Chyanne Cook

Community Development Team Leader at Girl Scouts of Western Ohio

Chyanne Cook currently serves as the Community Development Team Leader at Girl Scouts of Western Ohio, a position held since September 2024, where responsibilities include leading a team to strategize and implement membership recruitment and retention initiatives. Prior experience includes roles as a Sexual Violence Preventionist at YWCA Dayton, Community Educator at House of Ruth Maryland, and Internal Recruiter at Aston Carter. Chyanne also worked as a Training Manager at Hertz, a Volunteer at NAMI, and served as a Talent Acquisition Recruiter at Rock Central. Additionally, Chyanne held the position of Morgan State CFA Scholar President, focusing on financial literacy education for HBCU students. Educational qualifications include a Bachelor of Business Administration in Entrepreneurship from Morgan State University and a high school diploma from Mastery CS - Hardy Williams.

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Dayton, United States

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Girl Scouts of Western Ohio

Imagine joining a group of individuals—each with their own unique skills and passions, but united by a common purpose. Imagine yourself at Girl Scouts! Girl Scouts of Western Ohio, is one of the largest in the USA, serves more than 28,000 girls in a 32 county area throughout western Ohio and southeast Indiana. Nearly 11,000 adult volunteers work to provide services and deliver the Girl Scout Leadership Experience to girls. Four regional Girl Scout Centers are located in Cincinnati, Dayton, Lima and Toledo. Why Girl Scouts—Diversity was the founding idea of Girl Scouting in 1912. Today, Girl Scouts of the USA serves girls in every zip code, from the inner city to the prairie. GSUSA serves girls in urban community centers, churches, mosques and temples. Girl Scouts serves girls across income and demographic groups, and the national membership mirrors the U.S. population figures. The journey begins with the Girl Scout environment itself. A girl’s leadership blooms among other girls–away from school pressures, social cliques and boys–where girls can be themselves and try new things. In Girl Scouts activities are girl-led. Girls learn by doing and the learning is cooperative not competitive. We also focus on what girls need to thrive in a rapidly changing world. Girl Scouting builds girls of courage, confidence, and character who make the world a better place.


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51-200

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