Boutelle featured at Starfish National Conference
The Telegraph
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Boutelle
EDWARDSVILLE Southern Illinois University Edwardsville’s Sally Boutelle will be a featured panelist at Starfish by Hobson’s COVID Pandemic virtual conference on Thursday, March 11. Starfish helps colleges and universities achieve increases in retention rate, exceed graduation rate goals, and set the standard for student academic success.
Representatives from both 4-year and 2-year institutions will discuss how they leveraged Starfish to support changed policies, processes, practices, and implementation during COVID, along with challenges they have faced and the approach to overcome those obstacles.
“I’ll be sharing how SIUE jumped into action last spring to support our students as quickly as possible using Starfish,” said Boutelle, assistant director in SIUE’s Enrollment Systems, Research & Analysis (ESRA) Department. “Last spring in response to Illinois Gov. Pritzke
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Mustard Seed Peace Project keeps working amid pandemic
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Southern Illinois University Edwardsville student club Mustard Seed Peace Project (MSPP) members work with their designs for latrines in Virginia, in the rural Ixcan region of Guatemala. The student club has worked with the MSPP engineering team to design and implement handwashing stations and latrines on location at the university. The MSPP engineering team mentors students through the design process and travels with the student team to implement the project. Show MoreShow Less
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A latrine in Virginia, a community in the rural Ixcan region of Guatemala. Show MoreShow Less
More women than men feel workplace is a threatening environment: study
7 Mar, 2021 05:00 PM
3 minutes to read
A study has found that not everyone supports more diversity in the workplace. Photo / Getty
Lincoln Tan is the New Zealand Herald’s diversity, ethnic affairs and immigration senior reporter.lincoln.tan@nzherald.co.nz@LincolnTanNZH
Men and women are indeed from distinct planets when it comes to views on diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) in the workplace, a new study has found.
Despite almost three in four saying their organisations are committed to diversity, 67 per cent more women than men reported feeling their workplaces have threatening work environments .