Breaking the Bamboo Ceiling: Female Leaders Share Their Experiences at Annual Be Heard! Conference
ST. LOUIS - Saint Louis University’s Emerson Leadership Institute held its third annual Be Heard! Women in Leadership conference on Friday, May 3. The event, “Breaking and Powering Through the Bamboo Ceiling,” kicked off Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.
The half-day event featured conversations about creating a sense of belonging and equity in the workplace, culminating in a panel discussion with local Asian women leaders. The panelists shared their experiences and how they navigate the workplace.
The conference featured a panel of local Asian women leaders, including:
- Elaine Cha – host and producer, St. Louis on the Air, St. Louis Public Radio
- Grace Lee – dean of faculty, Mary Institute County Day School
- Nalini Mahadevan – principal attorney, MLO Law and co-founder of the Immigrant Professional Women’s Network in STL
- Shu Schiller – dean of the College of Business Administration, University of Missouri-St. Louis
The panel was moderated by Luchen Li, associate vice president for global engagement at SLU.
Barnali Gupta, Ph.D., the Edward Jones Dean and professor of economics at Saint Louis University’s Richard A. Chaifetz School of Business, told the audience that leadership is about the people being led and not the leader.
“If you make leadership about you, you’ve already failed,” she said.
Gupta challenged those in attendance to remember why their work is important.
“Our students are my why,” she said. “They are why I do what I do. Find your why.”
The panelists shared experiences around tokenism, the paths to leadership and finding solidarity with other women, whether in the workplace or through professional organizations.
Lee said she found solidarity and kinship with other women of color early in her teaching career and those relationships helped her move up in educational administration. Cha said finding relationships with women of different generations helped her shed generational bias. She also noted that it was critical that she freed herself of the friendship myth.
“There is this expectation that we are all supposed to get along all the time and that the work of teambuilding tends to fall on the women,” she said. “We should be professional and be supportive of one another, but you don’t have to be best friends with everyone.”
Being supportive goes beyond co-workers, Mahadevan told the group and should extend to the women not yet in the organization.
“We don’t just need to be the best we can be, like the Army slogan, but we need to be the generals at the front,” she said. “We set the example and teach the people behind us. I think of my daughter when I am thinking about what comes next.”
Schiller echoed that sentiment, noting it was incumbent upon women in leadership to ask themselves how they are developing their employees to be leaders.
“Team success is grown by individual success,” she said. “As a leader, I need to help them be successful and continue to invest in their development and growth.”
The path to leadership was varied for the panelists, with Schiller sharing her experience of creating an intentional path to academic leadership at UMSL by determining her motivation and aiming toward a goal, while Cha shared that being a radio host was not a job for which she was aiming.
“I lacked the direction some of my colleagues here have talked about,” she said. “But I asked questions all along the way. I have stuck my neck out, which hasn’t always served me well, but I am where I am because I am assertive without being loud. That’s the secret sauce for me.”
Cha challenged those in attendance to find their own secret sauce to propel them forward in their careers.
“Don’t be afraid to do things,” she said. “Leadership comes from moving together.”
About the Richard A. Chaifetz School of Business
Founded in 1910, the Richard A. Chaifetz School of Business at Saint Louis University has shaped the future of industry for more than a century. As one of the oldest business schools west of the Mississippi, the Chaifetz School has built a reputation as a leader in business education committed to innovation, inclusion and impact and recognized with eight undergraduate and graduate programs nationally ranked by U.S. News & World Report.
About Saint Louis University
Founded in 1818, Saint Louis University is one of the nation’s oldest and most prestigious Catholic institutions. Rooted in Jesuit values and its pioneering history as the first university west of the Mississippi River, SLU offers more than 15,200 students a rigorous, transformative education of the whole person. At the core of the University’s diverse community of scholars is SLU’s service-focused mission, which challenges and prepares students to make the world a better, more just place.
Latest Newslink
- SLU's Remote Sensing Lab Joins Climate TRACE Global CoalitionSaint Louis University’s Remote Sensing Lab is now a coalition member of Climate TRACE, a global coalition focused on tracking greenhouse gas emissions, building the world’s largest and most comprehensive emissions inventory to provide accurate and transparent data. Climate TRACE is a non-profit coalition of organizations building a timely, open, and accessible inventory of exactly where greenhouse gas emissions are coming from
- SLU Students Visit Rome for 2025 Jubilee, Audience with Pope Leo XIVEight Saint Louis University students, along with a Jesuit in Formation and two campus ministers, went to Rome before the fall semester began to participate in the Jubilee of Young People. The trip was sponsored by SLU's Department of Campus Ministry.
- Saint Louis University Museum of Art Opens Two New ExhibitionsSaint Louis University Museum of Art (SLUMA) presents two new exhibitions this fall. “From War to Classroom: The Bosnian Student Project” opens Friday Sept. 19, and “Intersections: Memory, Identity, and Place” opens Friday, Sept. 12.
- SLU AirCRAFT Lab's Unmanned Aerial System Named Most Innovative at Recent CompetitionAn unmanned aerial system (UAS) built by Saint Louis University's Aircraft Computational and Resource Aware Fault Tolerance (AirCRAFT) Lab was named the most innovative at the 2025 Student Unmanned Aerial Systems (SUAS) Competition. The event is sponsored by RoboNation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing robotics education and workforce development.
- Museum of Contemporary Religious Art Opens Two New ExhibitionsSaint Louis University’s Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) presents two exhibitions that explore the ways in which the places we inhabit shape us and are shaped by us. “To See This Place: Awakening to Our Common Home” and “Legacy: Selections from the Gerald R. and Mary Reid Brunstrom Gift of Art from Australia” open on Friday, Sept. 5.