From Trees to PhD, Graduate Student Refines Her Passion
With tree branches waving in the wind, Shenhaye Ferguson stood before her first students.
Spell cat. C-A-T.
They never repeated it back. After all, they were plants. But that didn鈥檛 matter to Ferguson. At age 5, she found her passion for learning and teaching.
The first-generation college student completed her bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees at the University of the West Indies (UWI) in Jamaica, the largest regional university in the English-speaking Caribbean.
That鈥檚 where she met professor and mentor Saran Stewart (PhD 鈥13), who recommended she attend the 91桃色.
鈥淚f I can name-drop Shen鈥檚 name anywhere, I do,鈥 Stewart says. 鈥淪hen has published in most of my work. She wanted to learn. She always took initiative to move it to the next level.鈥
In 2018, Ferguson left Jamaica to pursue a PhD in Higher Education at the
鈥淯ltimately, college students are the ones who are going from university into the working world to serve our country and our community,鈥 Ferguson says. 鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to stay within that niche.鈥
In July, she鈥檒l defend her dissertation, an academic pursuit to understand how home community environments shape first-generation Jamaican university students鈥 higher education journey.
For Ferguson, it鈥檚 personal. She lived a 10-minute walk from the UWI. But that walk can be dangerous. When gunfire erupted, she鈥檇 find shelter on campus or at a professor鈥檚 house. She鈥檇 wait patiently, and when it was over, she鈥檇 head home.听
鈥淭his is why everything is connected to the home community environment. There鈥檚 no way you can separate a student鈥檚 home environment from what takes place within the campus space and how they perform in school or the different activities they engage in,鈥 she says.
While collecting data on first-generation students, she noticed a heart-breaking trend. Nearly everyone she spoke with recalled being disparaged by their teachers: You don鈥檛 deserve to be at university. You鈥檙e going to be a criminal. You鈥檙e stupid.
Still, they attended university in part to prove the naysayers wrong. And despite Ferguson鈥檚 decade away from public high school in Jamaica, she says the education system is in much need of transformation.听
鈥淭here has been some progress but not enough until everyone can access education in Jamaica.听If you think about higher education, this wasn鈥檛 created for persons like us,鈥 Ferguson says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way you are from a poor family and you would be seen at a university a couple of decades ago.鈥
From matriculation to graduation, administrators need to consider a student鈥檚 home community environment, she says. Without support systems, the journey to graduation can be challenging. Ferguson advocates for intentionally creating resources for both traditional and non-traditional university students so that they can flourish in higher education and beyond.
She found that support in Stewart. The now-University of Connecticut professor watched Ferguson excel and find refuge in school.
鈥淚t only takes one generation to switch the entire landscape, and Shen is that generation,鈥 Stewart says.
In addition to her doctoral work, Ferguson is an adjunct faculty member in the Graduate School of Social Work. She teaches a class called 鈥淧ower, Privilege and Oppression.鈥 She started last fall, and as an international professor with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in American history, she offers a unique perspective.
The course is part of GSSW鈥檚 core curriculum, meaning anyone who wants to be a social worker must take it. Ferguson takes pride in teaching it, especially at a predominantly white institution.
鈥淲ith so much backlash against racial and social justice pedagogy and pushback against incorporating theories such as Critical Race Theory, some of us have to advocate for changing the narrative. If we get to reach 15 students and those 15 students can reach 15 more and that ripple effect continues, then your work is done, you鈥檝e made your impact, you have made your point,鈥 she says.
As Ferguson enters this next chapter, she hopes to combine her passion for administration and teaching. No doubt, she鈥檒l stand in front of many more classrooms. But none will be as significant as her first 鈥 a yard full of trees foreshadowing a lifelong journey ahead.
To learn more about this year's Commencement ceremonies, please听click here.