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Dr. Michelle Magalong Named UMD's First Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow

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Harvey WaldenCommunity Member
2 days ago
Dr. Michelle Magalong Named UMD's First Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow

Dr. Michelle Magalong, HISP Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow

Dr. Michelle Magalong, HISP Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow ksuddith Tue, 06/02/2026 - 12:48 Historic PreservationSchool of Architecture, Planning & PreservationDr. Michelle Magalong Named School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation's First Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow Brings experience with underserved communities to Maryland’s Built Environment School The Historic Preservation Program of the School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Maryland’s Built Environment School, is excited to welcome Dr. Michelle Magalong as its first President’s Postdoctoral Fellow this summer. She brings to this role her extensive professional and research experience in community development, historic preservation and public health in underserved communities. The University of Maryland President's Postdoctoral Fellowship Program offers this highly competitive opportunity to scholars whose research, teaching and service will contribute to diversity, inclusion and equal opportunity in higher education and within the university.Magalong’s career has been dedicated to telling the stories of historically marginalized groups through historic preservation. Her dissertation focused on the process and development of the National Park Service Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Initiative and Theme Study, part of the Park Service’s recent effort to identify, acknowledge and preserve more inclusive and diverse historic sites. Magalong currently serves as the Executive Director of Asian and Pacific Islander Americans in Historic Preservation (APIAHiP), a national volunteer-run, nonprofit organization.“We are very lucky to have Michelle on board as a President’s Postdoctoral Fellow. Her work to improve the visibility of underrepresented groups in historical preservation spaces is incredibly important. We look forward to working with her and learning from her,” says Dr. Don Linebaugh, Dean ad interim.During Magalong’s two-year appointment at UMD, she will expand upon her dissertation work to explore the importance and impact of the National Park Service Heritage Initiatives that include the American Latino Theme Study, LGBTQ Theme Study and special resources studies on women, the Civil Rights movement and African American Heritage Initiative. Her research—Telling All American Stories: A Movement of Diversity, Inclusion, and Relevancy in Historic Preservation—has the ultimate goals of increasing the number of nominations and listings on the National Register of Historic Places and as National Historic Landmarks and raising the degree of scholarship on these kinds of historic preservation efforts. Currently, less than 10 percent of national landmarks are associated with African Americans, Asian Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, Native Hawaiians, Pacific Islanders, women and LGBTQ individuals.“Michelle’s work is vital to the mission of historic preservation,” says Dr. Dennis Pogue, Interim Director of Maryland’s Historic Preservation Program. “We are so happy that she chose to bring her knowledge and expertise to the University of Maryland. I think she's going to really make an impact.”Magalong joins UMD from the University of California, Riverside, where she previously served as Associate Director of the Center for Social Innovation at the School of Public Policy. She holds a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in urban planning from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).“I am incredibly honored to be a part of the School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at UMD. With part of the school’s mission in promoting social justice and cultural value in the built environment, I look forward to working with and learning from the faculty and students on how we can advance the fields of historic preservation, urban planning and public policy to be more reflective and relevant to telling all our stories through the power of place,” says Magalong.In addition to her position at APIAHiP, Magalong has served on advisory boards for the National Park Service, the State of California and the City of Los Angeles on their respective theme studies and context statements on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. She also currently serves California Humanities Board of Directors. She was also recognized in 2018 as one of the “40 Under 40: People Saving Places” by National Trust for Historic Preservation.Written by Dan NovakMon, 05/20/2019 - 12:00

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Bethany Missionary Baptist Church: A Mind Shift

15 hours ago

"There are moments in life when it feels like progress has completely stopped. You pray, believe, work, and try again, yet somehow you still feel stuck between where you are and where you believe God is calling you to be. Many believers silently wrestle with questions like: • Why do I still feel stagnant? • Why does life seem harder than expected? • Why does everyone else appear to be moving ahead? • Why do I know God has more for me, but I still feel limited? In this powerful continuation of the Progress, Process & Possibility series, the message challenged believers to recognize that true transformation does not begin externally—it begins internally. Before God changes your circumstances, He often changes your thinking. A mind shift is necessary for progress. Matthew 17:20 and the Power of Faith The foundation scripture for this message comes from Matthew 17:20: “If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed… nothing shall be impossible unto you.” Jesus was teaching His disciples that even small faith becomes powerful when it is active, obedient, and connected to God’s will. Faith is not simply positive thinking. Faith is movement. Faith is cooperation with God. Faith is trusting God enough to continue moving forward even when the outcome is not fully visible yet. That is why the statement repeated at the end of the message is so powerful: “Faith acts like a thing is so even when it’s not so that it might be so.” Faith moves before certainty arrives. Faith obeys before conditions become comfortable. Faith believes God’s promises before physical evidence appears. Why a Mind Shift Matters Many believers genuinely love God but still struggle mentally, emotionally, and spiritually because their thinking has not yet aligned with God’s truth. The Bible says: “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” That means your thoughts eventually shape: • Your expectations • Your decisions • Your confidence • Your relationships • Your direction in life If someone constantly believes: • “Nothing ever works out for me” • “I’ll never get ahead” • “People like me never succeed” • “This is just how life is” then eventually those thoughts begin creating the boundaries of their life. The message reminded us that many people are living beneath their purpose because their thinking has remained trapped in old environments, painful experiences, fear, disappointment, or family cycles. But God never intended for His people to remain mentally stuck. Your Past Does Not Cancel Your Purpose One of the strongest moments in the sermon was the reminder that God already has a future prepared for His people. Your future is not random. Your purpose is not accidental. Your life is not forgotten. The message declared: “Your future is only a secret because you haven’t seen yourself in God’s Word yet.” Many people have experienced painful beginnings: • Difficult childhoods • Financial hardship • Broken relationships • Family dysfunction • Disappointment after disappointment Sometimes life itself teaches people to expect less. If you grow up surrounded by struggle, limitation can begin feeling normal. You can become so familiar with survival that abundance feels unrealistic. But God’s purpose is greater than your environment. No matter what has happened: • God still has a plan • God still has purpose • God still has promises • God still has possibility for your life Romans 8:28 reminds believers that all things work together for good to those who love God and are called according to His purpose. Even the painful parts of your story can become part of God’s process. Progress Requires Movement One of the clearest truths in the message was this: “There will be no progress without movement.” Many people confuse preparation with progress. Some people have spent years: • Getting ready to start the business • Getting ready to obey God • Getting ready to heal • Getting ready to apply for the opportunity • Getting ready to pursue purpose But intention alone is not movement. At some point faith must become action. The sermon challenged believers not to spend another decade preparing for a life God has already called them to step into. Progress does not always look dramatic. Sometimes progress looks slow. Sometimes progress looks messy. Sometimes progress feels exhausting. Sometimes you walk. Sometimes you run. Sometimes you crawl. But as long as you keep moving forward, you are still progressing. One of the most encouraging statements in the message was: “Don’t you dare stop moving.” Even small movement matters. Don’t Settle for the Infancy of Your Purpose The message also confronted the danger of settling too early. Many people stop growing after achieving one milestone. They reach one level of success and unconsciously decide that is all life will ever be. Some settle after: • Graduating school • Receiving a promotion • Starting a business • Getting married • Achieving one goal But God never intended for your first accomplishment to become your final destination. The sermon asked difficult but necessary questions: • Have you settled for the infancy of your purpose? • Did comfort become your ceiling? • Did disappointment stop your growth? • Did fear convince you to stop dreaming? Growth requires stretching. Purpose requires perseverance. Progress requires continued obedience. There is more in you than what you have experienced so far. Obedience Is Active Participation With God One of the most refreshing parts of the sermon was the way obedience was reframed. The message described obedience as: “Active participation with God.” Many people hear the word obedience and immediately think about restriction, pressure, or obligation. But the sermon explained that obedience is actually cooperation with God’s design for your life. Transformation requires participation. God does not force growth on people who refuse to walk with Him. Transformation happens when believers: • Hear God’s Word • Believe God’s Word • Apply God’s Word • Walk consistently with God’s Spirit It is not enough to know scripture intellectually while resisting it practically. Faith must eventually become lifestyle. God’s Way Often Starts Narrow The sermon contrasted two paths: • The wide way • God’s way The wide way is attractive because it is crowded. Everybody seems to be doing it. It feels easier, more comfortable, and easier to justify. But the Bible says the wide way eventually leads to destruction. God’s way often starts narrow. Why? Because God has to remove things that cannot go where He is taking you. During the process, God begins chipping away: • Pride • Fear • Bitterness • Toxic habits • Wrong thinking • Unhealthy patterns Transformation can feel uncomfortable, but eventually that narrow place opens into freedom, blessing, and possibility. Every God Commandment Is Connected to Blessing One of the deepest revelations in the sermon came from Deuteronomy 28. Many believers view commandments as restrictions. But the message explained that every commandment is actually connected to: • God’s wisdom • God’s favor • God’s protection • God’s purpose • God’s blessing The sermon repeatedly emphasized: “God’s commandments are opportunities.” Obedience positions believers for the life God designed. Deuteronomy 28 reveals that blessing follows alignment with God’s Word. The message highlighted the phrase: “It shall come to pass.” In other words: “It has to happen.” When believers cooperate with God: • Favor follows • Opportunity follows • Growth follows • Blessing follows The blessing knows where to find those who remain aligned with God’s purpose. God Wants to Bless Every Area of Your Life The message made it clear that God’s desire is not limited to spiritual growth alone. Deuteronomy 28 reveals God’s desire to bless: • Your family • Your children • Your work • Your business • Your finances • Your future • Your resources • Your daily life God’s blessing is not confined to Sunday morning worship experiences. He desires for His people to experience His hand in every area of life. The sermon even challenged believers to stop settling for survival living. God did not create His people merely to barely get by. He created them to manage resources well, walk in wisdom, and become a blessing to others. A Mind Shift Changes Everything At its core, this message was a call to transformation. Not superficial change. Not temporary motivation. Not emotional hype. Real transformation begins when believers allow God to change the way they think. A changed mind produces: • Different expectations • Different decisions • Different habits • Different conversations • Different outcomes The process may take time, but progress becomes possible when your thinking aligns with God’s promises. No matter what season you are in right now, do not stop moving forward. God still has purpose for your life. God still has opportunities ahead of you. God still has promises attached to your future. And according to His Word: “Nothing shall be impossible unto you.”"

Hamilton-Davis Funeral Home: A Legacy of Compassionate Service

15 hours ago

"Since 2021, Hamilton-Davis Funeral Home has stood as a trusted pillar within our community. During life's most difficult moments, we provide steady guidance, heartfelt compassion, and professional care. We recognize that the loss of a loved one is deeply personal, and we are honored to support families as they reflect on treasured memories and say their final goodbyes."

Prescott Farmers Bank & Trust Open House & Ribbon Cutting

2 days ago

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Training on Teams (DCFS)

2 days ago

"On Teams (DCFS only), training room 6 1st Floor DPW"

Bethany Missionary Baptist Church: FAQs on A Mind Shift

2 days ago

"Frequently Asked Questions: Mind Shift for Progress, Process & Possibility 1. What does it mean to have a “mind shift” spiritually? A spiritual mind shift happens when your thinking begins to align with God’s Word instead of your fears, past experiences, limitations, or emotions. Many people want God to change their circumstances while continuing to think in ways that keep them trapped. Scripture teaches that transformation begins internally before it shows up externally. When your thinking changes, your expectations, decisions, and actions begin to change too. The sermon emphasized that progress starts with renewing the mind. God wants believers to stop seeing themselves through the lens of failure and begin seeing themselves through the lens of purpose, possibility, and promise. 2. Why is mindset so important in spiritual growth? Your mindset influences every part of your life. The way you think affects: • Your decisions • Your confidence • Your faith • Your relationships • Your willingness to obey God The Bible says, “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” That means your thought life eventually shapes your reality. If someone constantly believes they are stuck, defeated, or incapable, they will often live beneath their God-given potential. A kingdom mindset allows you to believe that God can still work in your life even after setbacks, failures, disappointments, or delays. 3. What does the sermon mean by “progress requires movement”? The message challenged believers not to confuse intention with action. Many people spend years talking about what they are going to do without ever taking steps toward it. Progress requires movement. That movement may not always look dramatic or fast, but forward movement matters. Sometimes progress looks like: • Applying for the opportunity • Starting over after failure • Taking one step of obedience • Trusting God through uncertainty • Continuing even when life feels difficult The sermon reminded us that even crawling forward is still progress. 4. How can I know if I’ve settled for less than God’s best? One sign of settling is when you stop growing, stretching, or believing for more because comfort, fear, disappointment, or exhaustion has convinced you to stop. The sermon asked difficult but important questions: • Did comfort become your ceiling? • Did fear stop your growth? • Did disappointment make you stop dreaming? • Did one accomplishment become your final destination? Sometimes people settle emotionally, spiritually, financially, or professionally because they no longer believe greater is possible. But God never intended for believers to stop progressing. 5. What does “active participation with God” mean? The sermon described obedience as active participation with God. That means transformation is not passive. God does not force growth on people who refuse to cooperate with Him. Active participation includes: • Hearing God’s Word • Applying His principles • Walking by faith • Making godly decisions • Trusting God consistently • Staying connected to His process Obedience is not about earning God’s love. It is about positioning yourself to walk in the life He designed for you. 6. Why do believers still struggle even after getting saved? One of the most honest parts of the sermon addressed the frustration many believers feel when they love God but still experience hardship, delay, or disappointment. Salvation changes your spiritual position immediately, but transformation is still a process. Many believers are saved spiritually while still healing mentally, emotionally, and practically. God often works progressively: • Renewing your mind • Developing your character • Strengthening your faith • Teaching discipline • Building spiritual maturity The sermon reminded us that God’s process is designed to prepare us for the future He already planned. 7. What does it mean that God has already written my future? The sermon emphasized that your future is not random or accidental. God already has purpose, promise, and destiny attached to your life. Jeremiah 29:11 reminds us that God’s plans are filled with hope and an expected end. Even when life feels uncertain, God is not confused about your future. This means: • Your past does not disqualify you • Your setbacks are not final • Your mistakes are not greater than God’s grace • Your purpose still exists despite delays God’s Word reveals who you can become when you walk with Him. 8. What does Deuteronomy 28 teach about blessing? Deuteronomy 28 reveals how God’s blessings are connected to hearing and obeying His Word. The sermon highlighted that the blessings described in this chapter are not random—they are connected to alignment with God. The passage shows God’s desire to bless: • Your family • Your work • Your finances • Your business • Your daily life • Your future generations One of the strongest statements from the message was: “The blessing knows where to find you.” When believers walk in obedience and alignment with God, blessing becomes connected to their journey. 9. Are God’s commandments restrictions or opportunities? The sermon completely reframed the way many people think about commandments. Instead of viewing God’s commands as punishments or limitations, the message taught that every commandment is actually connected to: • God’s protection • God’s purpose • God’s wisdom • God’s favor • God’s blessing God’s commandments are opportunities to experience life His way. Obedience positions believers for greater peace, wisdom, direction, and fruitfulness. 10. What should I do if I feel spiritually stuck? Feeling stuck does not mean your story is over. The sermon encouraged believers not to stop moving, even during difficult seasons. Sometimes spiritual progress happens quietly before visible results appear. If you feel stuck: • Return to God’s Word • Pray honestly • Examine your thinking • Stay connected to faith-filled community • Continue obeying God in small things • Refuse to give up during the process Progress often begins internally long before it becomes visible externally. 11. Can God still use me after failure or setbacks? Absolutely. One of the strongest themes throughout the message was that your past does not cancel God’s purpose. Many people allow failure, pain, rejection, or disappointment to convince them they have missed their opportunity. But Romans 8:28 reminds us that God works all things together for good. God can use: • Pain • Delays • Mistakes • Closed doors • Hard seasons as part of the process that shapes your future. Your setbacks do not surprise God, and they do not remove His ability to redeem your story. 12. What is the main takeaway from this message? The central message of the sermon is this: God desires progress, growth, and possibility for your life, but it begins with a transformed mind and active cooperation with His Word. You do not have to remain trapped by: • Old thinking • Fear • Limitation • Past experiences • Family cycles • Spiritual stagnation As your thinking aligns with God’s truth, your life begins to move in the direction of His purpose. God’s process may take time, but His promises still stand."

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