hygh
Larry is a lecturer and the internship coordinator in the communication studies department with an emphasis in strategic communications at California State University San Bernardino (CSUSB). Prior to CSUSB he was the senior communications manager for the Black AIDS Institute, the only national HIV/AIDS think tank focused exclusively on Black people. Hygh spent 20 plus years as the chief communications officer for The United Methodist Church (UMC) in five different regional offices in the United States, and the international mission agency when it was based in New York City. He earned an Ed.D. in organizational leadership from Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., a M.A. in mass communications from Stephen F. Austin State University (SFASU), and a B.A. in radio/television from SFASU in Nacogdoches, Texas. Larry describes himself as a “fun and adventure enthusiast” who is a foodie and loves to travel. He has traveled to six of the seven continents, 29 countries, and 45 of the 50 U.S. states. Visit him at www.LarryHygh.com
Liliana Conlisk Gallegos
"Uncivil disruptor who doesn't know her place". As an Optimus Prime Trauma Transformer con lengua de machete, I cannot help but experiment with EVERYTHING including art, virtual reality, and all forms of media. With the goal of advancing the certain decolonial turn, my live, interactive media art production and rasquache performances generate culturally specific, collective, technocultural creative spaces of production that reconnect Chicana/o/x Mestiza Indigenous wisdom and conocimiento to their ongoing technological and scientific contributions, still currently "overlooked" through the logic of the decaying Eurocentric project of Modernity. As a transfronteriza (perpetual border crosser), the current limited perceptions of what research, media, and technology can be and do are like a yonke (junkyard), from which pieces are upcycled and repurposed to amplify individual and collective expression, community healing, and social justice. I am a performer of research, a translator, a filter that collects, isolates, and exposes supremacist formats while finding a way to design hubs to compile digital and analogue collections of designs, expressions, and realities a nuestro modo.
Lorraine Hedtke
Lorraine Hedtke MSW, ACSW, PhD is a veteran narrative therapist who has turned the world of modern-day grief psychology completely upside down. She specializes in working within a post-structural, narrative therapy frame with people who are dying as well as with families after a loved one has died. Dr. Hedtke is a Professor and Coordinator at California State University San Bernardino in the Masters Counseling program and the proprietor of The Fabula Center for counseling and training in Redlands, California, and the website www.rememberingpractices.com.
Dr. Hedtke publications have appeared in numerous professional journals and magazines and she is the author of several books about grief. Her children’s book, My Grandmother is Always with Me, (2nd Ed), is written with her child, Addison Davidove. Her book, Breathing Life into The Stories of the Dead: Constructing Bereavement Support Groups, outlines an innovative and practical model for practice. She, along with John Winslade, co-authored two books on the topic: Remembering Lives: Conversations with The Dying and The Bereaved, and The Crafting of Grief: Constructing Aesthetic Responses to Loss. She regularly consults and presents virtually and in person around the world on how to create life and love affirming conversations with people who are dying and people who are living with grief.
Mary Anne Schultz
In 45 years of professional nursing, Dr. Schultz has served as a staff Registered Nurse in hospitals, a Nurse Educator in the CSU system, a Nursing Administrator including former Department Chair and as a consultant in private industry. Beginning with an associate degree, credentials obtained in nursing are: a baccalaureate degree (University of Cincinnati, 1979), a master's in medical-surgical nursing/nursing administration (Case Western Reserve/Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, 1984), and a doctoral degree (UCLA, Nursing Economics/Health Systems, 1999).
A master's in business administration (MBA, 1991) complements experience in the service field. Publications include articles of data based investigations as well as those addressing strategic planning in health care, a proposed conceptual framework for nursing research and diffusion of Precision Health concepts into curriculum. Numerous awards for scholarship, research, leadership, and writing have been obtained.
She recently completed a Health Informatics certificate program, University of California, Davis. In March, 2020, she received an appointment from Governor Gavin Newsom to serve, as the first and only Registered Nurse on the California Initiative to Advance Precision Medicine (CIAPM). She also chairs a CMS-backed committee, PACIO (Post-Acute Care Interoperability) under the CARIN Alliance.
Nadiyah Herron
Nadiyah Herron is a college educator of Communication/Media Studies with several colleges in the Los Angeles area, as well as a national online university. She maintains a master’s degree in Strategic Communication, a minor in Sociology, a bachelor’s in English, and attended Pepperdine University, National University, and the University of California Riverside. She has extensive experience in the field of media/communication. Nadiyah has hosted, written, been a guest, or worked in production for the following networks/media outlets: TBN, TBN Salsa, WAM, E! Entertainment Television, ABC 7 Eyewitness News, Marriage.com, Huffington Post, and NBC Universal (training only).
Nadiyah is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. She has been married for over a decade and values her Christian faith. Currently Mrs. Herron is working on bringing her groundbreaking documentary "We Rise" to a screen near you! "We Rise" is a documentary film about the strength and resiliency of Black Economics like it has never been told before, in the shadow of structural racism, backed by legislative policy, and how it has generated clear and persistent inequities in economic well-being among Black Americans, violating the fundamental principles of capitalism, a free labor market, and the American dream.
Nadiyah dedicates much of her time to causes involving foster youth, victims of abuse and childhood abuse, and issues effecting Black people in America and traditionally underrepresented communities around the globe.
Sailesh Maharjan
Born in Kathmandu, Nepal; ordained as a Theravadin Buddhist monk at the age of 12 and lived in various Buddhist monasteries across Nepal, Sri Lanka, and United States for 16 years. Educated in Buddhist studies, including Mindfulness, Insight, and Loving-Kindness meditation. Received the highest degree (Royal Pandita Award, Sri Lanka, 2011) in ancient Buddhist languages, including Pali (the language spoken by the Buddha), Sanskrit (the language used to record Mahayana Buddhism), and Sinhala (prominent language used in interpreting Buddhist literature), all of which are necessary to accurately understand and interpret ancient Buddhist texts. Provide online mindfulness practice and Dhamma lectures to adults and youth at various Buddhist centers throughout Southern California. Graduated with a bachelor’s in psychology from the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, and master’s degree in Clinical Psychology from California State University San Bernardino. Research interests include applications of mindfulness and Buddhist psychology in clinical and nonclinical settings.
Yunfei Hou
Dr. Yunfei Hou is an associate professor in the School of Computer Science and Engineering at California State University San Bernardino and associate director at the Leonard Transportation Center. He received his Ph.D. from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University at Buffalo, SUNY in 2016. His current research interests include applications in transportation cyber-physical systems, and data and information analysis for transportation engineering. Recent projects span areas such as vehicular sensing in smart cities, traffic management with connected vehicle technologies, and transportation cybersecurity.