My Portfolio

This section highlights a sample of my social marketing and health communication work. Each piece was designed for a specific audience and goal, with an emphasis on clear messages, positive tone, and realistic next steps.

Sunshine Club: Social Studies Ice Cream Social
This design was created to support our school’s Sunshine Club initiative and to strengthen relationships between faculty and staff. The goal was to promote a simple, fun event that encouraged connection and helped build a more positive school climate. Bright colors, playful fonts, and clear event details were used to grab attention quickly and make the invitation feel warm and welcoming.

Ice Cream Social promotional poster for Sunshine Club.
Six simple habits students can use to manage stress, including movement, organization, breathing, and journaling.

Ways to Manage Stress
This infographic was designed for high school students who are balancing schoolwork, activities, and social pressures. The content focuses on small, realistic steps for better sleep, movement, journaling, and talking to someone you trust. The visuals are simple and friendly so that the message feels approachable rather than overwhelming. The goal is to normalize stress while giving students clear, doable strategies they can try right away.

Managing Stress: 6 Simple Habits for Teens

A teen-friendly stress guide that turns big pressures into six small, doable habits students can start today.

Stress management infographic for student wellness.
Encouraging health communication poster reminding students that stress is manageable and support is available.

You’ve Got This: One Step Can Change Everything

A gentle mental health message that walks students through four simple steps from taking a breath to reaching out for support.

Peak Potential: Sleep and Performance Campaign


This series of designs are part of a larger “Peak Potential” concept that connects sleep, substance use, and personal habits to athletic and academic performance. The core idea is that small daily choices add up to either support or limit an athlete’s potential. Key benefits such as better focus, faster recovery, and a clearer mind are highlighted as the “core product,” while the “actual product” is the behavior change itself, like committing to a sleep challenge. This reflects social marketing principles by focusing on benefits that matter to teens, rather than only listing health risks.

Peak Potential health performance communication poster..
Sleep education campaign tile addressing teen sleep habits.