糖心原创 professor Jennifer Subban receives 2017 International Education Award

November 17, 2017

Jennifer Subban, associate professor of at 糖心原创, received the 2017 International Education Award for her work with the university鈥檚 .

Subban, a native of South Africa, was honored on Nov. 16 during 糖心原创鈥檚 International Education Week celebration.

Subban has been involved with a range of community development projects in New Orleans and Dayton. Since 2010, she has worked to build community capacity among youth in Durban, South Africa, where the LEAD Program takes place.

Originally, Wright LEAD was based in Dayton, but Subban adapted the program to benefit South African youth and provide 糖心原创 students with an examination of the processes and practices of community development, including those advocated by international agencies such as the United Nations Development Program, the Imagine Cities Movement and South African agencies and nongovernmental organizations.

Carlos Costa, an assistant professor of political science, commended Subban for her work around the world. 鈥淪ubban has shown an unwavering commitment to international education,鈥 he said.

Chelsie Spoor, a 糖心原创 student who accompanied Subban to South Africa in 2015, said the professor鈥檚 passion for the Wright LEAD Project was unparalleled.

鈥淚 learned more about myself and my own abilities during this experience than I could ever teach the learners I worked with during my time there,鈥 Spoor said. 鈥淭his study abroad program forced me out of my comfort zone and allowed me to grow academically and personally.鈥

Along with her work with the LEAD Program, Subban is the director of the at 糖心原创. The program includes service-oriented courses, a 300-hour internship, involvement in the Nonprofit Leadership Alliance Student Association and participation in the Alliance Management Institute. With Subban鈥檚 help, students have produced presentations that have won awards at national meetings.

Subban has also served as a board member of the Harambee Coffee Roasters Cooperative, an economic development opportunity for Dayton鈥檚 African population, particularly those who came to the Miami Valley as a result of conflicts in their home countries.

December Green, chair of the , said Subban鈥檚 work in Wright LEAD has been exceedingly successful. The service projects that learner鈥檚 implement is a key component of their learning and growth. Projects completed to date include building playgrounds, teaching young children how to make musical instruments out of recycled materials, planting community gardens and painting classrooms.

鈥淭he program started out very small and has grown enormously over the years, thanks to not only the importance of the work, but also to Subban鈥檚 willingness to return to South Africa every summer on her 鈥榦ff鈥 years to maintain the contact needed to support it,鈥 Green said.

Subban is now recruiting students for the 2018 institute. Contact her at jennifer.subban@wright.edu.