Family and Consumer Sciences – Conference Speakers


Commissioner Clarence H. Carter

Clarence H. Carter was appointed to serve as a member of Governor Bill Lee’s Cabinet as the Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) in January 2021. Mr. Carter leads the state’s second-largest agency with an operating budget of more than $3 billion and nearly 4,000 employees working in offices in all 95 counties. Through more than 17 programs and services, the Department partners with Tennesseans to facilitate nutrition programs, employment assistance, vocational training, and protective services to enhance their well-being. 

Mr. Carter serves as chair of the State’s Families First Community Advisory Board and Child Care Task Force, and as a member of the State’s Coordinating Task Force; each dedicated to innovation in determining collaborative solutions to better serve Tennesseans. Mr. Carter is a National Academy of Public Administration Fellow and 2022 recipient of the Spirit of Fatherhood Judge David Gray Ross Award from the National Partnership for Community Leadership. Mr. Carter also serves as a thought leader on issues in human services; presenting at national conferences and testifying before Congress.

Mr. Carter has more than 30 years of experience in the public safety net space, including serving four governors, a mayor and in the administrations of President George W. Bush and President Donald Trump. Mr. Carter served as Director of the Arizona Department of Economic Security and Commissioner of the Virginia Department of Social Services. He also managed the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and served as the Director of the Office of Community Services. On the local level, Mr. Carter served as Director of the Washington, D.C., Department of Human Services, where he led an initiative to transform the District’s shelter-based homeless system to one that assisted those served to finding permanent residency.

In 2015, Mr. Carter founded the Institute for the Improvement of the Human Condition. At that organization, he worked with state and local safety net agencies to meet the emergency needs of socially and economically vulnerable citizens.

Prior to serving as TDHS Commissioner, Mr. Carter served on the federal level as Director of the Office of Family Assistance and Acting Director of the Office of Community Services within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. While there, Mr. Carter led the administration of seven federal programs including the $16.5 billion Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program.

Mr. Carter earned his bachelor’s degree at the Indiana University of Pennsylvania in Indiana, Pennsylvania. Mr. Carter has an enduring commitment to transform the safety net by connecting economically, socially, and developmentally vulnerable individuals and families to services that expand beyond their short-term needs, but also position them for long-lasting success.

Jen Slaw

Jen Slaw works with organizations to create more positive work environments, improve team engagement, and navigate change with a growth mindset. She’s been hired across industries for companies like Nikon, Con Edison, American Express, Turner, Skanska, Deloitte, Bristol Myers-Squibb, and First Energy. A former structural engineer and world-record-holding expert juggler, she’s shared her unique perspective on major TV network news/morning shows, the Late Show with David Letterman, Off-Broadway, and TEDx stages.

Danielle Dreilinger

Danielle Dreilinger is a journalist and author of The Secret History of Home Economics (W. W. Norton, May 2021). She was a 2018 Knight-Wallace Journalism Fellow at the University of Michigan, was named best features writer by the Louisiana Press Association, and has received project fellowships from the Robert B. Silvers Foundation, the Education Writers Association, and the Institute for Citizens and Scholars (formerly the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation). She spent five years covering New Orleans’s nationally contentious education revolution for the Times-Picayune. Before that, she produced WGBH’s local news website and wrote for the Boston Globe, most notably as the Somerville correspondent focused on gentrification, diversity, politics, and city life. She began her journalism career covering the arts for several outlets, including WBUR, where she was part of the team that won the station’s first Online Journalism Award. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, the Hechinger Report, USA Today, the Atlantic, Ploughshares, Nashville Scene, and No Depression, among (many) other publications. She holds a bachelor’s degree, summa cum laude, from Columbia University.   She is a fan of cats, knitting, books, history and change, people who are left out, the way we live now and what makes us tick.