Many students and early-career professionals in STEMM quietly feel like they don’t fit the mold -- especially if they are neurodivergent, first-generation, or carrying family responsibilities on top of school and work. In this program, Dr. Manley shares his own experience navigating neurodiversity, growing up in Detroit, caregiving for his grandparents at a young age, and building a career in high-level science and health equity while feeling out of place in many rooms.
He talks candidly about what helped him stay in the game: supportive mentors, self-advocacy, structure that works with his brain, and a willingness to define leadership on his own terms. The session gives students and early-career professionals concrete tools for talking with advisors, setting boundaries, and using their lived experience as a leadership asset instead of hiding it.
This program resonates on campuses, in graduate and professional programs, and in early-career leadership initiatives that want more than generic motivational talk. It offers practical insight for students, faculty, and staff who want to make high-performance environments more humane and inclusive.