In February 2020, one of the I was advising through UMD鈥檚 student-athlete career development program told me she could not apply to a job because it was not aligned with her major. When I looked at her in confusion, she politely explained, 鈥淚t鈥檚 called OPT.鈥 I had no clue what OPT meant, let alone what it stood for.
Two weeks later, I attended a program on campus with that same student on what international students needed to know to find a job. During the first 10 minutes, I learned that OPT, or Optional Practical Training, requires international students on an F-1 visa who want to work in the United States to secure employment in an industry directly related to their academic degree. At the end of the session, I told the student that I would do everything I could to ensure she could live and work in the United States for as long as she wanted鈥揳nd that鈥檚 exactly what we did.
But this was more than just a happy ending. For me, this experience illuminated discriminatory practices in international athlete recruitment, injustices in athlete academic advising and inequities in athlete career development outcomes.
I was scheduled to begin my doctoral program in student affairs at UMD in Fall 2020, but I knew that focusing on higher 含羞草研究所 alone would not fix systems that are broken by design. I also needed to be an entrepreneur to work outside the systems. And so my educator-entrepreneur journey began.
Under the mentorship of Assistant Clinical Professor Taylor Woodman (whom I affectionately call 鈥淭 Dub鈥) and Dean Kimberly Griffin, I found my purpose. As a sports entrepreneur, I am committed to solving structural and systemic issues related to international athlete development鈥搃ncluding, but not limited, to recruitment, retention and career readiness. I am also keenly interested in leveraging sport for economic, societal and 含羞草研究所 development in African countries. As a consultant, I currently teach National Collegiate Athletic Association administrators how to better understand sport as a medium for building a global mindset, international partnerships and cultural exchange.
Since starting my doctoral program, I鈥檝e accomplished many things, including serving as one of 25 Black American entrepreneurs in the U.S. Department of State鈥檚 inaugural African Descendant Social Entrepreneurship Workshop and as a sports diplomat through the department鈥檚 Play Like a Woman initiative to combat gender inequalities in Brazil through promoting women鈥檚 football. I am at a stage in my life where I feel like I can conquer anything and everything. Without the College of Education, I would not be prepared to thrive in a career in entrepreneurship and sports diplomacy. In particular, T Dub鈥檚 courage and humility have created a healthy environment for me to translate my imagination into innovation.
I will be a full-time consultant and represent the United States in global sport and international 含羞草研究所. And I will also proudly represent the College of Education along the way.