Alumni Fellows
Philippa is a second-year doctoral student in the Counselor Education & Supervision program. Why is Social Justice important? As long as systems are set in place that normalize the overwhelming privileges and benefits granted to the dominant society, many marginalized people may not even recognize inequality. Her interest is to raise awareness in this area, and have marginalized people see where change can occur for the benefit of their lives. |
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Paul Kabera is a master's student in the Clinical Mental Health Counseling program. He serves on the executive board of the Society for Sexual, Affectional, Intersex, and Gender Expansive Identities (SAIGE) as an Emerging Leader. His long-term career goal is to work with adults that present a variety of mental health concerns. However, he has special interests in helping individuals work through complex trauma, especially those whose trauma relates to marginalized social identities and those with comorbid chronic illness and/or a terminal diagnosis. |
Ivana Marshall is a native of Williamsburg, Virginia, and a 2017 graduate of the University of Richmond. Her undergraduate academic interest areas led her to study human rights issues in Poland, Jordan, London, Canada, Ireland, and Northern Ireland. Immediately following her undergraduate studies, Ivana worked as a Governor’s Fellow in the Office of Policy for past Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe. Because of these experiences, she found opportunities to address human rights issues in institutions of higher education. Ivana began her career in higher education as the Inbound Immigration Specialist at Hampton University, where built upon her undergraduate work to assist faculty, staff and students in their J-1, F-1 and H-1B visa applications. Currently, Ivana serves as the Assistant Director of Alumni Engagement and Inclusion Initiatives at William & Mary; where she develops the engagement, leadership and philanthropy of three identity-based alumni communities: Asian-Pacific Islander-Middle Eastern/Southwest Asian (APIM), Crim Dell Association of LGBTQ+ alumni, and Latinx alumni. Additionally, Ivana is the newly appointed Chair of the University Advancement Diversity & Inclusion Committee. In addition to her full-time work, Ivana is a part-time student in the Higher Education Administration Leadership, Policy and Planning master’s program at William & Mary. Ivana is nearing the end of her tenure as the President of the William & Mary Higher Education Student Association and has recently been accepted as a Social Justice & Diversity Research Fellow for the 2021-2022 academic year; where she will continue her studies of combating discriminatory policies in higher education. She is extremely passionate about engaging communities through education in meaningful ways, both at home, in the United States, and globally. |
![]() Alexus McKoyAlexus is a master’s student in the School Psychology program. Her social justice interests are focused on educational inequities, specifically disbanding the school-to-prison pipeline. She is also an advocate for increasing awareness of mental health in the Black community, and for creating and implementing more culturally-competent treatment options for mental health illnesses. |
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![]() Danielle Likvan SwansonDanielle Likvan Swanson is a second-year master's student in School Counseling, and graduated with a bachelor's of fine arts in Industrial Design from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Danielle's research interests include disparity of basic needs within public schools, epigenetics and its collaboration with counseling, as well as race and gender experience and equality within public schools. As a Social Justice and Diversity Fellow, Danielle looks forward to expanding her knowledge and experience in research-based social justice work and continuing the work on the current research studies and making a difference in the lives of the families involved. She is passionate about educating herself and others on current and historical social justice issues, and, as a parent and Girl Scout troop leader, her interactions with young children are always teachable moments. For her, social justice is a way of life, and the foundation upon which she is trying to build her children's outlook on the world. |
![]() Monique D. WilliamsMonique is a doctoral student in the School Psychology program. She believes that being an educator puts her in the forefront of being a changemaker, differentiator, and most of all a disruptor to the failure of the education system that gets stuck on maintaining racial and social inequity. She decided to become a Research Fellow because she wants to gain the resources and tools to further her good trouble and lens in the community through strong academic research and application. She truly believes that educators must dismantle the system that lays the foundation for how students (especially marginalized youth of color and low SES) and staff are treated, permeated in special education, and pushed out of schools with little attempts to intervene and to meet students' unmet needs. |