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You are here: Home / Archives for Spring 2023 / 23 Philanthropy

23 Philanthropy

$3 Million Grant for Professional Pathways Program

CHHSN Receives $3 Million Grant for Professional Pathways Program 

In September 2022, the California Department of Health Care Access and Information (HCAI) announced the approval of a $3 million grant to CSUDH to help establish a Health Professions Pathway Program in the College of Health, Human Services and Nursing (CHHSN). The program is designed to support and encourage students from underrepresented regions and backgrounds to pursue health care careers. 

“To build the workforce California needs, we must reach out to the next generation to support them to become health care professionals,” said HCAI Director Elizabeth Landsberg. 

CHHSN Dean Mi-Sook Kim said that the funding will be used for three CSUDH initiatives. One will establish allied health pathway programs for incoming students. It will help students better discover the career options available to them, while providing them with structured rubrics to help them choose the right courses for their interests. 

“This pathway program is a dream project for a health college,” said Kim. “Many universities are unable to do this type of programming because they don’t have the resources to do it. right. It’s exciting for the college.” 

The funds will also help CHHSN establish a paid summer internship program for Toro health students. Because internships are typically unpaid, many CSUDH students are unable to pursue them. “So many students here come from underserved or low-income populations. They tend to need jobs that earn them money, rather than unpaid internships.” 

“They’re the group that we need to support more to be able to go into the health care sector workforce,” Kim added. “We need a lot more diversity, but often those students are the very ones who are unable to do it.” The HCAI grant will allow CSUDH to provide 20 paid summer internships for CHHSN students per year for the next five years. 

In addition, the funds will support the development of a post-undergraduate fellowship program targeting underserved student populations. The fellowships will provide five students with $25,000 each, so that they can explore careers in health care without the added pressure of having to find a job. 

“This is really a student success plan at the college level,” said Kim. “I get excited whenever I talk about it, but this won’t be an easy task. These funds will help us get off to a good start. Now it’s up to us to do the hard work.”  


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Dean Kim standing proudly in front of Welch Hall.

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Congresswoman Barragan holding giant check with students.

Nursing, OT Skills Labs Receive Federal Appropriations for Upgrades

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Nursing, OT Skills Labs Receive Federal Appropriations for Upgrades

Nursing, OT Skills Labs Receive Federal Appropriations for Upgrades 

On May 4, 2022, Congresswoman Nanette Barragán (D-44th) presented a check for $700,000 to CSUDH for much-needed upgrades to the College of Health, Human Servicesand Nursing (CHHSN) facilities. The funding will go toward purchasing new equipment, supplies, teaching tools, and improving simulation capabilities. 

“Our students need up-to-date equipment that is similar to what they will find at their work sites,” said CHHSN Dean Mi-Sook Kim. “We are using some of the funds to remodel our occupational therapy (OT) lab spaces so they look like a hospital setting, not a classroom. Students will be working in the same way they will once they leave the program and get jobs.” Similar upgrades will be made to other CHHSN classrooms and facilities, added Kim. 

“With upgraded clinical laboratory equipment, the students will have access to the modern tools and equipment needed to obtain the skills and training needed to successfully enter the health care workforce,” said Barragán in presenting the funds. 

“This investment will contribute to enhanced educational experience, more local hires at hospitals and community centers, and better public health outcomes in medically underserved communities here in California’s 44th District and throughout the greater Los Angeles metro area, where these students will pursue health careers.” 


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CSUDH Launches Snap Inc. Institute for Technology and Education

CSUDH Launches Snap Inc. Institute for Technology and Education

In September 2022, CSUDH celebrated the official opening of the Snap Inc. Institute for Technology and Education (SITE), whose transformational mission is to make computer science an integral part of K-12 education in Los Angeles.

Housed within the CSUDH College of Education (COE), SITE was made possible by a $5 million gift from Snap Inc.—the largest single donation in CSUDH history—as well as the Computer Science for All (CSforALL) CSforED initiative.  

Speaking at the launch, Snap Inc. public policy manager Jasson Crockett said that the glaring lack of diversity in tech was a catalyst for the historic gift.

“We wanted to do something meaningful beyond just cataloging the problem and its potential solutions,” Crockett said. “If we want more people of color to pursue careers in tech, we have to expose more youth to computer science early and make sure we’re training enough computer science teachers.” 

Child playing with blocks.
Child playing with blocks.

“We want our preservice teachers and local students to have joyful, engaging, relevant computer science experiences that inspire their passions, connect to their interests, and show them that regardless of their future path, computer science is something anyone and everyone can do and connect with,” said SITE director Mike Karlin.

“If you want to diversify tech, you need to go to schools that are preparing teachers to work in diverse communities,” added Jessica Pandya, Dean of the College of Education. “CSUDH prepares the most diverse teachers in California.”

SITE has already begun engaging in a number of research, partnership, and curricular improvement activities. COE faculty have been integrating the California K-12 Computer Science standards into preservice teacher coursework.

SITE has also partnered with local school districts to better understand their computer science needs and to hold events for elementary school students and teachers.  

In June 2022, SITE was invited by the U.S. Department of Education and the International Society for Technology in Education to be part of a select group of colleges in support of their Digital Equity and Transformation network, where it will work to improve technology practices in preservice teacher education.

“There is a big divide in this nation, and it isn’t just political or racial. It is technological,” said CSUDH President Thomas A. Parham. “The Snap gift is so essential because it is an investment in the mission of bridging that gap by educating the next generation of students.”


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