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Emergency Alert
UDC Operating Remotely on Friday, Jan. 30

The University of the District of Columbia’s academic and administrative offices will conduct business remotely on Friday, Jan. 30. All on-campus activities, including athletic-related activities, are cancelled.

Campuses will reopen on Monday, Feb. 2.

Staff: Contact your immediate supervisor with questions or for further instruction regarding remote work expectations. 

Faculty: Reach out to your immediate supervisor and/or the dean for questions and further instruction regarding the transition to emergency remote instruction (ERI).  The Center for the Advancement of Learning (CAL) is available to support faculty with instructional continuity, including support for Blackboard, Zoom, Webex and other teaching and learning technologies. 

CAL Faculty Support Resources

calhelpdesk@udc.edu 
Virtual Office Hours
Consultation Request Form

For learning technology tools and on-demand faculty resources, please visit CAL’s website.

Students: Due to inclement weather, the university will be closed to face-to-face operations. Instruction will be moved to emergency remote, including synchronous and asynchronous methods. Certain laboratory, clinical, and other hands-on classes for which in-person instruction is a requirement may necessitate a make-up lesson, but every effort will be made to pursue virtual learning to the extent possible. Where synchronous virtual instruction is intended, published class meeting times must be observed so that students’ schedules are not disrupted.

The safety and security of our students, faculty, staff, and the broader community remain our top priority. We will continue to provide updates regarding the status of the university’s academic and administrative offices as conditions change.

Please continue to check our website and social media channels for the latest information.

If you have any safety concerns, contact OPSEM at 202-274-5050. For all immediate emergencies, call 911.

Thank you for your continued dedication to our students and to UDC’s mission. 

Speech-Language Pathology Program Faculty

Speech-Language Pathology: The UDC Edge

Weynshet Demessie, B.S. (SLP), Clinic/Office Manager

Weynshet Demessie is the Clinic/Office Manager and holds the B.S. degree from the University of the District of Columbia.

Tiffany C. Gurley Nettles, Ph.D. CCC-SLP

Tiffany Gurley-Nettles, Ph.D. CCC-SLP is a distinguished scholar, educator, and clinical practitioner in Speech-Language Pathology and Health Psychology. As the Program Director and Assistant Professor at the University of the District of Columbia, Dr. Gurley Nettles is enthusiastic about mentoring the next generation of speech-language pathologists. She teaches various courses, including Medical Speech-Language Pathology, Aphasia, Neuroanatomy of the Speech and Hearing Mechanism, and Thesis Seminar. Her commitment to student success is evident in her hands-on, interactive teaching method, which emphasizes experiential learning and critical thinking while infusing immersive technology and a mindfulness-based approach. In addition to her academic responsibilities, Dr. Gurley Nettles maintains an active clinical practice, providing assessment and intervention services for individuals and their families with diverse communication needs, brain health and intervention, cognitive aging, and more. She has additional research interests and current projects in culturally responsive clinical supervision, immersive technology in Speech-Language Pathology education, immersive technology in neurocognitive rehabilitation, and health trauma intervention. She can be contacted by email at tiffany.gurleynettle@udc.edu.

Richard Kalunga, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

Dr. Kalunga holds a Ph.D. in Communication Sciences and Disorders from Howard University, an M.S. degree in Speech – Language Pathology from the University of the District of Columbia, and a B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, Manchester, UK. He specializes in language acquisition and disorders, literacy, sociolinguistics, and fluency disorders. His research emphasis is in literacy and developmental correlates.

Natalie A. Ottey, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

Dr. Ottey holds a Ph.D. in Communication Sciences and Disorders from Howard University, an M.Sc. degree in Speech-Language Pathology from the University of the District of Columbia and a B.A.A. degree in Early Childhood Education from Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada. Her research interests include neurogenic motor speech disorders and pediatric neurogenic language impairments, with an emphasis in the treatment of apraxia of speech disorders.  She provides instruction in neurophysiological disorders of speech and swallowing.

Tabia Pope, Ph.D., CCC-SLP 

Dr. Pope holds a Ph.D., M.S., and B.S. from Howard University’s Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders. Her clinical, instructional and supervisory focus is within Concussion Clinics, as well as Medical Speech-Language Pathology and Neurogenic/Cognitive-Communication Disorders. Her research interests include traumatic brain injury, with an emphasis on academic sports concussion management, interprofessional education and collaboration, and brain health support group counseling. Dr. Pope also integrates contemporary issues and policies within CSD into her instruction, including health communications for community outreach and timely identification, multicultural considerations for assessment, functional treatment and interventions, and fostering interest in and understanding of initiatives that address health disparities and cultural competency. 

Carmen Ana Ramos-Pizarro, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

Dr. Ramos-Pizarro holds a Ph.D. degree in Speech-Language Pathology and Voice Science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She specializes in Voice and its Disorders and currently teaches graduate courses in Voice and Speech Science. Dr. Ramos-Pizarro is currently involved in research with colleagues in Argentina, Colombia, and Puerto Rico and her research interests include the speech patterns of persons from multicultural backgrounds and individuals in transition (transgender), evidenced-based intervention in voice disorders and voice feminization, and the use of simulation in the training of auditory-perceptual rating skills.

Sulare Telford Rose, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

Dr. Telford received her Ph.D. from Howard University with a specialization in child language disorders and a concentration in sociolinguistics and psychometrics. She obtained her undergraduate degrees in Spanish and Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology from Andrews University. Dr. Telford has over seven years of experience working as a bilingual speech-language pathologist, early interventionist, and clinical supervisor. She is keenly interested in exploring and developing effective assessment and intervention methods for addressing the needs of culturally and linguistically diverse populations, particularly those from Caribbean English Creole-speaking backgrounds.

Dorothy Gaspard-St. Cyr, M. Ed CCC-SLP

Dorothy Gaspard-St. Cyr, M.Ed., CCC-SLP, is a licensed speech-language pathologist who has been providing speech therapy services for over 20 years. She completed her Bachelor of Arts degree in Speech Pathology and Audiology at the City University, City College of New York, and began to work as a Teacher of Speech and Hearing in the city’s early intervention and preschool programs. She then moved to Virginia and earned her Master’s degree in Communication Disorders from the University of Virginia. Professor Gaspard-St. Cyr has worked in public schools, skilled nursing facilities, outpatient clinics, and in private practice. She enjoys working with both the adult and pediatric populations and has experience with, voice, fluency, childhood language disorders, and adult neurogenic/cognitive-communication disorders.

Emily Gibson, MS, CCC-SLP, CBIS

Emily Gibson holds a B.A. degree in Hearing and Speech Sciences from the University of Maryland, College Park, and a M.S. degree in Speech-Language Pathology from the University of the District of Columbia. She is a certified brain injury specialist with a history of providing speech-language pathology services across the lifespan in home and outpatient medical settings. Areas of clinical expertise include management of adult neurological disorders of swallowing and communication, gender affirming voice and communication, voice disorders and management of laryngeal airway problems, including PVFM and chronic cough. Special interests include evidence-based practice for management of neurological disorders, cognitive motor learning principles for management of voice and laryngeal airway disorders, and dynamic assessment and functional treatment geared towards community reentry for individuals recovering from traumatic brain injury and stroke. She provides clinical supervision and instruction for graduate students treating both pediatric and adult clients.

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