~ To me, defending the highest potential in others is the essence of what it means to be a lawyer. Naturally, I am building a university that teaches men and women to realize their own power and potential.

Testimonials.

Course Name:
Criminal Justice Criminology [CRJ 330]
Institution:
Iona University
Location:
New Rochelle, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Ohenewah delivered a master class where students felt they belonged and eagerly participated.
Prof. Ohenewah has a deliberate and iterative pace to the way she teaches in class. She pauses, and asks if students understood the concept, if they have any questions or comments regularly. The students were very eager to participate. I was positively surprised that Ms. Ohenewah knows all of her classmates by first name only two weeks into the semester and has built an excellent rapport with all of them. In short, Ms. Ohenewah delivered a master class where students felt they belonged and eagerly participated, the classroom materially was adequately discussed, practical examples were utilized and a civic in depth conversation was held.
~Department Chair, Classroom Observation
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Professor Ohenewah, your support, your energy and your authenticity make me feel like I can take on the world.
This class is truly the best one I’ve taken. You create an environment where I feel seen, supported and capable of handling anything. The good, the bad and even the indifferent moments that life throws at me. You are relatable in a way that makes learning feel natural and effortless, and you have a unique way of connecting with your students that sets you apart from any professor I’ve had. Professor Ohenewah, your support, your energy and your authenticity make me feel like I can take on the world. You are truly one of a kind, and it shows in everything you teach.
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
As a professor you challenge us to think outside the box, or to think of it in the completely opposite angle from where we were coming from.
My feedback overall about this course is that it has been very eye opening. I like the fact that it is a space where we can freely share our thoughts on the sociological concept at hand. Getting to hear how someone else in the class views a particular issue is insightful because it is often based on their culture, family dynamic, gender, and race. We all live a different truth and it is good to hear other views. As a professor you challenge us to think outside the box, or to think of it in the completely opposite angle from where we were coming from. I truly enjoy coming to this class because the conversations are engaging and interesting.
The only bad that I can think of its that it is on a Friday evening after a draining week of work and school. Thank you so much professor for your support!
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Honestly, every class you've spoken life into us and given us the confidence and strength to see our full potential.
This course has been my favorite class since I've entered Saint Paul's School of Nursing. Honestly, every class you've spoken life into us and given us the confidence and strength to see our full potential. I love how you articulate yourself so every class has been a pleasure. Thank you for everything!
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Grateful to have a professor like you. You are truly a great and amazing person.
First and foremost, I am very thankful—grateful to have a professor like you. You are truly a great and amazing person that I have ever met. You are so sweet, kind, understanding, caring, with a big heart to help us in class. I dearly enjoy being in your class as well, of course. You are very pleasant and made the class very interesting because we are discussing real challenges about life. It opens my eyes and makes me awake to what's going on outside of my own little world—family, work, school, taking care of my dad who is in my country. I will miss you professor and I wish you all the best, the very best in life and what comes next in the near future.
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Thank you so much professor for teaching in such a fun way.
I really loved and enjoyed the course. The content was satisfying and clear. The examples professor was giving were very helpful and it was really easy to understand. I am really grateful how professor taught all content in a way we could understand and connected it to real life with some examples. Even I got a chance to express my opinion and feelings about love or about men via ideas in class. Over all, all content professor covered in class was really helpful and interesting. I really appreciate for this class. Thank you so much professor for teaching in such a fun way.
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Overall this was a good learning experience and I feel like I understand sociology much better now.
I really enjoyed this course. The content was clear, the examples were helpful and easy to understand. I appreciated how the class connected real-life situations to the concepts we learned. It helped me think differently about society and how people interact. Overall this was a good learning experience and I feel like I understand sociology much better now. Thank you professor, I really enjoy your class. God bless you always!
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Our professor valued everyone's word.
This course was overall a very good course. I loved the fact that our professor had us engaged in the various topics. Our discussions were very interesting, listening to others' thoughts and ideas concerning ethnicity, race, culture, status, socialization, class. This allowed me to hear different points of view. These debates were not based on a right or wrong answer. These discussions had me thinking deeper and this is how we actually need to train our brains to work. Our professor was excellent, she used her knowledge and wisdom to give us the information that was needed for this course and I am truly grateful that I was a part of this class. Our feedback from topics really mattered and our professor valued everyone's word. Thinking deeper and critically is an important aspect of nursing and this course really allowed me to think and ask why.
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
Professor, you created an environment that encouraged learning, and the examples used in class helped connect concepts to our everyday lives.
I really enjoy this course, I genuinely appreciated the way the material was organized. Professor, you created an environment that encouraged learning, and the examples used in class helped connect concepts to our everyday lives—stuff that we encounter daily and somehow we are being enlightened and understanding those concepts better and clearer. I truly appreciate the fact that the workload is not heavy and that allows us to spend more time with other classes. That flexibility really takes us a long way. The course is meaningful and productive, really teaching us social norms and values.
Course Name:
Principles of Sociology [SOC107]
Institution:
St. Paul's School of Nursing
Location:
Queens, NY
Date:
Fall 2025
The beauty of this course is that when we sit in class, we can finally think about things we otherwise do not have the time or reason to think about.
The Sociology course being offered at St. Paul's is an opportunity for prospective nurses to confront their own biases of society and explore their true values when matched against societal concepts. The course, being broad in nature, cultivates a learning environment that allows students to think critically, creatively, and constructively. The bad part about this course is as an overwhelmed nursing student trying to make sense of the world around them, it's the one class you'd feel safe running late to, and that can be easily taken advantage of even though you'd be missing out on a kind of experience you literally cannot get anywhere else. Everything else this semester is so difficult that we use this course as an opportunity to take it a little easy. Albeit, this type of behavior is unique to the individual, but certainly many students may feel the same. The beauty of this course is that when we sit in class, we can finally think about things we otherwise do not have the time or reason to think about. Sociology challenges our current way of thinking, and having vocal classmates offers different perspectives that we can take into account. Being able to analyze reasoning from many points of view is a fundamental asset to learning. Intellectuals are able to observe from many different angles and this course fosters that type of education. Something you can only get if you're sitting in class with our sociology professor. The value we get as students for being subjected to material of this sort, that is so different from our nursing classes, is immense because it allows you to realize there's another side of life we might have been neglecting with our busy, performative schedules.




