• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertising
  • Join PGM
Pepperdine Graphic

Pepperdine Graphic

  • News
    • Good News
  • Sports
    • Hot Shots
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
    • Advice Column
    • Waves Comic
  • GNews
    • Staff Spotlights
    • First and Foremost
    • Allgood Food
    • Pepp in Your Step
    • DunnCensored
    • Beyond the Statistics
  • Special Publications
    • 5 Years In
    • L.A. County Fires
    • Change in Sports
    • Solutions Journalism: Climate Anxiety
    • Common Threads
    • Art Edition
    • Peace Through Music
    • Climate Change
    • Everybody Has One
    • If It Bleeds
    • By the Numbers
    • LGBTQ+ Edition: We Are All Human
    • Where We Stand: One Year Later
    • In the Midst of Tragedy
  • Currents
    • Currents Spring 2025
    • Currents Fall 2024
    • Currents Spring 2024
    • Currents Winter 2024
    • Currents Spring 2023
    • Currents Fall 2022
    • Spring 2022: Moments
    • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
    • Spring 2021: Beauty From Ashes
    • Fall 2020: Humans of Pepperdine
    • Spring 2020: Everyday Feminism
    • Fall 2019: Challenging Perceptions of Light & Dark
  • Podcasts
    • On the Other Hand
    • RE: Connect
    • Small Studio Sessions
    • SportsWaves
    • The Graph
    • The Melanated Muckraker
  • Print Editions
  • NewsWaves
  • Sponsored Content
  • Digital Deliveries
  • DPS Crime Logs

Connie Horton: Rising up in a Room Full of Men

April 12, 2020 by Gianni Cocchella

Photo by Milan Loiacono | Design by Logan Wood 

When Pepperdine administrators face important decisions, Connie Horton is often one of the only female leaders in the room.

As vice president for Student Affairs since 2017, Horton oversees a variety of departments such as Housing and Residence Life, Student Activities and Campus Recreation. She is a key decision maker, and being one of the few female voices in upper administration has brought subtle challenges.

“It’s hard to explain them,” Horton said. “There are things, like, I’ll go into a meeting where I’m the only woman. Although I’ve been treated quite well, it is interesting, and I remember being struck by that pretty early on.”

Having been connected to the Pepperdine community since she was an undergraduate four decades ago, Horton has seen progress, but she would like to see more women in leadership roles.

“I appreciate my male colleagues,” Horton wrote in a follow-up email. “… I do long for the day when it is more like 50/50 in gender split in leadership.”

Horton believes that women must overcome not only external sexism but also internal sexism. Men can be 50% qualified for a job and still feel confident, but women can be 99% qualified for a job and still doubt themselves, she said.

“Women [need to] recognize when they are doubting themselves more than they need to and [not] … doubt that they are qualified,” Horton said.

Horton, who was born in New Mexico and raised in Sacramento, said her mother was and continues to be her role model. Growing up, they both embraced the women’s movement of the ’60s and ’70s.

“There was this idea that women can do anything,” Horton said. “My mom was very big on this.”

Inspired by this, Horton earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology from Seaver College in 1982. She returned to the university in 2005 as director of the Counseling Center.

Throughout her time at Pepperdine, she has had many female mentors, including Nancy Magnusson Durham, the former vice president of planning, information and technology.

Horton respected Durham’s guidance and admired her for being one of the few women leaders on campus. But she has seen female leaders at all levels.

“Just like we have some female leaders at the university level, we have some amazing [female] students who are doing great leadership,” Horton said. “But I wonder [what] … we, as an administration, faculty and student body, could do to encourage everyone to feel like they can live into their abilities and gifts.”

_______________________

Follow Currents Magazine on Twitter: @PeppCurrents

Email Gianni Cocchella: gianni.cocchella@pepperdine.edu

Filed Under: Currents, Spring 2020: Everyday Feminism Tagged With: #sacramento, Connie Horton, Currents, External Sexism, female leadership, Feminsim, Internal sexism, Nancy Magnusson Durham, New Mexico, Seaver College, sexism, Vice-president of Student Affairs

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
  • Sports
  • Podcasts
  • G News
  • COVID-19
  • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
  • Everybody Has One
  • Newsletters

Footer

Pepperdine Graphic Media
Copyright © 2025 · Pepperdine Graphic

Contact Us

Advertising
(310) 506-4318
peppgraphicadvertising@gmail.com

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
(310) 506-4311
peppgraphicmedia@gmail.com
Student Publications
Pepperdine University
24255 Pacific Coast Hwy
Malibu, CA 90263
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube