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Sharon Clark Diaz Endowed Scholarship

$2,937
148%
Raised toward our $1,973 Goal
9 Donors
Project has ended
Project ended on December 01, at 12:00 AM PST
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Scholarship giving in memory of President Sharon Diaz

The Sharon Diaz Endowed Scholarship honors the memory of a great healthcare and academic leader 

Sharon Diaz, PhD (h.c.), RN, the founding president of Samuel Merritt University who served in that capacity for nearly 37 years before her retirement, died unexpectedly on September 12. She was 75.

President Diaz was the driving force behind much of the University’s growth and expansion into new academic programs. She also led successful efforts to grow the institution from a nursing diploma program to a college (1984) and then a university (2009).

1973 marks the year President Diaz joined the faculty of Samuel Merritt Hospital School of Nursing. Today we ask you join us in giving to celebrate that milestone moment and the admirable career and life that followed. 


Full obituary by President Diaz's family

Sharon Clark Diaz
(July 29, 1946 – September 12, 2021)

Sharon Diaz, President Emerita of Samuel Merritt University, devoted her life to health care, education, community and family. Born in Bakersfield, California to Karl and Mildred (Lunn) Clark, she was the first in her family to attend college.  Sharon met Luis Diaz when they were both students at San Jose State University, and they married in 1968 when she graduated and began her nursing career.

While working as a nurse, Sharon became interested in nursing education. She returned to graduate school at the University of California–San Francisco for her master’s degree and joined the faculty of Samuel Merritt Hospital School of Nursing in Oakland in 1973. Thus began her 45-year career as a pioneering leader in higher education for health professions.  In 1999, Saint Mary’s College awarded her an Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy in Educational Leadership.

As a young faculty member, Sharon recognized that hospital-based nursing diploma programs were destined for extinction as nursing care became more complex. Appointed Director of the School of Nursing in 1976, she partnered with Saint Mary’s College to create an intercollegiate nursing program that granted Saint Mary’s first nursing BS degree in 1981. Soon, under her leadership as founding President, Samuel Merritt College became the first hospital-based school to grant a bachelor’s degree. Within a decade, Sharon began expanding the academic program to include higher degrees in nursing and degree programs in other health professions. By the institution’s centennial year in 2009, Samuel Merritt University (as it was renamed) provided masters and doctoral degrees in nursing, physician assistant, physical therapy, occupational therapy, podiatric medicine on three Northern California campuses. In her final decade as President, she strongly supported diversity, introduced on-line programs, and built capacity in educational technology and simulation.

Over her career, she grew annual student enrollment from fewer than 150 students to more than 2,500 and had a profound impact on many thousands of health care professionals, patients, and community members.

Sharon committed herself to many vital community organizations as a board member and volunteer, including Meals on Wheels, George Mark Children’s House (palliative pediatric care), Sinkler-Miller Medical Association, the Ladies’ Home Society of Oakland/Mathilda Brown Home, the Ethnic Health Institute, and the Bay Area Tumor Institute.

She was an avid reader and outstanding cook who loved to learn new things, including mastering foods from other countries.  Sharon was always game for a challenge, whether it was earning her pilot’s license, skiing the black diamond runs, beating family and friends at cards, or traveling with her husband to several countries around the world.

Sharon and Luis, an international consultant on environmental engineering and waste management, moved from the San Francisco Bay Area to Kauai in 2018. Sharon is survived by her beloved husband, Luis; sons Daniel and David; and granddaughter Cristina. She also leaves her sister Carol Lee Blair; her nephews Larry, Russell, and Philip, her niece Lisa, and their children and grandchildren.


Give today to support future healthcare leaders like President Diaz

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$45

45-year Career in healthcare

President Diaz's 45-year career as a pioneering leader in higher education for health professions.

$84

1984 SMU starts to transform

President Diaz led successful efforts to grow the institution from a nursing diploma program to a college (1984) and then a university (2009).

$150

150 Students in the beginning

Over President Diaz's career, she grew annual student enrollment from fewer than 150 students to more than 2,500 leading to a profound impact on many thousands of health care professionals, patients, and community members.

$552

552 Miles of paradise

President Diaz retired in 2018, and her and her husband Luis moved from the San Francisco Bay Area to Kauai, a Hawaiian paradise of 552 square miles.

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