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President’s Council Virtual Programs

back to class
Back to Class: Health Equity and Innovation

Jasmine Gonzalvo, clinical professor of pharmacy practice explains how the Center for Health Equity and Innovation within the College of Pharmacy increases access to health care using innovative, evidence-based, and sustainable strategies to improve health outcomes for disparate populations, locally and globally. You’ll find out about early projects that centered around the social determinants of health, such as innovative models of care, social support, person-centered care, and more.

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aerial view of campus with tour options
Intercollegiate Athletics Facilities Tour

Explore each of Purdue’s athletic complexes through this self-guided 360 degree tour. There are 16 areas for you to see—get a close up of Keady Court, go inside the locker room at Folk Field, check out the student-athletes study spaces in the Brees Academic Center, and much more.

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President's Council At Home
Back to Class: Economic Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic

Kevin Mumford, associate professor of economics and Kozuch Director of the Purdue University Research Center in Economics (PURCE) examines the evidence on the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the government response. National measures including deaths, GDP growth, unemployment, stock market returns, and government tax revenue will provide the context needed to predict the long-lasting effects of this pandemic on occupations, education, and the size of government.

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President's Council At Home
“Breakfast with the Deans” 2021

February 14, 2021—The college deans have recorded two-minute updates about their colleges. Their individual recordings have been combined into one video to replicate the “Breakfast with the Deans” event, which is presented each year by the President’s Council in Naples, Florida.

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video message from president mitch daniels
Video Message from President Daniels

February 14, 2021—Each February, President Daniels shares a University update during the President’s Council Annual Dinner in Naples, Florida. This year, since we’re not able to be together in person, he has recorded a special address.

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house and blueprints
Discovery Park District – Development on Campus

Initially broadcast during Homecoming 2020, this video shares the exciting developments in the Discovery Park District covering Convergence (for businesses), Continuum (housing for faculty, staff, and the community), Provenance residential village, and other exciting projects coming down the pike.

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Back to Class: Steps to Leaps Program

In the era of COVID-19 campus disruptions, this timely course covers trends, research, and programming that enhances college student well-being and resilience. The Purdue Steps to Leaps program comprehensively builds skills around well-being, grit, networks, leadership, and impact.

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Purdue University's Cheer team performing on a stage
Purdue Dance Showcase

Dance troupes from across campus created a special showcase for the President’s Council family. Featuring: Purdue Goldusters, Jahari Dance Troupe, Purdue Golden Girl, Purdue Latin & Ballroom Dance Team, and Higher Ground Dance Company.

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Keagan’s story

I’m walking with Grandparents University tour group near the steps of Hovde Hall. It’s a Thursday morning in July, and the only students around are between the ages of 7 and 14. I catch a snippet of a conversation between a grandmother and her grandson as she details the pranks she pulled with her friends around this area.

I smile because just a few months ago I was doing the same thing.

Grandparents University (GPU) is a two-day event where grandparents and their grandchildren embrace Purdue and all it has to offer.

Participants choose a specific major to study and attend a class taught by Boilermaker experts. The majors aren’t exactly like the ones we have here at Purdue, but they do get to do cool activities like creating hot sauce, designing monsters, flying drones, and cooking in a Purdue kitchen. It’s a great opportunity to see wisdom and curiosity combined in the classroom, as grandparents and their grandchildren collaborate on these projects. They’re equally willing to learn from the instructors —and from each other—while creating lasting memories.

They might not know it yet, but this Purdue experience at such a young age will help with their college decision in a few years.

My mother started working at Purdue when she was pregnant with me, so I’ve been familiar with the university my whole life. Many of my childhood memories are associated with different parts of campus, and these memories played a big part in my decision to attend Purdue. I was going to a place that I knew—a place I already considered a home away from home. In the same way, when these children make their college decisions, they will already have built connections with Purdue through Grandparents University.

It will also help they already have a Purdue degree!

At the end of GPU, the kids graduate just like regular students by walking across the stage of Elliott Hall of Music. They even have their own caps to decorate and keep—which is great because robe rentals would be a nightmare.

I had been to nine commencement ceremonies before my own in May, so I’m well-versed in Purdue graduations. Nevertheless, it was still fun to watch this one.

These children had learned so much more than what was taught in their major. They learned more about their grandparents and strengthened their connection with them. They learned about the university and what’s in store for them when they (hopefully) become Boilermakers. And at the Block Party, they befriended students they had never met before and hung out on Memorial Mall—just like regular college students.

It was almost exactly what I experienced throughout my college career. Yes, I got my degree and now  have a job as was intended on this life path. But I also made lifelong friendships and went outside my comfort zone in ways that helped me grow as an individual.

Purdue shaped me and continues to shape me. I credit a lot of my growth as a person and a professional to my college career here, and a lot of what I know to the professors and instructors I had throughout my education.

Through Grandparents University, you have the opportunity to provide the same transformative experience for future Boilermakers. You can be the Purdue instructor that inspires a path that lasts a lifetime.

Patsy J. Mellott

BS College of Health and Human Sciences, 1969
Fishers, IN

Patsy earned a bachelor’s degree in food and nutrition in business from Purdue in 1969, in addition to an MBA in food marketing from Michigan State University in 1970. She retired from Kraft Foods in 2006 after 36 years in corporate food marketing and marketing communications management.

A community volunteer, Patsy serves on the Women’s Fund of Central Indiana Advisory Board and the Purdue College of Health and Human Sciences Dean’s Leadership Council, in addition to the President’s Council Advisory Board. She is a former member of the Health and Human Sciences Alumni Board. Patsy held several offices from 2006 through 2013, including president and treasurer. She serves her community’s Discover Indianapolis Club in Fishers, holding several leadership roles for over 10 years.

Patsy has received several honors, including the Purdue University Nutrition Science Department Hall of Fame recipient in 2009 and the Purdue University College of Health and Human Sciences Distinguished Alumni Award in 2016. She also received the college’s Gold and Black Award in 2016, an honor reserved for donors who have moved the college forward by committing exceptional financial resources.

In addition to endowing two scholarships, the Patsy J. Mellott Scholarship and Patsy J. Mellott HHS Scholarship, she established the Patsy J. Mellott Teaching Innovation Award in the College of Health and Human Sciences in 2013. In 2015, she endowed the Patsy J. Mellott Women’s Tennis Coach Performance Award. She is a lead donor in the Christine M. Ladisch Faculty Leadership Award and the Purdue Women’s Network Virginia C. Meredith Scholarship for the College of Health and Human Sciences.