Meet Our Speakers
The Student Leadership Conference brings together a dynamic group of speakers whose work, lived experiences, and leadership span education, advocacy, entrepreneurship, and community engagement. Each speaker contributes a unique perspective on leadership, change-making, and impact.
Speakers are listed below in alphabetical order. Click on each name to learn more about their background, areas of expertise, and the session they will be leading. We invite you to explore, engage, and consider how each speaker’s journey and insights can inform your own leadership path.

Master of Science in Disability Services in Higher Education
Outside of work, they are a creative non-fiction writer. Their works have been published in Briarpatch Magazine and Somewhere We Are Human, an anthology edited by Reyna Grande and Sonia Guiñansaca. Their co-authored work has been published in Decolonial Feminist Genealogies and Futures, edited by Annie Isabel Fukushima and K. Melchor Quick Hall.

Academic Director of the Youth Studies Program, CUNY SPS
Prior to joining CUNY SPS, Dr. Zeller-Berkman worked on various initiatives for city government, foundations and non-profits including Mozilla Foundation, the Mayor’s Leadership Team on School Climate and Discipline and the Deputy Mayor for Strategic Policy Initiatives. For seven years she was a director at The Youth Development Institute (YDI) where she led the Community-Youth Development Unit. She was a fellow at La Guardia Community College and taught in the Children and Youth Studies Department at Brooklyn College. She is a founding member of the Public Science Project at the CUNY, Graduate Center and continues to deeply value this community of critical participatory action researchers.
Dr. Zeller-Berkman holds a BA from Emory University and a Doctorate from CUNY Graduate Center’s Social Personality Psychology Program. She has spent the last 25 years as a practitioner, researcher, evaluator, capacity-builder, professor and scholar in the field of youth and community development/critical youth development. She has worked in partnership with young people on participatory action research projects about issues that impact their lives such as sexual harassment in schools, incarceration, parental incarceration, economic mobility, housing and high-stakes testing. She has published in the Encyclopedia of Adolescence, Current Issues in Out-of-School Time, SAGE Encyclopedia of Out-of-School Learning, Harvard Educational Review, Community, Youth, and Environment, and The Oxford Handbook of Qualitative Research. She is a proud board member of the National AfterSchool Association. A member of the Collaborative for Advancing Youth Development. Last, but not least, she is a mama to two wonderful beings.

Master of Science in Health Information Management

Master of Arts in Disability Studies

Master of Science in Data Science

Co-Director of the Education Program and lecturer in the Education and Language Acquisition
With an M.A. in Linguistics from the CUNY Graduate Center and a B.A. in Speech Pathology and Linguistics from Queens College, Michele teaches a diverse range of courses including Introduction to Language, Foundations of Bilingual Education, Language and Literacy in Education (K-12), and Education Technology. Her interdisciplinary background allows her to bridge theory with practical classroom applications.
Michele's journey to academia exemplifies the transformative power of education and the theme of "Change Agents: From Classroom to Community." After leaving school in Trinidad at ninth grade, she returned to education in New York, earning her GED before completing her bachelor's and master's degrees at CUNY institutions. This personal experience of transformation fuels her commitment to helping students recognize their own potential and become agents of change in their communities.
Her research addresses critical intersections in contemporary education: ePortfolio pedagogy, digital learning environments, literacy, and the development of culturally relevant and responsive teaching practices. She is particularly focused on teacher preparation and identity development, exploring how educators can better serve diverse student populations. In March 2025, she was recognized by CUNY for her commitment to advancing teaching excellence and student success.
Michele's work demonstrates how educators serve as change agents by transforming not only classroom experiences but also empowering students to carry that impact into their communities. Her approach to teacher education emphasizes the connection between academic learning and real-world application, preparing future teachers to foster social impact and drive positive change in urban schools and diverse communities.

Master of Science in Nursing Informatics
With a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications, Yanil previously worked as a Communications Consultant for the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, managing communications for public health initiatives. Passionate about advancing public health and health equity, she integrates evidence-based practice strategies into her nursing care to support patients in improving diabetes self-management and to help her organization meet community health needs for vulnerable populations. Yanil is a member of the Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing and the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA).
