The Connell School of Nursing has earned a reputation for developing leaders. The five high-achieving alumni profiled here credit opportunities at CSON鈥攇etting to know faculty leaders and their research, developing their networking skills in a variety of settings, and taking advantage of top-notch tutoring and mentoring鈥攆or their success.

The Keys to Inclusive Leadership in Nursing (KILN) program helps students from backgrounds traditionally underrepresented in nursing tap their own leadership potential, providing services and support including intense academic help, stipends, and grants for expenses such as exam review and conference fees. CSON鈥檚 undergraduate School of Nursing Senate and Graduate Nurses鈥 Association and the statewide Massachusetts Student Nurses Association help participants develop essential leadership skills and confidence.聽

Katie Davis

Katie Davis

Katie Davis 鈥10, M.S. 鈥12, was ready to start her dream nurse practitioner job when she got a call from a doctor she had worked with in an emergency department. How would she like to join a cutting-edge startup that could save lives and spare elders exhausting emergency room trips? The job would pay half as much money as the nurse practitioner job, and require double the number of hours.

鈥淥f course I said yes,鈥 Davis recalled. She credited faculty leaders for pushing and encouraging her in ways that enabled her to leap at the chance to join the telemedicine startup Call9. 聽She added: 鈥淐onnell prepares folks well.鈥

But according to Associate Professor Catherine Read, who was the undergraduate program associate dean at the time, 鈥淚t鈥檚 all her鈥攕he鈥檚 a natural leader who took advantage of the opportunities.鈥

As a student, Davis was always in a hurry. 鈥淚 always wanted to do whatever would get me closest to taking care of patients the fastest,鈥 she said.

Her father, a physician, and mother, a nurse manager, didn鈥檛 push her toward health care. Nevertheless, she was working on an ambulance at 15 and was certified as an emergency technician before college. She began work on her master鈥檚 degree while still an undergraduate and finished it while she was working full time at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Needham as an emergency department nurse.

As an undergraduate, Davis and another student revived the Eagle EMS, a then-depleted student-run emergency medical service, building it up to 150 volunteers.

Davis has swiftly risen to the number two person in her fast-growing company鈥攁nother extension of the leadership skills and savvy nurtured at Connell, she says.

鈥淭here鈥檚 just something in me; a constant drive to learn to grow, to do something new, and have a positive effect on individuals or an entire system,鈥 she said.

Sabianca Delva

Sabianca Delva

Unlike many of her fellow Boston College undergraduates, Sabianca Delva 鈥12 held down a job, working 32 hours a week as a telemetry technician while juggling academic demands. She needed the income so she could send money to her mother back in Haiti, said Delva, who was eight years old when she came to the US with her father.

Growing up she moved a lot, and was bullied in school. She struggled during her first year at Boston College until the KILN program provided some financial support to help her focus on her studies, easing her onto a path to success.

KILN covered the cost of travel to the National Student Nurses鈥 Association conference in Orlando, for instance. And, she says, the program offered networking opportunities that eventually led to a great job at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Read remembers how she blossomed. 鈥淪abianca wasn鈥檛 someone who saw herself as a leader. But she was willing to take advice, and take a chance on herself.鈥

One success led to another: she was elected president of the Massachusetts Student Nurses鈥 Association (MASNA) and served on the board of the American Nurses Association Massachusetts. 鈥淥nce I had support I was able to do things beyond my experience,鈥 Delva recalled.

The first member of her family to go to college, Delva now is finishing her Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University, researching how apps can be used to reduce health disparities and improve cardiovascular health among immigrant populations.

And she is paying it forward, mentoring young high school students from underprivileged backgrounds interested in science and health careers.

Andrea Lopez

Andrea Lopez

It might surprise coworkers in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at the Floating Hospital for Children to learn that Andrea Lopez 鈥14 used to be quite shy.

That was true back when she arrived at CSON as a freshman, the quiet daughter of Guatemalan immigrants from tiny Rhode Island. Then she became a KILN scholar and her evolution began.

It started with mentoring from Associate Professor Judith Shindul-Rothschild, who also was the MASNA faculty advisor.

鈥淎s a student, having a mentor who is a professor is a really big deal,鈥 said Lopez, 鈥渆specially because most of the professors at 精东影业 are researchers鈥攖hey are published, they have so much behind their names.鈥

Shindul-Rothschild also introduced her to the Student Nurses鈥 Association, and she got involved in leading the group鈥檚 鈥渂reakthrough to nursing鈥 efforts.

Soon she was organizing programs with speakers on leadership and professional etiquette, resume writing, and interviewing tips. By her senior year, Lopez was president of MASNA as well as president of the Boston chapter of the National Association of Hispanic Nurses.

鈥淚 was trained to become a networking junkie,鈥 Lopez said. 鈥淣ow I can become friends with a rock on the floor.鈥

Jean Reidy

Jean Reidy

Jean Reidy 鈥07 was a 鈥渘atural born leader鈥 who stepped up again and again, starting from her freshman year, when she was elected president of her class in the School of Nursing Senate, said Read.

While Reidy took advantage of organized service and leadership opportunities at CSON, she also forged ahead on her own when she saw a need. As a freshman, for example, she launched a fundraiser to buy scrubs so classmates could start feeling like professionals before their clinical training.

The summer between her first and second years, she worked in orientation for admitted students, helping to smooth their transition. She did it again the following summer, meeting every incoming nursing student.

鈥淚 remember coming to orientation and feeling that this is so painfully awkward, and I remember thinking I could probably help students,鈥 she explained.

Throughout her undergraduate years, she spent four hours a week volunteering at a transitional housing facility helping people affected by HIV/AIDS.

She helped start a nursing day of service, and volunteered at the Greater Boston Food Bank. Spring breaks found her on service trips to Appalachia. Senior year, she took part in a CSON trip to Nicaragua, and served as a student leader on an Arrupe immersion program trip to El Salvador.

Reidy went on to earn master鈥檚 degrees in nursing and public health at Johns Hopkins. She now holds a newly created job at Erie Family Health Center in Chicago. There, she divides her time between providing direct care as a nurse practitioner and working as an administrator with a mostly bilingual staff serving many undocumented and poor patients, she said.

Morine Cebert

Morine Cebert

Nine years ago, Morine Cebert 鈥12 landed in a Boston College dormitory after years of sharing a one-bedroom apartment in Bridgeport, Connecticut, with six others, including relatives who had recently arrived from Haiti.

She came to Boston College from a high school that graduated only half its student body. And while she had ranked at the top of her class in secondary school, she failed her first freshman quiz in anatomy.聽

鈥淚t was an ego blow. I didn鈥檛 know what to do,鈥 she says.

The quiz score did not reflect the experience of a young woman who, as a child, had accompanied aunts and uncles to doctors鈥 appointments, acting as a translator, or a daughter who helped her mother pay her bills. Leaders of the KILN program recognized Cebert鈥檚 potential. They lined up tutoring help so she could learn how to study better. And they arranged for a small monthly stipend that would cover the costs of her stethoscope and scrubs, and allow her to eat lunch with her peers.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what equity is,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淵ou bring people onto the same playing field.鈥

Cebert became a very busy student leader: she was president of the Black Student Forum, an orientation leader, and an outreach coordinator for AHANA (individuals of African, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American descent).

KILN grants covered the costs of attending nursing conferences, where she soon discovered the vastness of the field and her passion for research. 鈥淧eople are doing research to change nursing every day and changing it by adding to the literature every day.鈥

Her ties to CSON faculty and other professionals she met through networking led to her discovery of the Nursing Bridge to the Doctorate program at Winston-Salem State and Duke Universities. She is now set to complete her master鈥檚 degree at WSSU and apply those credits to the Ph.D. program at Duke, beginning in the fall. 聽聽

Among her goals: answering the 鈥渜uestion of why African-American women are least likely to seek treatment regardless of income.鈥 聽

She still has a lot of work ahead. 鈥淢y parents taught me education is everything, and they are cheering me on. That鈥檚 what will get me through this Ph.D.鈥

鈥揓udy Rakowsky