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Leadership during transition with UOPX alumnus Rich Valerga

Rich Valerga | Episode 19


0:00 - The major theme in my life has been education. 0:02 And education is really important for a host of reasons, 0:05 and then where you get educated matters. 0:08 The °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ really allowed me to continue 0:10 to work and finish my degree. 0:12 At the same time. I find myself back known number 0:16 of years later going to graduate school again 0:18 and choosing °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ again 0:20 because it does allow for that flexibility. 0:22 And I do appreciate the expertise 0:25 that comes from the professors 0:26 that are working in industry while they're 0:28 also teaching at night. 0:29 I think that's really important. 0:31 You could ask for a better 0:32 institution to help you through that. Podcast Introduction 0:46 - Hello and welcome to the Degrees of Success podcast. 0:49 I'm your host Freda Richards. 0:51 And today we have an incredible guest, Rich Valerga. 0:54 He is a two-time University 0:56 of °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ alumni getting his bachelor's 0:59 and a master's here at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½. Guest Introduction: Rich Valerga 1:02 And he's currently enrolled to get his doctorate 1:05 of management as well. 1:08 He has a great passion for it, leadership and education. 1:13 His journey has been nothing but incredible 1:16 and we are excited to have him here to learn more about it. 1:19 Rich, tell me, diving directly into your story, 1:22 I wanna know all about the foundation of 1:24 where you came from and how you grew up. 1:26 - I was born in the Philippines, Early Life in the Philippines and Moving Around 1:28 so I was born in Subic Bay next to Subic Bay Naval Base. 1:33 I lived there for a number of years 1:35 and then I think when I was three we came back 1:37 to the States on the east coast. 1:40 I was in Maryland and then in Virginia for a number 1:43 of number of years 1:44 and then ended up moving to Iceland to Catholic, Iceland 1:50 in middle school and then to Naples, 1:52 Italy towards the middle of middle school 1:55 and start of high school there. 1:56 High school was seventh to 12th grade 1:59 and then we moved to eCOA Japan 2:02 and I did a couple years of high school there 2:04 and then back to California where I ultimately 2:08 graduated from high school and joined the Marine Corps. 2:11 But in the process of that, I also spent a few years 2:14 with my grandparents on both sides of my family. 2:17 And I had the, you know, the pleasure of getting that, 2:23 that information from that generation 2:25 and the upbringing from that generation that 2:30 has been kind of a, you know, a rock in my life of 2:35 things to do and things not to do. 2:37 - Well, we have so much in common. 2:38 So one, I am currently getting my doctorate here at 2:42 °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ as well. 2:43 And I believe we are in the same program 2:45 because I'm getting my doctorate of management as well. 2:49 And then I'm also, I'm an army brat. 2:52 My husband is a Marine 2:53 and my grandfather was a Marine 2:55 as well and so was my father. 2:58 And so my and my mom was an E nine. Shared Military Family Experiences 3:01 I always forget her title in the Army. 3:03 - Okay. - So I traveled a lot. 3:06 So I was Germany, Japan, and then all over the us. Right. 3:11 And we have the great opportunity to meet 3:14 so many different people that I feel like it ends up being, 3:19 to your earlier point, A, a blessing and a curse. 3:21 Right. Because there was no Facebook back in the day. 3:23 I tell people that all the time, 3:24 like I don't get super connected to people 3:27 because you would meet people as children 3:30 and enjoy that relationship 3:32 and then know that you would never see them again 3:33 as you got on. 3:35 - Yeah. Interesting how to, once you get out of 3:37 that environment, you have to really adjust your mindset 3:40 to long-term relationships 3:42 because you really were, you know, you'd get, 3:45 you'd move somewhere 3:47 and you knew you were gonna be there for an exact period 3:51 of time normally, And you got really deep relationships 3:55 for a very short period of time. 3:56 And then trying to call them 3:58 or keep in touch by letter was always difficult. 4:00 You try to start when you move to the same new place 4:03 and soon the letters got longer and longer 4:06 and then you're moving again. 4:08 So you're doing that with a new set of people. 4:10 And I was able 4:12 to keep some relationships from my early childhood, 4:16 but into my adulthood. 4:17 It was very difficult to keep those younger, you know, 4:21 friendships going unlike, you know, folks I know 4:24 that were born and raised in a hometown 4:27 and they know, like they go back there on Thanksgiving, 4:29 people say, where are you from? 4:31 And I tell 'em the state of confusion. 4:32 That's my answer for that question. 4:36 - I may have to steal that one from you. 4:37 That's, that's really good. 4:39 Yeah, someone asked me once like, where's your accent from? 4:43 And I was like, I couldn't tell you. I couldn't tell you 4:47 - Wherever you want it to be from. 4:48 You can pick. So 4:50 - Exactly. 4:51 Let me just give you this list 4:52 of places I've been, any of those. 4:55 Well, thank you for your service. 4:57 I can't, I commend you and your family. Life Lessons from Military Upbringing 5:00 It is a huge sacrifice, so thank you for that. 5:03 And the marines of all first to serve, I would tell you my 5:08 husband would say hurrah, but I know that that's the army 5:12 and I don't remember the, the Marine one 5:16 - Hurrah. 5:17 It's a little bit different, but yeah. Rah. 5:21 - So with that said, you have done so much, 5:26 and this is just, I mean this is, we're only at 17, right? 5:30 So at 17 you enlist 5:33 and then you move from that to serving pizzas 5:37 or delivering pizzas. 5:38 Coming to °®ÎÛ´«Ã½, working for both Caesars and 5:43 - Papa - John's. 5:44 Papa John's. Right. So do you make a mean pizza right now? 5:47 - I do. We try, we try as a family to 5:51 have pizza night, you know, once a month 5:54 or a couple times a month. 5:56 And so teaching the kids how to flatten dough 5:59 and how to stretch a pizza and slap a pizza 6:02 and how to put sauce on a pizza the right amount. 6:05 And the little ones really like it. 6:07 The older ones when they're, they come to visit, 6:10 they don't participate as much as they used to 6:11 and they were little, they just want to eat it. 6:13 They don't care about making it. 6:15 But the little ones like to throw the cheese 6:16 and eat the pepperoni while you're trying 6:18 to put it on the pizza instead of 6:21 the, the little ones really like it. 6:23 So it's a good family. 6:24 - So since you're such a pizza pro, you're gonna have 6:26 to give us at least a few tips for us to be able to go 6:29 and try to make some incredible pizza. Pizza Making and Family Life 6:32 - I really like Neapolitan pizza. 6:33 I like just plain cheese with light sauce 6:37 and a lot. 6:40 That's the, if you can find a place for me with, you know, 6:44 good mozzarella and good light sauce 6:46 and a like fire crust, 6:48 that's the best pizza you can make. So 6:51 - A fire crust. 6:52 But I know that you're currently in Chicago. 6:55 - Yeah. And pizza's a big thing here. 6:57 Yeah, the deep dish pizza. 7:00 So I don't, I don't care for the Chicago style pizza. 7:05 It's probably criminal to say that here, 7:06 but I don't like the, the deep dish pizza. 7:09 I like a very thin wood fired pizza. So 7:14 - They're gonna come get you, they're gonna make 7:15 you come back to Arizona. 7:19 Oh my goodness. So after having, 7:22 after making pizzas, you decide I need to go back to school, 7:26 you end up deciding to be a driver 7:28 and you're driving at night. 7:30 - Yeah, like I did like three, three 7:33 to 11:00 PM like the afternoon, 7:36 late night shift, the last shift. So, 7:39 - So you're doing that and going to school. 7:42 - Correct. - Where did you get this hustle from? Returning to School and Night Driving Job 7:45 Like where did your inspiration come from? 7:47 - I think I did. I didn't, you know, I saw a lot of friends 7:52 having ended up in California, being on the beach, you know, 7:55 people would get stuck in the beach life 7:59 where they were just kind of bumming around 8:00 and surfing during the day 8:02 and working in a restaurant in the evening. 8:04 And I saw my friends get older, they were older than me 8:09 to start with and I saw them continue to age 8:12 and I realized I didn't want that for me in life. 8:15 Like it, it took a while to get to that point, 8:18 but there is definitely a point where it clicked 8:20 and it's like, I want more than this 8:23 and the only way I'm gonna be able to do this is 8:25 to do something else. 8:27 So, you know, that's something else. 8:29 At the time when I went to college, you know, 8:33 it was the big, you know, you're having the 8:37 2000 turnover stuff going on 8:40 and you had the early two thousands bubble 8:43 that was happening and it seemed like that would be, 8:47 you know, I really just looked for the highest bang 8:50 for your buck in a career 8:52 and thought, you know, I could do this 8:54 and make a decent living and have a family. 8:57 And so that really kind of kept me focused at the time Choosing IT and Career Motivation 9:01 to just get it done 9:05 and do it, you know, go to school in something 9:09 that would be meaningful for me in a career going forward. 9:13 Not just, you know, I had picked it at the time 9:16 and I really enjoyed that work. 9:18 I, you know, my friends 9:19 and I would at that point do a lot 9:24 of computer programming and other things. 9:26 But I did realize early on 9:28 that I didn't wanna become a programmer. 9:29 I wasn't quite excited about sitting and, 9:34 and typing for a career. 9:36 I preferred the telecommunications aspect of things 9:40 that seemed, so network 9:41 and telecommunications seemed a little more interesting 9:43 to me and that's what I focused on in school. 9:45 And then with certifications, 9:48 'cause what I did when I was about to graduate is I packed 9:53 my daytime classwork 9:55 or my nighttime classwork with daytime certification classes 10:00 at a another school 10:02 that was doing like certifications at the time. 10:04 That was just like a learning center. 10:06 And so I would get my certifications 10:09 and then go to school, then go to work 10:11 or just to try to be marketable when I got out 10:16 of got outta college. So. 10:18 - So how old were you at this time? 10:20 - 23. Yeah, 23, 24. 10:25 - So you're 23 and 24, you're getting a certificate 10:29 during the day, also going to school during the day Education and Certifications 10:31 and then working at night 10:34 as a driver at 23 to 24. 10:37 That's not the typical behavior of 10:42 23 to 24-year-old there. 10:45 There has to be like, I know that you said you spent a lot 10:47 of time with your grandparents as well 10:49 and your, your parents had you traveling a lot 10:52 due to the military. 10:53 - Right. - What did they instill in you 10:58 or what did your situation instill in you that you 11:03 at 23 to 24 recognized? 11:07 Hmm, I don't wanna be like these other gentlemen 11:09 that are just kind of getting older on the beach, kind 11:12 of letting life pass by. 11:13 I'm going to completely change my life. 11:18 - Yeah, I think, you know, both of my, both sets 11:21 of my grandparents worked really hard 11:22 and one, one 11:25 of my grandfathers drove a truck on the west coast. 11:27 My other grandfather had worked in the mines, 11:29 was in the military, had worked for a dry cleaner, had, 11:34 I mean he had hustled 11:35 and he opened his own small business in a small town in 11:39 Colorado where he had a meat market 11:42 and my grandmother had a bookstore that she owned. 11:44 And I think just watching their, their work ethic growing up 11:49 and you know, it doesn't necessarily, 11:52 it doesn't hit you at the moment, 11:54 but those are the memories that kind of, 11:57 when you're having those, those moments in life Influence of Family and Grandparents 12:00 where you're thinking about what's next, those are the rock, 12:03 the bedrock moments that are in your, you know, 12:06 thought process of, okay, you know, this is 12:09 what I should be doing. 12:10 And you know, like you discussed 12:12 before, I had, I had done a lot 12:13 of stuff early on in my early teens and late teens. 12:18 I didn't really feel the need to continue on in 12:20 that lifestyle of a typical 20-year-old. 12:23 I maybe I felt like I was 10 years older in my mid thirties 12:27 or you know, having my quarter life crisis at 12:29 25 or whatever. 12:32 So I think, you know, watching my grandparents, you know, 12:36 and their work ethic and my, my mother, she had gone 12:40 to college later in life 12:42 and I think it took her eight years to graduate 12:44 for her bachelor's degree. 12:46 But she stuck to it and she also worked in IT 12:49 and she got her her undergraduate in 12:54 computer information systems. 12:55 So it was kind of an interesting coincidence that my mom 12:59 and I were doing the same kind 13:01 of classwork at the same time. 13:03 So I had someone to talk 13:04 - To about, oh was at the same time 13:06 - It was at the same, my mom was either, either finishing up 13:08 or she, I know she was working still at 13:13 that point in the federal government doing it 13:16 work in the federal government. 13:17 So when I had questions about classwork 13:19 and the practical application of, you know, classwork 13:23 or certification program she had, she was doing it 13:27 for a job so she could answer my questions at the time. Working at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ 13:30 And so, you know, school, the military 13:32 and school both were like big impacts in my life to kind 13:37 of reconnect me to my family and 13:39 - Yeah, - Kind 13:40 - Of friends connect you back to your parents, the military 13:42 with your father and school with your mom 13:45 and you ended up getting the same degree. 13:48 - Yeah, she got one in com. 13:49 Computer science was a little bit different than the network 13:52 and telecommunications work, 13:53 but she did basically the job I wanted to do 13:57 and which was network administration. 14:00 So when I was offered a job in Northern Arizona by 14:05 °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ at the time, that's what I, 14:08 I was doing the regional IT work for them, 14:12 which was exciting. 14:14 And then we quickly realized 14:17 that our campus doing expansion work, that 14:20 there was no one there to do it. 14:22 And that become, that kind of became the second part 14:25 of my life was I was just in the right 14:28 place at the right time. 14:29 So I got additional experiences 14:31 that you wouldn't normally get at a young age. 14:33 So, you know, I had a lot of responsibility in my early 14:38 to late twenties or early to middle twenties 14:41 in my late twenties actually. 14:44 And it really helped me understand what I wanted to do 14:46 and be when I grew up I guess you could say. 14:51 So yeah, 14:53 - So you came here, you got a lot 14:54 of hands-on experience here at the °®ÎÛ´«Ã½, 14:57 working here at the °®ÎÛ´«Ã½. Pursuing a Master's and Working at the University 15:01 You ended up using that hands-on experience 15:03 and the opportunity to get another degree. 15:07 - I did. That was, that was really nice, you know, 15:11 education, esp, you know, now the inflation 15:14 and at the time when I was looking at getting a 15:19 master's degree, it was, how am I gonna afford to do this? 15:22 And you know, it's a, I think a question a lot 15:25 of parents ask when their kids are going into college 15:27 or a lot of people ask themselves when they're going into 15:30 college, is this affordable? 15:31 And °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ was always affordable. 15:34 And then having that additional benefit as an employee 15:37 to get reduced tuition was fantastic. 15:40 And it gave you both sides 15:43 of the story as well. 15:46 Like, you know, I had, 15:47 I didn't know higher education very much. 15:51 I knew kind of the K 12 from being a student 15:53 and teaching for a couple years, 15:56 but I didn't know the back end of working in a university 16:00 and all the things that go into the production of class. 16:04 You know, people just think it's Right an easy thing. 16:06 You just step in and act your couple hours and go home 16:10 and you know, the professors have a lot of, they put a lot 16:13 of time and effort into, excuse me, into their work 16:16 and you know, having office hours helping 16:19 students that are struggling. 16:20 You know, you as a student, you took it for granted 16:24 and as an employee you watched those really great people 16:29 spend that time with students to help them 16:31 through their process. 16:32 And you know, once you get into advanced statistics 16:35 and other things that people normally have problems with, 16:38 it's not your everyday, you know, work. 16:41 It was great to see, you know, the, the staff at university, 16:44 if °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ spend that time, I guess my coworkers spend 16:47 that time with students to help them. 16:49 And whenever I had a problem I had a ready set group 16:52 of teachers that I worked with. 16:54 So they couldn't really say no to me 16:55 'cause I could make sure their computers didn't work in the 16:58 morning if I had to and they would have Career Shift Post-MBA 17:00 to run into me sooner or later. 17:02 Sabotage. Yeah. 17:04 So no, it was really good to get both sides of that, 17:09 that story and then being able to expand that mission 17:12 when I worked for them at the same time was even better. 17:16 You don't see a lot of expansion in K 12, you see such, 17:18 or in higher ed right now you see a lot 17:20 of contraction going on in a lot of brick 17:23 and mortar universities that are closing up shop due to, 17:26 you know, the slide and birth rates 17:29 and you know, various other issues 17:31 that people are having these days. 17:32 But yeah. 17:35 - But °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ has, 17:36 was not the last school you would help expand. 17:40 - No, that was, 17:41 - It is not kind of a startup. 17:42 And I wanna jump into that part of your journey 17:45 because your career is exceptional. 17:47 Thank you. Tell after the NBA, what was next? 17:53 - I was still working in Northern Virginia 17:56 and I was getting kind of an niche 17:59 to go back into teaching full-time. Rebuilding Schools After Hurricane Katrina 18:01 'cause I had saw, I had noticed what good 18:05 that our professors were doing 18:07 and I knew that I couldn't be a teacher. 18:10 I wasn't really called to be a everyday in front 18:13 of the classroom teacher type, 18:15 but I still wanted to work in that environment. 18:18 And it, in 2005, hurricane Katrina hit 18:22 in New Orleans pretty hard and I took a job right 18:27 after that in New Orleans to help rebuild the schools 18:31 after they had closed down from that. 18:33 And at that time you saw a lot of young professionals. 18:36 I was 28 I think when I moved there, 28 or 29. 18:41 You saw a lot of young professionals moving to New Orleans 18:45 to kind of help in that rebuild effort. 18:48 And in the early days, 18:50 school started reopening essentially in December 18:53 and January of 2006, 2005, 2006. 18:58 You had this great diversity of talent 19:00 that came from all over the country down to New Orleans. 19:03 And I got to work for a great company at the time 19:08 as their head of IT 19:10 and operations for a charter school network. 19:13 And we opened a few different schools, 19:16 we started expanding there 19:19 and that was really quite a blessing for me personally. 19:23 And you know, I had my sons, two 19:27 of my two older sons were both born in New Orleans 19:30 and it was really great to have that time to be able 19:34 to help a community rebuild from 19:38 a pretty bad travesty. 19:39 You know? And it was even better that I, that's a bad way 19:44 to discuss Katrina, but it really did, 19:48 it really did bring in a lot of talent that 19:50 otherwise wouldn't have come to New Orleans at that time. 19:53 And I got to work alongside of really smart people that kind 19:57 of drove me to like, wow, you know, Experiences in New Orleans Post-Katrina 20:00 I didn't know you could do that or I didn't know this. 20:02 And you know, I got to see a lot of different 20:05 viewpoints from people I respected and trusted. 20:11 - Your perspective is so intriguing you are saying it was a 20:14 blessing for me to be able to go 20:17 after Katrina to help build this new charter school 20:21 and to meet so many other talented people that also came 20:24 after this horrible event happened 20:27 that devastated Louisiana and 20:31 - Right. 20:32 - So many lives were lost houses. 20:35 Generational pain 20:39 and loss happen in that hurricane. 20:44 It's humbling to me to hear you say that it blessed 20:47 because clearly the people who were brave enough 20:52 who had the heart to serve 20:54 to leave wherever they were comfortably to go to a place 20:59 that the grocery stores were, were flooded. 21:03 The, I mean it was, 21:04 it was literally the grounds were literally destroyed. 21:07 And from what I understand it took a while for them 21:10 to recover some remains. 21:13 - It took a a long time and, 21:14 and schools were kinda shelters of last resorts. 21:19 So as we began to open up schools, you often 21:24 opened up tragedies that happened in those schools 21:26 that maybe people were missing family members that had 21:30 ended up in a school at the end of end of their lives. 21:35 It's, yeah, it was interesting. 21:37 We opened, I think we were up to eight schools 21:40 and you know, throughout the city, you know, 21:45 I didn't, I took it for granted that, you know, you hear it 21:47 and you see it on tv 21:49 but I didn't realize that hospitals weren't really back 21:53 and my wife at the time was eight 21:55 and a half months pregnant. 21:57 So we kind of needed a hospital soon to 22:00 have my first son out there. 22:02 So, and you would drive like underpasses 22:05 and see cars still stacked up. 22:07 'cause it really took a while to get the city back into kind 22:11 of operations, you know, back into 22:13 where it could function again. 22:16 And then definitely back to 22:17 where it could start receiving its citizens again. 22:20 It took a little bit of time to get through that so, 22:24 but it was, it was, I mean I learned so much from that 22:27 and I got to meet so many interesting people 22:31 that again, 22:33 otherwise I wouldn't have gotten the chance to meet them 22:36 had I not volunteered 22:38 to go down there and help with that. So 22:40 - Tell me your favorite memory from that time. 22:44 Something that sticks with you 22:45 and reminds you of your, your passion and drive. 22:52 - I think it, the memory that sticks with me the most came 22:58 on the next hurricane that was down there, 22:59 Gustav that was coming. Facing Hurricane Gustav and Staying Behind 23:02 I had to make those decisions. 23:04 So I wasn't from New Orleans, 23:05 I'd never actually visited New 23:07 Orleans, I'd never been there. 23:08 We just up and moved And so I didn't 23:13 experience the should I stay 23:14 or should I go portion of that hurricane. 23:18 So while you feel like you can understand why people make 23:21 decisions, you really don't understand 23:24 until you're put in those situations 23:26 where you have to make that decision. 23:27 So I was put in that decision 23:29 and I had two small children at the time 23:32 and I was standing in my 23:36 bedroom looking at my stuff 23:39 and realizing that I couldn't fit all my stuff in a 23:41 car to evacuate. 23:43 And my kids had gone up to my mother's house and a few days 23:47 before, so I was there alone 23:50 and the power hadn't gone out yet, 23:51 but I was kind of looking 23:53 to see should I stay or should I go? 23:55 And we had just put a lot of money into these new schools 23:58 that we opened 'cause there was in, 24:03 you hear a lot about 24:04 how the federal government didn't respond to that tragedy, 24:09 but in the end they did respond well 24:12 and they put a lot of money into the city, into schools 24:14 and we had put a lot of money and time 24:17 and effort into getting the schools back up and open again. 24:20 And you know, having to make that decision 24:24 of do I leave or do I stay here 24:27 and help protect, you know, the assets we just put in. 24:29 Because essentially it becomes a free 24:31 for all when everybody leaves the city. 24:33 Like as much, you know, as much law 24:36 and order as they try to put and the national guards out 24:40 and people are out. 24:42 There's still a lot of either, you know, people trying 24:46 to find a shelter, which like I said 24:47 before, they often came to schools. 24:50 The mayor at the time suggested they go to schools 24:53 and us that ran those schools were like, no, no, no, 24:56 like leave the city, don't do this again. 24:59 You know, this was Gusav supposed to be a, you know, huge 25:01 and it turned out to be in for somewhere 25:03 else other than New Orleans. 25:04 But I think that experience of just sitting there making 25:08 that decision and first making the decision that none 25:10 of this stuff matters. 25:12 So I just took pictures of my stuff 25:14 'cause I figured I could give it 25:15 to my insurance agent when I came back 25:18 and that I really just needed a, you know, couple days, 25:22 a week's worth of clothes in my car. 25:24 So if I had to leave, I had some clothes for that time 25:28 and I ended up staying with our head of security 25:32 at the time he had two horses. 25:34 So, you know, making that decision 25:36 and then being able to ride around the city on horseback 25:39 with our head of security was really, it's a memory 25:42 that really sticks with me. 25:43 'cause everybody was gone. My neighbors were gone. 25:46 My neighbor across the street worked 25:47 for New Orleans police department 25:49 and a bunch of other of his coworkers were staying with him. 25:52 So I had, you know, my house 25:54 and his house on the block 25:56 where essentially were the only people that were there. 25:58 And I felt pretty safe personally 25:59 'cause I had, you know, a lot Lessons on Stuff vs. Experience 26:01 of the precincts staff members living 26:04 across the street at the time. 26:05 So I wasn't, I didn't have to worry about my house 26:08 or my property, which was great. 26:10 I could go and worry about other people's 26:12 property and Right. 26:14 You know, doing that on horseback was quite interesting 26:17 and that, you know, it took until right 26:21 before the storm hit where I went in 26:23 and I grabbed all of our important data 26:27 and I took those machines in my trunk 26:29 and drove out state just far enough 26:32 for the night when the hurricane was supposed to hit. 26:34 I went and stayed in a hotel for a night 26:36 and then I drove back in with the National Guard, 26:38 tucked into the National Guard to go back 26:40 and put it back online and get the system 26:44 because we had payroll coming up in a couple days. 26:46 So we had to have our systems online 26:48 to get our employees paid 26:49 that were scattered everywhere at the, you know, 26:51 they had left, we had given everybody time off so 26:55 that they would leave. 26:57 So I went and put that back 26:58 and that was really, you're kind of alone. 27:02 You have family, but you're alone. 27:04 And then you're pondering this notion of like, 27:05 I've collected all this stuff, what 27:08 of it should I leave with? 27:09 And you realize that stuff really doesn't matter. 27:12 Like you can, you can rebuy stuff 27:15 and that was, you know, 27:19 and I was what, 31 at 30 at that point, you know, 27:22 at 30 years old to realize that the stuff game wasn't really 27:26 that important was, it was a great lesson to learn 27:29 that young, although you fall back into those bad habits, 27:33 sometimes you're like, oh I want one of those 27:35 'cause everybody has 'em or I one of these. 27:37 And I really, you know, I try to instill with my kids that, 27:42 you know, stuff isn't that important. 27:45 You know, the experiences 27:46 and relationships you have are much more 27:48 important than stuff. 27:50 'cause you can, you can always get stuff, 27:52 but you can't always get the opportunity to travel overseas 27:55 or get the opportunity to go to college 27:57 or, you know, get the opportunity to spend with your family. Reflection on Pandemic Blessings 28:00 Like even with the pandemic, I have two, 28:05 my daughter was born in 2020 in January 28:08 and then we had the pandemic 28:10 and she got to spend all this time with me 28:12 that my two older sons didn't get. 28:14 'cause I had to go back to work two days later 28:16 and my daughter got, you know, I was able to work from home 28:21 and she got all that time with me 28:24 and it's really made a difference in her life. 28:26 And I think, you know, with my youngest son now 28:29 that he's two, he's gotten some of that time not quite 28:32 as dedicated as my daughter, 28:35 but it's been, you know, in, in that, you know, pandemic, 28:39 I've really gotten more blessings from that to be able 28:43 to stay home and work from home. 28:44 And while it's challenging to do the work, you know, 28:48 I was again lucky where I am now to have the opportunity. 28:52 - Thank you so much for sharing that with us 28:55 and that somehow brings us to the end of this episode 28:57 of Degrees of Success. 28:59 I'm your host, Frida Richard, reminding you Closing Remarks 29:02 that your next chapter just might be your best one yet. 29:05 Don't forget to like, subscribe and comment 29:08 and we'll see you soon.

Listen to the podcast episode featuring UOPX alumnus Rich Valerga

From military to education: Rich Valerga’s inspiring journey

°®ÎÛ´«Ã½ alumnus Rich Valerga earned an MBA and a Bachelor of Science in Information Technology from °®ÎÛ´«Ã½. In this episode of the Degrees of Success podcast, he talks about his life-long focus on education and the challenges of being a leader during times of significant transition.

Opening quote

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- Life is about finding the people who get you and sticking with them. That encapsulates all of it.

0:05

Students at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ who find the place where somebody gets them, just stick with them.

0:10

Just stick with them and you'll, you'll get over that mountain.

0:25

- I wanna talk about your doctorate that you received here at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½. Is this where CAA was born in your mind?

Founding of CAA

0:33

- Yeah, well, CAA at this point in time is an inclusive collegiate partnership.

0:39

So the first college that we were able to

0:44

sit ourselves onto was West Valley College in Saratoga, California.

0:50

We had gone through 10 plus years of just being all over the community in whatever

0:56

space we could find. And it changed all the time. Our goal was to have an equitable spot on the college

1:02

campus for our students. Like other adults in the community have access to when they wanna go back to school, they go,

1:09

if they wanna go to college, they go to the campus. And so whatever that campus is, we needed a campus space

1:16

and just that central hub. And it took, just like with my University

1:22

of °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ program, it took a lot because it's like trying to get the brain around it.

1:27

Now what do you do again? And now is that, would it be like a department of our college

1:32

and you know, just trying to explain what it is. So here's what it is. It's its own private nonprofit,

1:39

charitable 5 0 1 c three.org program for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

1:47

It's private college program. As a private college, it's providing, you know,

1:54

professors and campus space and all the things that you would expect at a college. It's an equitable college for these adults

2:02

who historically have not had access to structured high higher education in the same way

2:08

that other adults have in our communities. And they're one of the last groups in our community that has really had the gate shut on them at the

2:15

college campus. And not, not because they don't want to educate them, they would ask all the time for ourselves and others.

2:23

We, we were always going into meetings at colleges 'cause they were looking at how do we serve these adults?

2:29

You know, how do we do it in an equitable way? And we would say, just put us on campus.

What is CAA?

2:34

We have a program, it's all developed. We just need a place. And then to show how it works so we can replicate it on other campuses

2:41

or other people could, we can start the movement. Just put us on your campus and the first college to say, we have space, we can do that.

2:50

Come on over. Was West Valley the only one so far? And so we are forever indebted to them that it's our,

2:57

our flagship campus there, just the creative

3:02

forward progressive thinking of the West Valley Mission College District. So unbelievably supportive to our students.

3:10

So we situated ourselves there. And then from there we've been

3:17

able to put together the depth of programs

3:22

that, that our students really expect when they're coming to tour college.

3:29

- Tell me about some of those programs. - Well, we have 10 schools of study. So now we're a college of liberal arts.

3:35

Everything from science and, and dance and digital media studies with, you know, movie making

Schools of study

3:44

and all that to communications and language studies, Spanish, Italian, Chinese, you know,

3:50

whatever it is that they want to study. Our job is to come up with a way to make it happen in a school of study.

3:56

And so they, our schools of study are very broad, like communications houses a lot.

4:02

We have a brand new one that just opened up the School of Leadership and Civic engagement, which comes out

4:08

of classes that were happening where the students really wanted to be able to work in

4:13

that area during their class time as part of their structured learning. We have diploma tracks undergraduate, graduate,

4:21

and postgraduate our students, as I said, with Downs Autism,

4:26

any, any, any ability that they had come in with any learning ability.

4:31

And people say like any level, but we really don't look at it as levels. It's just what are your strengths today

4:36

and what are we working on as your next step? So their programs are progressive, where

4:42

whatever it is that they need today is what they'll get in that class. They're gonna put in the hours of experience with

4:48

and exposure to skills that are required to complete that class. And when they complete it, they get their credits.

4:54

So we have students graduating with an undergraduate diploma from our college who are at all different areas

5:01

of learning in different subject matter, but who have passions and have been pursuing them, things that they love.

5:07

And then when they get into graduate studies, it, then in an even bigger way, it's how do we contribute with

5:12

that in the community? How do we get out into the community with that? How do we start doing something with that?

5:18

And then postgraduate studies is just again, how to maybe globally, so like locally, nationally, globally,

Student progression & diplomas

5:25

just continuing to move out. We had some art students that were part of a global art exhibit, which is wonderful

5:32

and inclusive global art exhibit to show their work, their meaningful work and just things like that.

5:39

We, it's, it's based on what they want to do and what their goals are, of course, but we have those opportunities for them.

5:45

And then if they finish their postgraduate diploma and they still wanna learn, then they can do a postgraduate too with another emphasis.

5:52

And we're getting better and better as time goes by at being able to develop the infrastructure of

6:00

administrative databases and all those things needed to manage transcripts and learning goals and helping the students

6:08

and families understand where they are on their diploma journeys, you know, in their portals and just putting the,

6:14

putting them in the driver's seat. Say, here's where I am, here's what I need, here's how I wanna do it.

6:19

And I'm getting, you know, a, a larger and larger student advisory capacity going

6:25

within our college. You know, when you're a, a startup nonprofit, still pursuing a code that really fits what you do

6:33

and funding that really fits what you do. It's, it's an interesting task to try to build things

6:40

and staff them and, and you know, you get really good at being, you know, le tiny but mighty and just bringing in everybody's ideas

6:49

and you know, knowing that you don't have to invent every wheel. And that's what we really hope is to find other programs doing the same thing that we are

6:57

with lifelong opportunities for unlimited numbers of students online, on site

7:03

with all these different areas of study. And really focusing on getting adults everywhere.

7:08

Anyone who wants to come in and learn to be able to find those opportunities, they can then learn to take actions on and move forward and,

7:15

and make changes with. So we're looking for 'em. And I hope anybody that listens to this podcast that knows

7:23

of a program will contact us. We have a lot of friends and programs that are those post senior or those like more finite number of people

7:30

or number of years or whatever in different colleges and different communities. But we know they're out there

7:35

and we don't wanna invent every wheel. And, and that's another thing, somebody that comes into the diploma program at University

7:43

of °®ÎÛ´«Ã½, for example, say their doctorate 'cause that's where I was and they don't know where they're going,

7:48

but they just know what they have a passion for. And maybe they don't have a job doing that right now, but it's something they'd like to do.

7:55

That's, you know, that's really the key is to just as we're finding, to be able to get, to get

8:04

what you are doing, put together in a way that you can share it with other people

8:09

and get it encapsulated somehow so you can offer it. That's, that is such a tough thing

8:15

to do when you know you're trying to figure it out yourself. And the, the assistance that I had in trying

8:24

to put together the ideas that I had for our programs that were just, you know, how do I encapsulate that,

8:30

as I've said, has been just invaluable. But for anyone encapsulating what it is that you are learning and what your specialties are becoming

8:37

and finding out where you can take those to make a change. I think that's, that is one of the big things

8:43

that I know the alumni program too wants to reach out and help people with that have come

8:48

through programs at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ and that is all of our goals. That is the goal. Yeah.

Why focus on adults?

8:55

- You had this experience with your daughter and then you created this incredible college.

9:04

When did you make the decision for it to be adults that are neurodivergent or IDD as opposed to children?

9:11

What, what, what was that that, - So that's a great question. We were coming up with all kinds of programs

9:17

for my daughter, you know, at the age, age range of five to 22. And definitely five to 18 till they get out of high school.

9:24

Lots of programs, lots of parents starting programs for the kids, you know, when they're at home

9:30

and they're not, you know, independent or working on trying to become as independent as they can and maybe getting out of the home.

9:37

But when they're younger, there's a lot of programs in the Bay Area where we were so many

9:43

that you could never possibly take part in all of them. I mean, just wonderful things and all these startup things. I was singing all these new programs popping up,

9:50

popping then the theater and everything else. And so yeah, we, my co-founder

9:55

and I were working with the theater program previously for the kids and I was bringing my theater background when I

10:02

went back for my master's and my daughter was diagnosed and I had to take the big break. I actually was looking at children's theater,

10:09

taking children's theater out to teach kids about all kinds of, you know, lessons and equity

10:18

and diversity and inclusion and all those wonderful things that we were embedding into the shows.

10:23

And the show. One of the shows that I did when I first got with that group was, it was a musical version of The Odyssey

10:30

for Children and I played Athena and it really was life changing because that group

10:36

and that experience made me want to do that with the art form, you know, with my art.

10:41

And so Athena was the second stage of my Alice, and it's Alice and Athena

10:48

and I just love her, her owl, I didn't even think about it at the time. The, the wisdom and the, the, the owl is the symbol

10:55

and the, yeah, it was just such a great experience. And then just that, that imagery of that, it was kind of cool for me.

11:01

So kind of the starting to then where I was going with it, with education and leading, you know, forward and,

11:07

and trying to get out in front of it and just like, you know, Athena did with Odysseus, you know,

11:14

so symbolic in different ways. It can make it whatever, you know, but find a lot in. But anyway, so I have Alice and Athena are my two things,

11:22

but realizing doing that with the kids, that that was really a joy of mine. But then what happened was in that theater program that

11:30

my co-founder and I were working on and my daughter was coming out of high school just finishing high school up,

11:35

she was buddy coaching in it, so was my son. Our first musical was Wizard of Oz. And my son wore all black and had a dog puppet

11:42

and he was toto, let's go this way, you know, was wonderful with them kinda like a buddy coach. And my daughter was buddy coaching Glenda

11:49

and was able to do Glenda in one of the shows just for fun. So they, we were all involved in it

11:56

and then all of a sudden, you know, the, some of our most beloved actors that had started with

12:01

that program were aging out and they couldn't come back and do a show and there was no adult theater program

12:07

that they could just slide right into that was similar, approaching it the same way, which was everybody

12:13

of all abilities on stage together with this wonderful play that was the model was, it's beautiful

12:18

'cause it's, theirs didn't have to look like anybody else's play. A lot of improvisation and fun and joy in music

12:25

and collaborative camaraderie, everything I loved, right? Yeah. So that's what was being built there.

12:31

So we thought, well let's do it for the adults and we'll make this college of adaptive arts. 'cause we had some town hall meetings

12:36

and they were telling us they wanted a college and telling us the problem of not having college. Could it be a real college? Could you teach reading?

12:43

And like, okay, so the first workshops that we did involved all kinds of different subject matter kinda in the arts.

12:49

So everything was through the channel of the arts. And then as it moved forward, then we just started

12:55

to develop more specific classes for those areas and then ended up with the schools of study and now it's a college of liberal arts with 10 schools

13:02

of study and and on like that. So it's really a matter, I think often for families and for parents of really needing to be,

13:09

and rightfully so focused on your child, the age that they are, what they have, what they need, and making sure that you're finding the programs

Arts as a foundation

13:17

for them at that point. And then you do hit a point where a lot of people call it kind of the cliff of service drop off

13:24

and it's not expected. There's a sense that there's gonna be so much there

13:29

for them, they seem so happy in what they're doing and then all of a sudden it just kind of drops

13:35

because, you know, there aren't the programs that the parents are creating and running and everything like there are for the younger kids.

13:41

And for reason, there's reasons for that too. So that was something that we could contribute access

13:47

to doing these whatever it is that they have a passion for and they want to be part

13:53

of their life ways they wanna contribute to the community, whatever that is for them, that we could bring that to them.

13:59

And so d and I would just say we're their agents, like I mentioned before, Dee and I were their agents

14:06

and we just created the stage with the light on them. And we, if we look at an organizational structure

14:12

for college of adaptive arts, the very bottom is us as co-founders and our board

14:18

and our staff is up there kind of like this, you know, the people that are the stage managers and that you'll see out on the stage.

14:25

But, but the, the students are the ones up on that stage, the community's really gonna see and it's their voice we want them to hear.

14:32

And when there's ever an opportunity to, you know, be at city hall to talk about something to,

14:40

there's no anything going on. We really hope the students can be the ones out there.

14:45

And so that's where this new department of leadership and and civic engagement is coming in, is

14:51

to really build up not just self-advocates and advocates for the college or,

14:56

but to really build up those community leaders that are going to be able to step out on that same level.

15:03

And just as CAA created an inclusive place for an inclusive model for higher education,

15:09

have an inclusive model for community engagement. So we're all involved and their voices aren't just heard,

15:14

but they're at an active part of change making and, you know, societal change and pursuing social justice.

15:22

- CAA just sounds incredible and it sounds like it's really supporting people and giving people similar to your daughter,

15:27

that encouragement, that confidence to be able to your point to go out and serve and to create other environments for people like-minded

15:37

or possibly in the same or similar situation, to also also feel empowered and confident.

15:43

So simply incredible. You've had so many students within this 15 years, right?

15:49

- Yeah, yeah. - Tell me one of the success stories. Tell me about what it looks like for people to go

15:56

through this process and a particular person or two that had a re a really pivotal moment.

Student success stories

16:01

- Yeah. Well there's one student in particular that I think of automatically.

16:07

People say, oh, it's, you know, this college is really only for those who would be able to go to community college

16:13

but might have a learning disability or they're very high functioning. So, and they, but, but what about, you know, our student who doesn't read

16:21

and, you know, they just to understand it's for everybody. So we had a student come in who we thought was, you know,

16:30

mostly everybody kinda thought was nonverbal, it was just selective speaking I think, but very nonverbal

16:37

and had some physical issues, deformities and things going on and had not ever thought about being involved in different

16:46

kinds of physical activities or arts that's physically, you know, dance, things like that.

16:53

And so actually found out that they could participate in dance and came in

16:58

and found their way that they were gonna bring their spirit to that art form.

17:05

And it was incredible and, but didn't have the confidence to

17:10

pursue other areas of learning. Like, for example, reading that was so difficult or science

17:17

or, no, don't even talk to 'em about science. They don't want school, they don't want homework. We don't have homework by the way. So the students love that everything happens in class like

17:25

it would if you were homeschooling everything's in class so that they get exposed to things with the instructor in a way

17:31

that's guided and strategic and then they have home activities they can do, but it isn't about grades

17:37

and being competing with other people. It's about where you are and moving that forward, whatever that ends up being by the end of the semester.

17:43

So once the student comfortable with that, then started pursuing some of these other areas and ended up finding a huge love of poetry

17:52

and literature and still is working on those reading skills that now has been exposed, not only exposed to

17:59

but has experienced, you know, great literature that they never approached before. And being able to be part of conversations

18:08

and get out into the community to present information

18:13

or what have you in, in a way that they're speaking so wonderfully

18:18

and communicating in their own communication style so beautifully because they have the confidence to do it

18:24

and not even thinking about being nervous about it. So just overcoming all the boundaries of fear of failure

18:30

and anxiety and those things that get in the way of really feeling like you could approach higher education

18:36

and finding out that it can be for you and that it will be set up for you. And then being able to broaden the scope of

18:42

what you're learning to the point where now you're in the community communicating, you're in the community dancing, you're in the community,

18:48

sharing messages in so many different ways and impacting people. So that's really neat. And then another student who did go

18:56

to a community college, we was with us for several years. We did not know that

19:02

that student actually got their diploma from that community college and they completed it,

19:08

but they didn't have any place to put what they were interested in. And then that was journalism and working on a paper

19:15

and had always worked on school papers and was really active in the paper at that community college.

19:20

And we had no idea that their dream was to like be an editor right, of a paper and

19:25

or to create their own paper. And this they, they knew they could do it and how to do it,

19:30

but what would the resources be and where would you have, where would you do that, where you'd have the support to be able to do that.

19:36

And so we said, well, okay, let's start a paper. And so this was a graduate student who's now in our

19:42

workforce development program and we started finding more and more of this out and oh my gosh, you have

19:48

that much journalistic background. Bring us in your columns, let us see what you've written. And so her, her goal is to be a professor at the college

19:56

and now she's producing our first Cardinal Times newspaper for our students and reporting on things.

20:04

The students went to a Barracuda's hockey game, they're invited to go to Barracuda and she interviewed a player

20:09

and she wrote an article about that and they invited her to come and interview a player. And that was just incredible, you know, opportunities that

20:18

what journalist in the Bay Area has a chance to do that every day and know back in the clubhouse

20:24

and you know, get involved. And so, and then a student that just recently discovered photography as an interest, who

20:32

before thought he might like to maybe work in the classroom with, with fellow students

20:37

and things as a staff member, maybe a goal for him. And then he got involved with photography in one

20:42

of the classes with an amazing teacher and now he wants to be a photographer. So guess what? He's a photographer.

20:48

He's the photographer for the, the times that the other student is the editor for.

20:54

And they are the team that are building this paper up and now he's finding this area totally out of the box

21:01

and non-traditional. And he's going other places and doing photography for them

21:06

because he's learning how to take some great pictures and he's doing it just, you know, he loves what he does and if he can, you know,

21:14

build into doing this vocationally in some way, it would just be a dream come true. And so not ever having explored that,

21:21

he didn't even know he had that interest. And now he's the photographer, the the photographic journalist for our, for our paper

21:29

that we're producing for our college. So just really neat stories like that all the time all around.

21:35

And those that really had an anxiety going back to school because they had felt like with maybe learning disabilities

21:42

or whatever the issues were, some of them have had real extreme bullying in their past and they're just not sure it's a safe space.

21:49

So we also have an arts behavioral model that is, you know, making sure that students are respecting each other

21:55

and coming in with, you know, positive attitudes of, of supporting each other and that they can trust each other in that space.

22:02

And the old theater term of we're going to leave it at the door, we employed that we're going to be glad we're gonna leave it at the door.

22:09

And learning that is a skill. That's a, I mean that takes a while sometimes for students to be able to understand the concept

22:15

of leaving it at the door, but an important one path. And then in the interpersonal relationships,

22:21

not just at the college, but with feathers outside of it, you know, the more they're able to employ things like attitude

22:27

and respect and you know, mutuality in their relationships in their classes, then they will know how to apply that outside of class

Behavioral & social model

22:35

and be encouraged to do that. And we treat the class space as a professional environment and how you come into the space

22:41

and how you interact with others in the space, which can be very new to our students. And so that's regardless of if they're there for one class

22:49

or 10 years, that's always gonna be a part of their learning process of those professional skills.

22:55

And then we have a school of business now too for them to pursue, you know, other kinds of professional skills,

23:02

but you know, those social, cognitive, developmental skills that we work on within this curriculum

23:07

that really was shaped and, you know, put into a, a structure that you could share

23:14

and train, you know, with others that is the foundation of everything.

23:19

Not how high do you kick or how well do you write a sentence or you know, how you can, you do a,

23:25

a lab experiment on your own to prove a hypothesis. It's, you know, it's just

23:30

what is your personal best today in your areas of learning choice and what does it mean for you to move forward

23:38

to your next steps and to continue to do that throughout your life. - You've made a pivotal change for these students.

23:48

You've created a place for them to feel comfortable. You've created a place for them to feel powerful

23:53

and you've created a place in them to where imposter syndrome is something of the past.

23:59

And I could, I could only imagine how that had to be transformative for them, their future

24:06

and the next generations coming behind them. So for them, and I'm sure if I were to meet any of them,

24:13

especially the two that you had mentioned, one, a journalist, one a photographer, and doing this with the times

24:19

and also setting up the brand new paper for the college, congratulations and an awesome thank you.

24:26

And your faith, your, your optimism is clear.

24:32

Like it is part of the vision and it is part of the value of the college. And you could see it moving into your students as well

24:38

as they move forward in their life and in their careers. And that in itself is absolutely incredible.

24:45

So thank you for that. Thank you for driving through and pushing past, 'cause I imagine it couldn't have been all unicorns and glitter, there had

24:51

to have been within this 15 years a little bit. There had to have been some rub.

24:57

Was there, was there, was there any, what what challenges did you deal with within this 15 years getting to this point?

Biggest challenge: gaining support

25:04

- The biggest challenge is when people just aren't getting behind you. When you know that what you have can, can con when you know

25:11

that what you have is viable and it's, and and you just are trying to find the support

25:18

and no matter how much you talk about it, no matter how much how you put it out there, it's just not like

25:25

taking root, you know, and you know that it needs to, and it should and it can, and it's not, it's not hard to do.

25:32

This is just us all getting together to do it. You know, we're training our teachers, right? You could have taught somewhere else

25:38

for 20 years in special ed. We still are gonna need to train you in our methods. It may not be a good fit.

25:44

You know, it's like just teaching people what it's about and well, usually it is,

25:49

but you know, it's definitely coming in and learning how we teach in the classroom, which is very different. But that's the main thing is just getting people to get

25:57

behind what you're doing and what the students are doing. That's been the big challenge. And of course, as you're around longer

26:04

and longer in the community, people start to get it more and more understand it. You have people spreading the word for you,

26:10

but then they're talking to people that have never seen it. And it's really, it really requires people, meeting the students, seeing what we do

26:17

to really understand it, seeing it on that campus and understanding what kind of a, of a,

26:23

of a inclusive partnership that can be and how that brings these individuals in our communities

26:29

that haven't had access. How it brings them access and how it is such a social justice issue.

26:35

That, and funding, of course, always funding, but it comes, it's the right thing at the right time.

26:43

By no fault of our own. I mean, we were just, you know, told by everybody else it was the right thing at the right time.

26:48

And we jumped in and we always say, Dee and I, we call each other we're Sisters of the Swell,

26:54

which is this, this watercolor that she got. We have two women on surfboards, you know,

27:00

waiting for the wave. 'cause we always talked about, we didn't even know that we were kind of catching one at the time that we were,

27:07

that this really was so, such a big hole in our educational system.

27:13

And then you've gotta, it's exhausting to ride it, get up on it and try to ride it to shore. Then you get there and you feel like, oh, okay, we hit

27:20

that milestone and then, you know, you're soaking wet and you're tired and you're looking around and you see all of these other people with their surfboards

27:27

that were out there at the same time, you didn't even know were there. And then you're just saying, Hey, okay, let's, let's climb this hill together

27:33

and see if we can get into the valley over there, you know, and where you, and so, and you don't even know what's there,

27:38

but you know, you gotta go to something else. So you're all just climbing the hill together

27:44

and getting strength in each other. We call our supporters mountain movers. They really, truly are.

27:49

But you're climbing that mountain or trying to move that mountain, you know, and then you get to the other side and now you know, there's, there's, you know, somewhat

27:57

of a bounty over there to be able to try to, you know, be part of, but you know, is it gonna go, are,

Climbing the mountain together

28:05

are you gonna be at the table? Is someone else gonna be invited to the table? So now you're all over there looking for tables to be able

28:11

to sit at, you know, and we're talking about our students really, you know, being able to get them a seat at the table in these places.

28:18

And so just, you know, all the, all the work that's required to really just have that hope and optimism

28:25

and what you're doing founded in the fact that you know, that you've, you know, gotten where you are, that you have what you have underneath you,

28:31

but primarily you have that meta support, all those people that are climbing that mountain with you

28:37

and that together you can come up with the information and the resources required to stand on, to get

28:43

to each new level. Like when mountain climbers put in their hook, and I'm not a mountain climber, I'm gonna call it a hook

28:49

and a rope, you know how they have to do that, you know, and if you have multiple yeah. And somebody at the top, you know, helping you out

28:56

and you know, you have to learn to do it before then you can even really get on, get up there at all to any degree, which we had to learn, kind

29:03

of build our processes. So all those things were challenges, but it really is just primarily being able to continue

29:12

to communicate until you can just build that group around you that understands, gets it,

29:18

and wants to go there with you in anything that you do. - Absolutely. Dr. Pamela, you were phenomenal.

29:24

And the, the things that you've accomplished with your partner and, and simply your, your goals

29:30

and aspirations moving forward, wanting to be able to touch and serve more so that they can feel more successful and empowered.

29:39

It's admirable. And so we are proud that you are a university °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ alum.

29:45

We are so, so grateful that you joined us today in sharing your story. I know that the listeners

29:51

and the viewers are definitely going to be able to get something from this that brings us to the end

Closing remarks

29:57

of this episode of Degrees of Success. I'm your host, Frida Richards.

30:02

Don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe and remember that your next chapter just

30:07

might be your best one yet. See you soon.

Chapters in this video

  • Early Life in the Philippines and Moving Around
  • Shared Military Family Experiences
  • Returning to School and Night Driving Job
  • Choosing IT and Career Motivation
  • Influence of Family and Grandparents
  • Pursuing a Master's and Working at the University
  • Career Shift Post-MBA
  • Rebuilding Schools After Hurricane Katrina
  • Facing Hurricane Gustav and Staying Behind
  • Reflection on Pandemic Blessings

About UOPX alumnus Rich Valerga

Portrait of Rich Valerga

Alumnus Rich Valerga is the chief financial and operating officer for Acero Schools of Chicago where he works to improve district-wide operational excellence in information technology, data privacy, finance, compliance, real estate management and food services. Valerga received the 2020 Chicago-ISACA’s Excellence Award and was named a 2012 Center for Digital Education Top 50 Education Innovator. He is an IT contributor to Tech and Learning Magazine. 

Podcast host Freda Richards and guest Rich Valerga pictured during the taping of the podcast

About the Degrees of Successâ„¢ Podcast

The Degrees of Success podcast by °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ brings you inspiring stories of UOPX alumni who have transformed their careers through education. Each episode highlights personal journeys of overcoming obstacles, achieving professional milestones and using education to unlock new opportunities. Whether you’re looking for motivation, career advice or guidance on how education can propel you forward, these alumni stories offer invaluable insights to help you succeed.

Listen to the Degrees of Successâ„¢ Podcast