Professional Development Day Draws Record Turnout
For the past four years, Professional Development Day has given staff members an opportunity to build skills and network. On June 9, nearly 300 participants received the same benefit, albeit from a distance, making it the largest turnout in the eventâs history.
Zandra D. Rawlinson, EdD, associate director of training and development at the University of Baltimore, (second from top), leads a session on emotional intelligence during Professional Development Day.
Professional Development Day was held virtually for the first time to keep in line with safety measures instituted due to the coronavirus pandemic preventing large gatherings. With so many of UMBâs employees teleworking since mid-March, it attracted a large, remote audience.
âThis will be, of course, our first year that weâre doing it virtually,â said Mark A. Emmel, MAS, SPHR, director, organization and employee development, opening this yearâs program on the Webex virtual conferencing platform. âI may just sort of ask your patience a little bit as we work through the technology. Itâs really new for all of us and there might be some bumps along the way but thatâs OK.â
Matt Lasecki, SPHR, associate vice president and chief human resources officer, said the large attendance âsays a lot about the resilience and the ability of people at UMB to adapt to change and thrive in challenging environments.â
This yearâs theme, âLiving the Core Values,â centered on UMBâs seven core values: accountability, civility, collaboration, diversity, excellence, knowledge, and leadership. The program is co-sponsored by Human Resource Services and the UMB Staff Senate.
The day began with welcoming remarks by UMB Interim President Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS.
âThanks for being here, and thanks for being on our first-ever virtual Professional Development Day,â Jarrell said. âObviously, it shows you have a strong appetite for learning, to get new skills and make new connections. If thereâs anything Iâve learned, itâs that learning new skills and making new connections go a long way in getting you to where you want to end up in life. I wish I could be there with you all in person. Iâm glad that we can do it safely this way.â
The programâs focus on remote working along with the theme of living UMBâs core values was fitting for the times as individuals face the challenges of living during a pandemic combined with recent outrage over the death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man who died last month in Minneapolis after a white police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.
âIn the time of COVID and more recently the death of George Floyd, if there is anything Iâve learned, itâs that our core values will carry us through and make us even better than we are now,â Jarrell said. âI know these crises have been a test for all of us, yet I view it as an opportunity to show just what our mettle is and to make sure we institute these core values in everything we do moving forward.â
The virtual gathering was all the more important, given the countryâs current climate of racial and social injustice, said Staff Senate President Kristy Novak, MS, associate director of student placements at the Íűșì±ŹÁÏ School of Nursing.
âIt gives UMB the opportunity to really evaluate our core values in how we define ourselves as an academic institution. But as individuals it gives us the opportunity to gauge how we align our actions and our behaviors with those core values,â she said. âAnd not just in how we carry out our daily roles but in our interactions with our colleagues, with our supervisors, with our students, and with our Baltimore community as a whole.â
Lasecki introduced the dayâs keynote speaker, as a familiar face appeared on participantsâ devices: University System of Maryland (USM) Chancellor and former UMB President Jay A. Perman, MD, who introduced UMB to the seven core values during his inaugural address in 2010.
âThis is a homecoming of sorts, and of course, I wish I could be with you in person,â Perman said.
Speaking on the topic of UMBâs core values, Perman said, âFrankly, I consider the core values one of the best things we did together when I was here with you. And I think the crises weâre facing right now make it the perfect time to talk about why our values matter.â
His keynote address focused specifically on the core values of collaboration, leadership, and accountability.
Collaboration has been a crucial part guiding and supporting USM institutions while navigating a pandemic, said Perman.
âAs the scope of the COVID crisis began revealing itself in January and February, we all began to realize this was something unprecedented â that the universities needed guidance and support, they needed to talk through actions and implications,â he said. âSo we hosted briefings, preparedness training, tabletop exercises, and we issued guidance. We all knew instinctively that we needed to face this global challenge together.â
USM leaders began meeting three times a week instead of once a month, with some calls exceeding more than 100 participants. They discussed common approaches, transitioning to remote learning, mandating telework, recalling study-abroad students, canceling events and commencements â âall the stuff youâve done,â Perman said.
Like institutions across the country, senior leadership had to decide whether to refund a portion of studentsâ room, board, and mandatory fees for the spring semester. For an institution like UMB, whose students largely live off campus, or for the Íűșì±ŹÁÏ Global Campus, whose courses are online, the decision meant little, Perman said. But to an institution like the Íűșì±ŹÁÏ, College Park, with many of its 41,000 students living on campus, âthe decision could have impacts lasting years,â he said.
Ultimately, the decision was made to refund room and board and mandatory fees for the spring semester.
âIt wasnât an easy decision for those universities with large residential populations, but it did earn us the goodwill of students who knew we were trying to help. And a little goodwill is actually no little thing,â Perman said.
Collaboration remains at the forefront as system leaders make decisions about the way in which students, faculty, and staff return while being mindful of safety and public health, he said. âThat value of collaboration is a process and itâs renewed with every decision that we make, even when they cost money. And I think that is the truest test of any value,â he said.
On the value of leadership, Perman said when he accepted the job as chancellor it was in part to fulfill one of his lifeâs missions: to ensure that every person who wants a college education can get one. The sense of obligation comes from his own history, when a woman he never met offered him a scholarship to attend medical school.
âThat one act of generosity seeded in me the desire to open the same doors to education that had been opened to me. And I truly donât think thereâs a better opportunity to do that than as chancellor of this system,â Perman said. âAnd I started seeing as a test of my own leadership my success in helping others become leaders, because there is no monopoly on leaders. Higher education is all about building leadership capacity, diffusing it, opening our hearts and minds to new ways of doing things.â
Moving on to the value of accountability, Perman turned his attention toward the brutal death of Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers.
âYou donât need any reminder that the last several weeks have been difficult for all of us,â he said. âWe all saw the brutality of George Floydâs murder. And I think a lot of us knew and know that if we hadnât actually seen it, hadnât seen the video of it, then the officers who killed him would never have faced consequences â certainly not consequences befitting the horrible act.â
Perman, Jarrell, and other USM leaders acknowledging in a unified voice the structural racism taking place in the country.
âYes, itâs high time that we look at where our work and our lives intersect and consider what we can reasonably be held accountable for â as professionals, yes, but as human beings, as well,â Perman said. âItâs a big ask. I know it is. Undoing centuries of injustice and inhumanity is difficult. But at some point, we have to say, âEven though we didnât build it ⊠weâre accountable for dismantling it.â â
The day included breakout sessions via âroomsâ on Zoom on topics such as âEffective Communicationâ and âPrinciple-Centered Leadership.â Others, such as âEngaging Emotional Intelligence to Enhance Virtual Workplace Performance,â âEnhance Telework with Teams,â and âCollaborate with SharePointâ reflected these teleworking times.
Senior marketing specialist Hope Wallace said she has heard a lot about âemotional EQâ lately, so when she saw a session about it offered on Professional Development Day, she registered right away. Emotional intelligence (also known as emotional quotient or EQ) is the ability to understand, use, and manage oneâs emotions in positive ways to relieve stress, communicate effectively, empathize with others, overcome challenges, and defuse conflict.
âThe course was very informative, and I walked away with real-world practices to put into place,â Wallace said.