2025 TerrapinSTRONG Symposium
Navigating Change: Turning Disruption into Direction
Through the theme Navigating Change: Turning Disruption into Direction, the 2025 symposium focused on the experience of individuals, leaders and institutions managing change and finding ways to push through fear and freeze in times of uncertainty to continue moving forward. Topics range from the rapidly changing landscape of AI to leading institutions through change to creative ways to work through our personal responses to change through movement and the arts.
Collaborative Initiative with Office of Faculty Affairs and University Human Resources
2025 Sessions
Opening Plenary
Building Capacity: Supporting Ourselves & Others through Change
Panelists in this conversation will bring their lenses from organizational change, mental health, business, and design for a broad discussion of strategies and mindsets we can use to face the present and the future without getting trapped in fear or paralyzed by uncertainty. Panelists will offer tangible techniques and new perspectives we can use to honor our emotional reactions to change, reframe change, care for ourselves, and utilize change as an opportunity to make progress.
Moderator:
Katie Hershey Conlon, consultant, Center for Leadership & Organizational Change
Panelists:
Erica Estrada-Liou, director, Academy of Innovation & Entrepreneurship
Tiara Fennell, assistant clinical professor, School of Public Health
J. Gerald Suarez, professor of the practice in systems thinking & design fellow, Center for Leadership, Innovation and Change, Robert H. Smith School of Business.
Katie Hershey Conlon
Panel moderator Katie Hershey Conlon serves as a consultant with the Center for Leadership & Organizational Change (CLOC), where she utilizes positive organizational development, strengths-based leadership, and the science of well-being to support teams. She is a certified CliftonStrengths Coach and Fierce Conversations Facilitator, and is also trained in Appreciative Inquiry, Polarities, Gallup's Q12 Engagement survey, and the Hay Group's ESCI 360 tool. Katie has a master’s degree in applied positive psychology from the University of Pennsylvania and a master’s degree in counseling and personnel services from the University of Maryland.
Erica Estrada-Liou
Erica Estrada-Liou serves as director of the Academy for Innovation & Entrepreneurship, where she helps the campus community creatively address complex challenges through design. She is passionate about using design to help us navigate ambiguity and approach change with curiosity. Erica holds masters degrees from Stanford University in both business administration and mechanical engineering.
Tiara Fennell
Tiara Fennell is an assistant clinical professor in the School of Public Health and clinic director of the Center for Healthy Families, where she supports both clients and graduate students preparing to be therapists. Tiara’s research focuses on burnout and training to support African American families in therapy. Tiara holds a PhD in human development and family science from Virginia Tech.
J. Gerald Suarez
Dr. J. Gerald Suarez is a premier educator, speaker and consultant in the fields of Organizational Design, Systems Thinking and Total Quality Management. Suarez joined Smith in 2005 as Executive Director of the multidisciplinary Quality Enhancement Systems and Teams (QUEST) Honors Fellows program. He was a Ralph J. Tyser Teaching Fellow and an Executive Education Senior Fellow. From 2008 to 2010 he served as Associate Dean of External Strategy, leading the offices of marketing communications, recruitment and career services. Suarez earned the prestigious Allen J. Krowe Teaching Excellence Award and has been consistently selected a Top 15% Faculty Member at the Smith School. He teaches at the corporate, executive MBA, custom EMBA, international, and undergraduate levels. He is also a Lockheed Martin Visiting Technical Fellow.
Morning Sessions
Lunch Sessions
Afternoon Sessions
Closing Plenary
Rewiring Reality: The Impacts & Implications of AI
There is no denying the fact that AI is rapidly changing our world, our work, and higher education. Panelists will address both the benefits and the dangers/challenges of AI and provide the audience with valuable perspectives on how to think about AI and where it may be heading in the future, whether we're on board or not.
Moderator:
James E. Bond, assistant dean & director of student conduct, Division of Student Affairs
Panelists:
Rajesh Kumar Gnanasekaran, Assistant Director, Enterprise Software Engineering, DIT
Marisa Parham, professor of English
Sheena Erete, associate professor, College of Information
James Bond
Panel moderator James Bond serves as the assistant dean of students and director of student conduct and holds his JD from Georgetown Law. If you know him, you already know how engaging and dynamic he will be as a moderator for this conversation. We selected him not only for his sense of humor, charisma, and agility, but also because he has an insider’s view of how AI is impacting academic integrity, student conduct, and student success at the university right now.
Rajesh Kumar Gnanasekaran
Rajesh Kumar Gnanasekaran is the assistant director in the Division of IT who leads the AI team facilitating the incorporation of AI into the work of the university. He has a Ph.D. in natural language processing and generative AI from UMD College Park and an MBA from Maryland Global Campus.
Marisa Parham
Marisa Parham is Professor of English and Digital Studies at the University of Maryland at College Park, where as P.I. she directs the African American Digital and Experimental Humanities initiative (AADHUM) and NarraSpace, an immersive scholarly storytelling lab focused on queer, BIPoC, and migratory experiences. She is also associate director for the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH), and holds affiliate faculty appointments in African-American and Africana Studies, in the Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, the program in Immersive Media and Design, and in the program in Comparative Literature.
Sheena Erete
Sheena Erete is an associate professor in the College of Information and associate director of research for the Artificial Intelligence Interdisciplinary Institute at Maryland, as well as the founder and director of the Community Research, Equity, and Design Collective. She has a PhD in technology and social behavior from Northwestern University and her work focuses on creating more just and equitable futures for those who face structural oppression by co-designing technologies alongside community members.