By PAMELA GOULD
The Free Lance-Star
After two bouts with cancer, a massive heart attack, quadruple bypass surgery and three additional heart attacks, 40-year-old Jenny Stone has stared down her mortality.
“I realize tomorrow is not promised,” she said. And with that fact ever-present, she’s chosen to make the most of her time by going after her goals with determination.
“It’s get up and go or sit down and die,” said Stone, who lives in the Falmouth area of Stafford County.
“I want people to understand, when they have tragedies in their life, you can take them and get back up and have them as your reason for life.”
Stone ran a catering business and relished the work, but the heart attack in 2008 that led to her bypass surgery put an end to that career.
Her doctor said the long hours and the heavy lifting the job entailed were too much for her heart.
That’s what led Stone to chart a new course.
She enrolled in Germanna Community College three semesters ago and is now working to become a counselor so she can make a difference in others’ lives. MORE
DALLAS (FWAA) – Clemson's Daniel Rodriguez is the winner of the 2012 Discover Orange Bowl-FWAA Courage Award, as selected by a panel of FWAA members. Rodriguez, a redshirt freshman receiver from Stafford, Va., is playing for the Tigers after being awarded a Purple Heart and Bronze Star in Afghanistan. Rodriguez, who was chosen from several deserving nominees in a vote by a committee of FWAA members, will be presented the award and recognized in conjunction with the 2013 Discover BCS National Championship Game on Jan. 7. Rodriguez, 24, was wounded Oct. 3, 2009, during a battle near Kamdesh, Afghanistan, while serving in the U.S. Army. Combat Outpost Keating, in a mountainous region near the Pakistan border, was ambushed by nearly 300 Taliban insurgents. Eight Americans were killed; 22 were injured. Rodriguez was shot and wounded in the leg, neck and shoulder. Once recovered and discharged from the military, Rodriguez kept a promise to his friend, Pfc. Kevin Thompson, who was killed during the initial moments of the attack. Rodriguez had told Thompson if he made it home from Afghanistan, he would find a way to play college football. After enrolling at Germanna Community College, he began training for football. He sent a video of himself catching passes, spliced with video he'd shot during combat, to four-year schools. Clemson coach Dabo Swinney offered Rodriguez a spot on the team.
Anita Newhouse didn't believe she was college material. She was
wrong.
She says she came up with every excuse she could think of
not to enroll at Germanna Community College.
“I have a child.”
“I work full time.”
“I wasn’t a good student in high school.”
GCC 2012 Fall Commcncement speaker Anita Newhouse
“The truth is,” she says, “ my self-esteem and confidence
were so low that I honestly didn’t think I would be successful. I thank God I
listened to a friend who convinced me to enroll at Germanna in 2000. She
suggested taking one class at a time until I was used to that and then taking
more than one class each semester. As time passed, I became more confident and
I held my head higher.”
Newhouse, who was Germanna Community College's 2012 Fall Commencment speaker on Dec. 17, was 29 years old when she started at GCC.Her goal was to earn a bachelor’s degree by
the time she was 40. She did it in half that time, graduating from the University of Mary Washington when
she was 34.
Now, at 36, the
Lignum resident is manager of Germanna’s Welcome Center at the Daniel
Technology Center in Culpeper, which brings together counseling, financial aid
and admissions resources to help students in that area find the answer to any
questions they have, overcome any doubts they have, and get off to a flying
start.
She says she can
identify with “the hesitation, the anxiousness, the worry and the fear” some
students feel as they enter college.
“If you the burning
desire to do it, follow your dreams and don’t let age hold you back from what
you want to do. Believe me, you can.”
The Professor and the Doomsday Clock: ‘A Confederacy of Dunces’ & Signs of John Kennedy Toole’s Suicide
On the 75th anniversary of the birth of the author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning novel ‘A Confederacy of Dunces,’ John Kennedy Toole’s biographer Cory MacLauchlin, the writer of ‘Butterfly in the Typewriter: The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of “A Confederacy of Dunces,”’ tells us about the warning signs that lead up to the suicide of one of America’s strangest literary geniuses.
An uneasy silence fell over the hot classroom as students stared at Professor Toole drawing feverishly on the blackboard. It was the fall of 1968, the first day of class at Dominican College in uptown New Orleans. The students, awaiting his usual charming smile, could tell something was wrong.
Placing the chalk down, the 30-year-old English professor turned to face the class, revealing the bold white lines of a Doomsday Clock, the iconic quarter face of the Cold War era measuring how close humanity comes to self-destruction. Everyday thereafter, in a somber ritual that no student understood at the time, Toole redrew the hands of the clock a bit closer to midnight. Six months later he was found dead in his car on the side of the road, a garden hose attached to the exhaust pipe.
After the eulogies were said and sympathy cards sent, his legacy would have surely slipped into obscurity. No one expected him to become a celebrated novelist, especially since he was unpublished at the time of his death. But in 1980, John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Duncesflew off bookshelves. The fictitious tale of the fat medievalist Ignatius Reilly, plotting social revolution while selling hot dogs in the French Quarter of New Orleans, was hailed as a comic masterpiece and won the Pulitzer Prize.
The immense popularity of the book left readers hungry for more information on the author. They speculated why a man of such promise and talent would end his life so rashly. Some concluded his literary labors must have exhausted his will to live. Or perhaps he crumbled under the weight of cruel rejections from heartless publishers. The dunces must have been in a confederacy against him.
But that clock he drew on the board in 1968 tells a far darker story, one that challenges our notions of what the moments before a suicide look like and how he proceeded with cool measure towards his own demise. It tells the story of a quiet crisis grinding away behind a stalwart face.
In the foreword to A Confederacy of Dunces, Walker Percy notes that a sense of sadness underlies the humor of the novel: “The tragedy of the book is the tragedy of the author—his suicide in 1969.” Henceforth, Toole’s death has been so closely linked to the novel that it’s difficult to imagine him apart from his end. But by all accounts he was a rather blithe spirit: witty, intelligent, a wonderful dancer, and a talented mimic. In fact, when he returned home from the Army in 1964, Confederacy manuscript in hand, he was at his artistic prime, and he had complete confidence in his plan. He would teach at Dominican to pay the bills and edit his manuscript until it was ready for submission. But he also walked into a stifling living situation. He lived in a cramped apartment with two aging parents. His father was near senility, his mother was overbearing, and the household was in financial straits.
At first, Toole made remarkable headway in gaining the attention of Simon & Schuster editor Robert Gottlieb. Over the course of their correspondence, Gottlieb’s praise for the young writer never wavered, but there were some problems with the novel. Seeking a second opinion, Gottlieb shared the manuscript with Candida Donadio, literary agent to Joseph Heller, Thomas Pynchon, and Philip Roth. Donadio and Gottlieb agreed that Toole was “wildly funny, often funnier than almost anyone else around, and our kind of funny.” But they also felt the novel lacked significant “meaning.” In June 1964, Gottlieb wrote to Toole, “There must be a point to everything you have in the book, a real point, not just amusingness forced to figure itself out.”
Lines like these reached not only Toole, but also his mother. On occasion, and with her son’s friends in audience, Thelma Toole would read Gottlieb’s letters aloud and then respond in a tirade against “those fools in New York” who knew nothing of art and culture. She defended her son’s genius while he sat quietly on the couch, his shortcomings echoing off the walls of the apartment he paid for. Toole decided he could no longer revise the book, so one day he quietly tucked the manuscript away in a box.
His friends and family noticed a change in his behavior. He became bitter, and his humor turned caustic. To his close confidants he confessed that he suffered from headaches, hallucinations, and a growing sense of paranoia. He believed students were taunting him, driving by his home at all hours of the night and honking a car horn. And he became convinced his novel had been stolen, handed over to novelist George Deaux and published under a different title. It would be easy to say that he went crazy or lost his mind. However, a group of girls from Dominican College did occasionally drive by Toole’s house and playfully honked the horn. And there are some uncanny similarities between Confederacy and Superworm by George Deaux. “Do you think these things I’m seeing aren’t real?” Toole once asked a friend. “I think you need to get help,” the friend replied. Toole nodded and changed the subject. He discussed his issues with calm and deliberate explanation. He could process and calculate. The real problem, his friend Dave Kubach observed, was that Toole “had so much faith in his own mind that no one could convince him of anything different.”
She was left with an aching desire to turn back time and stop the progression of that clock.
One of the most difficult aspects of suicide to understand is that it usually follows a rather logical process. It often takes planning and careful consideration. Edwin Shneidman, a founder of the nation’s first comprehensive suicide-prevention center, concluded that people contemplating suicide typically suffer “psycheache,” a pain with no clear anatomical origin, but felt nonetheless. The sufferer determines that death is the only way to cease the pain. One might imagine a suicidal person seized by a wave of madness that compels him to do something against the basic instincts of survival, but this is not the case with many suicides. Imagine the resolve of Virginia Woolf filling her coat pockets with stones and walking straight into the River Ouse. In her letter to her husband she concluded, “I am doing what seems the best thing to do.”
Toole arrived at the same conclusion. As the fall semester of 1968 came to an end, and the Doomsday Clock in his classroom at Dominican neared midnight, tension in the Toole home escalated. After the holidays Toole had a fight with his mother and left New Orleans. Nobody knows for sure where he went, but he spent two months on the road, ending his final journey just outside Biloxi, Miss., where he quietly unwound a garden hose and started the ignition. Dressed in his gray suit, he sat in stillness as the noxious fumes billowed into the cabin of his blue Chevy Chevelle.
When Marti Luke, one of his students at Dominican, got news of his death, she immediately thought back to the clock. His final hour was right there on the board, but nobody had recognized it. And like many of his friends and acquaintances, Luke wished she would have done something to help Toole. She was left with an aching desire to turn back time and stop the progression of that clock. That guilt haunted her for decades. Many of Toole’s friends expressed a similar regret—maybe just one more phone call, one more letter. Suicide has a way of casting a long shadow.
And yet, in my conversations with his friends and acquaintances, they repeatedly focused on Toole’s brilliance, wit, and perceptive observations of the human condition. Luke’s resolution over the death of Toole finally came when she played the part of Irene Reilly in the 1993 stage adaptation of A Confederacy of Dunces. At the end of each show, a photo of Toole was projected onto a screen above the stage. One night, she noticed how the large black-and-white image of her dear professor illuminated the dark auditorium and shined onto the smiling faces of the audience. It seemed as if time stood still and the tragedy of his end dissolved into the light.
Despite the August 2011 earthquake that resulted in the closing of the V. Earl Dickinson Building for repairs, Germanna Community College was among the Top 50 fastest-growing two-year colleges in America for 2010-2011, according to the
latest rankings compiled by Community College Week.
Germanna's Dickinson Building
GCC ranked 45th in the
nation with a 2.6 percent increase in enrollment comparing Fall 2010 and Fall
2011, climbing by 197, from 7,582 to 7,779.
The Dickinson Building is reopening now and will be
fully operational in January 2013 for the beginning of the spring semester.
Germanna President David A. Sam said the
ranking shows the college continued to serve the community without missing a
beat despite the quake. The increase in enrollment that semester also bucked national trends in enrollment, which were beginning to reflect a downturn.
Two other members of the Virginia Community College System
were in the top 50. Lord Fairfax Community College, based in Fauquier County, was 32nd
and Piedmont Virginia Community College in Charlottesville was 47th.
Jenny Stone isn’t the typical college student body
president.
For one thing, the Germanna Community College Student Government Association leader and Falmouth resident is 40 years old, and her 21- and 20-year-old sons plan to join her at GCC for the spring semester.
She’s survived two bouts with ovarian cancer. During her second cancer surgery in 2007, she had a cardiac event on the operating table, she says. A major heart attack and quadruple bypass followed a year later at age 35.
Germanna SGA President Jenny Stone
This month she suffered
a minor heart attack. Doctors tell her that her heart disease has become a grave concern, she says.
Of her heart problems, she says: “I’m not allowing this to
stop or slow my life down. I decided long ago not to dwell in my illnesses or
let them define me.”
She plans to soon take
part in an SGA trip, a winter formal dance and a Fredericksburg Food Bank
drive.
“I’m not resigned to dying,” she says. “But I understand it
could happen any moment.
“In some ways, it makes me a little less afraid,” Stone says.
“I know that tomorrow isn’t promised, so I have to affect today. And that means
by being willing to get up and do things.”
“Things happen. You have to pick yourself up and go. I was
really angry at my body. I was going 90 miles an hour and I really wanted to
make my catering business work.”
She ran Stone Soup Catering at Little Washington in
Rappahannock County until health problems forced her to stop.
“Catering was something
I was good at and I loved it,” she says.
She’s found herself
again at Germanna, she says.
“This school has been a revelation,” Stone says. “I am so
looking forward to my bachelor’s and master’s work.
She’s studying
psychology and plans to get her associate’s degree at Germanna, then transfer
to the University of Mary Washington for her bachelor’s and possibly Marymount University
for graduate work.
She has been a Sunshine Lady Foundation Scholar through the
Germanna Educational Foundation.
“I had not been in school in 20 years,” she says about
coming to Germanna. “I was as terrified as an 18-year-old coming out of high
school. I felt behind the times and old. "
But that feeling didn’t last long. The
fact that she’s been elected SGA president is evidence that she’s accepted by
other students, and she says GCC’s faculty has been “inspirational,”
particulary psychology Prof. Evan Gorelick.
She said she hopes
her psychology studies lead to work helping police officers who are under
stress, as well as family counseling.
“When you get to the
point that your next minute may be your last, you think carefully about what
you want to spend time on,” she says.
“I want to see my sons finish college … I want them to go on
to feel they are a part of a community greater and larger than themselves.” She
said accepting her own mortality led to her focusing on helping others.
She's worked with
the student government at Germanna to help victims of Hurricane Sandy.
“To have an impact,
you can’t just do it as one person, you do it as a community, although my
husband tells me one person starts things,” she says. “It starts at home. It starts
here at Germanna. It starts showing students what community means … That’s
important.”
Madison County husband and wife John W. “Bill” Price III and Patricia Adams Price have been named Germanna Community College’s 2013 Philanthropists of the Year.
They were honored at the 2012 Germanna Educational Foundation Annual Dinner and Celebration of Philanthropy Nov. 16 at Stevenson Ridge Lodge in Spotsylvania County.
Culpeper Regional Health System President and CEO Lee Kirk presented the college with a $40,000 donation at the event. Germanna President David A. Sam thanked Kirk and CRHS. "For your continuing support of Germanna. When you invest in Germanna, you're investing in people--our students--and in our community."
Culpeper Regional Health System's Lee Kirk presents Germanna Educational Foundation with $40,000 donation at GCCEF's Annual Dinner. Left to right: GCCEF Executive Director Mike Catell, CRHS President and Chief Executive Officer Lee Kirk, GCCEF Board Member Connie Kincheloe, GCCEF Board member Butch Davies, GCCEF President Jane Wallace and Germanna President David A. Sam.
Bill Price, an employee of Madison Wood Preservers, Inc. since 1972 and currently the Chief Executive Officer, is a life-long resident of Madison County. Pat Price is from Carrollton, Al.They met while attending the University of Alabama.After college, he taught at Madison County High School for three years and she was a substitute teacher.
He went to a junior college in Texas for two years before transferring to the University of Alabama, “So I know how important community colleges are, especially today, a lot of kids just cannot afford to step right into a four-year school. The expense has just gotten out of hand.
“Having taught in Madison, somewhere along the line, Pat and I developed the philosophy that there’s one thing you can give your children that they can’t lose, they can’t throw away and they can’t sell--and that is a good education.”
He served on the GCC Educational Foundation board for 17 years and was president of the foundation for two years. Pat Price is on the board of the Boys and Girls Club of Central Virginia in Charlottesville.
"The Foundation greatly appreciates the Prices' generosity--their gifts in terms of time and energy as well as donations, over many years," said GCCEF Executive Director Mike Catell.
Other honors conferred at the GCCEF Annual Dinner:
·John J. “Butch”Davies, III, a Culpeper attorney and former member of the Virginia House of Delegates, was named the GCCEF Board Member of the Year.
·The Rev. Lawrence A. Davies, who recently retired after 50 years as pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church (Old Site) in Fredericksburg, and was that city’s first African American mayor, was honored as GCCEF Community Member of the Year.
·Steve B. Jones of Spotsylvania County was named GCCEF Alumnus of the Year. He graduated from Germanna in 1979 with an Associate Degree in Business Management. He is President and Chief Operating Officer of the Fried Companies, Inc. a regional residential and commercial real estate development firm located out of Fairfax County with offices in Springfield, Spotsylvania and Greene County.
The Rev. Lawrence A. Davies, who retired recently as pastor at Shiloh Baptist Church (Old Site) in Fredericksburg, has been honored by
Germanna Community College’s Educational Foundation as its first Community
Member of the Year.
Davies was the city’s first black mayor, serving from 1976-96.
Germanna President David A. Sam announced during the foundation’s annual
dinner and celebration of philanthropy that the new award will be named for
Davies.
The award will be given annually to someone who has made a major difference
in the community.
In honoring Davies, Foundation President Jane Wallace said he and his wife
Janice together have “been a force for peaceful and positive change” over the
past half century.
Davies’ daughter Lauren, who ... MORE Source: Pam Gould, The Free Lance-Star
Clemson fans shake Daniel Roriguez' hand before a game.
This Veterans’ Day is a special one for former Germanna Community College and Brooke Point High School student Daniel Rodriguez.
Rodriguez, who earned both a Bronze Star and Purple Heart while serving in the U.S. Army in Afghanistan, has seen a dream come true this fall.
He made the Clemson football team as a walk-on, and led the Tigers onto the field carrying an American flag prior to the team’s Oct. 21, Military Appreciation Day win over Virginia Tech.
Rodriguez’ fight was far from over after tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan that saw him wounded and decorated for valor.
He was a football star at Brooke Point in Stafford County, but he was too small for a football scholarship. His father suffered a heart attack and passed away four days after Daniel graduated. Without a scholarship or a father, he felt he couldn't afford college, so he enlisted in the Army.
In Afghanistan, when his unit of 60 men came under attack by 300 Taliban, he saw a buddy shot in the head. Daniel exposed himself to enemy fire to help his friend and was shot in the shoulder and took shrapnel in both legs as he fought his way through the Taliban to reach him and drag him out of the line of fire. Then he realized his buddy was dead.
Germanna Community College Dean Martha O'Keefe received the Patricia Lacey Metzger Award for achievement during the 19th annual Leadership Colloquium for Professional Women on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2012 at the University of Mary Washington. O’Keefe is Dean of Workforce and Professional Development at the Germanna Center for Workforce and Community Education. She has held the position for 11 years. The Metzger Award honors those who “uphold high standards in their personal and professional lives while fulfilling a career goal of significant nature.”
“It's an opportunity to directly impact the lives of others,” O’Keefe said of her work, “by opening doors and possibilities that might otherwise have been closed to them.”
Below is a question and answer profile done by Pam Gould of The Free Lance-Star:
NAME: Martha O'Keefe AGE: 54
POSITION: Dean of Workforce and Professional Development,
Germanna Community College Center for Workforce and Community Education.
YEARS IN POSITION: 11 years
COLLEGE ACTIVITIES:The Center for Workforce and Community
Education provides noncredit professional development training and services
throughout the Germanna service region, which includes seven counties and the
City of Fredericksburg.I oversee a wide
range of professional development courses and programs, primarily in the areas
of IT, business professional, construction and industry, and health care.We are also developing many new courses in
the areas of intelligence and homeland security, as well as in cyber security,
to meet the current demands of employers in our service region.Our department stays well connected with the
business community, local offices of economic development, chambers of
commerce, local school divisions, and sister colleges and universities to
collaborate and provide the best educational services available.A typical day for me might include meeting
with business partners, working with instructional faculty, administering
grants, assisting students, and planning new programs and services. Within the
college, I have served on various committees including the International
Education Committee, the Curriculum Committee, the Student Appeals Committee,
the Technology Committee, and the Safety Committee.And out in the community, I regularly
participate on a variety of business committees and serve on several regional
boards of directors.
COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES:I'm active at my church and also occasionally volunteer at the local
food pantry. And when my children were younger I helped coach their athletic
teams.
HOBBIES: I enjoy just about any outside activity, though
on most weekends, I can be found working in the garden.I also enjoy swimming, hiking, running, and
yoga.
I BECAME AN EDUCATOR BECAUSE:I enjoy working with others and believe that
education is the key to helping individuals grow intellectually, which
translates into their ability to develop confidence, competence, and
independence; and then, hopefully, they can and will pass their success on to
their own children and the other lives they touch.
I LOVE MY JOB BECAUSE:It's an opportunity to directly impact the lives of others— by opening
doors, and possibilities, that might otherwise have been closed to them.
Working at Germanna is also an opportunity for me to be creative, and be part
of a collaborative and committed team of professionals.
IF I WASN'T IN EDUCATION, I'D BE A/AN: This is a tough
one, because I have a variety of interests and passions. During collegeyears, I gave consideration to, and was quite
interested in, careers in graphic arts and art history, architecture,
veterinary medicine, and farming or horticulture.I continue to read a good bit about these
topics.
MY FAVORITE SAYING/QUOTE: Many years ago,
this one by Anita Roddick stuck with me: "Be courageous, it's one of the only places left uncrowded."I think it's
inspirational for those who are unsure of what path to take.
WHEN I RETIRE I WANT TO:I am not even thinking of retirement yet!Though perhaps that's just my avoidance of
thinking about getting older.However, I
suppose when I do retire, I would be interested in working in the nonprofit
sector. Perhaps working with disadvantaged youth or with organizations focused
on community revitalization or redevelopment.I also enjoy traveling, and hope to travel more, and continue learning
more about other cultures.
ANYTHING ELSE YOU'D LIKE TO SHARE:
My family has been very supportive of my career, for which I am very
appreciative. Though our three children are grown, and (mostly!) moved out of
the house, my husband and I always enjoy family trips to the beach and time
spent with extended family.
Gene Bailey, president of the Fredericksburg Regional Alliance, offered career advice to about 60 Germanna students, faculty members and staffers at a “Knowledge: Key to a Larger Paycheck” luncheon at the Fredericksburg Country Club Tuesday, Nov. 6 organized by GCC Career Counselor Marie Hawley. Bailey gave Germanna students tips on networking, opening lines, dining room skills, putting together resumes and job interviews.
Perhaps the most valuable advice Bailey shared is that the students should keep in mind that others are probably just as nervous as they are.
He invited the students to attend FRA’s 13th Annual Meeting luncheon as his guests and told them not to be intimidated.
“Everybody is scared of something,” Bailey told the GCC students.
“…The objective is to get in the game, not think of five reasons not to go.”
”I was 19 years old and did not have indoor plumbing,” Bailey said. “My [starting point] was a lot lower than anybody’s in this room. If I can do it, I’m reasonably sure there’s somebody in this room who can do better.”
FRA's Gene Bailey and GCC student Joanna Stroup
GCC Career Counselor Marie Hawley and student Javier Penzellence
GCC's Dr. Miguel Lechuga and students Kimberly McGinnis, Kristina Wall and Christine Beverly
Connect Veterans with Good-Paying, High-Demand Jobs
~ VCCS Offers Grants to Strategically Connect Veterans
with Growing Job Sectors ~
RICHMOND — Marine
Corp veteran Dave Graf was laid off from his job in 2009, shortly after
returning from two tours of duty in Iraq as a helicopter maintainer and gunner.
He then decided to use his G.I. Bill benefits and enroll in Blue Ridge
Community College where he earned a total of four postsecondary credentials in
aviation and automotive maintenance, including two associate’s degrees – all
while maintaining a perfect 4.0 grade point average.
“It had
been a dream of mine to have the credentials to back up the skills I knew I had
as an aircraft and auto mechanic. I could do both at BRCC,” said Graf who
quickly leveraged his credentials into a good-paying career. “It seemed the
best way to maintain my lifestyle.”
Graf’s
story is not unique. And it represents the goal of a new series of grants
announced jointly by the Office of Governor Bob McDonnell and Virginia’s
Community Colleges.
Up to $1.25
million in Workforce Investment Act (WIA) Rapid Response Assistance funds are
available to build strategic partnerships aimed at connecting veterans who have
recently separated from their military service, as well as eligible military
spouses, with good-paying jobs in high-demand fields.
Speaking
about the announcement, Governor McDonnell said, “Our returning veterans have
already developed many leadership skills that employers look for. This program
holds the promise to help more veterans in Virginia translate those skills to
high-demand jobs. They have stood up for the Commonwealth and we must open the
doors of our colleges and universities to them.”
Secretary
of Homeland Security and Veterans Affairs Terrie Suit said, “As more men and
women return from bravely serving in the defense of freedom, we must do all we
can to support them in their transition. I look forward to the proposals
submitted for these competitive grants to do just that.”
Individual
grants proposals can apply for a maximum award of $250,000. Each proposal must
include a Virginia Community College; a Local Workforce Investment Board; a
local VEC Disabled Veterans’ Outreach Program; and a Local Veterans’ Employment
Representative. Proposals may also include education and training providers as
well as faith-based and community based organizations.
“Community
Colleges are at their best when they can connect local people and resources to
address unmet community needs,” said Glenn DuBois, Chancellor of Virginia’s
Community Colleges. “Community colleges have focused on serving veterans since
I was a community college student. We’re proud of that legacy and eager to
build on it with these innovative grants.”
More than
823,000 veterans live in Virginia, according to statistics released last year
by the Department of Veterans Services.
Proposals
for funding will be accepted until December 19, 2012 at 3:00 p.m. The full RFP
is available on the VCCS Web site under Workforce Grants.
About Virginia’s
Community Colleges: Created more than 40 years ago, the VCCS is comprised
of 23 community colleges located on 40 campuses across the commonwealth.
Together, Virginia’s Community Colleges serve more than 400,000 students a
year. For more information please visit myfuture.vccs.edu.
Dutch exchange professor Sanne van Uden, who has been visiting Germanna Community College, is a Drama and Social Skills instructor for ROC deLeijgraaf in the province of Noord Brabant. ROC deLeijgraaf is one of 40 or 50 regional training centers for higher vocational education in the Netherlands, called Hoger Beroepsonderwijs or HBO.
ROC deLeijgraaf has its own restaurants, hotel and Work Plaza, where students receive practical training.
van Uden said Dutch students usually end up with either certification for a trade or a university diploma. “Of course we have dropouts. But there are only a few.”
All students in college from age 16 to 24 are eligible for a government grant, but typically also need to take out loans, van Uden said. The government requires that if a student misses 16 hours of class time, he or she be assigned a coach or mentor, she said.
“It’s very interesting to see how the schooling system works here,” van Uden said.
“Many [GCC students] have jobs as well as going to college, and they are motivated. They are very friendly and very eager to learn.”
She said facilities and technology at Germanna are “very new, very modern.”
One major difference is that Germanna provides all students a second chance to excel, transfer to a university and reach their full potential.
In the Netherlands, she said, students are put on either a university track or a vocational track at age 12. “Of course, the child is followed for eight years. They have a good knowledge of how good the child is.”
Germanna faculty member Shelly Palomino, who’s been hosting van Uden, said she has toured Germanna, the University of Virginia and the University of Mary Washington, meeting faculty and talking with students. She also will visit Washington and New York.
van Uden said another difference is that teachers who went to university themselves rarely teach at the vocational level. She is an exception, with a master’s degree in education.
“One of the things Sann made me realize,” Palomino said, “is that despite the fact Germanna might be considered a stepping stone, we have great talent [among the faculty] at a community college--very motivated and interested and passionate, people who have had books published and accomplished great things. You look at [some faculty members’] credentials and think they should be teaching at UVa. But you talk to [them] and they have the passion” for making a difference at the community college level.
Germanna Community College is among the most technologically innovative colleges in the nation, according to e..Republic’s Center for Digital Education. e.Republic is a publishing, research, event and new media company focused on state and local government and education..
e.Republic's eighth annual Digital Community Colleges Survey found that in the mid-sized colleges category, tied Piedmont Virginia Community College, which is based in Charlottesville, for seventh place.
Community colleges across the nation have responded to increased enrollments and limited budgets through innovative use of technology, according to the Digital Community Colleges Survey results released. Survey questions and criteria examined and scored areas of digital and emerging technologies, such as use of mobile devices and technology integration into curriculum; strategic planning and data management; and delivery models and professional development, including availability of technology tools and training for faculty and students. MORE
Dan Wallace presents a $5,000 check to GCC Middle College Director Carolyn Bynum on behalf of the Rappahannock Electric Cooperative's Operation Round Up. Mike Catell, executive director of the Germanna Educational Foundation, is at right.
Rappahannock Electric Cooperative's Operation Round Up has raised $5,000 to support Germanna's Middle College, which helps students who didn't finish high school get their GEDs and make the transition to college free of charge, Middle College Director Carolyn Bynum said the GED test will be changing in 2014, and the funds will be used to purchase new curriculum. VIDEO
According to REC's Web site:
"Operation Round Up lets REC members volunteer to have their electric bills rounded up to the next highest whole dollar, with the extra change dedicated to charitable causes.
"The purpose of Operation Round Up is to support individuals, school programs, philanthropic groups, non-profit organizations, rescue squads, fire departments and other deserving causes within REC's service area. A board of directors reviews applications for support and decides how donations are made. The board is made up of seven REC members, who volunteer their time."
Call at 800/552-3904 for more information on Operation Roundup. Go to www.germanna.edu or call 540/891-3000 to learn more about Germanna's Middle College.
Germanna Community Colleges christened new offices at the Central Park Corporate Center in Fredericksburg Tuesday.
GCC President David A. Sam thanked The Rappaport Companies, which donated space for three years.
The college's Educational Foundation and Marketing & Public Information offices are making the facility their new home.
The public is invited to a ribbon cutting to celebrate the opening of Germanna Community College’s Educational Foundation and Marketing and Public Information offices and renaming of Central Park Town Center at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 2 at 1320 Central Park Blvd., across from Funland.
A donation byThe Rappaport Companies of 2,300 square feet of space for three years is providing the college with an address in the city. GCC has campuses at Massaponax and Locust Grove and centers in Stafford and Culpeper. No classes will be offered at the Central Park location.
Germanna’s Educational Foundation and marketing department have moved from the Locust Grove Campus to Central Park.