December 2002
Two CCRI co-op
seminars were recently included in the Best Practices Booklet of the New
England Association for Cooperative Education and Field Experience
Two Community College of Rhode Island
co-op seminars run by Wakefield resident Anne Marge were recently included
in the Best Practices Booklet of the New England Association for
Cooperative Education and Field Experience (NEACEFE). The college's
Workforce Experience Seminar and E-Learning Co-op Seminars, overseen by
Marge, who is director of CCRI's Cooperative Education and Career
Placement program, were included in the publication. CCRI Cooperative
Education and Career Placement offers job search assistance and a credit
co-op program.
Marisa
Albini of Warwick has been hired as Director of Alumni Affairs
WARWICK--Marisa Albini of Warwick has been hired as Director of
Alumni Affairs at the Community College of Rhode Island. Albini will
organize alumni events, programs and services and work with the CCRI
Foundation to cultivate alumni donors.
Albini holds an MA in education and a BA in journalism from the
University of Rhode Island, and an AS in social science from Dean Junior
College.
Previously, she worked as an assistant director of major gifts and
as an assistant to the vice president for university advancement at the
University of Rhode Island.
Leslie
Gell of Providence has been hired as Program Director for the Division
of Lifelong Learning
PROVIDENCE--Leslie Gell of Providence has been hired as Program Director
for the Division of Lifelong Learning at the Community College of Rhode
Island. Gell will work to promote adult education and literacy services at
the college and to oversee grant programs and special projects. She will
also help develop personal enrichment, education and entertainment
programming.
Gell holds a master's degree in education with a focus on ESL from the
University of Massachusetts in Boston. She also holds a bachelor's degree
from Brown University.
Previously, Gell worked as executive director for Brown University's Fox
Point Early Childhood Education Center and as a coordinator of vocational
training programs at the International Institute of Rhode Island.
CCRI
to offer workshop on 'Seven Habits of Highly Effective
People'
The Community College of Rhode Island will present a three-day workshop
based on Stephen R. Covey’s best-selling book, The Seven Habits of
Highly Effective People, Tuesday-Thursday, Feb. 4-6 at the CCRI Knight
Campus in Warwick. Participants who complete the workshop may earn 2.2
CEUs. Tuition is $1495 and includes all course materials.
Over the course of three days, students will learn ways to develop
leadership skills, cultivate business relationships, hone negotiation
strategies and learn crisis-management techniques. The highest-level
course Covey offers to the general public, The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective People workshop is recommended for those currently in
positions of leadership and influence within their companies. For more
information, call 877-552-2949.
The workshop is sponsored by the CCRI
Institute for Leadership & Organizational Development, which provides area
businesses with customized skills training to improve individual and
organizational effectiveness.
Georgia
Maurasse of Providence receives a $1,000 merit scholarship
PROVIDENCE--The National Retail Federation (NRF) recently awarded
Community College of Rhode Island student Georgia Maurasse of Providence a
$1,000 merit scholarship for receiving the highest score on the NRF's
National Assessment in Customer Service.
Maurasse, a member of the Delta Epsilon Chi Association (DECA) for
marketing, management and entrepreneurship students, took the customer
service test at the DECA Southern and North Atlantic Region Leadership
Conference in Washington, D.C. This is the first time that the National
Retail Federation has offered the test, which is based on standards
developed by the Sales & Service Voluntary Partnership in conjunction with
representatives from the retail, wholesale, personal services and real
estate industries. By passing the test, students receive a National
Professional Certification in Customer Service.
Christina
Spaight O'Reilly of Rumford has been hired as a
Public Relations Coordinator at the Community College of Rhode Island
RUMFORD--Christina Spaight O'Reilly of Rumford has been hired as a Public
Relations Coordinator at the Community College of Rhode Island. O'Reilly
will create advertising and marketing campaigns for the college, and will
aid in the coordination of media coverage. She will also help write, edit
and layout CCRI publications.
Previously, O'Reilly worked as a communications coordinator for the
Hospital Association of Rhode Island. She holds a bachelor's degree in
international affairs from the George Washington University.
[]
November 2002
CCRI gets
okay to pursue Quonset facility
NORTH KINGSTOWN--The Community College of Rhode
Island received the go-ahead from the State Properties Committee
yesterday to pursue a new center for training and technology in the
Quonset Point/Davisville Industrial Park. The college has entered
into a 5-year lease agreement with owner Mary Emerson on a
10,000-square-foot former manufacturing facility located at 125
Airport Road, North Kingstown.
At the Quonset facility, CCRI will offer customized
training geared to such industries as boat building, information
technology and construction. Among the course offerings planned are
fiberglass and metal fabrication, welding, lead and asbestos abatement,
computer training, leadership development and Lean Manufacturing. Classes
in ESL and Command Spanish will also be offered. The Community College of
Rhode Island's latest initiative will be overseen by the CCRI Division of
Lifelong Learning.
The current timetable for the project calls for a
March 2003 opening. CCRI at Quonset will be open Mondays through Saturdays
from 8 am - 10 pm. Third shift training may also be offered, depending on
demand.
Presently undergoing extensive renovation, the
facility will include two computer labs with more than $70,000 worth of
new computers and technological infrastructure. It will also feature new
welding equipment, a machine shop, a classroom and a 1,100-square-foot
multi-purpose training space.
This spring, CCRI launched a successful welding
program, contracting with the Quonset-based business, Ocean State Testing
Inc. Toray, another Quonset-based business, has provided free-of-charge
the location for CCRI's Lean Manufacturing training program. Offered in
partnership with RIMES, the Lean Manufacturing program began training
employees of CAS America this fall. Quonset Point/Davisville is also home
for some CCRI computer training and Commercial Driver's License program
courses.
In 2001, CCRI conducted two surveys of Quonset Point/Davisville
businesses to define interest in an area training facility. After
identifying 125 Airport Road as a possible site for a center, CCRI
demonstrated that the building qualified as a sole source provider in
February 2002, thereby paving the way for negotiations with the building's
owner. Structural, electrical and HVAC plans were approved several months
later, and a lease agreement was reached this fall.
Community collaborators on the CCRI Quonset project
include the Economic Development Corporation, the Central Rhode Island and
North Kingstown Chambers of Commerce, the Workforce Investment Boards of
Greater Rhode Island and Providence/Cranston, and the RI Department of
Labor and Training.
"We are eager to have a permanent presence for CCRI
in Quonset/Davisville. We've been in touch with area businesses for the
last 18 months, and they're very eager to see that this is a reality,"
says Phil Sisson, Dean of Lifelong Learning at CCRI.
For more
information, call the CCRI Center for Training and Development at
825-CCRI.
Disney’s “Keys to Excellence” comes to Rhode Island
The Community College of
Rhode Island is pleased to co-sponsor a professional development seminar,
“Keys to Excellence,” offered by the Disney Institute this month. In this
one-day Rhode Island opportunity, local businesses and service industry
professionals are invited to learn the proven success strategies that have
established Disney’s exceptional reputation for customer service and
employee satisfaction.
“Keys to Excellence” challenges
management professionals to re-examine their practices, from hiring and
training to establishing a broad culture of service and company vision.
Dynamic presentations and relevant case studies bring each program topic
to life in true Disney fashion.
CCRI offers such non-credit professional development seminars through its
Institute for Leadership & Organizational Development, a program of the
Division for Lifelong Learning. The Institute targets the local business
community with its programs in management skills and business practices.
According to Fred Colonies, Director
of the Institute for Leadership and Organizational Development, “The
College is pleased to provide this opportunity for Rhode Island businesses
to attend such extraordinary training locally. Disney is famous for their
performance management. What a great example to emulate within our own
organizations!”
The seminar will be held on Friday,
Nov. 15, at the Crown Plaza Hotel at the Crossings in Warwick and will run
from 7:30 a.m. through 3:30 p.m. Cost is $399, with special rates offered
to members Northern R.I., Central R.I., or Greater Providence Chambers of
Commerce, as well as to members of the Northeast Human Resources
Association (NEHRA), the sponsor organization.
For registration information, go to:
www.nehra.com. If you require any special accommodation to
participate, please call (781) 235-2900.
CCRI
Hall of Fame to induct six new members
Senator Jack Reed and CCRI President Emeritus
Edward J. Liston will count among the new inductees to the Community
College Hall of Fame when the latest ceremony takes place Friday, Nov. 15
at the Providence Biltmore. Established in 1994, the biennial Hall of Fame
honors former faculty and staff, as well as current friends of the
college, who have had made a positive and unique impact on CCRI.
Other inductees for the year 2002 include former CCRI faculty and staff
members Raymond A. Ferland of Smithfield, Lloyd S. Kaplan of Providence,
Harry C. Keenan of North Kingstown and Raymond J. Newbold of Narragansett.
Ferland, a former social science and human services professor as well as a
former vice president for student affairs, will be honored for his student
advocacy efforts. He is responsible for establishing the Raymond A.
Ferland Student Assistance Program, which provides emergency funds to
needy students.
Kaplan, a professional musician as well as a professor, has taught music
at CCRI since 1966, where he developed the college's jazz program.
Recently, the Lloyd S. Kaplan Music Scholarship was established in his
name.
Keenan served CCRI not only as a science professor, but as a counselor,
administrator and coach. The college's golf coach for more than a decade,
Keenan was named regional coach of the year five times, and was recently
inducted into the CCRI Athletic Hall of Fame.
Liston, CCRI's second president, greatly expanded
the scope of the college during his 22-year tenure. In addition to
creating the Center for Business and Industrial Training and founding
satellite facilities throughout the state, Liston opened the campus
college's urban campus in South Providence. This campus is now known as
the Liston Campus.
Newbold was one of the 13 original faculty members at Rhode Island Junior
College, the first chairman of the mathematics department, and the
college's first baseball coach. From 1972-78, Newbold served as dean of
arts and sciences of the Providence campus, where he oversaw the move to
the new Flanagan Campus in Lincoln. He retired from teaching in 2000.
Senator Reed will be honored for his support of Rhode Island Higher
Education. Recently, Reed helped secure nearly $6 million in funding for
the Rhode Island Educational Opportunity Center and the Rhode Island
Educational Talent Search, both housed at the CCRI Liston Campus in
Providence.
President of the CCRI
Alumni Association Richard V. DiGennaro will preside over the Hall of Fame
2002 induction ceremony. He joins Assistant to the President Nancy V.
Abood as co-chairs for the event. Executive Vice President of Business
Affairs Robert Henderson chaired this year's selection committee.
Senator Jack Reed of Cranston
will be inducted into the Community College of Rhode Island Hall of Fame,
Friday, Nov. 15 at the Providence Biltmore. Established in 1994, the
biennial Hall of Fame honors former faculty and staff, as well as current
friends of the college, who have made a positive and unique impact on
CCRI.
A vital supporter of higher education in his home state, Reed recently
helped secure nearly $6 million in funding for the RI Educational
Opportunity Center and the RI Educational Talent Search, both housed on
the CCRI Liston Campus in Providence. On the Knight Campus in Warwick this
summer, he also hosted a field hearing of the Senate Health Committee to
address the healthcare worker shortage in Rhode Island and the nation.
In 1996, Reed became the 47th United States Senator from Rhode Island.
Previously he served three terms as member of the U.S. House of
Representatives from Rhode Island’s Second Congressional District.
Reed is a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee; the Senate Armed
Services Committee; the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Committee; and the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.
He is also the senior Democratic member of the Joint Economic Committee.
Edward J. Liston
of Harpswell, Maine and Vero Beach, Fla. will be inducted into the
Community College of Rhode Island Hall of Fame, Friday, Nov. 15 at the
Providence Biltmore. Established in 1994, the biennial Hall of Fame honors
former faculty and staff, as well as current friends of the college, who
have made a positive and unique impact on CCRI.
President Emeritus Edward J. Liston, the second president of the Community
College of Rhode Island, has been a leader and advocate for community
colleges for more than 30 years. During his 22-year tenure, Liston
expanded the scope and influence of CCRI throughout the state. He created
an Office of Community Services to provide non-credit enrichment courses
to the general public and a Center for Business and Industrial Training to
offer customized job training for companies. He established a network of
satellite facilities across the state to bring postsecondary education to
outlying communities and forged partnerships with high schools to
encourage students to continue their education. He also established the
non-profit CCRI Foundation to seek external funding for scholarships,
endowment, special projects and professional development opportunities.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, President Liston expanded
educational opportunities for inner city residents with the opening of the
college’s third campus in 1990 in South Providence. That campus is now
known as the Liston Campus.
Harry C. Keenan of North Kingstown,
a retired psychology professor at the Community College of Rhode Island,
will be inducted into the CCRI Hall of Fame, Friday, Nov. 15 at the
Providence Biltmore. Established in 1994, the biennial Hall of Fame honors
former faculty and staff, as well as current friends of the college, who
have had made a positive and unique impact on CCRI.
Described by one of his associates as "a complete Renaissance man," Keenan
has served in a variety of roles at CCRI, including counselor, biology and
psychology professor, administrator and coach.
When not in the classroom, Professor Keenan could often be found in the
field house, where he worked as golf coach for more than 10 years and as
president of the faculty/staff running club, the Knight Krawlers, for more
than 20 years. As golf coach, he saw his teams win five New England
championships and seven national tournaments. Keenan has been named
regional coach of the year five times and was inducted into the CCRI
Athletic Hall of Fame in May 2002.
Raymond J. Newbold of Narragansett,
a retired mathematics professor at the Community College of Rhode Island,
will be inducted into the CCRI Hall of Fame, Friday, Nov. 15 at the
Providence Biltmore. Established in 1994, the biennial Hall of Fame honors
former faculty and staff as well as current friends of the college who
have made a positive and unique impact on CCRI.
One of the 13 original faculty members at Rhode Island Junior College,
Newbold was the first chairman of the college's mathematics department. In
addition to his teaching responsibilities, Professor Newbold coached the
college’s first baseball team and continued coaching until 1980.
In 1972 Professor Newbold left the mathematics department to become dean
of arts and sciences at the original Providence campus. He supervised the
move from that facility to the new Flanagan Campus in Lincoln in 1976,
after which he returned to the mathematics faculty until his retirement in
2000.
Dr. Raymond A. Ferland of Smithfield,
former Vice President for Student Affairs at the Community College of
Rhode Island, will be inducted into the CCRI Hall of Fame, Friday, Nov. 15
at the Providence Biltmore. Established in 1994, the biennial Hall of Fame
honors former faculty and staff, as well as current friends of the
college, who have made a positive and unique impact on CCRI.
Ferland joined the Rhode Island Junior College faculty in 1967, where he
served as a faculty member in both the social sciences and human services
departments and later as vice president for student affairs. Among his
accomplishments, Ferland oversaw the construction of the CCRI Flanagan
Campus in Lincoln.
Through the years, Ferland has been a strong advocate for students,
especially those needing help in overcoming social and economic barriers
to achieve their educational goals. He is responsible for establishing a
book loan fund to provide emergency assistance for students. Financed by
proceeds from an annual golf tournament, the fund has since been renamed
the Raymond. A. Ferland Student Assistance Program. His strong support of
student athletes earned him the prestigious Green Jacket Award from CCRI
Athletics.
Lloyd S. Kaplan of Providence,
a retired music professor at the Community College of Rhode Island, will
be inducted into the CCRI Hall of Fame, Friday, Nov. 15 at the Providence
Biltmore. Established in 1994, the biennial CCRI Hall of Fame honors
former faculty and staff, as well as current friends of the college, who
have made a positive and unique impact on CCRI.
Kaplan has been a vital part of the CCRI community since he began his
college teaching career in 1966. At CCRI, he developed the jazz program of
study as an alternative for music majors and introduced new courses in
opera, 20th-century music, jazz history and the creative process in the
arts.
Kaplan has taken his love of music into the community as well, lecturing
for the Rhode Island Committee for the Humanities and for assisted living
and retirement communities. In recognition of his accomplishments at CCRI
and in the community, a Lloyd S. Kaplan Music Scholarship was established
at CCRI in his honor.
Kaplan has been a professional musician since his army bandsman days in
the 1950s. Specializing in jazz, he can be found at events at CCRI and
around the state, performing with his own trio, Lloyd Kaplan’s Aristocats.
Bilingual Judicial Interpreter Certificate
Program
PROVIDENCE--The Community College of Rhode Island will
offer an open house for its new Bilingual Judicial Interpreter
Certificate Program on Tuesday, Nov. 19 from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
at the CCRI Liston Campus atrium, One Hilton St., Providence.
Slated for a January 2003 launch, the new CCRI Bilingual
Judicial Interpreter Certificate Program is a 22-credit curriculum which
combines existing courses in justice administration and cooperative work
experience with new offerings in translation, interpretation and criminal
procedure. The certificate program was created in response to a Rhode
Island General Laws amendment guaranteeing non-English speakers access to
qualified interpreters during criminal legal proceedings.
Initially, the program will train interpreters for Spanish speakers only,
although long-range plans include interpreters for Portuguese, Cape
Verdean and Cambodian speakers as well. The latest census
figures list nearly 9% of Rhode Island's population as Hispanic.
To be effective translators, interpreters will learn to master three
difficult tasks: (1) to translate documents on sight, (2) to translate
conversation simultaneously into both English and Spanish, and (3) to
recount an argument sequentially in another language.
The program's classes will be offered on a part-time,
evening schedule to accommodate the needs of working adults. Students must
demonstrate fluency in English and Spanish prior to acceptance into the
program
CCRI's Bilingual Judicial Interpreter Certificate
Program is a much-awaited step toward standardizing Rhode Island's court
interpreters, a movement that has been spearheaded by the court's Task
Force on Limited English Speaking Litigants.
With the help of a Rhode Island Foundation planning grant, CCRI officials
have spent the past two years collaborating with representatives from the
Rhode Island Supreme Court and the Governor's Commission on Hispanic
Affairs to create the Bilingual Interpreters Program.
Rhode Island Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank Williams stated, "This
training program is essential to the Rhode Island Courts and the citizens
we serve. We currently have a severe shortage of trained, experienced
interpreters. Without these professionals, the courts are handicapped in
our mission to provide equal access, a fundamental right."
For more
information, call (401) 333-7385.
CCRI Update
recently
won a 2002 Silver Medallion of Achievement
The
CCRI Update, a quarterly newspaper for students and faculty at the
Community College of Rhode Island, recently won a 2002 Silver Medallion of
Achievement for District I of the National Council for Marketing and
Public Relations (NCMPR). NCMPR District I members include community
colleges from Newfoundland to Maryland. The CCRI Update is produced by the
Office of Public Relations and Publications.
[]
October 2002
CCRI programs to stay at Newport
Hospital

At a Press conference last week, CCRI President Thomas D. Sepe announced
the college's continued collaboration with Newport Hospital.
The Community College of Rhode Island nursing and
rehabilitative health programs housed at Newport Hospital, which were slated
for relocation this January, will stay at their current location until the
opening of the new Newport County CCRI campus in 2004, Newport Hospital
President and CEO Arthur Sampson and CCRI President Thomas Sepe announced at
a press conference today.
Due to
budget cuts, CCRI had planned to close the
Newport
Hospital satellite after its lease with the hospital ran out in January
2003, and to relocate the programs temporarily to its Warwick campus. This
move presented a hardship to many area students, who would have faced longer
commutes or lacked the ability to get to classes.
Newport
Hospital
officials have agreed to rent CCRI its current classrooms and laboratory
space for the nominal cost of approximately $35,000 a year. This figure
represents the cost of utilities and maintenance, and is a comparable to the
cost of relocating the program to another CCRI campus until such time as the
new Newport County
campus is operational.
"It has
always been our goal to continue to offer our nursing and rehabilitative
health programs at Newport Hospital, and we are thrilled that we have been
able to work out a solution that is beneficial to both the hospital and our
students," said Sepe.
“CCRI is a valuable resource to this hospital and to healthcare in this area
which is why it was important to us to keep this satellite location on
Aquidneck Island,” said Sampson. “Many students in the nursing and
rehabilitation programs would have been very inconvenienced by having to
travel to another campus for an education.”
Since
1988, Newport
Hospital has served as a satellite campus for the CCRI nursing program. CCRI
confers approximately 150 Associate in Science in Nursing degrees each year,
an estimated 20 percent of whom were educated at Newport Hospital.
More
recently, CCRI's newly created Rehabilitative Health Department, which
oversees the Occupational Therapy Assistant, Physical Therapy Assistant and
Therapeutic Massage programs, also has been based at the Newport
Hospital
satellite campus.
Earlier
this year, when the RI General Assembly cut the budget for higher education,
the Community College was forced to take several cost-cutting measures, the
most visible of which was the closing of five CCRI satellites. Three of
these satellites were located on Aquidneck Island, at Middletown
High School, the Navy
Base, and Newport Hospital. While the high school and Navy Base satellites
closed this September, the CCRI Newport
Hospital satellite was scheduled to close in January 2003 when its lease
expired. The hospital satellite closing would have displaced approximately
360 students.
The
closing of the Aquidneck Island satellites did not impact construction plans
for a new CCRI
Newport
County campus, to be located on 5+ acres off Ranger Road. The campus,
financed by a $10 million dollar bond approved in 2000, is slated for
groundbreaking this fall.
Liston Campus
expansion breaks ground

(L-R) Commissioner Warner, President Sepe, Governor Almond, Lusi
Construction’s Armand Lusi, Lt. Governor Fogarty, architect Mark Fisher,
Chairwoman Dowling, and Secretary of State Edward Inman raise their
shovels at the Providence expansion ground breaking.
The Liston Campus is stretching its wings now that construction is
underway for a new addition.
Governor Lincoln Almond,
Commissioner of Higher Education Jack Warner and Chair of the Board of
Governors for Higher Education Sarah Dowling were among the dignitaries
gathered beside the construction site Oct. 22 for the project’s official
ground breaking.
Funded by a $6.65 million bond issue passed in November
1998, the expansion will include a two-story, 30,000-square-foot addition
off the northwest end of the existing building; a 20,000-square-foot
renovation to first-floor faculty and student services offices; and a new,
larger entrance.
The architect for the expansion is the Robinson Green
Beretta Corporation of Providence and the contractor is A.F. Lusi
Construction, Inc. of Smithfield. The project’s completion is currently
projected for Spring 2004.
This expansion could not be more timely, as increasingly
the population of the urban campus approaches current capacity. This fall’s
Providence enrollment jumped 12.5 percent from September 2001.
"We had been changing closets to offices, and storage
space to classrooms," CCRI President Thomas D. Sepe told the crowd.
"The Liston Campus has shown extraordinary growth since
it first opened in 1990. Our Providence enrollment has blossomed from an
initial 650 students to a current population of 3,411 full- and part-time
learners. The campus operates seven days a week, days and evenings. It is
critical and timely that the facilities expand to accommodate our growing
community of learners," said Sepe.
Many speakers at the event lauded the importance of
growing an urban campus.
"One of the most important things we can do for our
economy is improve our education," said Governor Almond to a round of
applause. "This institution gives people the skills to go into the economy,
to earn money, to support families."
Lt. Governor Charles Fogarty echoed Almond’s sentiments,
and addressed the current budget crunch by adding, "time may be tough, but
we don’t cut back on those investments that pay off in the future."
Commissioner Warner spoke of raising the overall
educational achievement of the state, to attract better businesses, fill
higher-paying jobs and improve the overall standard of living. To accomplish
this goal, he reminded the audience how important it is for public education
to reach the "under-served"—those community members whose income levels and
personal circumstances make them less likely to pursue a college education.
"Community colleges represent access points for those
residents," he said. "We need to graduate more students, we need to enroll
more students, and we need more classrooms."
The Liston Campus expansion, will help meet these needs
by increasing the building’s square footage nearly 40%, from 78,000 to
108,000 square feet. The new addition will house five new classrooms, a new
computer laboratory, a new hard sciences laboratory, two allied health
program laboratories and a distance learning classroom. A new child care
center, relocated from its original campus location, is also planned. The
renovation component of the plan calls for the expansion of faculty offices
and the enhancement of the campus’s current entrance.
The CCRI Liston Campus offers associate degree programs
in Business Administration, Criminal Justice, General Studies, Nursing, Fire
Science and Liberal Arts; and certificate programs in the fields of Allied
Health, Entrepreneurship and Office Administration. Key to the campus’s
success is the flexibility of its scheduling, which includes the innovative
and highly popular Weekend College Program.
Not all courses at the Providence campus are geared to the college-bound.
ESL, GED and workplace literacy programs are also available for the
community. In addition to CCRI programs, the Liston Campus houses the RI
Educational Opportunity Center for adult educational, financial and career
counseling, and the RI Educational Talent Search for promoting high school
student retention and achievement,
both funded by the U.S. Dept. of Education. It also
houses the REACH welfare recipient program, funded by the U.S. Dept. of
Human Services.
One alumna who can attest to the need and the flexibility
of CCRI’s Providence programming is Mai Donohue (’97), an immigrant from
Vietnam who waited until three of her six children had gone to college
before pursuing her own dream of higher education. As guest speaker at
Tuesday’s ceremonies, Donohue mesmerized the crowd with her personal
achievements.
As a women in Vietnam, Donohue was not allowed to pursue
her dream of becoming an educator. Instead, she was forced into an arranged
marriage. After suffering domestic abuse, she did the culturally unthinkable
— she ran away to Saigon, "where there is no welfare, no education, no hope
for me," she remembered.
Donohue did find hope in Saigon, however, where she met
her current husband, an American serviceman. Together they moved to America
to raise a family.
Yet, while her children excelled in school, Donohue
recalled, she neglected her own education. "They (her children and her
husband) lived in a different world, a world of education, a world of
knowledge, a world that belonged to somebody else but not to me," she said.
One call to CCRI and its Access to Opportunity program
"changed my life," Donohue said. She credited the CCRI staff, in particular
Leisa Young of Advising and Counseling, for helping her attain her degree.
"When I fell down, they picked me up," she said. "When I fell apart, they
glued me together."
Since earning her associate’s degree through CCRI’s Liston Campus,
Donohue has gone on to earn a bachelor’s degree at URI, and now works as an
assistant teacher in an alternate learning program in Barrington.
Jeff Hughes and Red
MacDonald headline CCRI jazz concert
Warwick, RI--The Community College of
Rhode Island Music Department presents, "An Evening of Traditional Jazz,"
at 7 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 13 at the Bobby Hackett Theatre at the CCRI
Warwick campus. Local jazz players Jeff Hughes, Red MacDonald, Dick
Whaley, Bob Petteruti and Joe Holtzman are slated to perform, as well as
special guests Lloyd Kaplan and the Aristocats.
Admission is $15 for the general public and $12 for students and seniors.
All proceeds will benefit the Bobby Hackett Scholarship Fund, named for
the famous jazz cornet player who worked with Louis Armstrong, Benny
Goodman and Glenn Miller.
For more information, call CCRI at (401) 825-2168.
[]
September 2002
CCRI
Foundation announces new Board of Directors
Denise M. Jenkins, a resident of
Smithfield and head of School One in Providence, has been elected
president of the Community College of Rhode Island Foundation Board of
Directors.
Other
officers elected for a one-year term are:
Ronald J.
Caniglia of Warwick
CCRI Foundation Vice President
President, Stand Corporation
Leonard A.
DiLorenzo of North Kingstown
CCRI Foundation Treasurer
Vice President of Quality, Davol, Inc.
Beverly
Wiley of Foster
CCRI Foundation Secretary
Women's Softball Coach, CCRI
Established by the RI General Assembly
in 1979, the CCRI Foundation is an independent non-profit corporation,
created to encourage and provide college support from private sources.
Foundation funds are used to build a
self-perpetuating endowment for the college and for scholarships. These
funds are also used to support college-wide projects, such as faculty
enrichment and development, cultural activities, educational equipment
purchases, campus beautification, athletics and library acquisitions.
Community College of Rhode Island
Newport County Campus Fact Sheet
The proposed 65,000-square-foot campus
will consolidate and expand programs already held at CCRI's
three island satellites.
Location
The Community College of Rhode Island Newport County
Campus will be situated on a 5+-acre site off
Ranger Road in Newport. The site, part of a 14.2-acre parcel
formerly owned by the United States
Navy, is readily accessible to the facility's target
audience: the East Bay community.
History
When the Rhode Island General Assembly adopted its master plan for a
system of community colleges in 1960, it envisioned four campuses serving
all areas of the state. More than 40 years later, the CCRI Newport
facility will complete this vision by adding another campus to the
existing campuses in Warwick (enrollment @8,000), Lincoln (enrollment
@6,000), and Providence (enrollment @2,000).
Construction timeline
Groundbreaking for the site is planned for late summer 2002. The campus is
expected to be operational in spring 2004.
Funding
A voter-approved 2000 referendum has financed the $10.933 million needed
to build the Newport County Campus.
Student body
The CCRI Newport County Campus has a projected enrollment of 2,000
students. At present, CCRI serves 800 students through its East Bay
satellites at Newport Hospital, Newport Navy Base, and Middletown High
School.
Architectural features
►The 65,000-square-foot campus will appear as a
single, three-story building that is in fact three connected structures: a
student services complex, a classroom/laboratory wing and a 250-seat
auditorium.
►The
building's façade draws from the shingle-style architecture indigenous to
the Newport area and includes a brick ground floor, a shingled second
floor and a pitched roofline punctuated by dormers and a turret.
►A
light-filled, two-story atrium serves as an enclosed public square and
employs energy-saving, passive solar energy principles.
►The new
campus has been designed by J. Michael Abbott of Newport Collaborative
Architects.
Educational features
The new campus will include: 16 "smart" classrooms wired for both data and
video reception; physical therapy, occupational therapy and therapeutic
massage laboratories; academic computer labs; and a distance learning
classroom.
Like CCRI's other campuses, the
Newport facility will also include a Success Center, where students may
receive such support services as skills assessments and tutoring.
Programming
The Newport County Campus will house the CCRI Nursing and Allied Health
programs currently based at Newport Hospital. This includes the
Rehabilitative Health department, which oversees Occupational Therapy
Assistants, Physical Therapist Assistant and Therapeutic Massage programs.
CCRI officials are currently
collaborating with business leaders to create programming opportunities of
special interest to the East Bay community. Potential offerings at the
Newport Campus include travel & tourism and marine-trade courses.
Selling at Mach I
author Steve Sullivan to speak at Business
Outlook Breakfast
Organization turn-around specialist Steve
Sullivan will share strategies to streamline sales, leadership and
performance systems at "Recipe for Business Success," this fall's Business
Outlook Breakfast, at 8 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 24 at the Crowne Plaza at
the Crossings, Warwick. The breakfast is sponsored by the Community
College of Rhode Island Foundation and Atrion, in cooperation with RITECH
and Providence Business News as well as the Providence, Central Rhode
Island and Northern Rhode Island Chambers of Commerce. Cost for the event
is $30 per person.
Author of the best-selling business books Selling at Mach I and
Leading at Mach II, Sullivan has shared his expertise with an
illustrious clientele including IBM, Kimberley-Clark, Yale University,
Fleet Bank, Microsoft, the U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy.
Before founding Motivational Resources seven years ago, Sullivan spent
nearly two decades in sales and management at both International Paper and
Williamhouse-Regency, generating a combined $1.2 billion in sales growth.
A former army ranger, platoon leader and brigade operations officer,
Sullivan received an extensive military education at the Defense Race
Relations Institute, Armor School, Airborne School and U.S. Petroleum
Institute. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in international relations
from the University of Florida and a Master's degree in systems management
from the University of Southern California.
For more information, call the CCRI Foundation at 333-7150.
The Community College of Rhode Island Foundation was
established by an act of the Rhode Island General Assembly in January 1979
as an independent, non-profit corporation. The Foundation encourages and
provides support from private sources for the Community College of Rhode
Island.
[]
August 2002
Charles Sullivan Fund committee celebrates a special birthday
The CCRI Foundation is throwing a combined
birthday party for Professor Charles Sullivan and thank-you party for
donors newly established Charles Sullivan Fund, on Saturday, Sept. 14 from
6 to 8:30 p.m. at the Community College of Rhode Island Knight Campus, 400
East Ave., Warwick.
Initiated this spring to honor Sullivan for his work at CCRI and in the
Rhode Island community, the Charles Sullivan Fund is chaired by Paul
Brooks, Barbara Dreyer, Constance Evrard and Susan Symonds. Honorary
chairs for the event are Oskar & Laurie Eustis and Vartan & Claire
Gregorian. To date, the fund has raised approximately $75,000 in support
of arts and humanities at the college.
The evening's speaking program includes remarks by Sullivan and by the
event's honorary chair, Trinity Repertory Company Artistic Director Oskar
Eustis. Professor Lloyd Kaplan and his jazz band, the Aristocats, perform
jazz at one party station, while CCRI music instructor Cheri Markward and
friends offer classical guitar and violin at an adjacent station. Russell
Morin provides catering for the event.
Teaching
English at the community college since 1967, Sullivan has garnered both
Teacher of the Year and Third World Teacher of the Year during his tenure.
At CCRI, Sullivan founded a scholarship in his name to benefit women
returning to college. He is also chairman of the CCRI Committee for the
Arts and Humanities.
A poet in his own right, Sullivan has become a fixture in Rhode Island's
art and social service communities, serving as chair for the Rhode Island
Committee for the Humanities and as a board member of Trinity Repertory
Company, Planned Parenthood of Rhode Island, the Providence Athenaeum, and
Sunrise House.
Other committee members include Deborah Aiken, Jeffrey Austin, Deborah &
William Brody, Gene K. Burns, Hon. Christine Callahan, Sen. & Mrs. Lincoln
Chafee, Barbara & Tim Colt, Maryann Harmsen, Marie Jean Langlois, Barbara
Meek, Joan & John Monaghan, Nancy Potter, Sen. Jack Reed, CCRI President
Thomas D. Sepe, Nancy Sullivan, Terry Tullis, Jack White, JulieWhite and
Connie Worthington.
For more information about the Charles Sullivan Fund, call the CCRI
Foundation at 333-7150.
Pullano appointed
athletic director
Louis
Pullano of Cranston has been appointed Director of Athletics and Associate
Dean of Student Life at the Community College of Rhode Island.
Pullano is a graduate of CCRI, where he was a starting centerfielder on
the college's baseball team. "I am delighted to have the opportunity to
give something back to the student athletes, of which I was one," Pullano
says.
As director, Pullano will oversee all intercollegiate athletic programs,
the college's physical education programs and CCRI's athletic facilities
and equipment. With the added title of associate dean of student life,
Pullano also will develop new recreational programming.
"I will work hard to develop intramural or recreational programs for all
of our students, not just our student athletes," Pullano says. "I also
plan to hold events that enhance student life on all the campuses and
bring the student body together."
Pullano holds a BS in
physical education and an MS in athletic and physical administration from
the University of Rhode Island. Since 1995, Pullano has served as
Associate Director of Athletics at CCRI
Children's
Residential Programming Certificate
The CCRI Department of Human Services and the umbrella
organization Rhode Island Council on Residential Programs for Children and
Youth (RICORP) have collaborated to create a 30-credit-hour certificate
program in Children's Residential Programming. The program is designed for
the direct care staff who supervise children placed out of the home due to
abuse, neglect, family stress or other problems. Certificate courses will
begin this fall at both CCRI and at the RICORP offices with a strong
enrollment, for the program has a built-in clientele of approximately 700
direct care staff who currently work at RICORP's 32 member agencies.
According to program creator and CCRI Human Service Associate Professor
Jerry Hatfield, the goal of the certificate is to provide direct care
staff with a common knowledge base of behavioral science and communication
skills. This is necessary, he explains, because unlike trained social
workers and family therapists, many of the attendants in children’s
residential care have only a high school education. “The ones who spend
the most amount of time with the kids are the ones who are least
educated,” he says.
With the exception of a new course in technical writing, most of the
courses needed for the Children's Residential Programming certificate are
already offered at CCRI, and include human services and psychology
offerings in special needs populations, psychology, family intervention
skills and behavior modification.
The right training can make all the difference, says Jim Harris, Executive
Director of RICORP. “Kids’ behavior can go on a scale from 1 to 10. These
kids—some of them have been severely abused and neglected—they can be very
distrustful of adults, and they will act out their fears and frustrations.
If a caregiver can learn that a child’s behavior is signifying some unmet
need, then he can help discern what the need is and make sure it is
fulfilled for the child.”
Few agencies understand the need to instill trust and build communication
skills between caregivers and children better than the Child Welfare
League of America. Director of the CWLA New England Region Adrienne
Williams calls the program “a coup for the child welfare field,” and
applauds its emphasis on creating skilled direct care staff.
“It’s my hope,” Williams says, “that other states will not only study and
replicate this program, but realize the power of partnership that brought
it to fruition.”
WARWICK, RI – Ruth D. Sherman, Ed.D., of Easton, Mass., joins the
Community College of Rhode Island as Vice President for Academic Affairs.
As Vice President, Sherman is a member of the college's senior management
team and is responsible for providing vision with
academic and administrative leadership in the areas of educational policy,
instructional planning, program review, academic personnel actions,
faculty development and resource planning and allocation. She is also
responsible for advancing the college's educational initiatives involving
transfer issues, developmental education and student success initiatives.
Sherman comes to CCRI from
Bristol Community College where she was Dean of the Division of
Enrollment, Workforce and Community Development. She brings with her two
decades of community college leadership in administration, academic
programming, strategic planning, resource development, fiscal oversight,
enrollment management and business, education and community partnerships.
Sherman holds an associate's degree from Massachusetts Bay Community
College, a bachelor's degree from the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, a master's of education from Northeastern University and a
doctorate of education from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Sherman also served as a fellow with the Massachusetts Higher Education
Executive Leadership Institute.
[]
May 2002
Media Preview Community College of Rhode Island
Newport County Campus
EAST BAY – The Community College of
Rhode Island released detailed plans for the Newport County Campus, a
65,000-square foot facility to be built on a 5+ acre-site off Ranger Road
in Newport. The new campus will serve the more than 800 students currently
enrolled in CCRI's three Aquidneck Island satellites – Newport Hospital,
the Newport Base, and Middletown High School – as well as more than 1,000
new students from the East Bay and South County areas. The shingle-style
building, designed by Newport Collaborative Architects, will include a
classroom and laboratory wing, a student services wing, and a 250-seat
auditorium.
Groundbreaking for the project is
planned for late summer of this year. Officials expect the new campus to
be operational in spring 2004. .
Http://www.ccri.edu/newport, a Web site offering the public a
virtual tour of the new campus, will be operational in early June.
For more information, read the cover
story of the enclosed CCRI Focus Magazine. A fact
sheet on the project is also included in your packet.
To schedule interviews or receive
high-resolution digital photos, please contact CCRI Public Relations
Coordinator Laura Hart (401) 825-1175, cell: (401) 623-1101; or Assistant
to the President Nancy Abood, (401) 825-2181.
Seminar for Dental Hygienists
Planned
WARWICK- The Division of Lifelong Learning, the Dental Hygiene
Department, and Alumni Affairs have partnered to give a seminar entitled:
Fear Factor: Oral Pathology
What the RDH Should Know.
This seminar was designed to offer a continuing education opportunity
for dental hygienists that will cover examination procedures, diagnostic
and descriptive terminology and also a comprehensive review of common oral
diseases and dental hygiene interventions. The Rhode Island Dental
Hygienists Association has also approved two Continuing Education Units (CEU)
for participation in the seminar and certificates will be provided to
attendees as proof of participation.
Kathi Duffy, RDH, MS, who is a registered dental hygienist and
assistant professor to CCRI, will present the seminar. She has over 27
years experience in the dental profession as a dental assistant and dental
hygienist, and is a lead teacher for the dental hygiene program pathology
course at the college.
"This is our first endeavor with this division (Lifelong Learning) to
provide the continuing education for alumni and any other hygienist within
the state," said Duffy. "Part of our license renewal as dental hygienists
is receiving continuing education credits which are required to maintain
our license. This seminar will help the alumni and any other hygienist in
doing so."
The seminar will be held Thursday, June 6 from 6-9 PM at the CCRI
Knight Campus in Warwick. To register for the seminar, one must call the
CCRI Division for Lifelong Learning at (401) 455-6114, or fax (401)
455-6190. The cost of the seminar is $25 for CCRI Alumni and $30 for
Non-Alumni.
The Community College of Rhode Island, New England’s largest community
college, has campuses in Warwick, Providence and Lincoln and currently
enrolls more than 16,000 students in credit courses and thousands more in
non-credit and job training classes.
[]
April 2002
CCRI staffers chosen to participate in leadership
program
Camille Numrich of Cranston, coordinator of Career Services at the
Community College of Rhode Island, and Holly Susi of Cumberland, a public
relations officer at the college, have been chosen to participate in the
National Institute for Leadership Development LEADERS program, an
international program for administrators and faculty in higher education.
This year-long program, designed to enhance the skills participants
need to assume major decision making roles in their institutions, includes
institutional practice in supervisory and human relations skills, planning
and budgeting, and organizational transformation as well as discussions
with national experts on the issues confronting higher education during
the next decade.
The pair will first attend a week-long, intensive conference in
Phoenix, Arizona next month and then during the next year each will work
on projects that will aid the institution and foster individual
professional growth.
Leaders participants are chosen for their professional abilities,
their interests in advancement in higher education, and the quality of
their proposed projects.
The National Institute for Leadership Development is internationally
recognized by colleges, universities and businesses for its visionary,
holistic programs that produce leaders who effectively challenge
assumptions, eliminate barriers and create new pathways to successful
solutions.
Dollars for Scholars Walkathon
Put your best foot forward to raise scholarship money for Community
College of Rhode Island students at the Dollars for Scholars Walkathon, 12
noon on Friday, April 26 at the CCRI Knight Campus, 400 East Avenue,
Warwick. Nearly 100 students, faculty and friends are expected to lace up
and step out for this annual 3-mile walkathon, which raises money for the
St. Dunstan's Scholarship Fund. The St. Dunstan’s scholarship offers
tuition aid to eligible CCRI students who plan to transfer to 4-yr
colleges or universities. Scholarship recipients must be part of the
Minority Mentoring Program or Access to Opportunity—a program for the
low-income, first generation or disabled student. Last year's walkathon
raised more than $2,800 for CCRI scholarships. To walk in the event or to
sponsor a walker, please call 333-7280.
The Community College of Rhode Island, New England’s largest community
college, has campuses in Warwick, Providence and Lincoln. Currently, the
college enrolls more than 16,000 students in credit courses and thousands
more in non-credit and job training classes.
CCRI Foundation bestows grants
The CCRI Foundation, a charitable organization supporting the Community
College of Rhode Island, has announced three Professional Development
Awards to CCRI faculty and staff.
Assistant Director of Users Services Fera Karakaya of Westport, MA, and
Faculty Technology Support Coordinator Linda Beith of Attleboro, MA,
received funding to create an online WebCT training course for CCRI
faculty. WebCT software allows for online communication between faculty
and their student body, from posting syllabi on the Internet to offering
online class conversations.
Public Relations Officer and Adjunct Professor Holly Susi of Cumberland
received funding to study a multi-sensory structured language program (MSLP)
and then apply its teaching methods to select CCRI classes. MSLP methods
may help boost the literacy and success levels of some adult learners.
Music Department Chair Susie Swenson received funding to stage a piano
recital by CCRI Adjunct Professor Audrey Kaiser. This free, community
performance is part of the 2002 Indomitable Spirit creative artists
series.
The Community College of Rhode Island, New England’s largest community
college, has campuses in Warwick, Providence and Lincoln and currently
enrolls more than 15,000 students in credit courses and thousands more in
non-credit and job training classes.
Indomitable Spirit Piano Recital
CCRI adjunct faculty member and professional musician Audrey Kaiser of
Warwick performs a piano recital, "The Indomitable Spirit from the
Romantic Era to the Present," held at 3 p.m. Sunday, April 14 at the
Knight Campus, Warwick. The event is free and open to the public.
Among the pieces Kaiser plans to perform are Twenty-four Preludes
for Piano by Richard Cumming and Sonata 26 in Eb Major, Op. 81a
by Ludwig Van Beethoven. Kaiser also plans to play works by Liszt, Debussy
and Villa-Lobos, as well as ragtime selections by Scott Joplin, Eubie
Blake and William Bolcom.
Kaiser's program pays tribute to the indomitable spirit of creative
artists who have overcome hardship to produce enduring music. Beethoven,
for example, overcame deafness to become the preeminent composer of the
Romantic era, while Blake and Joplin outmaneuvered racism to create
prototype for American Jazz.
Kaiser, who holds a doctorate in music from the University of Kentucky,
is an adjunct faculty member of CCRI's music department, and has worked as
a piano soloist, professional recital accompanist, and touring
professional for the last 20 years.
Music director for the Ocean State Chamber Orchestra Ann Danis, who is
also associate professor of music at URI and the university's orchestra
director, leads the audience discussion.
Observatory holds free viewing hours
The general public is invited to explore the cosmos when the Margaret
Jacoby Observatory at the Community College of Rhode Island Warwick campus
holds special viewing days, from 8:30-9:30 pm on Fridays, April 12, April
26 and May 10. Visitors may peer through the college's 8" Schmidt-Cassegrain
telescope to view the planets and constellations in the spring sky, as
well as star clusters, double stars and planetary moons. Guests are also
taught how to use binoculars to view the stars in their own backyards.
Scheduled viewings are free-of-charge and weather-dependent. For more
information, call the CCRI Physics Dept. at 825-2212.
The Community College of Rhode Island, New England’s largest community
college, has campuses in Warwick, Providence and Lincoln. Currently, the
college enrolls more than 16,000 students in credit courses and thousands
more in non-credit and job training classes.
[]
March 2002
Financial Independence Training Offered
Accredited Financial Advisor Marylou Berry Roche
offers this important lesson to overeager consumers: "Your life won't be
fantastic if you live on plastic."
This spring, Roche teaches a two-day workshop in managing household
finances entitled, "Financial Independence Training—the FIT Team
USA" as part of the Community College of Rhode Island's new Division
for Lifelong Learning. The course will be offered on Wednesday evenings,
March 20 and 27, at the CCRI Lincoln campus, and on Tuesday evenings,
April 2 and 9, on the Warwick campus. The cost for the course is $35.
Pre-registration is required.
Roche uses a "financial freedom chart" to help participants control their
debt and live within their means. Her unique system organizes her clients'
life areas by color: red for physical fitness, green for financial, blue
for relaxation and gold for leisure. "It really comes down to getting
discipline in every aspect of your life. Financial stability is just a
by-product of the system," Roche says.
This color code system keeps participants from alternately avoiding or
overemphasizing their financial problems. "That way, a family can discuss
money only on green time instead of fighting all week," Roche explains.
Another key to the system is identifying monetary misconceptions. "We're
always thinking of the dollars we're going to have, as opposed to living
with what we really have today," she explains. Roche helps participants
learn how to eliminate what she calls "mystery money," and identify her
clients' personal "money gobblers."
Roche, president of the FIT Corporation of Wakefield, has worked as a
corporate trainer and financial advisor since 1992. Her clients have
included Southern New England Telephone (SNET), Texas Instruments, Good
Will Industries, and Roger Williams Hospital.
For more information on this or other Lifelong Learning courses, call
(401) 333-7070 or log on
www.ccri.edu.
Established this spring, the CCRI Division for Lifelong Learning offers
non-credit skills training and personal enrichment programs as well as
professional development courses and customized business training. The
Community College of Rhode Island, New England's largest community
college, currently enrolls more than 16,000 students in credit courses and
thousands more in non-credit and job training classes. Currently, the
college has campuses in Warwick, Providence and Lincoln.
Practicing Nurse Ethicist speaks to East
Bay Business Community
"Everything in life is pretty easy if you're not on
life support," says medical ethicist Dr. Diann Uustal.
A nationally recognized educator in clinical ethics, Uustal will address
members of the Rhode Island healthcare community at an East Bay Business
Breakfast entitled, "Ethics Conversations: A Dialogue with a Practicing
Nurse-Ethicist," from 9-11am on Friday, March 8, at Newport Hospital,
Friendship and Powell Streets, Newport. The breakfast is sponsored by the
Community College of Rhode Island Foundation in cooperation with Sovereign
Bank and Beacon Mutual Insurance . Admission is $15 per person or $12 for
each member of a three-member company team.
What happens when a patient's family requests procedures that the
patient's doctors feel are medically inappropriate? Does it matter if pain
medication is habituating when the patient who receives it is terminal?
When is it time to remove a feeding tube from a permanently unconscious
patient? In a forum similar to a town meeting, Uustal anticipates
questions like these, as well as questions on such hotly contested medical
topics as patient's rights, end-of-life care and adequate pain management.
With life-and-death issues part of her job description, Uustal knows first
hand the importance of communication among family members and healthcare
personnel during and before medical emergencies take place. Many of the
thorny issues she faces each day could have been clarified with
documentation of a patient's wishes, such as a medical power of attorney.
"Families must have a dialogue before illness occurs," Uustal advises.
Speaking on safe patient care, Uustal worries about the demands placed on
healthcare workers in some hospitals. "This is not a good time to be sick
in healthcare," she warns. "We need to review the way we do staffing and
the way we downsize. We've got to look at creative staffing patterns…. And
at some point, we've got to rebel."
She also is concerned over current insurance company pay-out policies.
"The emphasis is on sickness care, not healthcare, in this country,"
Uustal says, adding that most medical reimbursement policies are based on
treatments and procedures only. "All the time it takes to nurture someone
at the time of their death is not counted, because it is not
reimbursable."
Uustal, who began her medical career as a University of Rhode
Island-trained nurse, thrives on the complexity of the bioethics field.
"If people want a blanket policy and a rule to follow all the time, then
they will hate ethics," Uustal says, adding that her work "refuses to be
categorized in little compartments, because you can't treat people in
compartments."
She hopes that the healthcare workers who attend her discussion respond to
the field's complexities. "I'd like to excite the audience about ethics
instead of their throwing up their hand and saying, 'There are no right
answers.'"
Uustal holds master's and doctoral degrees from the University of
Massachusetts, and has completed a fellowship in ethics at Georgetown
University. The author of four books including, Clinical Ethics and
Values: Issues and Insights in a Changing Health Care Environment, Uustal
has been named to Who's Who in American Nursing, Who's Who in Medicine and
Healthcare, Who's Who in American Women and Who's Who in Executives in
Business. As president of her own consulting firm, Educational Resources
in Healthcare, she estimates that she travels to two cities a week to
teach the business of bioethics to other healthcare professionals.
"The Community College of Rhode Island has such a strong connection with
the healthcare field in the East Bay area that Dr. Uustal was the ideal
representative to speak at our first breakfast," says Julie White,
Director of the CCRI Foundation, a charitable organization established in
1979 to encourage, seek and provide support for the college.
CCRI is the largest training institution of nurses in New England,
conferring 150 Associate of Science in nursing degrees each year. Since
1987, CCRI has held nursing courses at its satellite campus at Newport
Hospital. Newport Hospital is also the home for CCRI's Rehabilitative
Health department, which offers occupational therapy assistant, physical
therapist assistant and therapeutic massage programs.
In 2003, CCRI plans to open its newest campus, located on a 5.12-acre
parcel on Ranger Road in Newport, on former Navy land donated to the city
last year. The new campus, designed by Newport Collaborative Architects
Inc., will house the nursing and rehabilitative health programs that are
already offered at Newport Hospital as well as courses that are now
offered at Middletown High School and the Naval Base. In addition, college
officials are considering programs in technology, hospitality and other
areas that will support the East Bay economy. Expected enrollment for the
first year of operation is 2,000 students.
[]
February 2002
The Indomitable Spirit Performing Arts
Series
This spring, the Community College of Rhode Island
celebrates the artist's motivating force with its new Indomitable Spirit
performing arts series. During the next three months, representatives from
the fields of theater, music and the visual arts appear at all three CCRI
campuses in special performances that are both free and open to the
general public. Each event includes an audience discussion, led by
visiting humanities scholars.
The first performance in the series features
filmmaker/actor Don Mays in "Monologues and Dialogues," Friday, February
15 at 8 p.m. at the CCRI Flanagan Campus in Lincoln. Mays, a former
stand-up comic and National Shakespeare Conservatory student, is also a
self-taught filmmaker whose film, Same Difference, addresses issues of
gang violence, sexual preference and prejudice. During the evening
performance, Mays shares reflections on this film, as well as readings
from the works of poet Langston Hughes and African-American writer Ralph
Ellison. An ensuing commentary and audience discussion is led by Associate
Director of Trinity Repertory Company Neal Baron and CCRI professor
Charles Sullivan.
The next event in the series, entitled "A Renaissance
Afternoon: Celebrating the Indomitable Spirit," takes place from 1-4 p.m.
on Wednesday, March 20 at the CCRI Knight Campus in Warwick, and features
an interactive performance by storyteller Marilyn Murphy Meardon, whose
portrayal of Elizabeth Tudor, Queen of England, transports her audience to
the late 16th century. Also joining Meardon are musicians from the New
England Mystic Consort, who perform songs in English and Spanish from the
time of the Spanish Armada. Neil O'Connell, faculty member from Marymount-Manhattan
College and expert in Tudor-Stuart England, leads the audience discussion.
[]
January 2002
Northeast Navy Show Band to help CCRI kick off
new program for older adults
LINCOLN – One of the most sought after big bands in New England will
help the Community College of Rhode Island kick off a new program of
entertainment, classes, trips and symposiums geared especially for adults
age 50 and older.
CCRI’s kick-off, A Star Spangled
Spectacular, will feature a two-hour performance by the Northeast Navy
Show Band – and a dance floor to enjoy as the band plays – on February 9
beginning at 7 p.m. at the Flanagan Campus, Lincoln. Jerilyn Nancy Sawyer,
the 10-year-old “Country Charmer,” will open the show with an
a capella rendition of the Star Spangled Banner.
Tickets for the Navy Band concert are
free, but since seating is limited, tickets must be reserved by calling
333-7286. A cash coffee bistro with pastry will also be available.
“The new Prime Time program embodies the
spirit of the community college,” said Mary Parrillo, director of the
Adults Skill Training program at CCRI and coordinator of the new program.
“Prime Time allows us to recognize the significance of and be responsive
to the needs of the older adult population by providing programming
developed just for them.”
Prime Time will feature an entertainment
series during the year that will include events such as a Tanglewood-type
concert on the green at the Lincoln campus, a country hoe down at the
Providence campus as well as a dinner theatre cruises and local
entertainers.
Non-credit enrichment classes such as sailing, floral design, and
computer classes are being planned. Symposia on issues such as health and
wellness and financial planning for retirement will be offered as well a
travel component that will include day trips and short trips.
Spanish English Center for Technology and
Language open
LINCOLN--The Community College of Rhode Island's new Spanish English
Center for Technology and Language/El Centro de Inglés Español para
Tecnología y Lengua, is currently enrolling students in its Spanish
language-based technology courses. Taught en Espanol and using Spanish
training manuals, Beginning Computers and Basic Word begin the week of
January 14 at CCRI's Lincoln campus. These six-week non-credit courses
allow Spanish speakers to learn applicable job skills without first
completing English as a Second Language (ESL) training. Cost for each
course is $125.
Other SECETAL programs planned for 2002 include citizenship classes,
interpretation and translation courses, advanced computer instruction,
computer assembly, and Internet and Web site development classes.
Prior to the opening of Spanish English Center for Technology and
Language, Spanish speakers often had to complete extensive ESL training to
prepare themselves for other technical courses. This educational policy
delayed students' ability to master and use employable computer skills. In
creating the SECETAL, the CCRI Center for Business and Industrial Training
can now move students to the workplace sooner. "Why should they have to
wait?" asked Diane Marshall, CBIT coordinator and co-creator of SECETAL.
CCRI instructor and SECETAL co-creator Marco Enriquez-Bernau stressed
how important this new program is to Rhode Island's Spanish community. "We
filled up the classes right away. A lot of people started to call each
other and to call us, to ask for those classes."
"ESL classes are not enough to give them a better job or a better life.
We want to give the Spanish community those tools to get better jobs,"
said Enriquez-Bernau.
Warwick campus child care center open
WARWICK--The Community College of Rhode Island's newest addition, a
child care center at the Knight Campus in Warwick, is currently recruiting
children of CCRI students, faculty and staff for the spring semester.
Known as Kid's World, the Warwick center is the latest of three
CCRI-based child care centers run by the Kent County YMCA. The other two
are located on the CCRI Flanagan Campus in Lincoln and Liston Campus in
Providence. Children of CCRI students, faculty and staff are eligible to
enroll their 3- to 5-year-olds on a first come, first serve basis,
provided that the youngsters are potty-trained.
The Warwick child care center includes both brand-new indoor facilities
and an outdoor play area. The center can accommodate up to 39 children at
any given time.
Sue Shanley, director of child care at the Kent County YMCA, oversees
all three Kid's Worlds, a collaboration that began more than 10 years ago
on the Lincoln campus. "The program was designed to encourage students who
had young children to return to school and complete their education,"
Shanley says.
Parents can choose quarter-time, part-time or full-time enrollment for
their children, depending on their CCRI classroom or work schedule.
Shanley adds that parents do not have to be on the premises the whole
time, which "makes it convenient for students who have to do internships
or labs off-site." Rates range from $35 per week for 10 hours or less care
to $140 for 40 hours a week.
Some CCRI students may be eligible for child care financial aid,
Shanley says, adding that both Rhode Island's Department of Human Services
and the YMCA Open Door program offer needs-based financial assistance for
student parents.
Lincoln campus pool named one of top aquatic
facilities in U.S.
The Community College of Rhode Island’s Lincoln campus pool, under the
direction of Kevin Salisbury, CCRI Associate Athletic Director and Aquatic
Director, has been named one of the nation’s top aquatic programs for
2000-2001 by the United States Water Fitness Association.
CCRI was ranked #1 nationally in the Junior College category, and 45th
among all the national award recipients, which included YMCAs, four-year
colleges, two-year colleges and others.
The USWFA Awards are presented annually to programs based on the
health and safety of the facility and of the aquatics program, staff
members’ qualifications and certifications, administration and quality of
the aquatics program, and leadership development of its staff and
volunteers.
The CCRI-Lincoln pool, which is a 25-yard, six-lane facility, was
constructed in 1977 and serves the student population and the entire Rhode
Island community. It has been utilized for community recreation, senior
citizen activities, interscholastic and United States Swimming youth
meets, state and municipal police training, physical education courses and
youth camps.
CCRI joins
Cornell University in offering global seminar
How would you like to be an international student
without ever having to leave your classroom? The Community College
of Rhode Island is offering a three-credit biology course called Man and
the Environment that will link up students from the Flanagan Campus,
Lincoln to campuses in New York, Iowa, Mexico and Hawaii.
Students will take part in
videoconferences and use the Internet, satellite and telephone technology
to exchange ideas, make their own presentations and debate issues with
their counterparts at other colleges, including global classmates from
foreign countries.
Students will analyze case
studies of real events and real people as they explore the social,
cultural, political, technical, environmental and ethical aspects of food
security and food supply, biodiversity, human population growth and global
warming. And because the case studies are presented through videos, there
is an added realism and credibility that will complement the background
material that learners will study.
“Students in New England,
for example, think very differently from students in the Midwest for whom
flooding, wheat issues and river water management are of paramount
importance to the existence of farming communities in that region,” said
Luis Malaret, biology professor who will lead the Global Seminar project
at CCRI. “Students at each college will end up learning perspectives they
would not otherwise have had the chance to come to know.”
Malaret said that the
subject of the seminar, sustainable food systems, was chosen by Cornell
University because it has been estimated that the world’s population will
double by the year 2050 so food production will need to keep pace in order
to feed the world.
Malaret learned of the
project when a colleague came back from a seminar and shared what he had
learned of the Cornell University project. Cornell is actually
disseminating the course, through its case studies, to high schools,
community colleges and other universities around the world.
“The skills that students
will develop in this course are tremendous,” said Malaret who listed
public speaking skills honed as mini-groups at each college present their
take on the issues, technical skills that will come from using the latest
distance learning technology, research skills that will be developed from
studying the issues, writing skills as the learners develop reports and
most importantly, critical thinking and analysis skills as students tackle
issues of global concern.
The class will meet twice
weekly, Tuesdays and Thursdays, from noon to 1:15 p.m. at the Lincoln
campus. Classes begin January 22 and seats are still available for this
course. For more information, call Malaret at 333-7295 or e-mail
lmalaret@ccri.edu.
CCRI counselors receive Rising Star award
Two Community College of
Rhode Island admissions/financial aid counselors were members of a
committee that recently received national recognition from the National
Association for College Admission Counseling or its work in developing a
workshop to provided professional development for their colleagues in the
New England Association for College Admission Counseling.
Terri Kless of Smithfield, a
counselor at the Lincoln campus, chaired the Two-year College Committee,
which received the Rising Star Award that was established last year to
honor those individuals and programs who are up-and-coming and strive to
make a difference in college admission. Kless has worked at CCRI for 10
years.
“The New England Association
for College Admission Counseling’s strategic plan suggested the need for
more workshops geared specifically towards professionals in two-year
colleges,” said Kless. “The program we designed provided professional
development for these counselors as well as a forum for networking.”
Marilyn Borges of
Providence, a Liston Campus, Providence counselor, was also a member of
the award-winning committee. Borges, who has worked at the college for
three years, was one of the members of the team that presented the one-day
workshop for two-year college counselors.
The Community College of
Rhode Island, New England’s largest community college, has campuses in
Warwick, Providence and Lincoln and satellite locations across the state.
CCRI currently enrolls more than 16,000 students in credit courses and
thousands more in non-credit and job training classes.
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