UPCEA Announces 2024-2025 Leadership Teams for Council for Chief Online Learning Officers and Council for Credential Innovation
UPCEA, the online and professional education association, announced today the 2024-2025 leadership teams for the Council for Chief Online Learning Officers and Council for Credential Innovation. The association extends its gratitude to the 37 member volunteers serving in leadership roles for these two bodies.
The Council for Chief Online Learning Officers (C-COLO) and its members are focused on leveraging the strategic potential of online learning to transform institutions of higher education and society. Each UPCEA member institution has the opportunity to identify a chief online learning officer—the primary leader for an online, digital, or other technology-enhanced postsecondary enterprise, whether at the unit, college, or institutional level—to represent them on C-COLO. Institutional delegates to C-COLO are able to attend the annual Online Leadership Roundtable convening event, and participate in other exclusive content hosted by C-COLO.
The Council for Chief Online Learning Officers is led by the C-COLO Leadership, a volunteer group made up of C-COLO delegates from UPCEA member organizations. The 2024-2025 C-COLO Leadership is:
Sunay Palsole, Texas A&M University (Co-Chair)
Susan Seal, Mississippi State University (Co-Chair)
Evan Silberman, City University of New York
Jerry Rhead, Michigan State University
Tina Parscal, Colorado Community College System
Brooke Elliott, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign
Carmin Chan, Northern Arizona University
Julie Thalman, University of Cincinnati
Jocelyn Widmer, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Nathan Bullock, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Kemi Jona, University of Virginia
Erik Nelson, Columbia University
Julie Uranis, UPCEA (ex officio)
The Council for Credential Innovation (CCI) is composed of senior leaders charged with driving non-degree credential strategy at the unit or campus level, and key thought leaders from other nonprofit organizations and companies that are actively contributing to the development of the alternative credential space. Each UPCEA member institution has the opportunity to identify a representative to the Council for Credential Innovation. The Council and its leadership focus on leveraging the strategic potential of non-degree credentials and non-credit education and training to transform institutions of higher education as well as the talent marketplace.
The Council for Credential Innovation Leadership is a volunteer group made up of CCI representatives from UPCEA member organizations. The 2024-2025 CCI Leadership is:
Ryan Torma, University of Minnesota (Co-Chair)
Lena Patterson, Toronto Metropolitan University (Co-Chair)
Saira Cooper, Rice University
Clare Van Ness, California State University, Chico
Anne Reed, University at Buffalo
Melanie Booth, Higher Learning Commission
Sheila LeBlanc, University of Calgary
Mike Macklin, Colorado Community College System
Sallie Reissman, Wilmington University
Karen Battye, Auburn University
Mark McConahay, AACRAO
Michael Sugerman, Washington State University
Patricia O’Brien, NECHE
Michelle Claville, CHEA
Noah Geisel. University of Colorado, Boulder
Pranesh Aswath. University of Texas, Arlington
Shawn Miller, Rice University
Tyler Ritter, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Kris Rabberman, University of Pennsylvania
Angela Jeantet, University of California Irvine
Allison Jones, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Dan Belyea, Maine Community College System
Candace House Teixeira, University of Southern California
Allison Ruda, Northeastern University
Doris Savron, University of Phoenix
Kelly Hoyland, 1EdTech
Amy Heitzman, UPCEA (ex officio)
Interested in getting involved with UPCEA as a volunteer leader? Fill out this form.
Other UPCEA Updates + Blogs
Turning the Tables: Three Game-Changing Business Strategies for Thriving in Today’s Higher Education Landscape
Institutions of higher education are encountering significant threats: The demographic cliff looms, the value perception of a four-year degree is…
Read MoreThe UPCEA Community: Focus on Credentials
Twenty years ago nearly every online leader was familiar with faculty concerns about quality and cannibalization. Those concerns proved ill-founded,…
Read More