Dr. Amber Adams Donica’ Beckett Dr. Beverly Buchanan Kacie Calloway Katheen Carlisle Dr. LeAnn Chisholm LaTonia Cormier Amy DuBose Dr. Lilian Felipe Michelle Fisher Abbie Flores Jeanell Frelot Stacie Granger Jennifer George Dr. Gina Hale Rose Harding Caroline Heing Kristen Helm Dr. Tammy Henderson Jennifer Huff |
Yinka Jenmy Rezvan Khoshlessan Dr. Stacey Knight Dr. Raouth Kostandy Molly Landry Dr. Elizabeth Long Shannon Marsh Dr. Nancye McAfee Dr. Nicki Michalski Yolanda B. Monroe Christina Morris Patti Moss Patricia O’Brien Stacey Ojemeni Sandra Oliva Linda Olliff Keili Peterman Dr. Cindy Pipkins Terry Rhodes Dr. Ruthie Robinson |
Carmen Rolf Jennifer Rosetta Becky Saleme Nicole Schroeder Becky Seymour Sommer Shackelford Rene Sheppard Dr. Judy Smith Kelsey Smith Bethany Steely Jenny Thedford Holly Thompson Tiffany Tran Lora Verrill Lori Wenner Kelli White Corie Willey Qiang Xu |
The ceremony will be held on the 8th floor of the Mary and John Gray Library at 4 p.m. with keynote speaker Dr. Cynthia Stinson, JoAnne Gay Dishman School of Nursing associate professor and department chair.
Dr. Cynthia Stinson, a first-generation college student who graduated in the first nursing class at 91制片厂 in 1975, is a Lumberton native, is a member of the Texas Nurses Association, American Nurses Association and Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society. She also is a member and medical educator with the Gift of Life program.
After graduating with her associate degree with high honors, Stinson then went on to earn her Bachelor of Science degree in nursing at LU in 1980. She graduated with her master’s degree in nursing in adult health from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston in 1994 and her Ph.D. from Texas Woman’s
University in Houston in 2006.
While working on her Ph.D., she came back to LU in 1994 and she served as the coordinator of nursing continuing education. Stinson’s commitment to nursing education became personal when in January of 2007, she was diagnosed with stage 2 invasive breast cancer, endured chemotherapy, 45 rounds of radiation and three surgeries. Cancer free now for nearly 15 years, she is even more committed to her mission to teach students so they can make a difference in a patient's life.
Stinson serves on the Board for the Pink Power Support Group for women with breast cancer and organized “Cancer Crusaders,” developing an educational series for lay people and healthcare providers in the area to enhance early cancer detection and treatment. She received the 2014 Good Samaritan Award from the Good Samaritan Foundation in Houston for this effort. She worked with the Julie Rogers’ Gift of Life in the “Wise Woman” initiative to improve housing and the quality of life for women. She also has served on the Board of Directors of the local chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association and been a volunteer speaker for the group at local, state and national levels.
Stinson formed a collaboration between the Gift of life and the JoAnne Gay Dishman School of Nursing to teach high school students about the dangers of tobacco and risks of cancer. She organized the teaching materials and worked with community nursing faculty to begin the imitative now active in four different cities in high schools in Southeast Texas. Stinson served as an advisor to a university Christian organization for minority students, called “The Seed,” and on the planning committee for the National Conference of Modeling-Role Modeling. She continues to present on numerous topics to not just her students but to young people, community members and anyone who will listen about health and disease, treatment and caregiving.
Just last year, Stinson was appointed to the Texas Health Services Authority Board of Directors by Gov. Greg Abbott and, with nearly 50 years of experience in the field, she serves as the only medical nurse on the board. In 2019, she was awarded the Julie and Ben Rogers Community Service Award. More recently, the department chair along with Dr. Ruthie Robinson, director of Graduate Nursing Studies, was awarded the State Research Award by the Texas Organization of Baccalaureate and Graduate Nursing Education for their research focusing on “Compassion Fatigue and Resiliency During the COVID-19 pandemic.”