Submitted
2020 Elevate Prize

A Path to Higher Education for Refugees

Team Leader
Chrystina Russell
About You and Your Work
Your bio:

Dr. Chrystina Russell spearheads innovative initiatives to bring university education and employment pathways to underserved communities around the world. She currently leads Southern New Hampshire University’s Global Education Movement (SNHU GEM), a competency-based bachelor’s degree and career training initiative for refugees. Prior to SNHU, she was the Chief Academic Officer at Kepler, the first blended learning university program in Rwanda. Chrystina served as the founding principal of Global Tech Prep, a high-performing public school focused on helping low-income students succeed through technology, and as faculty at the City College of New York. Chrystina began her career as a bilingual special education teacher in New York City. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Michigan with a BA in Social Organization & Minority Communities, has an MA in Bilingual Special Education, and holds a Ph.D. in Urban Education Policy from the CUNY Graduate Center.

Project name:
A Path to Higher Education for Refugees
One-line project summary:
GEM helps refugees thrive by providing a free accredited bachelor’s degree program connected to meaningful, well-compensated careers.
Present your project.

Only 3% of refugees (ages 18-25) are enrolled in some form of higher education. For women and other marginalized groups, the figure is even lower. With the average duration of displacement more than 25 years, entire generations are forced to spend their lives in refugee camps and urban slums with few opportunities for advancement, sowing potent seeds of despair and discord. 

GEM provides refugees with tools to become agents of change. It is a community-rooted, evidence-based solution that helps refugees develop skills, earn accredited bachelors’ degrees and foster connections to meaningful and well-compensated careers in business, humanitarian aid and the global digital economy.

Over the next five years, we plan to double our impact and expand operations into five new countries across Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia and the Americas.

Submit a video.
What specific problem are you solving?

Nearly 80 million persons are displaced throughout the world. Every day refugees and other displaced persons demonstrate incredible perseverance, determination and resourcefulness to transform their own lives. Yet, the magnitude and dynamic nature of this displacement ensures that no one-size-fits-all approach can sufficiently address it. Thousands of solutions aimed at root causes and consequences of displacement are needed. But where will those solutions come from and who will lead the resulting efforts? We have found that interventions that ignore the voices of refugees, and those in the communities where refugees reside, are difficult to implement, frequently shortsighted and often marginalize the very refugee and host communities they intend to help.   

Our solution focuses on the importance of developing the innate skills and capacities of refugees and providing them with credentials and connections needed for success in the 21st century. Research indicates that even in refugee settings, higher education can be a gateway to upward social and economic mobility with lasting effects that extend beyond the individual. However, only 3% of college age refugees are enrolled in college, and very few refugees are ever given the opportunity to attend one in their communities for free.

What is your project?

The Global Education Movement (GEM) provides an accredited bachelor’s degree program to refugees and those affected by displacement for free. We created the program to help refugees on their transformative journey through a college education.We offer it where refugees live -- in urban and rural settings throughout the world and at no cost to the learners. In partnership with local organizations and institutions on the ground, our model blends online and in-person academic instruction, internship and on-the-job training, individualized coaching, psychosocial support, and career counseling for each student. Learners gain critical skills as they work toward earning a bachelor’s degree at Southern New Hampshire University, an accredited nonprofit university that houses GEM. The program has been validated by external, independent evaluations that demonstrate GEM graduates have higher academic performance, levels of employment and earnings than comparison students from other universities.To date, over 800 students have graduated from the AA program, 400 from the BA program and 1,200 are currently enrolled. With graduates poised to become leaders in business, health and the humanitarian field, GEM graduates are not only helping themselves and their families, but they are leading and inspiring others.

Who does your project serve, and in what ways is the project impacting their lives?

We began in 2013 with a focus on vulnerable Rwandan learners without access to higher education. In 2015, we piloted a program in the remote refugee camp of Kiziba on the Rwandan/Congolese border. Showing early promise, we expanded to additional urban areas and refugee camps in South Africa, Kenya, Malawi, and Lebanon. GEM now serves over 1,200 students and graduates across nine sites in five countries. By helping to unlock the innate skills and passions of refugees, we are helping graduates to become agents of change on the local, national and international stage. Already, GEM graduates are ascending to leadership positions in business, healthcare, education and humanitarian development.

Core to ensuring a 95% graduation rate within four years of enrollment and an employment rate of 88% within six months of graduation has been the deep involvement of refugees and host community members in our development. Today, more than 50% of GEM’s core team are GEM graduates, providing invaluable input in all facets of our work. We are also guided by an advisory board of leaders from each of the countries where we operate and only work with program partners who are community-rooted and led.

Which dimension of The Elevate Prize does your project most closely address?
  • Elevating opportunities for all people, especially those who are traditionally left behind
Explain how your project relates to The Elevate Prize and your selected dimension.

Our project is people-oriented and people-powered. Our theory of change holds that by helping refugees build upon their innate skills they can earn valuable and necessary credentials for personal and professional growth. By giving people access to opportunities, new leaders will emerge who are capable of taking on the difficult causes and consequences of human displacement - whether that is in business, healthcare, education, development, the environment or another field. Refugee by refugee. Community by community. Country by country—we know that empowering the underserved to grow their strengths will create a more stable, safe and prosperous world for us all.

How did you come up with your project?

My journey to this project began years ago as a bilingual special education teacher in New York where I saw how holistic student support could fuel academic and personal success. In 2009, I helped found an innovative technology-focused middle school, Global Tech Prep, serving as its first principal. The idea of the school was to help bridge the digital divide by giving underserved students in Harlem access to technology. Yet more was needed to raise student proficiency and success than just technology. We needed to build an entire school community that put students at its center. Combining thoughtful pedagogy with new ways for students to harness and use technology inside and outside of the classroom, standardized test scores soared, as did opportunities for students. By 2013, I had worked in underserved neighborhoods domestically for more than a decade and wanted to test what I was learning in a completely new setting. I had that opportunity when I helped to start a new university program (Kepler) in Kigali, Rwanda as its chief academic officer. In partnership with SNHU, we developed what is now the Global Education Movement by combining a competency-based, online degree program with in-person academic coaching and career support. 

Why are you passionate about your project?

One of the places I draw my passion for this work is from my own experience as a university student, which fundamentally changed my own life’s trajectory. I entered school focused on becoming an attorney, taking pre-law classes, working at a law office and studying hard for the LSAT. My college thesis advisor, Marvin Krislov, a prominent law professor who has since served as president of Oberlin College and more recently Pace University, challenged my thinking. He convinced me to apply for the NYC teaching fellows instead, reminding me that I could always go to law school after the fellowship concluded. I followed his advice and became a bilingual special education teacher in the Bronx and on to the path I’m currently on now. I am reminded of the power of higher education every day as I meet with students and build lasting relationships with future leaders in countries around the world. For instance, one GEM graduate, Tujiza, who graduated with a BA from our first cohort of students in Rwanda is now at SNHU completing her Ph.D. in international business and working on the GEM team. It is these stories that inspire and motivate me.

Why are you well-positioned to deliver this project?

I come into social entrepreneurship -- leading and growing innovative, high impact solutions to problems -- not as a business person, but as an educator. I have seen first-hand how systemic barriers in education hold students back. In each experience and setting, I have worked collaboratively with communities to develop learner-centered approaches that empower student success. This has greatly informed my approach to building GEM and to leadership more broadly. By elevating the perspectives of students alongside parents and teachers, we create avenues for students to become part of the solution. In addition, I have also been blessed with the ability to find great people to help achieve our goals. This applies not only to our own team but to that of the programs we partner within in each country, which are critical to our ability to deliver high-caliber, personalized programming to every GEM student. Finally, through time and experimentation, we have been able to fine tune how to effectively leverage technology to enhance student success. In our programs, students become makers and producers, not just consumers of technologically-delivered interventions. 

All of these factors have been significant contributors to the success we’ve had in growing GEM from just 50 students in Rwanda in 2013 to over 1,200 students in five countries today,  95% of whom are are finishing their bachelor’s degree in four years (compared to 58% of students in the United States who finish in SIX years).

Provide an example of your ability to overcome adversity.

I was hired in 2013 as Chief Academic Officer at Kepler, the same year the university program started operations. Upon arriving in Rwanda to start my new job, I learned there was no budget, no internet, and no housing for staff or students at the school. We had just four weeks before the first students arrived. In the absence of executive leadership, I contacted the head of Kepler’s board of directors to backward map a solution. If we pushed the start of the program off a year, our inaugural class of students would be too late to enroll in a different university. It would also damage our reputation. We pressed ahead with the board naming me de facto CEO. The only way to open the school in such a short time, in a country that I had never lived, meant trusting my team. By raising up the voices that knew the country context and student population best, I allowed others to lead. In the end, we had to delay the school opening by two weeks. The greatest victory, however, was the end of school assessment. No students reported knowing there was any kind of leadership challenge within the organization.

Describe a past experience that demonstrates your leadership ability.

I strongly believe in the empowerment of women. Yet, throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, there are significant problems with the participation of women in education and often worse in refugee communities. This was no exception in Kiziba, Rwanda, one of our first efforts to implement our project in a refugee camp setting. Less than 20% of our inaugural class were women. We knew we needed to address this issue. The key issue was how to do it in a culturally sensitive way. We first worked with a parental advisory group and other camp residents. The goal was to work with the community, without forcing it on them. We accomplished this by letting female students lead. Our female students created an outreach program focused on helping prospective students prepare for the university admissions exam, which had been a key barrier to higher enrollment. By the second cohort of students in Kiziba refugee camp campus, there was an equal number of men and women across the two cohorts. For me, this story exemplifies my leadership philosophy, which is all about lifting up others, understanding and accepting complexity and trying to navigate challenges by working collaboratively.

How long have you been working on your project?
I have been working on this via GEM for 7 years
Where are you headquartered?
Manchester, NH, USA
What type of organization is your project?
  • Other, including part of a larger organization (please explain below)
If you selected Other, please explain here.

GEM is an initiative of Southern New Hampshire University, one of the fastest growing nonprofit universities in the country with over 135,000 online students and a vast and a growing alumni network. SNHU has been named the most innovative University in the north by U.S. News and World Report for the past five years. 

More About Your Work
Your Business Model & Funding
The Prize
Solution Team:
Chrystina Russell
Chrystina Russell