THE CHANCELLOR'S MEDALLION
IU Southeast’s Chancellor’s Medallion Dinner Celebrates Scholars and Community
Approximately 375 people attended the 2023 IU Southeast Chancellor’s Medallion Dinner, which brought in more than $100,500 from donations, ticket sales, sponsorships, and a silent auction.
Interim Chancellor Kelly A. Ryan delivered the keynote address at the dinner, held Saturday, April 8, at Caesars Southern Indiana. In her remarks, Ryan said the impact of scholarship changes lives. “Each student comes to us with their own set of circumstances and some of those are quite challenging. But they leave us with hope and certainty for a better and brighter future.”
Ryan also spoke of recent campus achievements including the development of the IU Southeast 2030 strategic plan focusing on student success, impactful research, and service to the state and region. Notable achievements included the expansion of hands-on learning opportunities for every undergraduate major to better prepare students for future careers, partnerships with the Novaparke Innovation and Technology Campus in Floyd County, and a 50 percent increase in student involvement in the annual student research and creativity conference.
Incoming Chancellor, Debbie Ford, was formally introduced to the supportive crowd and expressed her gratitude to the donors present as well as her enthusiasm to continue to expand on the good works of IU Southeast as she begins her duties on July 1.
This year’s Chancellor’s Medallion recognized community award winners, Sally Newkirk, retired director of the Carnegie Center for Art & History, and Laura McGuirk, retired educator and post-secondary counselor from New Albany High School.
In addition to the community award winners, the dinner recognized eight Chancellor’s Medallion scholarship recipients for their academic achievement and leadership potential. The scholarship recipients included Reece Grace of Louisville, KY; Keziah Jones of Olathe, KS; Courtney Kessinger of Greenville, IN; Hannah Fisher of Brownstown, IN; Sierra French of New Albany, IN; Jack Harrison of New Albany, IN; Ashton Minton of Paoli, IN; and Cheri Receveur of New Albany, IN.
Visit southeast.iu.edu/medallion to find out when the next Chancellor’s Medallion Dinner will be held. Proceeds from the Chancellor’s Medallion Dinner benefit the Chancellor’s Medallion Scholarship program. The scholarship of up to $6,000 is awarded to four juniors and four seniors and is based on outstanding academic achievement and leadership potential of the student recipients.
For ticket information and sponsorship opportunities, contact the IU Southeast Office of Development at 812-941-2464.
Sally Newkirk
Sally Newkirk retired from the Carnegie Center for Art & History after serving as the Museum Director for 30 years. During that time, the museum underwent many changes, the most impactful of which was becoming a department of the Floyd County Library. With the support of the Library Board, the Carnegie Center, Inc. Board and community support, the museum became established in the New Albany community and beyond. The Carnegie Center received national recognition when its exhibition titled, Ordinary People, Extraordinary Courage: Men and Women of the Underground Railroad received a Bronze award of excellence from the American Association of Museums and acceptance in the National Parks Service “Network to Freedom” program.
Newkirk was a frequent presenter at national and regional museum conferences. She and author Pamela Peters were invited to speak at the Royal Armories Museum in Leeds, England where the Ordinary People, Extraordinary People exhibit was on display for 12 weeks. Newkirk has received several awards, including the Indiana Council for History’s Social Studies Citizen Award in 1996, the first Anna Kathryn Hickerson Award in 2007, and BPW Woman of Achievement award and inclusion in the Floyd Central High School Hall of Fame in 2012.
Her work in the community includes service on the IU Southeast Board of Advisors, YMCA Board, Clark-Floyd Tourism Board, Arts and Cultural Attractions Board, the Association of Indiana Museums Board and more. She is a member of the New Albany Rotary Club and was recently sworn in as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA).
Sally and her husband, Michael, a retired high school English teacher, have three children and thirteen grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Laura McGuirk
For Laura McGuirk, student scholarships such as the Chancellor’s Medallion have been near and dear to her heart for most of her career. A lifelong educator and post-secondary counselor retired from New Albany High School, McGuirk went above and beyond to assure her students had every opportunity to attend college and to receive every scholarship or financial aid assistance that was available to them.
A graduate of New Albany High School herself, McGuirk has close ties to IU Southeast, receiving her Bachelor of Arts in Sociology in 1979, Master of Arts in Counseling in 1986 and school counselor certification in 1997. She also taught as an adjunct professor at the IU Southeast School of Education from 1986-1994. During her 22 years at New Albany High School, McGuirk’s students earned more than $145 million in scholarships, many of those scholarships due to her diligence in making sure every application was filled out correctly and personally writing letters of recommendation for her seniors. She also supervised countless aspiring school counselors from IU Southeast School of Education as a practicum supervisor.
McGuirk was twice awarded the New Albany High School’s Teacher of the Year award. In 2016 she was one of 30 high school counselors selected nationally to attend the NYSACAC Subway Tour of New York City colleges and universities. Other accolades include the 2005 IU Southeast School of Education Outstanding Supervisor in Counseling award, 2015 College Board College Scholarship Service Award, and the 2019-20 IU Southeast School of Education Excellence in School Counseling Award. Earlier this year, McGuirk was also inducted into the New Albany High School Hall of Fame.
After earning her undergraduate degree from IU Southeast, McGuirk worked for Kentuckiana Metroversity as a tutor coordinator. She later served as assistant director of admissions at IU Southeast where she received the 1991 IU Southeast Distinguished Service Award for Administrative / Professional Staff. Prior to joining the staff at New Albany High School, McGuirk worked at Lanesville Jr./Sr. High School and was a participant of the 1994 class of Leadership Southern Indiana.
McGuirk has two children, Adam and Colleen and is the proud grandmother of Cruz McGuirk.