Ideas Worth Spreading: TEDxUNO Recap
- contact: Charley Reed - University Communications
- phone: 402.554.2129
- email: unonews@unomaha.edu
On Saturday, Feb. 28, a collection of 10 speakers from the University of Nebraska Omaha (UNO) and Omaha communities spoke about ideas ranging from mentorship to concert organizing to parenting as part of the inaugural TEDxUNO event.
For almost six hours, guests to the UNO campus gathered in the Strauss Performing Arts Center to learn new ideas and ways to engage in their communities. Videos of each presentation will be available in coming weeks.
View photos from TEDxUNO 2015 on Flickr
Read The Gateway's recap of TEDxUNO 2015
About TED and TEDx
TED, which stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, was launched in 1984 and over the past three decades has spread across the world as one of the leaders in open discussion and dialogue.
Following the format of the larger TED organization, TEDx programs are independently organized across the world with more than 10,000 TEDx events in 163 different countries being organized to date.
TEDxUNO 2015 Speakers
Biographies for TEDxUNO 2015 speakers are included below.
Tre Brashear
Organizer, MAHA Music Festival
Tre earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Nebraska and his law degree from the University of Iowa. For 20 years he was a private practice attorney in Omaha.
In 2009, Tre and a few friends acted upon their vision that Omaha needed a music festival of its own and the nonprofit Maha Music Festival was born. Over seven years, the event has grown to include not just music, but also food, comedy, slam poetry and other elements. In 2012, Tre left private practice to become Corporate Counsel and Director of Corporate Giving for the Lozier Corporation and Lozier Foundation.
Withlove,Felicia
Motivational Poet
Withlove,Felicia (real name Felicia Webster) is a motivational poet, community activist, host, organizer and teaching artist with The Nebraska Arts Council, Why Arts?, The Omaha Playhouse and Classic Upward Bound.
With a Master in Education, Felicia seeks to be an inspirer of healing, using the arts and education as her medium to connect with various audiences. In her work, she infuses acting, beatboxing and music.
Felicia, is also the co-creative director and co- host of Omaha’s very own Verbal Gumbo, a long withstanding soul filled spoken word open mic, and the proud mother of a son.
Anthony Hughes
President, Queer Nebraska Youth Network
Originally from Dublin, Anthony has lived in Omaha since he was 10, graduating from Millard West High School in 2012 and is currently a student of history and politics at UNO.
Founded in 2010 by Drew Heckman, Queer Youth Nebraska Network is a grassroots organization that aims to create a healthy, empowered, and visible community of LGBTQ+ youth in Nebraska. With more than 700 members, the organization regularly provides support systems and helplines for those in need.
Since coming out at 18, Anthony has enjoyed numerous experiences in serving the LGBT community, in particular the young people from around Omaha and throughout the state as they find their feet in this strange world of ours. Having attended both national conferences and local interest meetings focused on the manifold issues and injustices LGBT youth continually face, his commitment to helping provide professional, safe, fun, and above all meaningful resources to our state’s queer kids remains an essential priority.
Angie Hodge
Math Professor
Angie Hodge is an associate professor of mathematics at UNO. She is also the Haddix community chair, which means that she is also involved in helping to recruit and retain mathematics teachers.
Hodge earned both her master’s degree and Ph.D. from Purdue University in mathematics and mathematics education respectively. Her research interests are in mathematics education with specialty areas in inquiry-based learning and gender equity in the STEM disciplines. She has taught several mathematics and mathematics education courses using inquiry-based learning including calculus, trigonometry, axiomatic geometry, history of mathematics, and math methods for secondary teachers.
At the national level, she is a Special Projects Coordinator for the Academy of Inquiry-Based Learning, a Project NExT national fellow, and a member of the MAA’s COMET (committee on the mathematical education of teachers) committee. You can follow her teaching and research through the MAA sponsored blog, “Math Ed Matters,” which can be found at http://maamathedmatters.blogspot.com.
Athena Ramos
Community Heath Advocate
Athena Ramos is a native Nebraskan who serves as the Community Health Program Coordinator for the Center for Reducing Health Disparities and an Instructor in the Department of Health Promotions, Social & Behavioral Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) as well as an adjunct instructor at both the University of Nebraska at Omaha and Metropolitan Community College.
In her role as Community Health Program Manager, Athena leads a Latino outreach and engagement team and serves as principal investigator for a number of community-based health research and education initiatives including a tobacco control outreach program, migrant farmworker mental health study, immigrant agricultural worker health study and various women and girls programs. She is an experienced administrator and junior researcher with proven ability to develop and implement social and human service programs with culturally diverse populations.
Athena has over 12 years of experience in management operations, public relations, strategic planning, health promotion and educational programming. Furthermore, she also is a sought after speaker for various workshops on health disparities, community development and engagement, and cultural considerations within health and healthcare. She is also an entrepreneur and owns The Front Porch Eatery, a small restaurant in Murray, Nebraska.
Steve Rodie
Director, UNO Center for Urban Sustainability
Steven N. Rodie, FASLA, is a Professor of Biology and Environmental Studies and the Director for the Center for Urban Sustainability at UNO. He teaches courses in landscape plants, landscape and environmental appreciation and sustainability, sustainable landscape design, and green infrastructure stormwater management.
In his role with the Center, Rodie facilitates and promotes research, teaching, and community outreach through engagement of faculty, students, community organizations and businesses that collectively address sustainable urban design, energy, policy, transportation and quality-of-life issues.
He earned B.S. in Forest Management from Colorado State University and a Master of Landscape Architecture degree from Kansas State University. Professionally, he has been elected as a Fellow in the American Society of Landscape Architects, and is a registered landscape architect in Kansas, California and Nebraska.
Cameron Logsdon
Coach, MavForensics
Cameron Logsdon is in his second year as Assistant Director of Forensics in the UNO School of Communication. In this role, Cameron coaches the MavForensics team, which specializes in competitive speech and performance and is ranked 8th in the nation.
Cameron received his Bachelor of Science in Speech Communication from UNO in 2011 and his Master of Arts in 2013, also from UNO. As an undergraduate student, Cameron was instrumental in elevating MavForensics to the national stage. He won UNO’s first national championship in competitive forensics in 2010 and followed it up with a second national championship in 2011.
Cameron is an advocate for the spoken word and performing arts. He believes in the power of art to celebrate culture and create community. For nearly a decade, Cameron has been active in several performance communities in Omaha, including slam poetry, stand up comedy, sketch comedy and community theater. Cameron’s YouTube page is available at https://www.youtube.com/user/cameronlogsdon.
Kira Cobbs, Denise Fellows, Jasmine Johnson
SummerWorks Omaha Participants
UNO’s Summerworks Omaha Employment Academy provides students opportunities to serve the community while gaining valuable work experience. This year, the University of Nebraska Omaha won the Presidential Award for Economic Opportunity, which recognizes institutions with service programs that build economic independence, increase family stability, and create more sustainable and resilient communities. SummerWorks was among the highlighted programs cited for UNO’s receipt of this prestigious award.
Kira Cobbs was born in 1998 in Denver, CO. She plays the piano and practices Chinese and sign language; she also participates in her school’s poetry organization, Louder Than a Bomb. She has been writing poetry since she was inspired to do so by her fourth grade teacher. Kira participated in SummerWorks in 2014.
Denise Fellows, prior to SummerWorks, referred to herself as a “silent poet.” She said that her poetry used to ‘scream so loud to be heard by someone other than her own ears.’ Denise worked with SummerWorks in the summer of 2014, and it was there she began sharing her work.
Jasmine Johnson is a sophomore at Benson High School and she participated in SummerWorks 2014.“We all became somewhat of a big family,” Johnson says of her experienced “I never for a second thought I would enjoy cleaning city parks, but if I could work at SummerWorks again I would. It was an amazing experience and opportunity.” Jasmine would like to thank her 7th grade teacher, Ms. Carlson of Monroe Middle School, for introducing her to poetry. Jasmine says poetry is the reasons she is the person she is today; it has helped her through anger, depression, and other life struggles.