Keith Green

Founder and Executive Director at Autism MVP Foundation

Keith Green, APR, serves as an Assistant Professor of PR & Strategic Communication and Coordinator of Strategic Communications at Montclair State University since September 2019, where responsibilities include overseeing social media strategy and collaboration on cultural studies. As the Founder and Volunteer Executive Director of Autism MVP Foundation since April 2015, Keith has successfully established an all-volunteer non-profit and contributed over $50,000 to scholarship funds for Monmouth University. Through Emerald Owl Communications, Keith offers expertise in driving earned media, creative campaign execution, and crisis planning. Previous roles include Vice President of B2B Communications & Partnerships at Guinness World Records, Senior Vice President/VP Marketing & Communications at Synergy, and Director of Public Relations at Richmond Raceway, among others. Keith holds an M.Ed in Sports Administration and Recreation and a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism from Temple University.

Location

Little Silver, United States

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Autism MVP Foundation

Our mission is to increase the number of autism-focused educators and therapists to meet the current and future needs of students on the autism spectrum. We accomplish this by providing scholarships to students who are pursuing graduate degrees and want to work in Special Education or autism-focused therapies so they can improve cognitive, social and daily life skill outcomes for children and adults on the spectrum. We have scholarship programs with Monmouth, Rutgers and Temple University. The autism diagnosis rate in the U.S. is a staggering 1 in 44 among 8-year old children. That figure equates to roughly 150 new diagnoses a day and approximately 60,000 children with autism entering our school systems each year. In New Jersey, where the foundation is located, the diagnosis rates is 1 in 35, which is the second highest in the country and equates to 3,000 children each year receiving an autism diagnosis. The challenge is that there are simply not enough educators and therapists to work with children with autism, so our foundation takes a unique approach to keeping individuals interested and incentivized to stay in these fields and work with individuals on the spectrum.


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11-50

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