KENNESAW, Ga. | Jun 7, 2023
Don鈥檛 let her smaller stature or quiet demeanor fool you; Stacey Dixon has shown she is a powerhouse with a purpose. In her new role as Director of Military and Veteran Services at 肉肉传媒, she is on a mission to revitalize the program to reach more students.
鈥淭he hardest part is seeing students not getting what they need and not knowing there are resources available to them,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have more than 1,700 military-connected students at KSU, and they need to know we are here. That鈥檚 my mission.鈥
A 20-year veteran of the United States Marine Corps, Dixon has lived a life of making lofty goals and achieving them all.
Her motivated and passionate spirit started at an early age. Dixon wanted to join the Marines when she was 17 after she saw the transformation it made in her brother. However, her mother was adamantly opposed and refused to sign the consent form for underage admission.
鈥淪o, I turned 18 in October, and I was on a bus to boot camp in December,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淭here was no turning back after that, but it was difficult. This was in the 鈥80鈥檚, so as a woman 鈥 a Black woman 鈥 in the Marine Corps, it was hard. Very, very hard.鈥
Dixon and her brother were stationed together for a time, and she recalls that he was one of the most intense noncommissioned officers she had ever dealt with.
鈥淗e was one of those Marines who didn鈥檛 like women being in the Marines,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淗e did everything to try to turn me away. But everything he said I couldn鈥檛 do, I proved him wrong.鈥
Her brother medically retired after 12 years in the service, but Dixon kept going with her sights set on becoming a warrant officer. Year after year, she applied, but was continually denied, and she finally stopped submitting her application.
鈥淏eing a warrant officer was part of my plan,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was what I was supposed to do.鈥
Dixon鈥檚 commanding officer initiated her tenth application on her behalf, and Dixon was finally selected. She was officially the first science officer in the Marine Corps.
While Dixon spent much of her career in the Marines working in meteorology and oceanography, one of the final jobs appointed to her was Casualty Assistance Call Officer, the official representative of the Secretary of the Navy who is tasked with going to see the next of kin in the event of a casualty. Between the heavy heartache of the assignment and some ongoing health issues, she realized it was time for her final salute. After two decades of service, Dixon retired as a Chief Warrant Officer 3, a high-ranking position officially appointed by the Secretary of the Navy and commissioned by the President of the United States and is considered to be advanced in both technical and tactical areas of leading in the field.
After her service, Dixon earned a master鈥檚 degree in business administration from National University in San Diego and then a doctorate in organizational leadership from Argosy University in Chicago.
She spent time as a financial advisor in San Diego which taught her the art of talking to people and engaging the community. In Chicago, she taught Junior ROTC until she stumbled upon an application for a program at National Louis University in which she would be an advocate for military education and veteran鈥檚 services. In that position, Dixon realized the program was something she had needed but did not have when she was a student. She set out to revamp it and expand its reach. When the director of the program left, she was promoted, and the program took off even more during her five years there.
Luckily for KSU鈥檚 military and veteran students, Dixon has a daughter and grandchildren who live in metro Atlanta, and she was eager to make the move south to be closer to them.
鈥淚 love it here. I love the community, and the KSU leadership has been so welcoming. This is where I鈥檓 supposed to be,鈥 Dixon said.
For KSU, Dixon鈥檚 ideas are big, and her self-created timeline is short 鈥 she wants it all done before the end of this year.
鈥淚 spent the first two months here just trying to meet everyone I could,鈥 said Dixon, who believes wholeheartedly the biggest key to success is to engage the KSU community. 鈥淲hat I learned is that the community is there. I see it. There are so many open gates here.
One of Dixon鈥檚 first goals is to improve tools used to connect students to the services offered by Military and Veterans Services.
鈥淲e know students may not open all their emails, so we want to engage with them through social media or monthly in-person events,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ur task is to communicate who we are, what we do, and what we offer. It鈥檚 building camaraderie, being around people who have had similar experiences. Our goal is to help these military-connected students have a life outside of the classroom.鈥
Another goal is to implement a training program for all faculty and staff on how to best teach and interact with student veterans. Dixon said when she was a student, she experienced many classroom discussions that included comments about military services that were disrespectful or upsetting to her or others who had served, and the professors were simply unaware that what was said was offensive.
Dixon also wants to implement a process that refers prospective students to veterans鈥 services from the moment they check that 鈥渕ilitary connected鈥 box on their KSU applications. She wants students to know KSU provides mental health services, health and wellness, school advising, help with housing, Social Security Administration help, and community engagement. After a student is enrolled at KSU, Dixon wants to make sure each military-connected student is contacted every term to assess their needs.
Dixon鈥檚 priority is that the needs of military-connected students are met, and their voices are heard.
鈥淚 want students to tell their stories,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard for us, for veterans, to talk about ourselves and what we鈥檝e done, especially if it鈥檚 been traumatic. I especially want female veterans to tell their stories. Often, they are forgotten about, or their service is diminished. I want them to talk about what they鈥檝e accomplished. I want all our military-connected students including our student veterans, active duty, reservists, national guard, spouses, and children to have a voice and tell their stories. That鈥檚 my mission at KSU.鈥
鈥 Amanda Cook
A leader in innovative teaching and learning, 肉肉传媒 offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees to its more than 47,000 students. 肉肉传媒 State is a member of the University System of Georgia with 11 academic colleges. The university’s vibrant campus culture, diverse population, strong global ties and entrepreneurial spirit draw students from throughout the country and the world. 肉肉传媒 State is a Carnegie-designated doctoral research institution (R2), placing it among an elite group of only 7 percent of U.S. colleges and universities with an R1 or R2 status. For more information, visit kennesaw.edu.