Rollins

Being the Change

October 14, 2021

By Stephanie Rizzo ’09

Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo and Raphael Adomakoh ’22
Photo by Scott Cook.

Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo wants to change the world, and she’s doing it through her students.

For as long as she can remember, Josie Balzac-Arroyo has always enjoyed learning.

“My mother never had to get onto me to do my homework when I was a kid,” she says. “I was always very studious and genuinely loved school.”

The assistant professor of social entrepreneurship still loves school, and she’s made a career of inspiring young changemakers looking to solve some of the world’s biggest problems.

As the oldest sibling born into a Latinx family—her father is from Puerto Rico and her mother immigrated from Nicaragua seeking political asylum during the civil war—Balzac-Arroyo saw the sacrifices her parents made to give her and her brother a better life growing up. “I saw how hard they worked, and I wanted to work just as hard,” she says.

And work hard she did. After graduating as valedictorian from her high school, she attended the University of Central Florida, where she majored in psychology, and started a part-time position at a law firm. And then, she rebelled for maybe the first time in her life.

“My dad wanted me to apply to law school right out of undergrad, but I pushed back. For as long as I could remember, I’d devoted my life to school. Now, I wanted to start my career,” she says.

For the next few years, Balzac-Arroyo worked as a paralegal in different law firms around Orlando. The meticulous attention to detail she’d honed as a young professional gaining real-world experience served her well, and she soon gained a reputation as smart, hardworking, and reliable.

Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo advised a group of students as they made their way to the finals of the Hult Prize for their innovative sustainable power alternative—a success that stands as a testament to Rollins’ world-class social entrepreneurship curriculum and ecosystem.
Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo advised a group of students as they advanced to the finals of the Hult Prize competition for their sustainable power alternative—a success that stands as a testament to Rollins’ world-class social entrepreneurship curriculum and ecosystem.Photo by Scott Cook.

“And then I had a mid-20s crisis,” she laughs. “My dad had been right. I wanted more. So I applied to law school, and it completely changed the trajectory of my life. In law school, I became more analytical, more inquisitive. I was inspired by so many things, specifically environmental law, climate change, and the connection between our rights as humans and having a clean and healthy environment.”

After receiving her JD from FAMU College of Law, Balzac-Arroyo attended George Washington University, where she received a Master of Laws (LLM) in international environmental law. Along the way, she developed a love of teaching. What if she could parlay everything she was passionate about—teaching, the environment, effecting change through strategic activism—into one perfect job? Enter Rollins. Now, six years on, she knows it was the right choice.

“I’ve fallen in love with being in the classroom and the opportunity to impact future generations,” she says. “My students give off an energy that keeps me going, and hopefully I can inspire them in similar ways.”

International relations major Josh Willard ’20 met Balzac-Arroyo his first semester at Rollins during his Rollins College Conference (RCC) course, Be the Change, an introduction to social entrepreneurship and the many different ways to use social disruption for good.

“Professor Balzac-Arroyo radiates a sense of optimism that we, as students, can make the world a better place,” he says. “I took one class with her my first year and have kept going back to her office for four years. She became one of my most important mentors, and her support set me on the course I’m on today. She encouraged me to open all the doors I could, and it just so happens that the door I chose to walk through after graduating from Rollins was to her alma mater, George Washington University, where I’m getting my master’s in international affairs.”

Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo turning residential lawns into sustainable micro-farms.
Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo and her students worked with Fleet Farming, a program developed by local nonprofit IDEAS For Us, to transform residential lawns into micro-farms that help decrease greenhouse-gas omissions.Photo by Scott Cook.

Major Impact

Balzac-Arroyo is always connecting with students—whether it’s turning local lawns into organic farms or through Rollins’ Social Impact Hub, where anyone, regardless of major, can partner with faculty and peers to tackle global social issues such as poverty, sustainability, education, and more. The hub is designed to be a truly creative space where students can pitch ideas both big and small.

“The Hub is focused on aligning our actions with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals,” explains Balzac-Arroyo. “We introduce students to social innovation and teach them to be changemakers within a global community.”

One of the ways Balzac-Arroyo introduces her students to social innovation is through the Social Impact Hub’s yearly pitch competition, Ideas for Good. Students in her community engagement course Strategies for Changemakers choose a Sustainable Development Goal and develop a pitch using the concept of human-centered design thinking. This means they engage in research about the needs of a community before they even begin to develop a solution. Past projects include everything from developing a better method for recycling plastics to investing in technology that makes it easier for diabetics to gauge their blood sugar levels. Once they’ve developed a pitch, students have the opportunity to win up to $50,000 in seed funding to make their ideas a reality.

Despite the wide range of subject matter, every project developed by Balzac-Arroyo’s students has one thing in common: Real people are at the heart of each and every idea.

“By spending time with a community, it allows you to identify problems more effectively,” she says. “We want to avoid a savior mentality in favor of co-creating solutions to social challenges.”

Josie Balzac-Arroyo works with her student on original research in the Olin Library.
Through Rollins’ Student-Faculty Collaborative Scholarship Program, social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo and Joshua Bedoya ’21 examined how corporations and businesses are being redefined as society is demanding that companies serve a social purpose and benefit all stakeholders.Photo by Scott Cook.

Creating Pathways for Change

One of the classes Balzac-Arroyo especially loves teaching is Law & Ethics of Social Innovation & Entrepreneurship, which is a requirement of the social entrepreneurship program but doesn’t require prerequisites—meaning any student who is interested in the law can take it. This often results in a mixed bag of majors, everything from political science and international relations students to those pursuing social entrepreneurship. Each of these students brings a unique perspective to the course, which makes for a dynamic, collaborative environment through which to study law and gets at the very heart of Rollins’ interdisciplinary approach to education.

“I want my students to know that the law should not be intimidating,” says Balzac-Arroyo. “We operate in a world of laws every day. So even if you don’t plan on going to law school, there are still plenty of things you need to know if you want to go into business. How do you protect your employees? How do you build a basic contract? What do you need to know about intellectual property when it comes to your name, your logo, or any proprietary technology you might develop?”

Another major component of the class is mediation and negotiation, skills that are essential for changemaking. Balzac-Arroyo uses them constantly both in and outside of the classroom in her role as a community advocate for social and climate justice. It’s just another way that this lifelong learner continues to embrace new methods of effecting change.

Social entrepreneurship graduate and current Crummer Graduate School of Business student Hannah Jackson ’20 ’22MBA says that Balzac-Arroyo’s main strength comes from her willingness to work alongside her students in the quest for change.

"What I really like about Professor Balzac’s approach to the classroom is creating an enjoyable environment where students actually want to learn,” says Jackson. “She appreciates students’ input just as much as her own, which makes it feel like she is learning alongside us. She’s mastered the skill of making students feel valued, and I look up to her because of her strength and courage to always stand on the right side of justice. As a woman of color, sometimes that boldness comes with a risk, but Professor Balzac always welcomes that risk with confidence.”


Social entrepreneurship professor Josie Balzac-Arroyo
Photo by Scott Cook.

Fun Facts about Professor Balzac-Arroyo

  • Loves to sing and got to the second round on American Idol
  • Valedictorian of both her high school and law school
  • Personally invited to meet Sen. Bernie Sanders in his D.C. office to discuss climate justice policies
  • Worked on Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer’s Green Works task force

5 Coolest Classes

  • RCC 100 Be the Change
  • RCC 100 Profit and Purpose
  • SE 300 Law and Ethics of Social Entrepreneurship and Social Innovation
  • SE 320 Strategies for Changemakers
  • SE 330 Law and Environmental Sustainability
Professor and students in a class discussion at a Rollins outdoor classroom

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