Schools

Towson University: A Full-Circle Presidency

On the first day of new student move-in, senior Jordan DeVeaux was walking into the newly renovated University Union when another studen ...

Kyle Hobstetter

September 28, 2021

Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

SGA President Jordan DeVeaux ready to connect with TU community

On the first day of new student move-in, senior Jordan DeVeaux was walking into the
newly renovated University Union when another student caught her eye.

Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Through the Union’s clear, garage-style doors, she watched as the new student stopped
their family so they could rub the ear of the bronze tiger statue in the middle of
Tiger Plaza. As she watched the student participate in one of TU’s traditions, she
couldn’t help but remember her excitement when she was a freshman.

“That was me just a minute ago,” DeVeaux says as she continued to watch new students
pass by the Union. “They have no idea what’s in store for them. They’re going to go
through some peaks and valleys here at TU, but they’re going to come out stronger.

“They’re going to say, ‘Who I was as a freshman is not even who I am anymore.’”

While DeVeaux admits a lot has changed in her four years at TU, one thing that hasn’t
is her passion for the Student Government Association (SGA). She’s been a member since
she was a freshman.

One of her fondest memories at TU was during that first year working at SGA. The president
at the time asked her to help with Tiger Pride Day, the annual day when TU students
meet with lawmakers in Annapolis.

The president let her use their desk to complete some spreadsheets. As she sat there
working, she snuck a quick photo. She propped her phone on the desk and took a picture.
She said one day she’d be in that chair as SGA president.

Four years later that prophecy came to pass, and she now serves at the president for
the 101st administration. It really has been a full-circle moment.

“My mother said to me, ‘We often regret the things that we don't do, not the things
that we do,’ and I couldn't get that message out of my head,” DeVeaux says about her
decision to take the position. “She asked me how much desire I had to help Towson
University grow.

“The students deserve a lifeline to the university. I asked myself if I was willing
to be that lifeline, and the answer was a resounding yes.”

With the first term of her presidency underway, DeVeaux has continued to follow the
six goals she set for herself and her team.

While these are the foundation of her campaign, she’s also set the goal to have more
members of the TU community get to know her and, more importantly, the SGA.

DeVeaux, who has aspirations of going into ministry, likes to call this way of thinking
“The Gospel of the SGA.”

“Gospel means ‘good news,’ so the good news of the SGA is that we are here, and we’re
available for you,” she says. “Any student concern you have, whether it’s about academics,
transportation, facilities or anything, we’re here to do our best to get the person
that’s able to help you to the table and ask them how we can come to a resolution.”

Finding resolutions is one of the reasons the Silver Spring, Maryland, native chose
Towson University.

She didn’t want to be surrounded by people who looked, acted and thought like she
did. She wanted to have conversations with people who wouldn’t always agree with her.
She even presented a TEDx Talk titled, “Civil Disagreement: A Dying Art.”

“I really wanted to cultivate that skill while I was in college, and Towson was the
perfect place because we are really, for lack of a better term, a melting pot of different
identities,” DeVeaux says.

With her time at Towson University winding down, she can’t help but reminisce. Over
the summer, she and the rest of the SGA got a behind-the-scenes tour of the new University
Union. She became emotional about how the university continues to grow and focus on
its students.

And she moves closer to graduation, she’s excited for not only what the rest of her
term as SGA president will bring but also the future.

“I’m excited and a little emotional because they’re my favorite people on the planet.
SGA is a family, and we welcome all who want to join,” she says.

Those interested in the Towson University SGA can check out their Instagram and Twitter; their website or reach them through email. SGA also hosts open meetings on Tuesday in their temporary office on the third floor
of the University Union. 


This press release was produced by Towson University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.