[3] Moreno is also a Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow in the Special Program for Urban and Regional Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
This non-degree fellowship provides professionals with opportunities for development through courses, conferences, networking, and hands-on experiences during a year-long program.
She completed her high school education at Colegio Departamental Silveria Espinosa de Rendón and later pursued a Bachelor of Science in Industrial Engineering at the Autonomous University of Colombia, graduating in 2001.
She also serves as a board member at the Ford Foundation,[5] the Inter-American Dialogue[6] and Association for the study of the Worldwide African Diaspora ASWAD.
During her time in office, her most important and visible work centered around the legislative agenda, three new laws were approved by congress for the heritage, national system of libraries, and the protection of native languages.
The country had major spots at international events such the Guadalajara bookfare and film festivals, the Conference for the Afrodescendant Agenda for the Americas in 2008, and the Iberoamerican Congress for Culture in 2010.
In addition, for three years the Ministry of Culture organized the National Grand Concert, a massive live concert that took place in 1102 municipalities of Colombia and 44 embassies around the world, and broadcast in national television with an audience of more than 10 million Colombians, with the participation of more than a 200,000 artists performing in different stages across the country, and included artist such as Carlos Vives, Juanes and Shakira, as well as folkloric dance and music groups that represented all of the variations of music and dances of Colombia.
In particular, the Visible Hands are leaders and organizations that promote self-inclusion and work for peacebuilding in the most violent and vulnerable areas in Colombia.