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Women are the fastest-growing demographic within the veteran population, and their presence in higher education continues to rise. As students, faculty, and administrators, they bring valuable experiences and perspectives that enrich educational environments. Yet despite their growing presence and contributions, many female veterans remain unseen in academic spaces.
This invisibility is rarely intentional. It can stem from personal hesitation, assumptions about veteran identity, or broader systemic gaps in how military service is recognized. Regardless of the cause, the impact is the same: when female veterans are not visible, they can miss out on the connections and support needed to thrive, and institutions miss the chance to fully engage an important segment of their community.
Across higher education, however, several institutions are modeling what intentional visibility can look like for this population. These efforts recognize the distinct identity of women veterans and the leadership and practical experiences they bring. In doing so, they foster community, strengthen professional networks, and reinforce leadership identity in ways that benefit both individuals and institutions.
Visibility to Build Community
Transitioning from the military to higher education can be disorienting. Female veterans may also face the challenge of adjusting to an environment where their service contributions are not readily recognized, making it harder to build meaningful connections. Institutions can reduce isolation and strengthen belonging by developing programs that intentionally acknowledge women as veterans in their own right.
At Stephens College, Mission Promise Kept, part of its Center of Excellence for Veteran Student Success, provides women veterans with practical support, including childcare, on-campus housing, and mental health services, helping to create a strong community foundation. Similarly, the University of South Florida’s Her Valor initiative links female veterans through mentorship, peer connections, and targeted resources, promoting an atmosphere of belonging.
These programs demonstrate an important reality: when institutions intentionally connect women veterans, community becomes easier to build.
Visibility to Expand Professional Networks
Visibility is not only about connection; it is also about opportunity. Professional networks often form around shared experiences and developmental pathways. Women veterans bring leadership experience, operational expertise, and cross-cultural competence to the civilian landscape. When institutions create welcoming spaces for that identity to be recognized, it can expand access to career opportunities and promote long-term professional relationships.
At Syracuse University, the D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families hosts V-WISE (Veteran Women Igniting the Spirit of Entrepreneurship), a national entrepreneurship program for women who serve or have served, as well as for military spouses and partners. By centering women’s military-connected identity, V-WISE builds structured peer networks and mentorship opportunities that support career mobility.
Additionally, the Jane Nelson Institute for Women’s Leadership at Texas Woman’s University offers Veteran Woman Entrepreneur Grants, recognizing the value veteran women bring to the business landscape by providing funding to help launch and grow small businesses.
When women veterans are intentionally visible within professional spaces, meaningful networks can form and opportunities expand.
Visibility to Strengthen Leadership Identity
For many women veterans, military service is both central and complex to their personal story. Fortunately, higher education can provide the right environment for that experience to evolve into a strong and positive leadership identity. Whether through a student profile, faculty biography, or at campus events, identifying as a female veteran allows academic spaces to reinforce the skills and attributes that define who they are as professionals and civilian leaders.
For example, Virginia Tech has partnered with Beneath the Service to support the Women Veterans Leadership Program, which creates leadership cohorts specifically for women veterans and acknowledges the connection between veteran identity and leadership development. At Purdue University, the Focus Forward Fellowship within the Military Family Research Institute offers another example of how targeted development opportunities can strengthen a positive leadership identity and support long-term professional growth.
When women veterans identify themselves, they help reshape public perceptions of who veterans are and how leadership is translated beyond military service.
Benefits for Institutions
Creating an environment where female veterans can thrive offers both institutional and individual benefits. Research shows that a strong sense of belonging is linked to improved engagement, academic performance, and persistence in higher education.
When women veterans voluntarily self-identify, campuses are better positioned to assess their needs and align resources accordingly. In addition, female veterans can bring leadership experiences and practical insights that enrich classroom discussions, campus initiatives, and institutional culture.
In short, visibility strengthens both the student outcome and the broader campus atmosphere.
Practical Steps for Higher Education Professionals
Institutions looking to strengthen female veteran visibility can take several practical steps:
1. Encourage voluntary self-identification for students, faculty, and administrators during admissions, orientation, and campus surveys.
2. Highlight women veteran voices in marketing materials, speaker series, and alum profiles.
3. Develop women veteran-focused cohorts or affinity spaces within veteran centers.
4. Recognize the distinction between veterans and military spouses. While some individuals may be both, the veteran identity is unique and should be acknowledged accordingly.
Importantly, visibility should always be voluntary and supported, not required. The goal is to create environments where identification feels empowering rather than mandatory.
Female veterans represent a growing, highly capable population within higher education. When they identify themselves, they help build community, expand professional networks, and strengthen the narrative of women’s military leadership.
I identify as a veteran – even when it is uncomfortable – because visibility creates pathways for others. It allows women veterans to find one another, and it helps institutions better understand who they serve. Visibility is not merely symbolic; it is foundational. And for women veterans in higher education, it matters.






















