Candidate Profiles - Student-Elected Trustee Election, Fall 2022
Socrates Wong
Ph.D.
ssw96@cornell.edu
Personal Statement:
What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address
I wish to serve as the graduate and professional student trustee to improve Cornell, and I believe the following are my priorities:
Alexis Miller MBA adm263@cornell.edu Personal Statement: What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address? Cornell University operates with the mission to educate the next generation of global citizens and enhance the lives of our community through public service. As the student elect-trustee, I will uphold this mission by prioritizing the following:
Dan Bromberg J.D. dsb283@cornell.edu Personal Statement: What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address? As your student elected trustee, I’ll use my 4-year knowledge of Cornell to progress its commitment to an environment where any person can engage in any study. I have three priorities in meeting this goal. Please see danbfortrustee.mystrikingly.com for more information:
Femi Olonilua Ooo22 MBA Personal Statement What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address? Through my campaign, I intend to address the needs of the students and work with the Board to undertake three main priorities: One Cornell – One Cornell begins with integrating the different schools at Cornell, inclusive of all people, all backgrounds, and all locations. We have an incredible opportunity to diversify networks and make a differentiated and exponential impact through cross-collaboration. I want to work to bridge the gap between student concerns and administration and make communication across the Cornell schools and administrators more accountable and transparent. One Cornell also includes advocating for increased resources to provide reduced costs to all students for access to university resources like mental health sessions, fitness facilities, and spiritual facilities. Relevant Experiences: Founding Member of the Global Shapers Queens Hub. The Global Shapers community, born out of the World Economic Forum, is a network of inspiring young people working together and taking collective action to provide access to education, create more inclusive communities, and safeguard youth mental health. In the Queens hub, I lead projects focused on promoting literacy and providing access to resources for high school students in Queens, NY. I also serve in iMentor, where I help high school students develop leadership and career skills necessary to graduate high school college-ready and enable success in college. Special Interests: As someone born and raised in Nigeria and awarded the opportunity to pursue college in the US, I understand the importance of quality education and financial resources and how access to these can change lives and generations. I am passionate about driving impact in the education sector and advocating for social change in my communities, especially those who do not have a voice. Through my work as a Global Shaper, I have been able to work with high school administrations in New York City to provide access to resources such as technical skills training, and financial literacy and mentorship to the students. I have also been able to raise funds (>5K) to facilitate the college application process for these students.
- Oversight: A key part of the job is to provide oversight to Cornell. This includes two major facets: holding the university accountable for commitments, which include the return of normality post-covid, divestments from fossil fuel, and mental health; the second facet is simply asking Cornell to acknowledge the problems and issues that the community faced. This includes recent problems such as the long lines in RPCC, the lack of parking or timely transportation to Cornell, or long-standing issues such as sexual assault. Cornell should acknowledge the problem instead of pretending the non-existence or deflecting responsibility.
- Advocacy: My duties is to advocate the needs of my constituents to the Cornell. I plan to accomplish this responsibility by providing an inclusive venue for the graduate and professional students to direct their thoughts to university leadership and other trustees.This includes addressing the institutional and systemic issues such as racial disparity and accessibility to allow our campus to be a welcoming environment for all.
- Stewardship: We are in unprecedented times, and it is only natural that unexpected occur despite the best intentions. My principle is to develop policies to help prevent the issue and challenges from reoccurring in the future instead of applying a bandaid without regard to the risk of reoccurrence.
Alexis Miller MBA adm263@cornell.edu Personal Statement: What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address? Cornell University operates with the mission to educate the next generation of global citizens and enhance the lives of our community through public service. As the student elect-trustee, I will uphold this mission by prioritizing the following:
- Access: I want to implement a method for prospective and current students to seamlessly integrate into the Cornell community by providing financial support to eliminate barriers to recruiting, financial aid, disability services, and international student support. Students deserve to discover their professional identity without financial constraint through participation in research, conference attendance, and exposure to experts in their respective field.
- Wellness: I want to ensure that the University maintains adequate mental health services and continues to make current digital technologies tools available for accessible learning. With the effects of the pandemic still disrupting our education, students should not feel burdened by balancing their health and classes.
- Equity: I want to create systems to regularly analyze and discuss anti-racism and inclusion data from Cornell. It is imperative that we adopt inclusive, culturally responsive teaching and decolonize curriculums by incorporating the growth of knowledge about colonialism; slavery; the construction of race, gender, disability, class and age classifications; and earlier misuses of the social and natural sciences.
Special Interests:
Over the years, my work in community service has fueled my passion for capacity building. My goal as the student-elect trustee is to serve without paternalism or assumptions so that Cornell operates as a unified organization. It is imperative for those with decision-making power to seek or have a grassroots perspective of the communities in which they serve. Thus, I will ensure that I spend time speaking with students from each unique corner of Cornell and relaying innovative ideas, pressing concerns, and pertinent questions of our student body. Essentially, my voice, as trustee, will be our voice.Dan Bromberg J.D. dsb283@cornell.edu Personal Statement: What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address? As your student elected trustee, I’ll use my 4-year knowledge of Cornell to progress its commitment to an environment where any person can engage in any study. I have three priorities in meeting this goal. Please see danbfortrustee.mystrikingly.com for more information:
- Access: I will work to increase student voice in Trustee decisions. To that end, I’ll advocate for a “Student Proposal” system. Students will submit proposals for board consideration to an online portal where students can sign-on to submitted proposals. A proposal with high support will be automatically forwarded to the board for consideration. Shareholders of public companies use this system.
- Trust: I will further student participation in faculty hiring, tenure, and firing decisions by requiring student interviews in those processes. I’ll also advocate for Environmental, Social, Governance (ESG) audits of Cornell’s investments, including a racial equity audit.
- Equity and Justice: I will highlight how Cornell perpetuates marginalization and strive for concrete commitments to progress equity and justice for students of all identities. I’ll seek funding for students on e-boards of identity-based organizations, a living wage for all TAs, subsidized housing for grad students, and voluntary recognition of a grad student worker labor union. I’ll also strengthen Cornell’s support of international students through further visa support (for employment, too) and advocacy for student-friendly Federal immigration laws.
Femi Olonilua Ooo22 MBA Personal Statement What do you consider the top 3 priorities for the Board of Trustees to address? Through my campaign, I intend to address the needs of the students and work with the Board to undertake three main priorities: One Cornell – One Cornell begins with integrating the different schools at Cornell, inclusive of all people, all backgrounds, and all locations. We have an incredible opportunity to diversify networks and make a differentiated and exponential impact through cross-collaboration. I want to work to bridge the gap between student concerns and administration and make communication across the Cornell schools and administrators more accountable and transparent. One Cornell also includes advocating for increased resources to provide reduced costs to all students for access to university resources like mental health sessions, fitness facilities, and spiritual facilities. Relevant Experiences: Founding Member of the Global Shapers Queens Hub. The Global Shapers community, born out of the World Economic Forum, is a network of inspiring young people working together and taking collective action to provide access to education, create more inclusive communities, and safeguard youth mental health. In the Queens hub, I lead projects focused on promoting literacy and providing access to resources for high school students in Queens, NY. I also serve in iMentor, where I help high school students develop leadership and career skills necessary to graduate high school college-ready and enable success in college. Special Interests: As someone born and raised in Nigeria and awarded the opportunity to pursue college in the US, I understand the importance of quality education and financial resources and how access to these can change lives and generations. I am passionate about driving impact in the education sector and advocating for social change in my communities, especially those who do not have a voice. Through my work as a Global Shaper, I have been able to work with high school administrations in New York City to provide access to resources such as technical skills training, and financial literacy and mentorship to the students. I have also been able to raise funds (>5K) to facilitate the college application process for these students.