Living The Dream | Is This for Me?
“I’ll Get Involved in Your Life”
Sammie Robinson was a child of the 1950s. “I come from a background,” she explains, “where the most optimistic dream was that I would attend a small Black college and maybe become a teacher.”
But business appealed to the young woman, and although she did attend college, “it was a vocational
experience.” After graduating she worked as an accountant for several years in other states until, by now divorced and raising a small child alone, “I went home to Texas, where my intent was to go to the local phone company and get a position I could stay in until I retired.
“I worked there for twelve years. I made nice money, but I was a captive. I didn’t like the job. So I decided that an MBA might make it easier to find a job I enjoyed more, with better pay.
“During my second trimester at Southern Methodist University, I took a course in Organizational Behavior and my eyes just opened. I started paying attention to what the professors were doing, and their lifestyle. I said, ‘I want to do this.’
“I went to all my professors and asked them about their lives. I cold-called the few African-American professors I managed to learn existed.
“I gave up my house and my car, and I entered a whole new world after age forty. I had always been so vocationally- and practically-oriented. There were so many things I didn’t know. Publishing, research methodology—I didn’t understand anything about a research career. This whole idea of living a life of the mind—it’s a concept that I am still coming to terms with.” Dr. Robinson believes her “mission” is to serve as a role model and mentor for minority students in predominantly white universities. “People who are somehow marginalized or disenfranchised gravitate to me. I will get involved in your life.”
Her involvement has often been extraordinary. “There have been students whom people said were worthless, but if I see something in them, I’m willing to give them a second chance.”
“One young woman was about to flunk out, but I said, ‘I will give you a chance to take the class over without having to fail it first. Your end of the bargain is that you must meet with me once a week.’ She earned a 4.0 that semester and she graduated.”
As a doctoral student, Dr. Robinson won top honors for dissertation research and a best teaching assistant award. “I save every e-mail I get from a student thanking me. They see the value of what I’ve given them a year to two years out. When a student tells me I made a difference, that’s it for me!”
In 2003, Dr. Robinson attended an academic conference at which she again encountered Dr. Lynn Isabella, the professor who had first inspired her as a student at SMU. “It was a real pleasure to thank her in person for writing letters of recommendation, and most importantly, to report that I finished my doctoral program,” says Dr. Robinson.
The dream continues…
Emeritus Professor at Houston Baptist University, took seriously her multiple roles as researcher, teacher, mentor, and role model. She developed a prolific research stream on African-American woman entrepreneurs with PhD Project professors Dr. Laquita Blockson and Dr. Jeffrey Robinson, and developed an entrepreneurship studies program at her previous university, Prairie View (TX) A&T University. Having turned fifty the year she earned her doctorate, she says, “I am rejuvenated. I am where I am supposed to be.” When her profile was posted on The PhD Project web site, it inspired one reader to contact her, initiate a mentoring relationship, and apply for and enter a doctoral program, where she is currently studying.