December 1st, 2011
How To Choose Between Colleges
In order to get a good secondary education, you’re going to need a plan of action. This plan should include things like attending college fairs, talking with teachers and councilors and a lot of follow up work with the colleges you decide to apply for. If you already have a list of colleges you’d like to apply for and attend, it may be good to take a look at their website or talk with a college representative about what the various enrollment requirements are.
It is also nice to have some idea of the average successful applicant and what the college is looking for from prospective students. You can visit the college’s website or use one of the many colleges and universities websites that allow you to compare and contrast various aspects of different colleges.
College fairs are a great place to find out about many different colleges all in one place. You can walk from booth to booth and discover many useful tidbits of information that will help you make a decision about which school you most want to attend. This will also help you order the schools that you are interested in so that you have a solid backup plan as well.
Once you’ve narrowed down your prospective schools to a list of 3-4 schools, it’s time to look deeper into what each of the colleges has to offer and the type of graduates they turn out. Find out what graduates of each college end up doing; where they work, average salary, etc. This will tell you a lot about the type of education you can expect to receive from a given school.
If possible, talk with a graduate of the school and find out what he or she thought of receiving an education at that college. You may be surprised at what you learn, and will definitely find the information useful for deciding on a school.
Posted in colleges | No Comments »
March 16th, 2012
Topeka, KS (PRWEB) February 13, 2012
Bryan College ? Topeka is now offering an Associate of Applied Science degree in HVAC/R Technology.
The new HVAC/R (heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration) degree program presents students with the knowledge they need to become HVAC/R technicians or work in other related industries, such as engineering technology, maintenance mechanics, electrical technology, etc. Once the program is successfully completed, students will obtain an Associate degree and can be prepared for a career involving job duties such as installation, maintenance, and repair of mechanical, electrical, and electronic systems.
?By offering a degree in HVAC/R, we are enhancing our students? educational opportunities in an economy in which environmental-related jobs are becoming more and more prominent,? said Wayne Major, Executive Director. ?This degree will give our students an advantage in a field with much faster-than-average job growth.?
Despite the continued slump in home and commercial building construction, demand for heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) specialists isn?t just strong, but it is expected to grow substantially over the next few years, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The BLS predicts HVAC jobs will grow by approximately 28 percent nationwide between 2008 and 2018 to a total of 394,800.*
Bryan College, located conveniently near exits from both I-70 and I-470, offers both day and evening courses for this degree, which can be completed in as little as two years, making it easier for busy adults to quickly get a degree and find a job.
All Bryan College students and graduates receive lifetime placement assistance, as well as financial aid for those who qualify.
About Bryan College
Since 1982, Bryan College has helped prepare students with specialized skills for new careers. The school?s programs are designed to be career focused. Bryan College has locations in Rogers, Ark.; Springfield, Mo.; and Topeka, Kan. For more information about Bryan College, visit http://www.BryanColleges.edu.
*Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2010-11 Edition: http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos192.htm
###
More Aids Press Releases
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 16th, 2012
Despite the two-year-old federal legislation to protect young consumers, college-age adults remain easy prey for credit card companies, which have moved off campus and on to Facebook.
An analysis by University of South Carolina law professor Eboni Nelson provides a look at the effectiveness of the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 (the CARD Act) in protecting young adults. It appears in the April issue of the Banking & Financial Services Policy Report.
“The CARD Act’s provisions for young consumers have been a step in the right direction, but more action is needed to protect college-age adults,” Nelson said. “Card companies continue to see consumers who are under age 21 as a profitable market and, as a result, they strategically have found ways to solicit the college-age crowd, including through social media.”
Nelson, who researches and teaches consumer and higher-education law, found several aggressive marketing practices and lax eligibility requirements by credit card companies despite the protections put in place by the law.
That is not good news for young people who are amassing record student loan debt. In early March, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released a report showing that Americans owe more on their student loans to the tune of $870 billion, compared with credit card debt of $693 billion.
Nelson said the CARD Act, administered by the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), curbed a variety of predatory practices that had been commonplace on U.S. college campuses.
Analyzing data from the financial industry, government and higher education and reviewing news reports, Nelson found that credit card companies restricted from some of these practices found new ways of targeting college-age students.
Banned from using credit information to find potential applicants, companies have turned to the mailing lists of colleges themselves and rewards and loyalty programs to find young borrowers, Nelson said.
Marketers, banned from “tabling” on campus, have relocated to nearby off-campus locations and online via social media, such as Facebook, where they are offering promotional items and discounts, along with reward points and promotional credit terms, she said. And colleges and alumni associations continue to enter into financial partnerships, although greater transparency and restrictions have led to fewer agreements, payments by issuers and new accounts.
A 2010 survey showed 76 percent of University of Houston students reporting having received a credit card offer since 2009.
Perhaps most disturbing of practices by card companies is letting college students use student loan proceeds as proof of independent income on credit card applications, Nelson said.
“The CARD Act stipulates that consumers under age 21 must show they can pay the bill themselves or must have a co-signer. However, it is unclear what resources can be used as current income. What this means is that savings accounts, allowances, stipends, grants, student loans and scholarships can be used,” Nelson said. “Also, the ability to pay only means the ability to pay the minimum monthly payments, which can be as low as $25. It doesn’t mean the ability to pay the total amount of the debt.”
In the University of Houston survey, nearly 30 percent of students who got a credit card said they used student loan proceeds as part of their income on the application. Nelson said that consumer advocates who have called for stronger eligibility requirements have been ignored.
Despite all the aggressive marketing to college-age students, the statistics have improved Nelson said. Since 2009, the number of college students who own credit cards has dropped, and their credit card balances have risen only slightly in comparison with previous years.
A survey by Gallup and Sallie Mae reported a 27 percent drop in the number of college students who own credit cards since 2009. Experian, a major credit reporting agency, shows credit card balances for 18- to 25-year-olds is growing at a slower pace: 0.4 percent in 2010, 2.4 percent in 2009, 12.3 percent 2008 and 13.3 percent in 2007.
“These numbers are encouraging,” said Nelson. “However, it is unclear whether they are a result of the CARD Act. A tightening credit market, a recession and a growing preference for debit cards may also have contributed. Regardless, over indebtedness continues to be a problem for many young consumers, and greater attention should be paid to protecting them.”
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 13th, 2012
W&J senior Emily Dowler spent part of last summer on a medical mission in South Africa
Honored for its renowned Magellan Project, the award recognizes the emphasis placed on internationalism at W&J.
“From their first day on campus, students at Washington & Jefferson College experience W&J’s commitment to internationalization. I tell students, ‘Whatever you do as your life’s work, you will find that our society is no longer local but global. As you design your education, keep your eye on the globe,’” said W&J President Tori Haring-Smith, Ph.D.
The Magellan Project is an internally funded initiative that fosters global citizenship through internships, research grants, and study/travel opportunities, providing students encouragement and financial support to pursue international projects. Projects must involve individual study and travel, not enrollment at a foreign university or participation in any kind of formal study abroad program. Students arrange their own itineraries, find their own housing, and solve their own problems.
“Magellan Scholars author their own lives. They are self-directed; their passion motivates them to keep going even when their contacts fall through, or they get lost, or they miss the last bus up the mountain. More than 100 Magellan projects have been funded since the program’s inception in 2008,” Haring-Smith said.
The Magellan Project arose from the observation that, while affluent students could afford to take a summer to travel and study abroad, less affluent students could not do so. In this way, they were being shut out of important learning opportunities that would enrich their lives and benefit them in the job market and in seeking graduate and professional school admission. Though 95 percent of W&J students rely on financial aid, a financial commitment on the part of the entire College community, including Board members, faculty and alumni, ensures that all students have access to the program, Haring-Smith added.
“Through the Magellan Project, students discover how to enter the world mindfully and how to combine classroom and experiential learning to solve real world problems. One scholar who traveled to The Gambia now plans to return upon graduation to build a much-needed food processing plant,” Haring-Smith said.
Prospective students who have traveled internationally through high school programs regularly seek out W&J because of the possibility of completing a Magellan project. W&J students hear so much about internationalization that they are more likely to study abroad, and since those programs involve exchange agreements, the College now hosts more than 60 international students a year, thereby internationalizing the campus while, at the same time, sending its own students abroad to see the world for themselves, Haring-Smith added.
W&J will be featured with other award winners in NAFSA’s report Internationalizing the Campus: Profiles of Success at Colleges and Universities, to be published this fall, and honored at an event in Washington, DC, in November during International Education Week.
About Washington & Jefferson College
Washington & Jefferson College, located in Washington, Pa., is a national liberal arts college founded in 1781. Committed to providing each of its students with the highest-quality undergraduate education available, W&J offers a traditional liberal arts curriculum emphasizing interdisciplinary study and independent student work. For more information about W&J, visit www.washjeff.edu or call 888-926-3529.
(end)
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 13th, 2012
I don’t know about you, but I sure have spring fever! Time to start planning my spring road trips to college campuses.
That’s right. I don’t just tell my students about colleges, I actually go visit a bunch every year. And my favorite time for checking out the spruced-up athletic facilities, refurbished dorms and brand-new academic buildings of colleges both near and far is when the flowers are just beginning to bloom and the trees turn that bud-yellow I so love.
My juniors are in the middle of carefully investigating schools that I’ve recommended to them on the basis of their unique abilities, needs, interests and preferences. Once they’ve checked out college websites, read a few dozen reviews of schools they’re considering (a wonderful source for these is Unigo ) and officially put themselves on admission office “inquiry” lists to receive printed materials and e-mail notifications, they’re chomping at the bit to get out there and see some of these places in the flesh.
A few tip on how to maximize your visit:
- Sign up in advance for a preview day or open house. This type of visit will give you a very full introduction to College X, Y and Z because it typically includes a student and/or faculty panel as well as nitty-gritty discussions led by admissions and financial aid officers, in addition to what you typically get when signing up for “standard” tours and info sessions. And if you go in the spring, classes are still in session, so you’ll see “real” students and profs.
- Don’t be overzealous setting up your schedule. Depending upon the distance you need to travel and the degree to which your family is willing to schlep around, it might be best to schedule not more than two or three visits per two-day trip. Since preview days and open houses may require half or even full-day commitments, you may find yourself on information overload pretty quickly. So don’t push it. (Remember: There’s time in summer and fall, too!)
- Record your impressions in writing. I always recommend that my students act like investigative reporters when visiting colleges. Not that they want to dig up dirt. But it’s essential that you do look and listen carefully, attending as much to your “gut” reactions as to the facts and figures that will be recited to impress. Using a college visit checklist will ensure that you don’t forget your thoughts and feelings, while also enabling you to compare apples to apples (e.g., “College X has co-ed dorms to die for and “College Y does not.”)
A terrific (and free) planning tool for setting up your visits can be found at Go See Campus. Before you leave, make sure you get the proper clearance from your guidance or college office, as may be required. And I strongly suggest that you (rather than a parent) actually arrange for the visits; most of the time this can be done easily and conveniently online (after, of course, conferring with mom or dad about “best” order, etc.).
This is your college search and your life. By becoming an active participant in this process, you’ll learn a lot and, equally important, gain confidence in your ability to find the college that’s right for you.
Join me for “Planning for College: How to Minimize Senior-Year Stress—a presentation for parents—on Monday, March 19 (Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Avenue, Saugerties) 6-7:30 pm. Free and open to the public. More info: 845-246-4317.
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 10th, 2012
How to do A Street View
As in Google Maps, Street View lets you explore places through 360-degree street-level imagery. In Lexxio, this feature should help you looking at the job location and check it out just before going there.

1. Zoom in
First, Zoom in, by clicking on the job location marker. This will get you to the street level zoom.
At this zoom level you will see the road/street’s name nearby the marker. This is your first hint of the job location whereabouts.
2. Drag and Drop Pegman

Drag Pegman to any positions at the closest road to the marker. Roads with Street View imagery will appear with a blue border.
Notice the green shade with dotted border under Pegman, it means it still finding the best possible position to land the Pegman. The shade will become solid green when it finds the right position. That’s when you release your mouse drag, and drop it. You should see the street view of the job location at that exact time.
3. Navigating In Street View

Rotate
• use the wheel in the control panel in the top left corner. • or use the left and right arrows on your keyboard • or click and drag with your mouse.

Walk
• click on one of the white arrows overlaid on the street. • or use the up and down arrows on your keyboard.
Tips: Use both Rotate and Walk navigation, to locate and get to closest position of the marker, as that’s where the job location is. You should also see an address at the top of the map. This address is approximate, based on latitude and longitude position provided by the job poster. It might be usefull to take a note on this address, just incase you can’t find any physical address of the job location at the apply page.

Exit
• click Exit cross on the top right corner of the Street View map.
Thassit. That’s all there is about Street View. You’re ready to get the fun begin, and enjoy a bit of a view and situation of the job location you’re about to apply to.
Colleges and universities, graded for their environmental efforts, have been making “green” renovations on campus. In 2010 alone, institutions throughout the country were provided millions of dollars in grants to help them improve energy efficiency, recycle, reduce water use and more. Some institutions also were provided prestigious Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification from the US Green Building Council for their environmental efforts.
The country’s institutions of higher education spend a significant portion of their annual budgets on utilities – money that could otherwise benefit program and community-building activities, the Alliance to Save Energy website notes. One thing many people agree upon is the need to conserve water, a blog on the Advancement of Sustainability in Education website reports. Through green “report cards,” the Sustainable Endowments Institute grades institutions with As through Fs in areas such as climate change and energy, food and recycling, green building, transportation and student involvement. Public and private agencies have been providing colleges and universities grants that can help them improve their grades in some areas.
A university New Orleans, Louisiana, in October announced that it had earned an overall B- grade on this year’s “green” report card, which was an increase from the C- grade earned for the previous year. In addition to having moved to Energy Star appliances and recycled paper, this college completed renovations and new construction where low-flow faucets and shower heads and vegetated swales to clean storm water before it carries unnatural pollutants into area waterways helped with obtaining a silver LEED certification at minimum, the announcement noted. In September, a riverfront university announced the official opening of a Marine Science Research Institute, a LEED-certified building powered by solar panels and featuring a drainage system for rainwater that can make its way into surrounding waterways and drinking water supplies.
This Louisiana college had previously partnered with a local farm to obtain fresh produce for its campus and made a “WeCar” hybrid car-sharing program available to faculty, staff and students, information in the announcement shows. A Maine college, one of this year’s green campus grant recipients, early on expanded its free shuttle service and established a transportation program where students agreeing not to drive back and forth to campus are provided bicycles, helmets and locks, along with free use of vehicles as part of a car sharing service known as Zipcar, according to the November announcement of $238,000 in grants to help pay for green improvements on campus.
That New England university’s grant money is to be provided by Efficiency Maine, the Maine Public Utilities Commissions Energy Programs Division, so that the university can automate and manage building energy, install a solar hot water system and light the parking lot with LED lights, the announcement noted. The university is one of many colleges and universities in the United States to be participating in what’s known as the American College & University Presidents’ Climate Commitment, where institutions are working also to raise awareness with regard to global warming. An Athens, Georgia, college in August announced the opening of a “green” residence hall that is its first – and one where it hopes drought resistant landscaping, gray water recycled from sinks and showers for use in toilets and other features help it achieve LEED certification.
In San Francisco, a law school in April became the second law school in the country to obtain the highest of LEED certifications, which is a platinum designation, the institution reports. A famous school of architecture in New Orleans, on the other hand, was provided a $500,00 gift toward green renovations on campus. The grant money was provided by architect and advisory board member Tim Favrot, who graduated from the institution. The money is to help pay for renovations of the 100-plus year-old building that houses the architecture schools, as well as the center that houses the school’s urban research and outreach services. This university is spending another $46 million on green renovations to a downtown health sciences campus, according to a separate announcement.
At a university in Washington, D.C., the Board of Trustees this year approved plans for a state of the art, $275 million science and engineering building that’s to be built with LEED silver certification standards in mind at minimum. This institution, along with one in Chicago, this year also announced or opened green buildings. With help from an Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation grant, the Chicago school announcement noted, the institution plans to install solar panels on at least a portion of its campus.
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 7th, 2012
Dr. Karen Bleeker, right, talks to Coastal Bend College Dean of Institutional Advancement Glynis Holm Strause and CBC Interim President Dr. Jimmy Goodson during a reception held in her honor.
Coastal Bend College Board of Trustees hosted Dr. Karen Bleeker, former President of the Community College of Denver in Denver, Colo. on March 6. The daylong visit included interviews for the position of college president for Coastal Bend College, located in Beeville, Texas, with campuses in Alice, Kingsville and Pleasanton, Texas. Bleeker is the second candidate to be interviewed of the five finalists.
“Our search for a new president of Coastal Bend College is entering a very exciting phase and the Board of Trustees invites all the members of our college community and the community we serve to play an active role as we move forward, Paul Jaure, CBC Board of Trustees Chair, said prior to the visit by Bleeker. “The Open Public Forums are a very important part of the process.”
Bleeker met with college officials, staff and faculty, and the community at large during forums throughout the day. She discussed college growth, athletics and student retention.
In Colorado, Bleeker had two early college programs giving high school students access to dual credit programs. “These students got all the advantages of going to college while still in high school,” Bleeker said. She taught dual credit and has continued to teach as a college administrator. “I love teaching. It helps me to know who the students are,” she explained.
Academic integrity was also discussed. Dr. Bleeker, author of To Be Honest: Championing Academic Integrity in Community Colleges, published in 2007, said she created the grade “XF” to indicate failure as a result of academic dishonesty on college transcripts for students caught cheating.
“There’s always a group of the usual suspects – issues common to community colleges – and communication is frequently one of them,” Bleeker said. She talked about her experiences with multi-college and multi-campus management during a forum attended by CBC employees from all campuses, acknowledging the challenges that arise. “People from other campuses don’t want to feel like dinghies on the back of the big boat – just bobbing along,” she said. She attributed success in this area to the willingness of staff and faculty to work together toward common goals.
Previously, Dr. Bleeker was Vice President of Educational Services at Temple College in Temple, Texas. Dr. Bleeker holds an Ed.D. in Educational Administration and Community College Leadership from The University of Texas at Austin, a Masters in Counseling from the University of Texas at San Antonio, a Masters in Adult Education from the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio, and a Bachelors in Sociology from Trinity University in San Antonio.
When asked if she was planning to make Texas her home, Bleeker said she loves Texas and is looking forward to coming home for good. “It would take an act of God or the Board to get me to go,” she quipped. “I plan to be here for a long time.”
Candidates forums held this week give the public opportunities to meet the five finalists for the position of college president. Two forums are held each day for staff, faculty, students and the community, including the media, on all campuses.
The daily schedule of Forums is as follows:
10-11 a.m.: Gertrude R. Jones Auditorium, CBC Beeville Campus
1-2 p.m.: Video Connections Available
Beeville Campus (E-112)
Alice Campus (A-205)
Kingsville Campus (K-131)
Pleasanton Campus (P-139)
Candidates will take part on the following days:
Wednesday, March 7, 2012: Dr. Beatriz Treviño Espinoza
Dr. Beatriz Espinoza serves as Vice Chancellor for Educational Planning and Services at Yuba Community College District in Marysville, Calif. Previously, Dr. Espinoza was Vice President for Workforce Learning Services at Arizona Western College in Yuma, Ariz. Dr. Espinoza holds a Ph.D. in Rehabilitation Psychology and Educational Psychology and a Masters in Rehabilitation Psychology from the University of Wisconsin at Madison and a Bachelors in Psychology from the University of Texas-Pan American in Edinburg
Thursday, March 8, 2012: Dr. Jimmy A. Cargill
Dr. James Cargill serves as the President of Dawson Community College in Dawson, Mont. Previously, Dr. Cargill served as Chief Academic Officer at Ashland Community and Technical College in Ashland, Ky. Dr. Cargill holds an Ed.D. in Music Education from the University of Houston, a Masters in Musicology and a Bachelors in Music Education from Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas.
Friday, March 9, 2012: Dr. W. David Pelham
Dr. W. David Pelham serves as Director of Higher Colleges of Technology – Fujairah in Fujairah, United Arab Emirates. Previously, Dr. Pelham was President of Cuesta College in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Dr. Pelham holds an Ed.D in Education Leadership and Community College Administration from the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, a Masters in Communications from Morehead State University in Morehead, Ky., a Bachelors in Individual Directions (Speech, Psychology, and Political Science) from Carson Newman College in Jefferson City, Tenn. and an Associate of Arts in General Education from Brevard Community College in Palm Bay, Fla. Scheduled for each candidate:
Dr. Thomas Rasco served as President of Texarkana College in Texarkana. Previously, Dr. Rasco served as President of South Arkansas Community College in Eldorado, Ark. Dr. Rasco holds an Ed.D. in Educational Administration from Baylor University, Waco, a Masters in Speech Communication and Management and a Bachelors in Behavioral Science from the University of Houston, an Associate of Arts and Sciences in Nursing and an Associate of Arts and Sciences in Respiratory Therapy from Odessa College in Odessa, Texas. Rasco’s interview was on Monday.
Feedback forms will be provided to all who attend the Open Public Forums and will be collected at the end of each Forum. They will be sent under seal to the Board of Trustees for review during the evaluation of the finalist candidates.
To watch coverage of other visits, go to http://www.coastalbend.edu/presidentialsearch/.
Coastal Bend College does not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, gender, age, or disability.
-30-
Tags: alice, beeville, cbc, coastal bend college, interview, Karen Bleeker, kingsville, pleasanton, president, texas
This entry was posted on March 6, 2012 at 5:39 pm and is filed under CBC Administration, CBC Board, Community, Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 7th, 2012
Fordham University is questioning a new unreasonable of extremist wall scrawl which has showed up upon both a Rose Hill as well as Lincoln Center campuses.
It proposed in February, when a 6 minute word showed up upon a senior’s dorm room door, in black permanent marker. The n-word was directed during a tyro of tone who lived their, pronounced students.
“Yes, my crony walked in as well as saw which word upon her doorway as well as she was scared,” pronounced Rachel Jones, a Fordham University student.
Jones pronounced a university didn’t action quick sufficient to a vandalism. She pronounced it took administrators rught divided scratched out a word though it took 10 days to paint a door, which incited in to a consistent sign for colored students upon campus about a hate.
“Students of tone were unequivocally watchful for a confidence report. But you didn’t get a tyro far-reaching a single from a administration department department right away,” pronounced Jones.
Since February, a university has investigated 3 apart incidents where secular slurs showed up upon campus. The many recent, final Friday upon a Rose Hill campus where someone wrote a N-word. And a week before, during Lincoln Center, wall scrawl which aim happy students was found in a stairwell.
“We have been a Jesuit village as well as you wish a university to exercise a manners as well as principals,” pronounced Jones.
Upset students pronounced a ultimate incidents have been a budding e.g. of campus-wide injustice complaint during a propagandize which is mostly swept underneath a carpet by administration. And it is because Jones as well as alternative students proposed a End The Silence campaign. The online apply to has been sealed by 1500 Fordham students as well as alumni as well as a list keeps growing.
Today, over a phone, a University orator told PIX eleven a university responded reasonably to a incidents as well as which a University President, Joseph McShane is set to verbalise to students tomorrow again about a ultimate with a investigation.
The University is investigating. They will inform commentary to a Department of Education.
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 4th, 2012
“Bittersweet” is how Joshua Canada describes his memories of working to improve the experience of students of color at Taylor University in Upland, Indiana, when he was a student there.
As vice president of the Multiethnic Student Association at Taylor, Canada successfully petitioned the school to restructure its ethnic recruiter position and to re-establish its director of multiethnic student services position. He was also an original member of Taylor Black Men, a student group that provided support for young men who didn’t necessarily feel comfortable discussing the unique challenges they faced with White classmates.
“I was really excited that I was able to do that, but there’s also this sadness that I have now because, although I felt like it was important, it painted a lot of my senior year,” said Canada, who occasionally writes for UrbanFaith.
He was compelled to act, he said, because he feared that no one else would if he didn’t. “I was blessed enough that I had a lot of coping skills,” he explained. “I could ‘code switch,’ and sometimes get in that middle world, where I could deal with both cultures, but there were several students who couldn’t.”
It is those students that concern a number of professionals who work at Christian colleges around the nation, and especially those affiliated with the Council of Christian Colleges and Universities. The CCCU, an international association of Christian institutions of higher education, seeks to provide resources and support for the students, faculty, and administrations of its member schools. Assisting students of color with their often difficult transition into the culture of predominately White Christian campuses has become one of its chief missions during its 36 years of existence.
Slow but Steady Progress
Twelve years ago the CCCU established a Racial Harmony Award to celebrate the achievements of its member institutions in the areas of “diversity, racial harmony, and reconciliation.”
In 2001, the organization’s board affirmed its commitment. “If we do not bring the issues of racial-ethnic reconciliation and multi-ethnicity into the mainstream of Christian higher education, our campuses will always stay on the outside fringes,” remarked Sam Barkat, former board member and provost of Nyack College in Nyack, New York.
CCCU schools have made “steady gains” since then, according to a report co-authored by Robert Reyes, research director at Goshen College’s Center for Intercultural Teaching and Learning and a member of CCCU’s Commission for Advancing Intercultural Competencies.
Robert Reyes: “We’re supposed to be unified as Christians.”
Reyes and his colleagues found that overall percentage of students of color increased from 16.6 percent to 19.9 percent at CCCU schools between 2003 and 2009 and graduation rates for these students also increased, from 14.8 percent to 17 percent, which still only adds up to a tiny fraction of all students at CCCU’s 115 North American affiliate schools.
According to Reyes, CCCU has a new research director and is developing a proactive research agenda related to these issues. This kind of research “creates a certain level of anxiety,” he said, because it categorizes people and theoretically separates us when we’re supposed to be unified as Christians. “I think it’s a misunderstanding of what the unity of the body is, and what unity means in the Christian faith,” said Reyes.
For those, like Reyes and Canada, who are engaged in diversity work on CCCU campuses, the task can feel like slogging through a murky swamp. UrbanFaith talked to current and former diversity workers at nine CCCU schools about their efforts and experiences. We repeatedly heard that students of color face unique challenges on these campuses and that CCCU schools are not always prepared, or willing, to deal with them. We also heard about successes and how challenging they can be.
The Problem — a Whole Different God
Multiple sources said students of color at Christian colleges are routinely harassed with racially insensitive jokes and comments by members of their campus communities, for example, and that this harassment is sometimes not taken seriously enough by school administrators.
When racism isn’t overt, students often feel like they won’t be accepted by their school communities unless they suppress their ethnic identities. Many students feel profoundly lonely on majority-White CCCU campuses, our sources said.
Dante Upshaw, for example, has been both a student and a staff member at evangelical schools. He recalled the challenge that worship presented when he was a student at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago.
“For the average White student, it’s an easy crossover. … It’s kind of this big youth group. But for the Black student, the Hispanic student, this is a whole different God,” said Upshaw.
He was unfamiliar with the songs that were sung in chapel, for example, and found himself in conversations about what constitutes godly worship. “I was a young person having to articulate and defend. That’s a lot of pressure for a freshman,” said Upshaw.
Monica Smith: “We haven’t gone far enough.”
Monica Smith has seen the same phenomenon played out on her school’s campus. As assistant to the provost for multicultural concerns at Eastern University in St. Davids, Pennsylvania, she said students of color once complained to her about being judged for skipping chapel services that felt culturally foreign to them. They were told they should be able to worship no matter what kind of music or speaker was up front. “The retort was, ‘You’re right, so why can’t it sound like what I’m used to?’” said Smith, who also teaches courses in social work.
Smith and her colleagues have identified four specific areas of challenge that confront students of color at Eastern: financial, academic, social, and spiritual. “If students are struggling in those areas, they really can’t pay attention in the classroom,” said Smith.
The university is making headway, but it’s slow, she said. “As much as we have done administratively and in the academic arena, I still don’t know that our university’s administration has gone far enough with this.”
Institutional Challenges — Like Turning the Titanic
Upshaw served as a minority recruiting officer and assistant director of the office of multi-cultural development at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois, in the early 2000s. He said the number of non-White students who were in pain over their experience at the school would have been as big as his admissions file.
He recalled leaving school one day to commute home to Chicago when he saw a student of color sitting on the stairs “like a lonely puppy.” Upshaw read the student’s demeanor as saying, “You about to leave me here, man? You’re actually going to leave and go to your home?”
Dante Upshaw: “Too many students felt alone.”
“There were just too many students like that, where they felt so alone on this beautiful, immaculate campus with great food service and great athletics,” Upshaw said. “Those were some hard years.”
In response to the need he saw, Upshaw founded Global Urban Perspectives, a multiethnic student group devoted to urban issues. He believes it was successful in part because it helped foster healthy relationships.
“The fact that we were together in a safe setting where we were given space to be ourselves, I think that really struck a chord with many of the students,” he said.
“It’s a wealthy system, it’s an established system, it’s a strong historic system, and it’s a very Christian religious system,” said Upshaw of the institutional challenges he faced at Wheaton. “Changing a system like that would be akin to turning the Titanic … It is going to take a long time, and it’s going to be real slow.”
Even so, Upshaw said he saw “the ship” turn quickly when influential individuals decided to act. Too often, though, he saw inaction born of the fear of alienating potential donors. Upshaw left the school, in part, because he was frustrated with the administration’s commitment to a broadly applied quota system that he felt undermined his efforts to recruit more students of color.
Additive and Subtractive Approaches
Although Joshua Canada is ambivalent about his experience at Taylor University, he returned there for graduate school and now serves as an adviser to the Black Student Union at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California, where he is also a residence director. He said not all students of color struggle with the racial dynamics on their campuses and some students rarely do.
“In their ethnic development, they’re not dealing with this tension, or this is what they’ve done their whole life and they know how to do this,” said Canada.
Joshua Canada: “To be successful, our vision of being multicultural must be transformative.”
He described two approaches to multiculturalism, one that is additive and one that is subtractive. With the additive approach, elements of non-European culture are added to the core culture, he said, and with the subtractive approach, people of color drop elements of their culture to assimilate into the majority culture.
“Students feel it, if it’s additive,” Canada said. “We did Black History Month. We did Martin Luther King Jr. Day. It’s a nice gesture, but people realize it isn’t who we are.”
“To really be successful, we have to come to a place where our vision of being multicultural is more transformative and then it really does change aspects of the institution. It really does change the big-picture experience, and not in a way that is unfaithful to the history of the institution, but that maybe acknowledges gaps.”
George Yancey is a University of North Texas sociologist and the author of numerous books, including Neither Jew nor Greek: Exploring Issues of Racial Diversity on Protestant College Campuses. (Canada’s UrbanFaith interview with Yancey prompted us to investigate the issue further.) According to Yancey, the task of student retention at Christian colleges is complicated by the evangelical community’s habitual conflation of faith and culture.
“There’s an issue in retaining students of color in higher education in general,” he told UrbanFaith, “but I think Christian College campuses have even more of a challenge because of some of the dynamics that are there. A lot of times, the way the faith is practiced is racialized. People don’t always realize it.”
Nurturing Dialogue
It wasn’t only African Americans, however, who recounted stories about the challenges students of color face at CCCU institutions. Jon Purple is dean for student life programs at Cedarville University in Cedarville, Ohio. He recalls the mother of an incoming student crying when she dropped her young Black son off at the rural Ohio campus, and not just because he was leaving home.
“She was in tears and was afraid to leave her son here, because of very real fears that some good-ol’ White boys might accost her son,” said Purple.
Continued on Page 2.
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
March 4th, 2012
In a Washington Times column in Monday’s print edition, Cardinal Newman Society President Patrick Reilly goes on the offensive against MSNBC and the moral degradation of America’s college campuses:
Chiding presidential candidate Rick Santorum for calling America’s colleges “indoctrination mills,” MSNBC host Ed Schultz recently accused Mr. Santorum of citing a “bogus study” from the Cardinal Newman Society.
What’s bogus is MSNBC’s reporting. Mr. Santorum is right about the indoctrination.
What has the liberal media all flustered is Mr. Santorum’s frank criticism of America’s colleges and their frequent hostility toward traditional religious values. What goes on today at most colleges is offensive and destructive from a moral perspective.
Unlike most media reporters, Mr. Santorum’s audiences understand his language. “Religion” is not the same as the undefined “spirituality” claimed by many young people today. In some respects, the two are polar opposites.
But liberal reporters seem to distrust anyone they can deride as old-fashioned religious folk. So they have set their sights on Mr. Santorum and a curious statistic that he cited recently, claiming that 62 percent of students lose their “faith commitment” during college.
It seems no one can find the source of that statistic, but the focus on it is something of a red herring. There’s plenty of data to back up Mr. Santorum’s concern about the leftist and secularist biases of higher education in the United States.
What I know, as president of the Cardinal Newman Society, is that MSNBC falsely attributed the statistic to us while failing to cite an actual study that we published. We’re not the source.
So why would Mr. Schultz drag the Cardinal Newman Society into his rant against Mr. Santorum? I have a guess.
In advancing our mission to renew Catholic identity in Catholic higher education, we have vocally opposed the Obama administration’s efforts to force Catholic colleges to insure both students and employees for sterilization and abortion-causing drugs. In 2009, we also organized a national petition with more than 367,000 signers protesting the University of Notre Dame’s honors to President Obama – a point noted by Mr. Schultz with disdain.
So that’s it. Mr. Schultz doesn’t like those who stand in the way of Mr. Obama, even a nonpolitical religious organization. We’re those old-fashioned religious folk.
Read the rest of the Washington Times column here.
Posted in Infomation | No Comments »
|
|