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2014-15 Alumni Awards honors 5 for their achievements

  |   Kristen B. Morales   |   Permalink   |   News Release

Five College of Education graduates were recognized for their career achievements and community leadership with 2014-15 alumni awards at the college's 10th annual Donor Appreciation and Alumni Awards Dinner Oct. 3 at the University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education. Congratulations to this year's award winners: Whitney Myers, Ian Altman, Kimber Shelton, Tonya Harris Cornileus and Mark Slonaker.

The College of Education's annual Alumni Awards honor past graduates who have a lifetime of achieved success, or who those at the mid-point of their careers with a high level of achievement.

Lifetime Achievement Award

An honor for outstanding success and significant impact in adult education.

Whitney Myers

Whitney Myers

Whether it was at camp or in the classroom, Whitney Myers has led the charge for education throughout his life.

Myers (EdD, '91) spent his career teaching and working with children, starting in Effingham County and the Marvin Pittman Laboratory School at Georgia Southern, and then on to the Griffin-Spalding County Schools near Atlanta. He spent his summers on staff at the state FFA-FHA camp in Covington and became assistant camp director in 1984.

But Myers missed the traditional school setting, and returned to the Griffin-Spalding schools as an assistant principal, then moved to Screven County as principal of the elementary school there.

At the time, the rural district was known for its high poverty rate and majority-minority student population. But the statistics didn't mean the district couldn't be successful. Myers established the state's first full-time elementary technology lab as principal, then became superintendent. He created a partnership with Georgia Southern for what is believed to be the first professional development school district in the country. The elementary and middle schools became Title I Distinguished Schools, and soon all schools in the district were receiving state and national recognition for students' high achievement. The high school's graduation rate is now over 82 percent, up from 57 percent nearly 10 years ago.

Myers' leadership experience has taken him to present at conferences and legislative hearings. After retiring from Screven County, Myers became the half-time executive director of Georgia's First District RESA, the educational services agency that helps schools share and enhance resources. In his spare time, Myers serves on several community and organizational boards and is active in his local church.

Crystal Apple Award

An honor for alumni in K-12 education who have made a significant impact on student, school, or school district performance.

Ian Altman

Ian Altman

Ian Altman isn't afraid to challenge his students, and society in general, with questions of social justice.

After enrolling at UGA to pursue a degree in philosophy, Altman (MEd, '06) delayed his graduation for several years in order to take extra classes in English, comparative literature and classics. After completing his master's he began teaching English at Clarke Central High School in Athens, where he remains today. Four years ago he moved from the freshman academy to teaching American literature and AP English, where he incorporates philosophical perspectives on intellectual history and rhetoric into his lessons.

His classes have become a "safe space" to discuss language identity and social justice issues, helping students understand literature from social and political contexts. Altman also is a strong and unapologetic advocate for the rights of undocumented students in Georgia, work which recently won him the Kenneth Goodman "In Defense of Good Teaching" award from the University of Arizona with colleague Matthew Hicks. And he has given presentations on the role of teachers in student advocacy and literacy issues at colleges and forums across the country.

Professional Achievement Award

Honoring alumni in the midpoint of their careers who demonstrate significant achievements in their field.

Kimber Shelton

Kimber Shelton's career focuses on empowering individuals and couples through private, one-on-one counseling and creating systemic change at large-scale university settings, where she trained hundreds of students, faculty and staff.

As a staff psychologist and coordinator of diversity programming at Georgia Tech'sCounseling Center, Shelton (PHD '09) helped improve the mood and functioning of students while also developing diversity programs that had effects throughout the campus. She developed and led monthly staff cultural competence trainings, created the institute counseling center's diversity and inclusivity mission statement, created training materials for the school's Office of Minority Education Peer Tutor program, created diversity-related outreachaimed at reducing mental health stigma and revamped the institute's Safe Space training program, which involved training more than 200 staff, students and faculty on sexual and gender minority awareness issues.

While at Georgia Tech and also in private practice, Shelton stayed active in several professional organizations, including co-chairing the Early Career Psychologist Transition Project for the American Psychological Association Society of Counseling Psychology. Due for publication in December 2014, Shelton co-authored a textbook on university counseling and has about 20 other diversity and social-justice oriented publications. In her private practice, Sheltonspecializes in working withunderserved populations including ethnic minorities and sexual and gender minority clients. She says her interest in working with underserved populations expanded while a UGA student, where courses on diversity and gender, her work with women in a local homeless shelter, and experience leading a gender-issues group pushed her own self-exploration of culture and responsibility.

She recently married and relocated to Dallas, where she keeps a private practice and is a member of the Texas Psychological Association Social Justice organization.

Tonya Harris Cornileus

Tonya Harris Cornileus has taken her talent for teaching and turned it into managing talent.

Cornileus (MEd, '04, PhD, '10) is the vice president for learning and organizational development at ESPN, where she is part of the sports network's human resources leadership team. She is responsible for the global learning, talent management and organizational development strategies for ESPN employees around the world.

Teaching was a passion for Cornileus when, armed with a degree in telecommunications, she spent eight years working in various school districts. She transitioned from teaching to the corporate setting when she became the manager of training and quality assurance for the telecommunications company Innotrac Corporation. After moving to the position of vice president for training and organizational development for Aegis Communications Group and receiving her master's, Cornileus moved to Turner Broadcasting System as director of executive development and organizational effectiveness. She returned to UGA for a Ph.D. in adult education/HR and organizational development before moving to her current job at ESPN.

Cornileus also supports several professional and civic organizations with her time and talents. She serves on the board of directors for the Urban League of Greater Hartford, mentors high school students and supports the Boys & Girls Clubs of Hartford. She is the mother of two adult children and, when she's not watching ESPN, Cornileus is an avid HGTV fan.

Service Award

Highlighting service to the community and a commitment to education.

Mark Slonaker

Slonaker-Lorez

The Georgia Bulldog Club has seen a slew of changes in the past few years, all under the direction of Mark Slonaker (BSED, '80), whose career has taken him from the basketball court to the classroom.

Today, along with his role as head of the UGA Athletic Association's fundraising arm, he shares his sports knowledge as a guest lecturer for sport management majors. This experience has led him to mentor several students and even take on a student as part of his practicum.

During his years at UGA, Slonaker lettered for the basketball team and was a co-captain of coach Hugh Durham's first team at Georgia in 1979. He held several collegiate coaching positions after graduation, ending with an 11-year stint at Mercer University and the school's first Atlantic Sun championship.

Slonaker took over the Georgia Bulldog Club in 2011, and since then has started several programs, including a young alumni ticketing program, an endowment program, fundraising plans for Foley Field and the Equestrian Center facility, and a restructured scholarship program.

He says his passion and love for the sport management field were inspired by the professors he had during his time as an undergraduate in the College of Education. "Their commitment to our profession motivates me to continue giving back to our future leaders in the sport management and physical education fields," he says.

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