Neag School Faculty, Staff Mentor Emerging Leader in Sport

Jane Nguyen, a 2018 Global Sports Mentoring Program Emerging Leader, visits the University of Connecticut this month. (Photo Credit: U.S. Dept. of State in cooperation with University of Tennessee Center for Sport, Peace, & Society. Photographer: Jaron Johns)
Jane Nguyen, a 2018 Global Sports Mentoring Program Emerging Leader, visits the University of Connecticut this month, hosted by the Neag School’s Department of Educational Leadership. (Photo Credit: U.S. Dept. of State in cooperation with University of Tennessee Center for Sport, Peace, & Society. Photographer: Jaron Johns)

Each year, the U.S. Department of State, the Center for Sport, Peace & Society at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, and espnW co-sponsor the Global Sports Mentoring Program’s (GSMP) Empower Women Through Sports Initiative. This is an international leadership development initiative that recognizes female achievement in sport and aims to empower women to be ambassadors of change for female athletes around the world. The initiative is based on evidence that women and girls who are exposed to sport increase their chances of success both on the field and in other areas of their lives.

This year, GSMP is partnering 15 emerging female leaders from 14 countries with leading executives and experts in the U.S. sports industry. The Neag School Department of Educational Leadership’s Laura Burton, Danielle DeRosa, and Jennifer McGarry were selected to serve as mentors to an emerging leader from Vietnam, Tra Giang “Jane” Nguyen. This is DeRosa’s second year as a program mentor, while both Burton and McGarry will be serving as mentors for the third year in a row. The Department welcomed Nguyen on Oct. 5 and will host her until Oct. 24.

 

“I want to change the mindset in Vietnam so that women can participate in sports. And I want to show people it isn’t only physical education; sport can make the lives of all people better.”

— Jane Nguyen, 2018 Global Sports Mentoring Program Emerging Leader

Nguyen’s passion for sport began at a young age as she excelled as a top youth table tennis player. However, her achievements in sport would grow beyond her success as an athlete. After earning a bachelor’s degree in physical education, she moved to Thailand to pursue her MS and Ph.D. in exercise and sport management from Burapha University. During her studies she was exposed to sport management and psychology for the first time, which prompted her to create the first nonphysical sport curriculum when she returned to Vietnam – including courses in sport management, marketing, economics, and tourism.

In her current role as a professor with the Institute of Sport Science and Technology at the University of Sport Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam, Nguyen bridges the theories she teaches in the classroom with real-world experience – often inviting her students to assist her in coordinating major sport conferences and other events throughout the year. In 2017, she organized the International Conference on Sport Management, the first university sport conference ever held in Vietnam, with more than 200 professors representing 28 countries.

Jane Nguyen, second from left, is one of the 2018 Global Sports Mentoring Program Emerging Leaders. She is being hosted at the Neag School this month by mentors Laura Burton, Jennifer McGarry, and Danielle DeRosa. (Photo credit: U.S. Dept. of State in cooperation with University of Tennessee Center for Sport, Peace, & Society. Photographer: Jaron Johns)
Jane Nguyen, second from left, is one of the 2018 Global Sports Mentoring Program Emerging Leaders. She is being hosted at the Neag School this month by mentors Laura Burton, Jennifer McGarry, and Danielle DeRosa. (Photo credit: U.S. Dept. of State in cooperation with University of Tennessee Center for Sport, Peace, & Society. Photographer: Jaron Johns)

In addition to her university work, Nguyen served as general manager for Thailand’s men’s and women’s national ice hockey teams at the 2017 Asian Games in Japan, where the men won the gold medal. She also managed the team during the 2017 Southeast Asian Games in Malaysia, where the men medaled in silver. She currently works within the association to secure funding to run ice hockey camps for girls and women.

Nguyen is also currently working on a major project inspired by her time with Sport for Tomorrow, an initiative led by the Japanese government. Her project, titled “Walk and Run for Tomorrow,” will consist of a marathon and other racing events for students with and without disabilities in Ho Chi Minh City.

“In Southeast Asian countries, we are very patriarchal,” says Nguyen in her featured GSMP emerging leader profile. “Women never have time to exercise or think about sports. That is why I work with students. I want to change the mindset in Vietnam so that women can participate in sports. And I want to show people it isn’t only physical education; sport can make the lives of all people better.” Although there are barriers for women to participate in sport, Nguyen says she sees her role as an advocate in this regard.

“We are so pleased to continue our involvement in this exciting and meaningful program,” says Burton. “GSMP has had such a positive impact on the lives of girls and women around the world, and we lucky to play a role in support of the program. Dr. Nguyen is a natural fit with us here at UConn, as she teaches and supports students in sport management at her university, while also seeking to positively impact the lives of girls and women through sport and physical activity.”

“GSMP has had such a positive impact on the lives of girls and women around the world, and we lucky to play a role in support of the program.”

— Laura Burton, Professor and GSMP Mentor

Throughout the month of October, Nguyen will be spending time with sport management faculty at UConn to learn more about the context of sport in the U.S., nonprofit development and social entrepreneurship, and gender and leadership development in sport. To share the GSMP mission more broadly with the UConn community, the sport management program also hosted Sarah Hillyer, director of the Center for Sport, Peace & Society at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, earlier this month to talk about empowerment through sport.

To date, GSMP has graduated 99 delegates who have gone on to impact 225,000 lives in more than 55 countries.

Learn more through this featured GSMP video or visit the U.S. Department of State’s GSMP website. Or, check out GSMP on Facebook.

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Where Are They Now? Catching Up With HESA Alum Meghan Hanrahan ’04 MA

Two years into her position as director of UConn’s master of science in business analytics and project management (MSBAPM) program, HESA alumna Meghan Hanrahan ’04 MA is thriving. She loves her work, the MSBAPM program’s enrollment is on the rise, and Hanrahan herself was recently featured in Hartford Business Journal’s 2018 “40 Under 40” issue. “I feel like I’m exactly where I should be,” she says. So how, exactly, did she get here?

Meghan Hanrahan (Photo courtesy of Meghan Hanrahan)
Meghan Hanrahan ’04 MA serves as the director of UConn’s master’s degree program in business analytics and project management.

When she graduated in 2004 with an MA in higher education administration (now the HESA program), Hanrahan had already been immersed in the UConn community for a good while, having received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Storrs. Upon graduating, she began a national job search and thought a change of scenery might be nice.

Then a unique opportunity presented itself: The UConn tri-campus School of Business program (which has since disbanded) needed a program coordinator for their new undergraduate business and technology program. Hanrahan recognized that the position would be a special one, especially for a young professional like herself. As the coordinator of a dynamic new program, she would have lots of room for growth, development, and entrepreneurship. She decided she couldn’t pass up the opportunity, and thus began her career.

For almost 10 years, Hanrahan remained in that same type of role in the School of Business, albeit with a number of changes in position and a great deal of upward mobility. Teaching, advising, managing, serving as a faculty liaison, and working with student and orientation services, she did, as she puts it, “everything you can imagine from a program-level role.” She was instrumental in many vital projects, such as the signing of articulation agreements with local community colleges to create transfer programs and rolling out the Honors program to UConn regional campuses. Best of all, Hanrahan loved her job. “It was phenomenal,” she says.

“The HESA program taught me so much about the critical roles that student affairs and services play in an institution.”

— Meghan Hanrahan ’04 MA

As she approached her 10-year anniversary working with the School of Business, Hanrahan decided she was ready to take on a new challenge. It was then that the leadership team of UConn’s West Hartford campus (which has since moved to Hartford) pitched her an exciting opportunity as the associate director of business and student services for UConn West Hartford. The position, which Hanrahan describes as a regional-level dean of students position, was exactly what she was looking for. In her two-year tenure in that role, she managed an “amazing” team and was able to bring her expertise to new institutional areas such as health services, First Year Experience courses, disability services, and community standards. “It was always what I’d dreamed of, going deeper into student affairs,” says Hanrahan.“I was inspired by the work of my team, and I loved what I was doing.”

Soon enough, however, opportunity came knocking once again. The School of Business was conducting a national search for a new director of the MSBAPM program, and thanks to the strong relationships Hanrahan had built within the School over her career, the hiring committee thought of her. At first, she was reluctant to apply since she still felt inspired and challenged by her role at UConn West Hartford, but as she learned more about the role, she began to reconsider.

Students entering the Front Street entrance of Uconn Hartford on Sept. 26, 2018. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)
Students exiting the Front Street entrance at the UConn Hartford campus this fall. UConn Hartford is in part home to the business analytics and project management program that Hanrahan directs. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)

At the time, Hanrahan was serving on a number of committees to find directors of regional campuses, and she had started to notice a trend. People applying for these upper leadership roles had either exclusive undergraduate or exclusive graduate experience, but never both. “The two things I didn’t have experience with at that time were working with grad students and working with international students,” says Hanrahan. Not only was the MSBAPM a graduate program, but it had a significant international student population. With these factors in mind, Hanrahan intentionally applied for the job. She was selected as the new director, and she remains in that position today.

Hanrahan admits that her first year as the director was challenging. “It was an unfamiliar environment,” she says, “I missed my undergrads.”

Instead of giving up, however, she realized she had to dig deep and figure out how to bring her unique skill-set to the position and “be a value-add to the institution.” Two years in, she has made a total 180 from that challenging beginning. “I’ve realized that my background is so valuable at the graduate level,” she says. “I’ve found my niche, and we’re doing great.”

“Having real impact on students is what it’s all about.”

When asked what she’s most proud of having accomplished since graduating from UConn, Hanrahan tells a powerful story. Not long ago she ran into a former advisee of hers while Hanrahan was out with her 9-year-old son. With Hanrahan’s support and his own remarkable determination, the advisee had gone from not having completed high school to graduating from UConn. He has a wife and children, a house, and he is currently completing a UConn MBA program. When they saw each other, the advisee turned to Hanrahan’s son and said, “I need to tell you something: Your mother changed my entire life.” She says this moment is one of many that keep her strong when she feels stuck or frustrated. “Having real impact on students is what it’s all about,” she says.

Hanrahan says she is grateful to HESA for the deep foundation it gave her in student affairs. “The HESA program taught me so much about the critical roles that student affairs and services play in an institution,” she says. “HESA gave me the tools to be able to articulate the importance of that role, to advocate for it.” What’s more, Hanrahan is currently working on a research project with three senior faculty members at UConn Hartford. HESA, she says, gave her the educational foundation that makes her research possible.

Hanrahan’s advice for current HESA students and emerging practitioners can be summed up as follows: Stay relevant, find your mentors (across disciplines), and be open-minded. “Even when things are challenging, figure out how you can learn or gain something from the experience,” she says. “Everything is an opportunity!”

View this story as it originally appeared on the Higher Education and Student Affairs website. Learn more about the Neag School’s HESA program at hesa.uconn.edu