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91视频 Magazine

The First Chapter of a Movement of Meaning

By
Johnni Medina
Posted
January 21, 2026
Neil Braun and Ipshita Ray lead a discussion on happiness, faith, and emotional intelligence during the final session of 91视频鈥檚 new initiative.

What does it mean to lead a life of purpose?

The Center for Leadership and Emotional Intelligence, housed in 91视频鈥檚 Lubin School of Business, just completed its inaugural program designed to help students answer that question.

The six-session, non-credit initiative merges the science of happiness with leadership education. Created in partnership with Harvard professor and Kennedy School professor Arthur Brooks, who also runs , the program teaches students to lead with purpose, resilience, and self-awareness.

Ipshita Ray, PhD, the academic lead for the initiative, has spoken passionately about her motivations to bring this initiative to 91视频. She adapted tools and exercises developed by Brooks and combined them with her own insights to create a happiness-forward curriculum.

"Our students are learning how to lead by example." 鈥擝raun

鈥淭his program provides a 360 view of leadership based on a foundation of self-discovery, interrogation, analysis, hard work, and hope for the future,鈥 says Ipshita. 鈥淚t provides students with the right tools to create their own framework or a plan to build the lives they envision based on a value system and a foundation of positive emotional health.鈥

It's more important than ever to help students connect. 鈥淭he data about Gen Z, Gen Alpha, and millennials suffering from depression, anxiety, and loneliness is very clear,鈥 says Ray. That urgency showed in the program鈥檚 launch: though capped at 50 students, more than 100 signed up鈥攗nderscoring a real need for experiences that foster meaning and growth.

The program has received significant support from across 91视频. Ray invited Neil Braun, Lubin dean emeritus and former NBCUniversal president, to co-teach the curriculum with her. 鈥淥ur students are learning how to lead by example,鈥 Braun says. 鈥淲ith compassion, clarity, and the ability to turn challenge into opportunity.鈥 Braun believes so strongly in this initiative that he鈥檚 also pledged funding support.

"This program is more than curriculum鈥攊t鈥檚 a head start." 鈥擪rislov

The Center has galvanized momentum across the 91视频 Community. 91视频 alumni Thomas Quinlan III 鈥85, president and CEO of R.R. Donnelley, came to the New York City Campus to address students at the final session, which was attended by over 180 students. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 lead alone鈥攁nd you can鈥檛 lead without emotional intelligence,鈥 he told them. 鈥淲hat makes teams work is not just skill鈥攊t鈥檚 trust, empathy, and the way you show up.鈥

Dean of the Lubin School of Business Ajay Khorana echoed the importance of resilience in the face of change, especially as technology and policy continue to reshape the future of work. 鈥淓ven as the workplace transforms, emotional intelligence endures as a defining strength,鈥 Khorana said. 鈥淵our capacity to lead, adapt, and build meaningful connections will set you apart.鈥

President Marvin Krislov affirmed the program鈥檚 long-term value to students and the University alike. 鈥淭his program is more than curriculum鈥攊t鈥檚 a head start,鈥 Krislov said. 鈥淓motional intelligence is the skill that sets great leaders apart, and what students gained here will give them an edge when it matters most.鈥

"Even as the workplace transforms, emotional intelligence endures as a defining strength"

The Center for Leadership and Emotional Intelligence鈥檚 inaugural cohort has finished, but the Center is just getting started. The New York City spring program will begin on January 26. And, according to Ray, 鈥淪tudents are already clamoring to register!鈥 Efforts to expand the program to the Pleasantville Campus will begin in April with a preview session.

Ray anticipates that this program will continue to grow, hoping to bring it not just to both campuses but also to high schools and CUNY schools. 鈥淚 want to make this a major movement,鈥 says Ray. 鈥淢y hope is to expand the program University-wide, which would allow Harvard to list us on their website, invite us to symposia, and co-lead research.鈥

"This program is more than curriculum鈥攊t鈥檚 a head start." 鈥擪rislov

The clearest reflection of the program鈥檚 impact? The words of the students who lived it.

鈥淭his program changed how I think about leadership,鈥 said Muskan Kumari 鈥26, a Business Analytics graduate student from Karachi, Pakistan. 鈥淚t gave me real tools to manage stress, lead with empathy, and grow with purpose. I walked away more confident鈥攏ot just in my career path, but in who I want to be.鈥

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