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Date: 9/5/2006 STACY DOWNING NAMED NEW DIRECTOR OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES AND LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT OFFICE
The office is welcoming new and returning students with a special open house from 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 27, outside on the MainStreet corridor in front of the Joseph A. Steger Student Life Center (SLC). The special welcome back for students promises games, giveaways, music, food and a scavenger hunt. In case of rain, the open house will be held on the 400 level of SLC. Downing, a native of Marion, Ohio, who now lives in Western Hills, previously worked at UC’s African-American Cultural and Research Center (AACRC) in roles including associate director of the AACRC and program director of the Darwin T. Turner Scholars Program, one of the nation’s oldest ethnic scholarship programs for academically talented students of color, which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. Downing herself was a Darwin T. Turner scholar when she received her bachelor’s degree from UC in 1996. She achieved her master’s degree in criminal justice from Xavier University, and returned to UC in 1998 to join the staff at the AACRC. I She says for every student, the key for student success is developing connections to UC outside the classroom. Her office helps students find a direction on how to get involved. “In every part of my research for my doctoral degree, I found that for students to be successful, they can’t just go to class. They should be integrated socially and academically into the university,” she says. “They need to develop real-life applications outside the classroom – leadership skills, communication skills, skills on conflict resolution and on interacting with other people. Students who are just coming to school and going to class are not getting the full university experience,” she says. Downing says her vision for SALD is to make it the “hub of student energy and excitement. I want students to be more involved with the office and with implementing new programs and offering new ideas.” She’s also exploring how the office can provide more programming specifically aimed at commuter students, so that they, too, can become more involved on campus. Her advice for new students entering UC this fall? “What I tell new students and their parents is, get connected. UC has a wide range of support services. Get connected with an office that provides support, whether it’s Disability Services, Educational Services, the AACRC, SALD, or the Women’s Center. There’s someone on staff here to support you, and once you get connected, that’s going to be instrumental to your success as a student.”
For more UC news, go to www.uc.edu/news/
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