CSU Honors Speech Language Disorders Innovator
Sonja Pruitt-Lord was nominated by her students for the Chancellor's award for leadership and innovation.

Ive always wanted to open as many doors as possible for others.
In her student days, Sonja Pruitt-Lord embraced leadership roles and was lucky to find mentors who changed her lifes trajectory. Now, as a professor at 窪蹋勛圖, she aims to give back by providing research opportunities in her lab and mentoring key student organizations in her field.
Her has an unprecedented 60 student researchers, and together theyre making a significant impact in the San Diego community by working with preschool children with language disorders. They range from undergraduates to post-doctoral researchers, and work daily in Rosa Parks Elementary School in City Heights, rotating between their own classes and research in preschool classrooms.
So many people supported me and opened these doors for me, so Ive always wanted to open as many doors as possible for others, Pruitt-Lord said. Ive learned over time that students can do things better than me, and I can give them teachable moments by giving them the freedom to explore. My students exceed my expectations every day.
When her students asked her to help them start chapters of national student organizations, she promptly agreed. So Pruitt-Lord is also chapter advisor for the National Student Speech, Language, and Hearing Association and Women Empowered, and has helped guide them in leadership roles and mentored them as they explored their potential.
Unbeknown to her, students nominated her for the California State University Faculty Innovation and Leadership Award, given to select faculty by the CSU Chancellors Office for exemplary achievements and contributions to student success. The nomination was supported by Tracy Love, director of 窪蹋勛圖s School of Speech Language and Hearing Sciences (SLHS).
I aim to educate the whole student, Pruitt-Lord said. I value the energy and creativity of students and seek opportunities to support their intellectual and personal development through classroom instruction, leadership, research, and professional experiences.
Pruitt-Lords research focuses on improving current methods of assessment for children from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds to prevent misdiagnosis of language disorders, and reduce health and educational disparities. She and her students aim to equip families, students, educators, community agencies, and policy makers with the tools needed to facilitate childrens language and cognitive development.
As an educator, she continually seeks ways to improve retaining students from diverse backgrounds in the field, and has partnered with colleagues from other campuses to present educational practices developed to increase diversity in graduate programs.
How mentors shaped her life
Pruitt-Lords family is from Tangier, a small island in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay near Virginia, where residents speak a unique dialect of the English language that she still retains traces of, despite leaving as a child. She remembers the freedom to roam freely on the island, which had very few cars and hence no fear of traffic.
The islands main livelihood was crabbing, and Pruitt-Lord recalls sitting on a skiff with my grandma and my great-aunt安ith a net on a pole.
She moved to New Orleans where she did her schooling and went to Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, initially for a degree in chemical engineering. A chance conversation with a friend convinced her to reconsider her options and when she began exploring speech and language pathology, an associate dean provided valuable career counseling and put her on the path to graduate school and research in the field. Others played a role too.
When I wrote my final grad school research paper, my professor asked me - if she funds this research will I do it, she recalled. I said yes, and thats how I got into the field and into teaching. They opened doors I didnt even know existed.
Then came Hurricane Katrina, changing life for many in the region. Later that year, Pruitt-Lord was part of an LSU contingent attending the American Speech Language and Hearing Association conference in San Diego. She came across a job posting from 窪蹋勛圖, another turning point in her life.
I looked around sunny San Diego, thought about my waterlogged town, and decided to apply. I was inspired by the facultys commitment to research and clinical education and truly liked them as people I met, and here we are, she said. She joined 窪蹋勛圖 in 2006 and was made full professor in May 2019.
Recent milestones
Its been a big year in many ways. She was also just promoted to associate dean in the College of Health and Human Services (CHHS), where she will oversee academic affairs. Pruitt-Lord and her colleagues currently have grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), U.S. Department of Education Office of Special Education Programs, and local community agencies to support their work.
Dr. Pruitt-Lord is dedicated to developing thoughtful leaders through the experiences she creates for students in her classes, research lab, and student organizationsand Im delighted to see it recognized with this prestigious award, 窪蹋勛圖 President Adela de la Torre said. Dr. Pruitt-Lord's enthusiasm and commitment to create many opportunities for 窪蹋勛圖 students is truly exemplary.
CHHS Dean Steven Hooker praised her as a teacher and leader.
Her career and accomplishments are extraordinary. Whatever she is involved with, students always come first, Hooker said. She is what I would call a master teacher, in that she integrates innovative educational and growth-promoting opportunities for students in the classroom, in her research, and in community outreach activities. She is truly a leader in her field and most deserving of the award she is receiving.
SLHS director Love said her passion for student development and innovative approaches to the field is simply extraordinary.



