The award is named in honor of Reginald Wilson, senior scholar 
emeritus at ACE and founding director of the Council's Office of 
Minority Concerns (now part of ACE Leadership), and is presented 
annually to an individual who has made outstanding contributions and 
demonstrated sustained commitment to diversity in higher education.
The award will be presented during the closing plenary of ACE2017, ACE's 99th Annual Meeting, on March 14 in Washington, DC.
"Mildred García is a leader who fully embodies the essence of this 
award with passion, integrity and commitment to ensuring inclusion for 
all students on a national and local level," said ACE President Molly 
Corbett Broad. "Her ability to work across boundaries and within diverse
 communities demonstrates the kind of leadership necessary in the 21st 
century. I am pleased to add her name to the list of Wilson Award 
winners who have honored Reginald Wilson's legacy."
As the president of CSUF, a Hispanic-Serving Institution, García, 
herself a first-generation college student, has been an outspoken 
advocate for increasing diversity and inclusion at all levels of the 
university and surrounding community.
García established a Student Success Center in each of the 
university’s eight colleges, designed to provide adequate support and 
advising services to increase graduation rates, reduce the time to earn a
 degree and narrow the achievement gap for underrepresented students. 
Through these and other efforts, CSUF’s graduation rate for first-time 
freshmen rose to 63 percent in 2016—the highest in the university’s 
history. CSUF also eliminated the achievement gap for transfer students.
She has specifically worked to cultivate and nurture academic talent,
 including developing diverse teams of people throughout her career as a
 higher education leader, creating a highly diverse university 
leadership cabinet and recruiting the most diverse class of incoming 
faculty members in the university’s history.
While she has played an outstanding role as a Latina in higher 
education and within the community, she has also displayed an 
extraordinary willingness to stand for and speak out for many 
underserved groups in the context of postsecondary education 
specifically and broader societal issues. García created the Titan 
Dreamers Resource Center, which provides undocumented students with 
academic and emotional support, referrals to financial assistance, 
information on programs and services designed to improve retention and 
graduation rates, and a comforting environment where students can 
connect with one another.
She also has made significant contributions to the research and 
scholarly community and was recognized by the Association for the Study 
of Higher Education (ASHE) for her work in transforming that academic 
community and making it more inclusive. An annual research award is 
given by ASHE in her name.
 
 
Left to right; ACE President Molly Corbett Broad; Mildred García; Reginald Wilson; Lynn Gangone, vice president, ACE Leadership.