Vershawn Sanders-Ward
The HBS Club of Chicago – Nonprofit Leadership Fund, Community Impact Scholars Pilot Program
has sent its first participant to the Harvard Extension School (HES)
for leadership development. This program works along-side our flagship
SPNM program.
Founding Artistic Director and CEO of the Red Clay Dance Company, Vershawn Sanders-Ward,
has been selected to participate in the prestigious Community Impact
Scholars Program (CISP) of the Non-Profit Leadership Fund’s (NPLF)
Community Impact Committee of the Harvard Business School Club of
Chicago (HBSCC). Advancing the Harvard Business School’s mission, the
HBS Club of Chicago looks to inspire, educate, and support leaders who
make difference in the Chicago area and provide channels for the club’s
members to make a positive impact in the community.
Sanders-Ward, a native of Chicago who earned a master’s degree in Fine
Arts in Dance from New York University, is the first recipient of the
BFA in Dance from Columbia College Chicago (Gates Millennium Scholar)
and is currently a candidate for Dunham Technique Certification. Her
work has been represented in Chicago, New York, San Francisco, The Yard
at Martha’s Vineyard, and internationally in Toronto, Dakar, and
Kampala.
The Red Clay Dance Company’s goal is to awaken “global” change through
creating, performing, and teaching dances of the African Diaspora with
the hope of transforming cultural and socio-economic inequities in local
and global communities through:
- Artistic collaboration through research, investigation, and refinement
- Employing dance “artivism” as the vehicle to shift cultural and socio-economic imbalances
- Nurturing “artivists” from novice to professional by providing an authentic pipeline
- Building global community through strategic partnerships
- Inspiring audiences to strengthen community through “artivism (art + activism).
“Effective leadership and
community engagement should live at the core of an Executive
Director/CEO’s work,” said Sanders-Ward. “I believe that this course
will provide me with additional tools to serve my organization as an
effective leader and will also strengthen our community engagement
efforts. I am also most excited about putting the theories around
leadership and community engagement into practice and witness how this
will impact my organization and the communities we serve.”
The Community Impact Scholar Program provides arts and cultural leaders
of nonprofit organizations an exceptional professional experience
through fully funded coursework at the Harvard Extension School. In
addition to being enrolled in courses offered in the Management
Certificate Program at the Harvard Extension School for the Fall 2019
semester, the participants are matched with a peer tutor from the
Harvard Business School Club of Chicago and enjoy a weekend on-campus
immersion experience at Harvard University in Cambridge.
“The coursework up to the visit was very dense and academic,” added
Sanders-Ward, “but meeting my instructors in person and having time to
discuss the core topics to the class really helped me frame the
practical application of these ideas in to my work with the Red Clay
Dance Company. There is an air of deep scholarship floating around
Harvard’s campus, but there also appears to be a strong sense that they
are shaping the next world leaders. I have attended two very prestigious
universities in my educational journey, and I am elated to add Harvard
to this list.”
A 2017 Dance/USA Leadership Fellow and a 2013 3Arts awardee,
Sanders-Ward earned a 2009 Choreography Award from Harlem Stage NYC. In
2015 and 2018, NewCity Magazine selected her as one of the “50 People
Who Really Perform for Chicago.” Sanders-Ward has served as an adjunct
faculty member and received choreographic commissions from Columbia
College Chicago, Northwestern University, Knox College, City College of
Chicago, AS220, and the National Theatre in Uganda. She is a board
member of Enrich Chicago and was selected to attend the inaugural Obama
Foundation Summit for Emerging Global Leaders. Sanders-Ward has had the
pleasure of gracing the cover of DEMO, Columbia College Chicago’s Alumni
magazine.
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