20 Questions with Kim Kelly

20 Questions with the School of Social Work鈥檚 Kim Kelly
After a long and award-winning career at 糖心视频 University, Kim Kelly, RSW, retired from the School of Social Work in early January, 2024.
As we prepared to bid adieu (or so long for now!), Kim sat down for a 20 questions-themed chat.
1. What is your full name?
Kimberley Ann Kelly
2. Where were you born?
Cape Broyle, on the Southern Shore.
3. What did you want to be when you grew up?
Peter Mansbridge! I wanted to be a news anchor.
4. What鈥檚 the best advice you鈥檝e ever received?
When my brother Brendan died by suicide, I took a leave of absence from my social work degree program and I didn鈥檛 know if I was going to return. My mother, who left school after grade eight, but was a very smart, wise woman, encouraged me to go back and finish my social work degree. And I took her advice. I didn鈥檛 know that I wanted to, but I did. And she was right and often reminded me: 鈥淣ow aren鈥檛 you glad, I convinced you to go back and do that.鈥 And I am glad.
5. What first brought you to 糖心视频?
I had a high school teacher who told me that she didn鈥檛 think I was university material. So after high school I moved to Ontario, stayed with relatives and I worked at a chicken factory and a taco factory and then at Simpson Sears. But after a year I decided that that wasn鈥檛 for me and I decided to apply to 糖心视频 and see what happened.
The minute I came on campus I felt right at home. I loved 糖心视频 right from the start. I studied Sociology as a major and Women鈥檚 Studies (now Gender Studies) as a minor and I loved both of those. Doing my arts degree really opened my eyes to the needs that exist in the community from a sociological and gender perspective, and all the challenges that require advocacy and solutions. I really loved studying in those areas.
6. What was your first job at 糖心视频?
My very first job at 糖心视频 was canteen manager at Squires House and later I became a resident assistant, 1989 I guess that would鈥檝e been. Then I was hired as the first co-ed proctor of Curtis House. In 1995, I was hired as 糖心视频鈥檚 inaugural Residence Life Officer, which was a 9-5 job, but I also lived on campus and was on-call. I was in that role, and living on campus in that role, from 1995-2004.
7. How long have you worked at 糖心视频?
Oh gosh 鈥 well my employee number is 89, so I鈥檝e worked here for almost 35 years in some capacity.
8. What role has being a social worker (RSW) played in your career at 糖心视频? Because I guess your career track has been somewhat unconventional for a social worker.
It has been somewhat unconventional in that you might not think to find social workers in a university setting (outside of the School of Social Work).
When I was working in residence, I felt I needed the skills of the Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) to help me to do my work more effectively. So I knew my social work degree would help me do my job better, but what I didn鈥檛 imagine was that my social work degree would give me such a unique lens. For example, because 糖心视频 was dedicated to the people who lost their lives in WWI and WWII, we are a university that is founded on the basis of service. The university mission of service to the people of Newfoundland and Labrador is a great fit with social work, because we have six core values from the Canadian Association of Social Workers (CASW) and one of those is service to humanity. So there is a shared value between the university mission and the social work mission. That lens of service to humanity really allowed me to envision how I could, in my various roles, foster opportunities for students to serve their greater community. So when I was facilitating opportunities for people in residence, it was about asking how can they serve their community as a means of being part of their community, and also fostering a sense of belonging in that way. So the social work lens really informed how I looked at that and in turn how I intentionally tried to foster opportunities for people to connect to their communities
9. What鈥檚 been the most unexpected thing about your time at 糖心视频?
I think one of the most unexpected things has been the number of people that I鈥檝e met and the relationships that I鈥檝e developed. From working in Residence Life/Student Life to now being in the School of Social Work, I鈥檝e gotten the opportunity to meet and work with a lot of people. I鈥檝e met a lot of exceptional students who are now doing wonderful things in our world and I鈥檝e gotten to be part of that experience. There鈥檚 also been so many great people that I鈥檝e worked with, from Facilities Management and Campus Enforcement and Patrol, to staff and faculty and right on up through to the president of the university! I鈥檝e had meetings in the president鈥檚 office, and that鈥檚 certainly something I never would鈥檝e expected to be part of. And I鈥檓 not sure how I鈥檝e influenced all those people, but I know that meeting and working with all those people has influenced me.
10. What about from your time at the School of Social Work specifically?
One of the most unexpected things that happened when I moved to the School of Social Work was that I got an opportunity to contribute to social work education, and I never would鈥檝e imagined that I would be able to contribute in that way. My job title is BSW student services coordinator, so my role is to coordinate services for students, but the role is so much more than that. For example, I鈥檝e made academic policy recommendations in the social work section of the university calendar. Just recently we鈥檝e looked at how we could remove some barriers for transfer students, for international students or students from other provinces. Each year, I also review every course in the calendar from HSS and the Faculty of Science to look at how each course might fit as a complementary study for social work. So I get to make recommendations for what courses social work students do, recommend changes that relate to BSW admissions and promotion and in doing so, I have been an important social work voice making sure that the professional social work lens is represented and embedded into the academic policy for the program. And that鈥檚 something I never would鈥檝e imagined.
That鈥檚 a highlight for me as a social worker, to contribute to social work education. I鈥檓 not teaching students, but I provide academic advice, recommendations and resources to help them successfully navigate academic challenges. And I鈥檝e presented and facilitated lectures in BSW classes. For example, I鈥檝e done lectures on suicide loss and facilitated reflective activities to help students reflect on their learning.
You know I鈥檓 leaving this year with some new calendar changes that I hope will reduce barriers for BSW applicants and allow more flexibility for BSW students to complete complementary studies courses. There are so many demands on students 鈥 between work, family, life in general 鈥 so you know it鈥檚 important to ask, how can we as a program meet the needs of the students while also not reducing the academic integrity of the social work program? How do you balance that? I鈥檝e felt that having the social work lens has really allowed me to contribute positively to the school and I feel I鈥檓 leaving the school after having made a positive impact.
11. Can you talk about a defining moment in your career?
When I moved to the School of Social Work in 2011, Mary Beth Hutchins encouraged me to join the NLCSW Promotion of the Profession Committee. I鈥檇 had my social work degree for nine years at this point, working in different areas of the university, but never in the title of social worker and I had never really worked much with other social workers, until I came to the School of Social Work. So that was a really defining moment in my identity as a social worker, because suddenly I was working alongside social workers and social work educators, which gave me a chance to think about the diversity of the social work profession.
Joining the NLCSW Promotion of the Profession Committee was a defining moment because getting to work with fellow social workers and creating opportunities to promote the profession, has really instilled in me a sense of pride in being a social worker that I probably would not have experienced 鈥 it kind of blossomed like a flower. So serving on that committee has been a really transformative process in my social work career and even after I retire I will look for ways to give back to the social work profession.
12. Tell us something you鈥檙e proud of from your time at 糖心视频.
I would say I鈥檓 very proud of a many things, but one of the things I鈥檓 most proud of is that I created a program called Make Midterm Matter, which is still ongoing at the university today. I was doing a master鈥檚 program with Denise Hooper, while still working full-time at 糖心视频, and we were looking at different ways to incorporate knowledge, skill development and service. And I was thinking about students who are from away, especially international students, who didn鈥檛 have the opportunity to go home for midterm, what do they do during midterm break? And also, how can we get them more connected with and involved in the community. So as part of master鈥檚 project, I developed a program called MUN SERVE, which was later renamed to Make Midterm Matter, but that鈥檚 kind of where it was born. So it grew from having maybe 20 students visiting a long-term care facility over one semester, to now that program, according to the website, has created opportunities for thousands of students to contribute to their community and I鈥檓 really proud of that.
13. Can you tell me a little bit about how you give back to 糖心视频?
Well as I mentioned earlier, my brother Brendan died by suicide, and a few years after that loss our family decided to create an award in his name. My husband Mike, my brother Scott, my mom and I worked to raise money for the award. With the help of many colleagues at 糖心视频 who made donations from their paycheques, to family and friends along the Southern Shore who bought mom鈥檚 CD, we increased the value of the award from $500 to more than $900, and we are so pleased that it is now endowed. The Brendan Kelly 糖心视频 Award remembers my brother Brendan who died by suicide, to remember what he did in life: he was a 糖心视频 University student who was actively involved in residence life and chaplaincy and who served his community. So that鈥檚 something I鈥檓 really proud of that will be part of my legacy, but more importantly part of Brendan鈥檚 legacy.
The award allows students to have some financial assistance, which is helpful for them, and it allows my family to have a legacy for Brendan, and that鈥檚 a really important thing, because everyone should be remembered.
14. What gave you and your family the idea to create the scholarship?
Well, there鈥檚 a lady who is a great friend of the School of Social Work, Lorraine Morgan, and she created an award in memory of her mom, Mary Florence (Mugford) Lane, a woman who persevered in life. And when I read about that award and got to meet Lorraine, it inspired me to create an award for Brendan. Because you know, it鈥檚 something I hadn鈥檛 thought about before, but Lorraine鈥檚 trailblazing of creating an award in memory of her mom, made me think, well, why couldn鈥檛 I have an award in memory of Brendan? So that鈥檚 where that idea came from.
15. What鈥檚 your favorite place in the world?
My favorite place in the world is one I haven鈥檛 visited yet. But it is somewhere I鈥檓 going to go in my retirement 鈥 Ireland. I鈥檓 going with my girlfriends for three weeks in May, so I鈥檓 looking forward to that.
16. What鈥檚 your favorite season of the year?
It鈥檚 not a season, it鈥檚 a day. My favorite day of the year is St. Patrick鈥檚 Day. I wear green from March 1-17th.
17. Who鈥檚 your favorite musician?
The Ennis Sisters are my absolute favorite. I mean, I love Stevie Nicks too and fellow Social Worker Jackie Sullivan. But I鈥檝e known the Ennis sisters since they were young girls and I believe they are true daughters of Newfoundland and Labrador and true ambassadors for Newfoundland and Labrador.
18. Do you have a favorite book?
My favorite authors are Maeve Binchy and Jane Austin. I can鈥檛 choose just one.
19. What physical or personality trait are you most grateful to your parents for?
I鈥檓 grateful to them both for different reasons. My dad took me up to our church in Cape Broyle when I was in grade 4 and taught me how to public speak. He said that every young girl should know how to speak in public. There was nobody there, he鈥檇 get the key to the church and he鈥檇 have me look out and look up, and say, don鈥檛 just read off the paper, practice. I feel one of my greatest strengths is my public speaking and I got that from my dad. From my mom I got my socializing skills and knack for writing poems 鈥 she and I had that in common 鈥 we can make up a poem or song parody in a few minutes. And I guess from both of them my love of singing and dancing 鈥 both of them were talented in that way.
20. In addition to travelling to Ireland in the spring (!) what are some of your retirement plans?
I鈥檓 a member of the board of directors for the RUAH Counselling Centre and I鈥檓 going to remain on the board and do some volunteering with them, maybe see how we might co- enhance supports for survivors of suicide loss. And I鈥檓 a Presentation Associate with the Presentation Sisters and I鈥檓 really interested in spirituality-based practice, reflective practice, and so I鈥檒l continue with that into my retirement as well. I recently joined the Basilica choir and love that experience. I am looking forward to new ways to give back to the community and new adventures with family and friends. There will be lots to do, no doubt!