search

UMD     This Site





Photo: Chris Bryant

Photo: Chris Bryant

 

The University of Maryland’s A. James Clark School of Engineering partnered with the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) as part of a mission to recruit, retain, and graduate underrepresented black scholars in the engineering fields by hosting the National Leadership Conference (NLC) in College Park, Maryland. Approximately 200 undergraduate and graduate student leaders attended the conference June 20–24 for the newly elected national and regional officers of NSBE, one of the largest student-governed organizations based in the United States.

During the four-day conference, participants received intensive training in leadership, communications, and project management areas such as budgeting, expense management, public relations, funds solicitation, governance, non-profit management best-practices, and balancing work and demands of school. This “meeting of the minds” was held throughout the UMD campus in the Chemical and Nuclear Engineering Building, Jeong H. Kim Engineering Building, A. James Clark Hall, and Prince Frederick Hall’s Multipurpose Room.

Bongnwi Tangyie, assistant to the director of the Clark School’s Center for Minorities in Science and Engineering (CMSE) and UMD liaison to the NSBE conference planning team, believes the event is necessary to cultivate growth and success in and outside of NSBE.

“Whatever they do on the collegiate level could have impact on the regional level, which has impacts on the national level—which is essentially important because they’re a national chapter,” Tangyie said.

Tangyie also said the attending students learned essential skills that will make them more business savvy on all levels by learning marketing plans in organizations.

Participants left the conference aware of the many resources that are offered through NSBE, such as tutorial programs, technical seminars, a national communications network, two national magazines, resume books, career fairs, awards, banquets, and the annual national convention.

At the closing session, attendees were highlighted for their accomplishments in the conference and got an opportunity to talk about what they learned. Tangyie said that after the event, students acquired the sense that they have responsibility, not only to themselves, but to their peers and the larger community.

NSBE’s NLC team was led by Briana Wilson, and the Clark School’s team included Rosemary Parker, CMSE director; Sheron Williams, assistant to the dean; Julie Berry, executive administrative assistant in the Office of the Dean; and Tangyie. Tangyie also added that the event wouldn’t have been possible without the generous support of Clark School Dean Darryll Pines.



Related Articles:
Fueling the Next Generation of Big Thinkers
UMD Alumni Jones, Laroia Elected to National Academy of Engineering
$100,000 investment from Amazon to power Clark School initiatives in diversity, robotics research and education
Lockheed Martin Awards $3M to Clark School
Empowering Voices in Engineering
UMD Receives $1M in Federal Funding to Help Increase Number of Minority Students Graduating with STEM Degrees
Sloan Foundation Funds Program of Exemplary Mentoring
Clark School Earns Impact Award for Work with Minorities

July 5, 2018


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Srivastava Named Inaugural Director of Semiconductor Initiatives and Innovation

State-of-the-Art 3D Nanoprinter Now at UMD

UMD, Partners Receive $31M for Semiconductor Research

Two NSF Awards for ECE Alum Michael Zuzak (Ph.D. ’22)

Applications Open for Professor and Chair of UMD's Department of Materials Science and Engineering

Ghodssi Honored With Gaede-Langmuir Award

Milchberg and Wu named Distinguished University Professors

New features on ingestible capsule will deliver targeted drugs to better treat IBD, Crohn’s disease

Forty years of MEMS research at the Hilton Head Workshop

Baturalp Buyukates (ECE Ph.D. ’21) Honored by IEEE ComSoc

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home