Here is this week’s news of grants and gifts that may be of particular interest to women in higher education.
Baruch College of the City University of New York received a five-year, $312,500 grant from the Financial Women’s Association that will fund a mentoring program for women at the college. The program provides a stipend for low-income students and other money that they can use for study abroad programs.
The University of Virginia received a $300,000 grant from the U.S. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention to support its Young Women Leaders Program. The program pairs up women students at the university for one-on-one mentoring with middle schools girls in local public schools. The program was designed to provide the college students with leadership training and to provide middle school girls with role models and mentors. The grant money will fund a study on whether the program is effective in reducing delinquency and other problems as the middle school girls move through their high school years.
Dr. Soufleris, a three-time alumna of the State University of New York System, has more than 35 years of higher education experience spanning student affairs, enrollment management, retention, and student success initiatives.
Most recently, Dr. Van Vlerah served as vice president for student success and institutional strategy at Manchester University in Indiana. She is slated to become the fifteenth president of Notre Dame of Maryland University on July 6.
Dr. Egan comes to her new role as president of Bennington College from Connecticut College, where she has been serving as the Fuller-Maathai Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Intersectionality Studies, dean of the faculty, and chief academic officer.
Dr. Pfluger has spent the past year as Bakersfield College's interim president. She previously served as vice chancellor of educational services and student success at the Kern Community College District.
Dr. Geneco comes to her new role from Tufts University in Massachusetts, where she has served as provost for the past four years. She is slated become the University at Buffalo's first woman president on August 10.