National Hispanic Institute

Founded 1979
Founder Ernesto Nieto
Type Non-Profit Education Organization
Focus Leadership & Education
Location
Area served
United States, Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic
Members
85,000
(5,000 new participants a year)
Key people
Ernesto Nieto
Founder and President
Gloria DeLeon
Co-Founder and Senior Executive Vice President
Nicole Nieto
Senior Vice President
Julio Cotto
Senior Vice President
Zachary Gonzalez
Associate Vice President
Dylan Besteiro
Business and Finance Officer
Efrain Cordova
Associate Director of Business
Gabriela Morales Barajas
Director, NHI-Villanova Leadership Service Center
Paola Hernandez
Executive Assistant to the President
Revenue (2014)
$1,829,689[1]
Expenses (2014) $1,676,079[1]
Volunteers
85,000
(alumni volunteers)
Website https://www.nationalhispanicinstitute.org/

The National Hispanic Institute (NHI) is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to serving the future leadership needs of the global Hispanic community. Founded in 1979 in the State of Texas with the mission of serving the future leadership needs of the United States via the Hispanic/Latino community, NHI became the largest Latino youth organization in the United States.[2][3] NHI is now an international organization with over 85,000 alumni worldwide and a well-known consortium of notable colleges and universities.[3][4][5]

To carry out its mission, NHI annually conducts independent research focused on leadership and educational development, collaborates with K-12 schools, colleges, and universities, and annually works with over 3,000 high-achieving youth and their families. According to its website, NHI has distinguished itself from other organizations by not focusing on civil rights, not pointing to existing social problems as the rally-call to civic involvement, or depicting Hispanics and Latinos as a community in urgent need in order to influence giving.[3] NHI instead recognizes the talent of Hispanic and Latino youth, the potential they represent to the future of the Hispanic/Latino community and extended sectors of the American and global society. Based on this philosophy, NHI develops and conducts experiences through which students may become intellectually, culturally, and socially engaged in the life of their communities.[3]

NHI utilizes a combination community-based revenue generating strategies to fund its work. It relies neither on government nor private charity to support its efforts.[3] NHI is headquartered in Maxwell, Texas (approx. 30 minutes southeast of Austin, Texas) and maintains its Leadership Service Center on the campus of Villanova University in Villanova, Pennsylvania (approx. 20 minutes west of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania),[6] and its partnership with the Center for Hispanic Studies on the campus of Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas.[7]

Work

Leadership & Academic Programs

Since its first program in 1981, the National Hispanic Institute has identified and selected high-ability youth to participate in its leadership and academic development experiences. These selected students are intellectually challenged to alter old, strident views that have historically framed their understanding of Hispanics and Latinos.[3] According to its website, NHI's leadership programs pursue four key outcomes:

- Instead of continuing the popularly held social notions of a people at the bottom of the human scale, students are presented with a new view, one of an energetic, dynamic, and powerful intertwined culture of global dimensions and potential.
- Instead of perceiving their educational development as being driven by the need to champion the cause of downtrodden communities, students develop an appreciation for the roles that intellectually, socially, and culturally play a role in guiding and advancing the equity, wealth, and skill-building trajectory of the future their community.
- Instead of viewing themselves as a collection of individuals from different nationalities, countries and backgrounds, students embrace the concept of a world-wide culture of Latinos tied together by a commonality of historical events, experiences, and language.
- Instead of being guided by an urgency to avoid causing potential harm to the American and global quality of life, students’ calling to leadership is invigorated by the excitement of supplying new strength, vigor, and promise to the American and global experience.[3]

NHI leadership programs are hosted on the campuses of notable universities that are members of the organization's consortium known as the NHI College Register (NHI CR). The leadership programs have historically been hosted on campuses in Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington State in the continental United States. They have also been hosted in Argentina, Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico, and Spain.[3]

The Great Debate

(for students between 9th and 10th grade)

Each Great Debate conference hosts between 150-300 students and discusses complex themes that are important to the growth and leadership supply of the Latino community. NHI’s goal is for youth to increase their capacity to express thought, respond to intellectual challenge, work in organized endeavors and compete against their top peers. Beyond learning about important community issues, you gain a support network of NHI alumni, including education directors, mentors and coaches. These volunteers are former participants of the Great Debate and other NHI leadership programs like the Lorenzo de Zavala Youth Legislative Session and Collegiate World Series. They dedicate hundreds of hours of their time to advance your leadership readiness. In addition, our university hosts/partners invest in supplying their campuses and facilities to support your leadership development. As a Great Debate student, receive other opportunities as well – like participation as a volunteer mentor, opportunities to win invitations to Celebración, future programs and access to the NHI College Register network.[8]

Lorenzo de Zavala Youth Legislative Session (LDZ)

(for students between 10th & 11th grade or between 11th and 12th grade)

This experience is an opportunity for young people to learn how to navigate, manage and create large organizations by taking charge of their own youth government and proposing future community policies and projects. Since the first project in Austin, Texas, in 1982, students from over 25 states and four Latin American nations have convened at one of six host sites to play this leadership game of vision, influence and construction of communities of the future. Each host site serves between 150-200 students from throughout the United States and parts of Latin America.

Programs are fully staffed and supervised by fully certified NHI undergraduate Senior Counselors, graduate volunteers, and adult professionals who do an annual “Week of NHI Service” as Education Directors.

No matter what careers LDZ alumni hold today – doctors, lawyers, politicians, artists, engineers, educators, business people, etc., – they recognize that their LDZ experience helped them develop skills to manage organizational culture and the use of formal protocols. They also recognize the need to seek out opportunities to be bilingual, bicultural and understand the changing dynamics of the emerging Latino population of the future.[9]


Collegiate World Series (CWS)

(for students between 11th and 12th grade)

NHI is familiar with the fact that from one day to the next, high school seniors are expected to make the transition to independent adult life. The CWS prepares students for the emotional ups and downs of adapting to life away from their parents, making large financial investments, managing time effectively, understanding various cultures and lifestyles different from their own, and making critical decisions that eventually chart the course of their life journey.

For five days, the CWS shepherds students into the transition of going into independent mode – adulthood – and the responsibilities that come with it. Inquiry Based Learning (IBL) is the core methodology of this program, which engages students in an investigative and question-driven approach to mapping out the next 12 to 60 months of their lives.

Of NHI’s three high school leadership programs, the CWS represents the most serious and thought-provoking experience. It is also the program that tests students’ ability to transform challenges into workable solutions.[10]


Celebración

Celebración is The National Hispanic Institute’s showcase event that annually invites its high school age and undergraduate students to participate in a four-day experience that introduces them to community social entrepreneurship as part of their continued involvement in leadership training.

Nearly 450 high school students and 100 undergraduate students attend this event, not to mention an additional 100 alumni who also convene to discuss ways of furthering the work and mission of the organization. Other features of Celebración include a private college fair, an alumni awards banquet, student entertainment, awards recognition and opportunities for all participants to broaden their social networks and contacts among individuals who actively work to help change the lives of others.[11]

John F. Lopez Fellowship (JFL)

(for college students)

The JFL Fellowship gives high-achieving college students the opportunity to develop their ability to mobilize communities and operate at executive levels and provides these students with a means to share their developing knowledge and expertise with others. As counselors, research specialists, trainers and planners, fellows gain direct interactive experiences that enable them to critically examine the needs and capacities required for future leadership. Named in honor of NHI alumnus and Board member, John F. Lopez, Jr., the JFL Fellowship is designed to elicit qualities of spirit, creativity, and talent.[12]

Leadership & Education Research

NHI annually conducts independent research focused on leadership and educational development via its Collaborative Research Center (CRC), its Leadership Service Center (LSC) at Villanova University, and its newly formed partnership with the Center for Hispanic Studies at Southwestern University.

Collaborative Research Center (CRC)

The CRC allows NHI to carry out research in collaboration with diverse community partners. The research across several youth populations includes the study of Latinos from upwardly mobile families, urban inner city settings, rural communities, and immigrant backgrounds. This research allows NHI to remain current regarding the thinking and trends of these different population groups from the perspective of their educational aspirations, career interests, income levels, parent backgrounds and perceptions, youth attitudes towards the Latino community, levels of community involvement, and a host of other activity areas that include political participation, generational dynamics, purchasing trends, etc.[3]

CRC research is used primarily for internal use and study, however, more recently NHI research has been requested for various uses. NHI's CRC studies are currently being aimed to assist institutions of higher learning in their outreach and recruitment efforts, as well as to improve their undergraduate retention rates. Additionally, the CRC is compiling and analyzing data regarding both the U.S. and global Latino community's long-term capacities to maintain organizational effectiveness in an era of extreme population growth.[3]

Leadership Service Center (LSC) at Villanova University

In October 2004, Villanova University and NHI announced a national partnership to jointly launch the Leadership Service Center (LSC) on the campus of Villanova University. The LSC was established to jointly investigate how institutions of higher learning such as Villanova University could advance and develop the Latino college campus community and better develop innovative community outreach that could effectively strengthen both partner's name recognition in northeastern United States Hispanic/Latino communities [13]

Via this national partnership, Villanova and NHI have mutually cultivated community relationships, organized a successful community-based infrastructure, and have effectively engaged key sectors of the high-ability Hispanic/Latino youth community in the northeastern United States. Having inaugurated the LSC at Villanova University in 2004, this joint effort has already begun to prepare young bright Latino men and women for leadership roles in their communities.[14][15]

Partnership with Center for Hispanic Studies at Southwestern University

In February 2008, Southwestern University and NHI announced they would jointly be launching a partnership with the Center for Hispanic Studies on the campus of Southwestern University. The partnership's intent is to research and evaluate college-readiness programs for Hispanic youth. Specifically, the center's intent is to open doors to conducting much-needed research on the impact of community intervention strategies via leadership and education such as those offered by NHI. The partnership is expected to augment the capacity of NHI's ongoing research via its CRC.[3][7]

College Register

NHI's College Register, was founded and launched in 1989, as a consortium of select and notable post-secondary, 4-year institutions that work closely with NHI to develop a new reservoir of Hispanic and Latino leaders that will make an impact on the global Latino community.[16]

The College Register is committed to increasing the numbers of Latino students at notable 4-year institutions and towards the advancement and development of the Hispanic/Latino college campus community. Since its inception, the College Register and NHI have developed programs that have created new market techniques for conducting outreach to Latino families, name-branded member institutions among the college bound Hispanic/Latino youth community, and cultivated strong and effective leadership among Hispanic/Latino campus leaders.[5]

Member Institutions

According to the NHI College Register directory, the following institution are active members of NHI's consortium of notable colleges & universities:[5]

American University, Washington, D.C.

Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts

Augustana College, Rock Island, Illinois

Austin College, Sherman, Texas

Baylor University, Waco, Texas

Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin

Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts

Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island

Buena Vista University, Storm Lake, IA

Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana

Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota

Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Colgate University, Hamilton, New York

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colorado

DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois

DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana

Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana

Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico

Emerson College, Boston, Massachusetts

George Washington University, Washington, DC

Howard Payne University, Brownwood, Texas

Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, Illinois

Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana

Iowa State University, Ames, IA

Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania

Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota

Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Boston, Massachusetts

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

New College of Florida, Sarasota, Florida

New York University, New York, New York

Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois

Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Rice University, Houston, Texas

Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York

Simmons College, Boston, Massachusetts

Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts

Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas

Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas

St. Edward's University, Austin, Texas

Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, Indiana

Stanford University, Stanford, California

Sul Ross State University, Alpine, Texas

Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas

Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas

Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas

Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut

Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas

Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts

Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana

University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona

University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico

University of Rochester, Rochester, New York

University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas

University of Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma

Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, IN

Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania

Washington State University, Pullman, WA

Washington University St. Louis, Missouri

Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts

Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois

Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA

William Jewell College, Liberty, Missouri

Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut

Achievements

- NHI students gain admission to 9 out of 10 schools[5]
- 98% of NHI students attend a four year university[5][17]
- 90% of NHI students graduate in 4 to 5 years[5][17]
- over 70% receive financial scholarships[17]
NHI Original Logo

History

- NHI was founded in 1979 by Ernesto Nieto and Gloria de Leon in Austin, Texas.[18]

- The organization's main office was first located at Concordia University Texas.[18]

- NHI creates Young Leaders Conference (YLC) in 1981 at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs.[19]

- NHI creates Lorenzo de Zavala Youth Legislative Session (LDZ) in 1983 at Concordia University Texas.[19]

- NHI's headquarters and administrative offices were moved to Maxwell, Texas—outside of Austin—in 1985.[18]

- Founder Ernesto Nieto publishes his book Third Reality: Crafting a 21st Century Hispanic/Latino Agenda, 2001.[20]

- NHI celebrates 25th year anniversary, July 2001.

- NHI opens its Leadership Service Center and East Coast Outreach Office at Villanova University, October 2004.[14]

- NHI announces its Center for Hispanic Studies at Southwestern University, February 2008.[7]

- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez held the position of Educational Director at NIH, according to her 2018 financial disclosures.[21]

Founder

Ernesto Nieto is the founder of the National Hispanic Institute and has served as President since the organization's inception in 1979. Ernesto Nieto served in various management positions in both the state and federal government. In 1979, he decided to leave his work in government to pursue his vision of creating a leadership institute for Hispanic/Latino youth.[20]

Nieto has received the Eagle Leadership Award by the El Paso, Texas City Council, the Meritorious Service Award by Southwestern University, and honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Texas Wesleyan University in Fort Worth, Texas. He also has been honored as a "Distinguished Alumnus" of both Southwestern University and Jefferson Davis High School. Other awards include the Southwestern University's Citation of Merit Award for Community Service and the Human Relations Award from the National Association for College Admissions Counseling.[20]

References

  1. 1 2 "National Hispanic Institute Inc" (PDF). Foundation Center. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
  2. http://www.prweb.com/releases/2008/02/prweb729744.htm
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 http://nhi-net.org/AboutNHI/Mission/tabid/59/Default.aspx
  4. http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/articles/nhi-78640-students-coello.html
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 http://www.nhicr.org/MemberDirectory/tabid/56/Default.aspx
  6. http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?BRD=1677&dept_id=82748&newsid=12843962&PAG=461&rfi=9
  7. 1 2 3 http://www.bizjournals.com/austin/stories/2008/02/04/daily20.html
  8. https://www.nationalhispanicinstitute.org/great-debate/
  9. https://www.nationalhispanicinstitute.org/ldz/
  10. https://www.nationalhispanicinstitute.org/cws/
  11. https://www.nationalhispanicinstitute.org/celebracion/
  12. http://www.nhi-net.org/Programs/CollegePrograms/JohnFLopezSummerInternship/tabid/69/Default.aspx
  13. http://www.publications.villanova.edu/blueprints/september2004/vupartnership.htm
  14. 1 2 http://www.publications.villanova.edu/blueprints/october2004/vnhi.htm
  15. http://www.publications.villanova.edu/blueprints/December2004/lawschool.htm
  16. http://www.nhicr.org/Home/tabid/36/Default.aspx
  17. 1 2 3 http://www.kiiitv.com/home/12201881.html
  18. 1 2 3 Nieto, Ernesto. Third Reality: Crafting a 21st Century Hispanic/Latino Agenda. Third Reality Publications 2001.
  19. 1 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwTbaw0PVdk
  20. 1 2 3 http://www.southwestern.edu/newsroom/story.php?id=1031
  21. "2018 Financial Disclosure for Alexandria Ocasio Cortez" (PDF). Clerk.House.Gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
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