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By Laurie Davies
Mautra Jones, EdD, enjoys the art of building. Building communities. Building programs. Building people. And as the eleventh president of the 17,000-student Oklahoma City Community College, she now gets to build on its legacy.
At 43, Jones is the first female and first person of color to lead 鈥淥 Triple-C,鈥 as locals call the fourth-largest higher-education institution in Oklahoma. Jones is also the first African American woman to lead any higher-education institution in the state of Oklahoma that is not an HBCU (historically Black college or university).
Oh, and Jones was also named National Mother of the Year in 2021 by . Fittingly, she learned of the honor in between her kids鈥 soccer games.听
Considered one of the youngest thought leaders in Oklahoma, Jones sometimes turns her own thoughts to the journey that, outwardly anyway, seems like a meteoric rise.
For her, the trajectory to leadership feels more like a group project. 鈥淧eople have believed in me, lifted me up and ensured my success,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e had incredible mentors, bosses, friends and educators. I think about the teachers who saw the potential in me and who cared. The qualities that people put into me 鈥 it鈥檚 life-altering and will impact generations to come.鈥
Sure, Jones has always been optimistic and full of life. That, she attributes to her personality. Her template for integrity and perseverance she owes to her grandmother, a native Oklahoman born in 1934. Now 88 years old, her grandmother didn鈥檛 have access to the educational and professional advancements Jones has seized. 鈥淔or her, my success 鈥 and the success of my siblings 鈥 are some of her dreams realized,鈥 Jones says.
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Raised by her grandmother, Jones grew up a student of the strong morals, values and emphasis on community service imparted in her home. These lessons have played out in diverse ways in Jones鈥 adult life. Jones has served at-risk teens and was appointed by Governors Kevin Stitt and Mary Fallin to provide oversight of the juvenile affairs system for the state of Oklahoma.
She also serves as a board director for a number of organizations, including BancFirst and BancFirst Corporation; South Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce; American Mothers, Inc.; Oklahoma Hall of Fame; StitchCrew; and Oklahoma Philharmonic Society.
While impressive, her speaker bio, leadership achievements and list of community recognitions are perhaps as long as the list of challenges she faced growing up. The difficulties she maneuvered 鈥渃ould have caused me to check a dozen boxes,鈥 Jones says. 鈥淚f you look at stats from those who grew up in the socioeconomic bracket I grew up in 鈥︹
Her sentence trails off for a few seconds while she considers how to finish her thought.
鈥淚 want people to understand that no matter what you鈥檝e gone through, it is for a purpose. I didn鈥檛 experience the heartache and lack of resources for no reason,鈥 she finishes.
In fact, her difficult childhood forms the backbone of what makes her strong. 鈥淚 am an overcomer. I am not a victim, I am a victor,鈥 Jones says. 鈥淚 am grateful for my struggles. Sitting where I sit now, it all makes sense.鈥
Where she sits now is at the forefront of a community college whose students are much like she was when she set out to get her Bachelor of Arts in Journalism at University of Oklahoma, which she earned in 2002. 鈥淎 lot of the students we serve at OCCC have obstacles that stand in the way. I know what it鈥檚 like to long,鈥 Jones says. Part of what drives her is knowing she can help steward the journeys of students who face the same hurdles she did.
鈥淪he is especially concerned with helping students who are first-generation students,鈥 says Robert Ruiz, executive director of external affairs for OCCC. 鈥淯nderstanding the needs of non-traditional students and trying to close achievement gaps 鈥 so many things at OCCC line up with her values.鈥
In fact, OCCC announced the forgiveness of $4 million in student debt through its Fresh Start Initiative in July. 鈥淒r. Jones really hit the ground running as president of OCCC. She has gone nonstop as far as positive impact,鈥 Ruiz says.
Ruiz came onboard as Jones鈥檚 second hire when she joined OCCC. 鈥淚鈥檝e known Dr. Jones since she was just Mautra in college,鈥 he says, noting that she was driven then just like she is now. 鈥淪he is a lifelong learner,鈥 he says, adding that her graduate degrees aren鈥檛 the only proof of this. 鈥淪he wants to brush up on her Spanish, so I鈥檒l be helping her with conversational Spanish 鈥 just because she wants to better serve our Hispanic students.鈥
Jones鈥 own trajectory might also encourage the students she serves. After getting her journalism degree, she went on to earn her听MBA from 爱污传媒听in 2006. She had just been promoted to a newly created director of marketing position, and she needed business skills 鈥 fast. 鈥淚 was so impressed with 爱污传媒. I literally walked into 爱污传媒, met with a counselor, and got signed up within the same day or two.鈥
She remembers one instructor was a statistician who worked on the Iowa Test of Basic Skills. Another worked at MassMutual in finance. 鈥淭he business savvy and knowledge I gained 鈥 I was able to apply things I learned in the classroom immediately in the workplace.鈥
In 2020, she went on to earn her Doctorate of Education, Leadership and Learning in Organizations from another university.
A woman of strong faith, Jones says it鈥檚 through prayers, God鈥檚 grace, supporters, educators, family members, mentors and mother figures that she has been able to accomplish anything at all. Her faith especially helps her tune out the noise inherent to being in leadership. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 let negativity pour into my soul or the work I do,鈥 she says.
How does she balance everything?
鈥淓very day is different,鈥 she says, noting that she tag teams with her husband, Judge Bernard Jones. Her husband is a trailblazer in his own right: He was the first African American to become a federal magistrate judge for the state of Oklahoma.
Today, Judge Jones serves on the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma 鈥 an appointment that has a touch of destiny. Mautra Jones explains: 鈥淏ernard鈥檚 great aunt was an educator who sued Oklahoma City Public Schools back in the 1940s for equal pay for teachers of color. One of her attorneys at that time was [late Supreme Court Justice] Thurgood Marshall. She sued in the very courts my husband serves in today.鈥
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Between his schedule and hers, college and community, faith and family, the Joneses divide and conquer and make family life, community commitments and their careers work.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 become a college president at 43 by happenstance. A lot of work went into getting me here, and I didn鈥檛 arrive alone. My husband is walking alongside me, I have support systems and, at OCCC, I have a great team,鈥 Jones says.
Right now, she plans to just keep building.
鈥淚t has taken drive, grit, faith and fearlessness,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ome people say I鈥檝e arrived and it鈥檚 all about me. It鈥檚 not. I am here to serve.鈥
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