We are a network of ecologists, social scientists, pedagogical experts, and students who are committed to expanding racial, ethnic, and cultural inclusion in ecology and environmental biology (EE) education and practice. Our leadership consists of a steering committee, a student advisory board, and a postdoctoral liaison. We seek to develop a uniquely integrative approach to increasing racial and ethnic diversity in EE by addressing barriers across networking, research, and teaching practices. The student advisory board, comprised of 12 undergraduate students and 3 graduate students across 13 U.S. states and territories, will ensure steering committee activities are driven by student needs, desires, and visions.
Steering Committee
Maria Miriti, Principal investigator ✉
Maria Miriti, Professor of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology at The Ohio State University. My ecological research examines the dynamics of plant populations and communities and I have a special interest in mechanisms of coexistence. I am passionate about diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice, which has motivated research and scholarship on promoting inclusion for students and faculty of color in ecology and environmental disciplines. I assert that the experiences of people of color are central to identifying and removing barriers to diverse participation. I received a PhD in Ecology and Evolution from the University of Illinois at Chicago and a B.A. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from Northwestern University. To learn more about my research, read more on my website.
Gillian Bowser ✉
Gillian Bowser, Professor in the Department of Natural Resources at Colorado State University. Bowser focuses on ecological indicators of climate change, such as pollinator insects, and linkages between changing ecological conditions, local community livelihoods and climate. She places special emphasis on sustainability, citizen-scientist engagement, and encouraging more students from underrepresented backgrounds to study science. Her current interdisciplinary work looks at biodiversity indicators in high elevations around the world. Bowser has worked as a wildlife biologist and ecologist for the U.S. National Park Service in Yellowstone, Grand Tetons, Joshua Tree and Wrangell St. Elias, and was an AAAS Science and Diplomacy Fellow in 2011. She serves on the board for the Rocky Mountain Sustainability and Science Network, and participated in the U.N. Framework on Climate Change Convention and U.N. Global Environmental Outlook. Bowser earned her B.S. from Northwestern University, her M.S. from the University of Vermont, and her Ph.D. in Biology at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
Caroline Breitenberger ✉
Caroline Breitenberger, Professor Emerita in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and former Director of the Center for Life Sciences Education at The Ohio State University. My research interests include examining factors that influence student persistence in the sciences. I am a Fellow of a national organization that promotes departmental transformation, the Partnership for Undergraduate Life Sciences Education (PULSE). I was awarded OSU’s Alumni Distinguished Teaching Award and the President and Provost’s Award for Distinguished Faculty Service. I completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology after earning a Ph.D. and BS in Chemistry, from the University of North Carolina and Ohio University, respectively. Now retired, I live in Gunnison, Colorado, where I am thrilled by the many opportunities to learn more about the natural world!
Carmen Cid ✉
Carmen R. Cid is Professor of Ecology and Dean Emerita of the School of Arts and Sciences at Eastern Connecticut State University. I have been recognized as a national leader in STEM curriculum development, project evaluation of student retention and support programs and career development enhancement for women and minorities in the sciences. In 2017, I was elected a Fellow by the Ecological Society of America (ESA), which represents over 9,000 ecologists, for her leadership and contributions enhancing ecology education outreach to diverse audiences, recruitment and retention of women and minorities in ecology and applying ecological principles to improve undergraduate liberal arts education. Nationally, I helped develop the 2018 ESA-endorsed undergraduate ecology education curricular framework which elevates all aspects of the human dimension, along with innovative data science methods, in the research and teaching of ecology. I have developed bilingual environmental education multimedia curriculum for urban ecology, targeting middle school learners and has worked with undergraduates and graduate students in enhancing their STEM experiential learning opportunities. In 2020, I was awarded the Connecticut Science Center Lifetime Achievement Award for my achievements in improving STEM education. I am currently on the ESA Governing Board, serving as chair of the Education and Diversity Committees.
Marcela Hernandez ✉
Marcela Hernandez is the Assistant Dean of Faculty Affairs and Recruitment in the College of Engineering at The Ohio State University. I am biochemist and molecular biologist. My professional experience includes designing and implementing programs to enhance and support research trainees with a special focus on those from underrepresented backgrounds. I became a scientist thanks to an awesome Ph.D. mentor whose enthusiasm and love for science made m ewant to become a researcher. He taught me how to think like a scientist. This made me realize the importance of good scientific training and mentorship. I believe this is the single most important factor in becoming a successful STEM professional. Consequently, I am very passionate about mentoring and hope to help the next generation of STEM professionals to retain their love for science and to maneuver around the traps that are responsible for the leaky STEM pipeline.
Valerie Ann Johnson ✉
Valerie Ann Johnson, Dean of Arts, Sciences, and Humanities and Professor of Sociology at Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina. My research, teaching, and advocacy, conducted in Costa Rica, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, the Seychelles Islands and the US, centers on gender, bioethics, disability, the health of women and girls, and environmental justice. I am also engaged in recent research in maritime archaeology on the hidden histories of pirates and slave-ships. This interdisciplinary work supports my belief that our human understanding of ecology and experiences with nature are shaped by a variety of cultural and social dimensions and this in turn shapes how we understand science. As a Dean, I have instituted at Shaw University, with the support of colleagues at NCSU, a Public Science Internship program designed to facilitate students across all disciplines in meaningful science activity. I have a Ph.D. in Medical Anthropology from UC Berkeley/UC San Francisco, MA in Sociology from Atlanta University (now Clark Atlanta University) and BA in Sociology from Spelman College in Atlanta.
Amy Kulesza ✉
Amy Kulesza, Assistant Director of Education Research and Development in the Center for Life Sciences Education at The Ohio State University. My current research focuses on understanding factors that lead to increased retention of minoritized and first-generation undergraduate students in STEM. Broadly, I am interested in how current policies (such as prerequisite courses) and practices (such as use of Course-based Undergraduate Research Experiences [CUREs] or service-learning) impact student retention. Specifically, I am interested in how classroom tools such as metacognition, time management skills, and positive affirmation can improve student outcomes. I also lead Instructor Professional Development and believe all instructors should be using evidence-based practices in the classroom to support student learning. I have a Ph.D. in Education: Quantitative Research, Evaluation, and Measurement from The Ohio State University, an MS in Ecology from The Ohio State University, and a BS in Biology from the University of Maryland.
Zakiya Leggett ✉
Zakiya Leggett, Assistant Professor of Forestry and Environmental Resources at North Carolina State University. My research is focused on soil ecology, citizen science, and diversity and inclusion in natural resources. I serve as the director of three programs focused on mentoring students and increasing diversity in conservation biology, natural resources, and forestry – Doris Duke Conservation Scholars Program, Scholars for Conservation Leadership Program and National Needs Fellowship Program. Through my research and program activities, I am committed to mentoring and encouraging diverse student populations to pursue their educational and career goals. I earned a B.S from Tuskegee University in Tuskegee, AL, a Masters degree from Duke University, and a Ph.D. from North Carolina State University.
Becky Mansfield ✉
Becky Mansfield, Professor of Geography at the Ohio State University. My research and teaching are in nature-society geography, political ecology, and science studies and I have a long-term interest in ideas about nature and race in both science and the popular imagination. My recent research investigates shifting understanding of environmental chemicals and their effects, the politics of deregulation of these chemicals, and implications for health and justice. I also have written about equity issues in the university, including articles on feminist and anti-racist mentoring and on sexual harassment. I have a PhD in Geography and MS in Environmental Studies from the University of Oregon and a BA in Environmental Studies from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Read more on my website.
Natasha Woods ✉
Natasha Woods, Assistant Professor of Biology at Moravian University. My research interests broadly include plant facilitation and competition, seed dispersal and germination, woody plant encroachment, and stability of coastal dune vegetation. My recent research investigates the impact of grass density and dune elevation on shrub encroachment on Hog Island, Virginia. I have a long-term interest in equity in science education and in increasing the inclusion of underrepresented minorities in ecological research. I have a PhD in Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology from The Ohio State University and a BS and MS in Biology from Jacksonville State University.
Postdoctoral liaison
Ariel Rawson ✉
Ariel Rawson, Postdoctoral Scholar, Ohio State University. My long-term interests are at the intersections of environmentalism, social justice, and interdisciplinary education. Specifically, I’m interested in how “human” dimensions are integrated into ecology or (not!) and the ethical implications of routine environmental concepts (e.g., competition, community, population). Recently, I’ve been collaboratively examining the relationship between colonialism and natural history in the context of increasing inclusion in ecology education. My Ph.D. examined the way race emerges, explicitly and implicitly, in excitement around the microbiome as a new ‘Anthropocene’ science of society-environment interactions. My previous work investigated the uneven relations between the global North and South in both Sustainable Development and in alternatives, such as ‘Rights for Nature.’ I have a Ph.D. and MA in Geography from Ohio State University and a BA in interdisciplinary studies from San Diego State University.
Student Advisory Board
Name: Toluwalase Ennie Akinwunmi
Institution: University of Pennsylvania
Year: Senior
Name: Felix J. Berrios Ortega
Institution: University of Puerto Rico, Humacao
Year: Senior
Name: Al’ya Bushelle
Institution: Spelman College
Year: Junior
Name: Kyle Gatdula Dahilig
Institution: University of Guam
Year: Senior
Name: Miles Dillard
Institution: North Carolina State University
Year: Senior
Name: Mahalo (MJ) Dinong
Institution: University of Hawaii
Year: Junior
Name: Anna Grondolsky
Institution: The Ohio State University
Year: Junior
Name: Jordyn Hardy
Institution: Wesleyan College, GA
Year: Junior
Name: August Hurtado
Institution: University of Vermont
Year: Junior
Name: Prachi Ingle
Institution: University of Texas, Austin
Year: Junior
Name: Federick Nelson
Institution: University of California, Davis
Year: Graduate Student
Name: Zipporah Sowell
Institution: Tuskegee University
Year: Senior, Class of 2023
Name: Khanh Ton
Institution: Rhodes College, TN
Year: Senior
Name: Tatjana Washington
Institution: University of Massachusetts
Year: Graduate Student
Name: Sidney Woodruff
Institution: University of California, Davis
Year: Graduate Student