Calendar of Events
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Please check our online Calendar of Events for the latest news.
September 25 Conference Book Title Request Deadline
Early Conference Registration Deadline
Finance Committee Meeting
September 28 Student of the Year Nomination Deadline
October 12 Student Logo Contest Deadline
October 16 NCHC Student Service Day
October 28 & November 1 Board of Directors Meeting
October 28- November 1 Annual Conference
January 31 Membership Renewals Due
February 1 Death Valley Institute Registration Deadline
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Amazon Link
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Remember that
you can support NCHC while you do your shopping. Simply click the Amazon link at http://www.nchchonors.org/ and a percentage of your purchase will go to help support the mission of NCHC,
at absolutely no cost to you!
What can you buy at Amazon.com? Books, movies, music, clothes,
electronics, toys, musical instruments, kitchen sinks, cat and dog food,
espresso machines, text books, jewelry, and groceries. In fact, you can
find just about anything on Amazon.com and help support NCHC at the same time.
Purchases made through Amazon.com are subject to their policies and
procedures. Order fulfillment and customer service are the sole
responsibility of Amazon.com.
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Future Years: Membership Renewal
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Remember, you now have the option of selecting the year for which you
wish to make payment. Both the membership form and the
invoice on our website offers institutions and professionals the
opportunity to pre-pay membership dues in a manner that is convenient
for their budget and fiscal year.
This option is intended to be a convenience for those lucky
individuals or institutions with funds left at the end of the year who want to
get a jump on future expenses. Our
new NCHC membership software allows us to track institutional and individual
memberships for as many years in the future as needed and will avoid duplicate
memberships.
If you have any questions, need assistance, or have
suggestions to offer, please don't hesitate to contact Carolee Martin Brink, NCHC Membership
Director, at 402-472-9150 or by email at nchc@unlserve.unl.edu.
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NCHC Trivia
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What is the maximum amount available for program
innovation through a Portz Fund
grant? A) $350
B)
$3000
C)
$2500
D)
$1000
E)
$750
(answer below)
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Conference 2009 Update
Happy fall semester, friends!
I hope your new academic year has begun with the
creativity, academic expectations, challenges, and joy of teaching and learning
which we associate with honors education. For those of us in conference
planning, the early weeks of fall term are busy with never-ending details that
compose the national conference we eagerly anticipate. Do we even have to
remind you that our convention is scheduled for 28 October - 1 November 2009,
in the Grand Hyatt, Washington, D.C.? Check out the hotel and other conference
information at our web site: http://www.nchchonors.org/2009-annual-conference.php.
You can view the final draft of the program, as we
prepare it for printing. You can also find links to the Student Logo
Contest and the NCHC Student-of-the-Year Award. And don't bypass Travel Tips,
requests for titles for our Book Tables, Poster guidelines, and opportunities
to sponsor and advertise.
One of the most important links on our conference web page is for registration.
Please remember that our Early Registration deadline for members is on or
before 25 September 2009. The early fee is $350. After the deadline, the rate
increases to $400 for members. Non-member registration is $700, so if you
haven't added your institution's name or your name as a professional or student
member to our NCHC membership list, now is the time to join our vital
organization. We welcome you!
As some of you have experienced, the Grand Hyatt is full to capacity, a good
sign of our healthy, thriving membership and the quality of our national
conference. If you haven't yet made your hotel reservations and need help
finding accommodations, please email me (jzubizarreta@columbiasc.edu) and
the national office (nchc@unlserve.unl.edu).
We are in the process of finding solutions, and we are happy to assist.
One more announcement I would like to share is that we are again this year
assigning student moderators to most general sessions in the program.
Coordinated by our colleague Jack Rhodes, student moderators will have prior
instructions about how to moderate academic presentations effectively, and Jack
has already communicated with the students about their responsibilities and
roles. Moderating a conference session is a wonderful growth opportunity for
students to be involved in our meeting, to engage in a meaningful professional
activity, and to gain valuable leadership experience. Many of our students
would not be able to attend the conference at all if they were not involved in
an important capacity and listed in our program. Remember, too, that part of
our calling as honors educators and administrators is to teach, and helping
students serve as successful moderators is a vital contribution to their
development. Please welcome them to your sessions and offer to partner with
them to make your presentations successful.
If you have any questions about the conference, don't hesitate to contact me or
our national headquarters. We will be in D.C. soon, and I look forward to
seeing you there. Be sure to say hello when you see me: I'm the one with the
dazed look, straight jacket, and white-coat attendants! Cheers.
John Zubizarreta 2009 Conference Chair
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Early Conference Registration Deadline
There is still time for you to join your NCHC
colleagues at the 44th annual NCHC conference. If you haven't
registered for conference yet, please note that the early registration deadline
is Friday, September 25. After that date,
the registration fee for members will be $400. |
Mini-Project on the Mall in D.C.
Partners in the Parks is an outdoor experiential learning
program sponsored by Southern Utah University and Cedar Breaks National
Monument in cooperation with the National Collegiate Honors Council.
Partners
in the Parks activities are academic adventures, which means
participants learn
through exploration. To see some of the beautiful places Partners in
the Parks has visited, be sure to watch the six episode Ken Burns
special on PBS, "The National Parks: America's Best Idea", beginning
September 27, 2009.
During the Annual Conference, 20 students will be treated to a
"Secretary's Tour," or behind the scenes look at the National Mall. Rangers
will meet with registered NCHC students and spend Saturday afternoon investigating
some of the nation's busiest and most famous historic sites from a completely
different perspective. Bring a snack, some water, and sturdy shoes and be sure
to register right away - this opportunity is open to no more than 20 special guests.
Please note: due to extreme space limitations, only two participants from the same school will be accepted.
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President's Column
Dear Colleagues:
Consistently, our NCHC membership notes that the most
important services that NCHC provides its members are our outstanding annual
conferences and our fine publications. As of today's date, a little over 1,400
people have pre-registered for our conference. Please note that the deadline
for early registration is September 25; to register please click https://www.ucs.iastate.edu/mnet/nchc/quickregister.html.
Conference chair John Zubizarreta and his committee have accepted the last
changes before the program is sent to press. We encourage you to go online http://www.nchchonors.org to read about all of
the various activities of our annual conference. Time and again, we are told
that our conference provides a multifaceted venue for academic and nuts and
bolts ideas. The city for this year's conference obviously presents fantastic
opportunities for explorations, so we hope that you have made plans to explore
our great conference venue. One of the best opportunities for studying and
exploring neighborhoods is through the popular City as Text™. The conference
website offers the City as Text™ registration https://nchchonors.wufoo.com/forms/city-as-texta-registration/.
During the conference, you will have numerous opportunities to exchange your
ideas about Honors. During the Idea Exchange, you will be able to find out more
opportunities brought to you by the Honors Semesters Committee. Also, your Pub
Board will be available for you to purchase additional publications.
This month, your Finance Committee will be meeting in Omaha
to review all committee funding requests. Members of the Finance Committee
under the Co-Chairmanships of Gary Bell and Liz Beck have devoted their
expertise and time to assure that their recommendations to your Board of
Directors are in the membership's best interest.
Yours in Honors,
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2010 Student Logo Contest
Kansas City October 20-24, 2010
The
National Collegiate Honors Council is looking for inspired students to
participate in the 2010 NCHC Conference logo design contest.
The theme of the Kansas City conference
will be "Rhythms and Currents." In keeping with NCHC tradition, the
Conference Planning Committee would like to invite student participation
through the annual logo design competition. NCHC member institutions are
invited to submit one original, student-created logo. The student creator of
the winning logo will receive complimentary registration to the 2010 Conference
along with recognition on the website and in both the online and printed
conference program.
To assist entrants, we ask them to
consider the following conference theme statement:
Kansas City, "The Heart of the
Midwest," pulsates with jazz rhythms and the currents of the Kansas and
Missouri Rivers that flow through its environs, nourishing the landscape and
nurturing its rich ethnic and economic diversity. Like the exquisite fountains
that grace Kansas City's plazas and boulevards, turning water into art, honors
programs and colleges channel the currents of higher education, providing
access to challenging academic opportunities and enriching life experiences for
students and professionals. To sustain these programs, especially in uncertain
times, NCHC members work together to improvise variations on the themes of
excellence and achievement, creating our own honors jazz.
NCHC is goin' to Kansas City in 2010 - Kansas City, here we come!
Multiple nominations by one
institution are not permitted.
Keep in mind that the logo must be
scalable--from as large as the front of a t-shirt to as small as the cover of
the printed conference program and must render well in color as well as
grayscale. Logos must be submitted by the honors director, dean or coordinator
of the member institution accompanied by a cover letter on the honors program
letterhead verifying the following:
The institution is a current member of NCHC.
The student is in good standing in the honors
program/college during the 2009-2010 academic year.
The logo is the student's original work and includes no
copyrighted or otherwise protected information material other than the
NCHC logo, if used.
The student understands that, upon submission the
conference logo becomes the property of NCHC.
The cover letter must also include
the student's name, complete mailing address, telephone number, and email
address. Both the honors director, dean, or coordinator and the student creator
must sign the cover letter. If the student needs an electronic copy of the NCHC
logo to incorporate into the design, please e-mail the request to nchc@unlserve.unl.edu.
Please note: Logo entries must be
submitted electronically (pdf, jpeg, or tiff) by Monday, October 12th, 2009.
Entries received later than Monday, October 12th will not be considered.
Forms are available here. All documents may be
uploaded or e-mailed.
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Student of the Year
Nominations for the NCHC Student of the Year Award are now being accepted by
the Student Concerns Committee. The NCHC Student of the Year Award is
presented to one Honors student who has made an impact on his or her Honors
program, and who has participated in Honors at the regional and/or national
level.
If there is an honors student currently in your program you would like to
nominate for this award, please complete the online form
and submit an optional resume or list of accomplishments. You must also
provide a letter in support of your student's nomination. The Student
Concerns Committee would like you to elaborate on why this student should be chosen
NCHC Student of the Year. Please nominate only one student from your program
for this award.
The Student of the Year Award is the only NCHC award designed, judged, and
presented by Honors students. Since the award will be judged by members of the
NCHC Student Concerns Committee, committee members are ineligible.
The winner will be recognized during the 2009 Conference in Washington,
D.C., and will receive a $500 cash award, a medallion and the auspicious
recognition the Student of the Year deserves.
Nominations must be received by Monday, September 28, 2009 to be considered. We will be unable to accept nominations after
the deadline. Any questions should be
directed to Sara Brady at bradysa@email.unc.edu.
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Student Auction
Now accepting donations
Students
from the Paul H. Nitze Scholars Program, at St. Mary's College of Maryland, are
preparing to host the 5th Annual Student Charity Auction and Raffle at this
year's NCHC conference in Washington, D.C.
The beneficiary
of the auction this year will be the Youth Leadership Foundation. The Youth Leadership Foundation (YLF) is an
organization focused on serving disadvantaged youth from Washington's inner
city by boosting academic performance while developing character. In 2008/2009, based on distinction, merit,
cost-effectiveness, and accomplishment,
the YLF was selected as one of the top Washington charities in the Catalogue
for Philanthropy. More information about
the program is available on their website http://www.helpingkids.org.
Due to space and time constraints, the 2009 auction will revert to a silent
auction, which will run concurrently with the Opening Reception for the
conference (Thursday evening, 7:00-8:30).
Items will be displayed on tables across the hallway from the reception, thus
inviting people to flow easily back and forth. (Place some bids...stroll
across the hall to chat and get some food...float back to see if you've been
outbid...repeat.)
As in the past, auction items will range from items of moderate value (signed
books, gift baskets and certificates, a college-insignia backpack or folding
chair, a bottle of high-end bourbon, etc.), to the idiosyncratic bigger-ticket
items. Last year's items in this latter category included a hand-made
quilt, tickets to Cirque du Soleil, a book signed by Stephen King, an
evening sail on Tampa Bay, and two nights in a London inn. We want all
budgets to be accommodated.
As with last year, there will be a raffle at the student party of
college-insignia hoodies, which students can enter by purchasing raffle
tickets, available throughout that day and at the party.
(The rationale for separating these two is to prevent all those well-heeled,
deep-pocketed honors administrators and faculty from purchasing all the
sweatshirts!)
But the students won't have an auction and raffle to run unless you provide
items to be auctioned and raffled. So do think of something interesting
to bring to D.C.
For more information, contact Michael Taber, Director of the Nitze Scholars
Program: mstaber@smcm.edu
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Final Call for Titles 2009 Conference
In
order to ensure that the widest variety of important and appealing titles is
available at the book table at the NCHC annual meeting in Washington, DC,
conference organizers are issuing this call for titles. The conference will feature an array of
excellent and stimulating speakers, and other featured events. The city is at
a world crossroads, with an unexcelled historical, educational, and
architectural heritage as well as a number of extraordinary cultural
amenities.
This year's speakers
include:
- Dr. Freeman Hrabowski,
President of the University of Maryland Baltimore County
- The legal scholar John
Murray and a three perspective panel, Israeli, Palestinian and
American, discussing the conflict in the Middle East
- A special screening of The Linguists with follow-up discussion by linguist K. David Harrison
and film maker Seth Kramer.
- A performance by the
political satire group, Capitol Steps.
The conference wants to ensure that works dealing
with our speakers as well as the many important and engaging historical and
cultural aspects of the city are available to faculty and students attending the
conference. To be certain that the widest
and most attractive array of titles is on hand at the meeting, we are asking
members to submit suggestions for the table.
You may do so by sending requests directly to Betty Talley at nchcadm@unlserve.unl.edu or complete the
online form available on the conference website no later than September 25.
~George Mariz |
Featured Committee Personnel
The Personnel Committee was
formed when NCHC hired its first Executive Director and opened a national
office. The Committee's role has evolved
as NCHC has adjusted to having a full-time staff. Like much of the work of NCHC, the
Committee's role is collaborative and its process collegial. We work in consultation with staff, members,
and other committees in order to strengthen the staff at the national
headquarters so that they can better serve the membership and further NCHC's
aims.
The Committee is also charged
with working in concert with the Finance Committee to review the benefits
package and salary increases. The
Committee has worked on the retirement package, a 403 (b) plan, and recommended
that a third-party administrator be retained to prepare IRS filings and to be
sure that the plan is in compliance with IRS rules.
The Committee periodically
reviews and revises the personnel manual and advises the Board of Director of
staffing needs. Finally, the Committee
acts as an ombudsman for staff concerns and issues. The chair of the Committee relays these to
the President and helps to work out solutions.
Members of the Committee
include Ted Estess, University of Houston; Ada Long, University of Alabama;
James Stickler, Allegany College of Maryland; and Peggy Watson, Texas Christian
University. The Committee is currently
chaired by Robert Baker of Fairmont State University. The Committee welcomes new members and
encourages anyone interested to attend our meeting at the Washington
Conference, Thursday, October 29 at 7:00 PM in the Arlington Room.
~ J Robert Baker
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The National Collegiate Honors
Council presents
Student Service Day
Friday, October 16, 2009
"I
don't know what your destiny will be, but one thing I know: the only ones among
you who will be really happy are those who will have sought and found how to
serve."
-Albert
Schweitzer

Service ideas include:
Volunteering at local libraries, thrift stores, and soup
kitchens
Hosting a Halloween party for at-risk youth
"Hug-a-freshman" day
Elementary and middle school outreach
Involve
your Honors program this fall!
We
want to know what you've done for your community.
Send
your service plans, reports, and photos to nchc@unlserve.unl.edu.
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Candidates for Board of Directors
Nominee for Vice President
Greg Lanier University of West Florida
I am truly
honored to be nominated to serve the NCHC as Vice President. As I have said many times before, my roots in
Honors run embarrassingly deep-all the way back to the mid 1970s as an
undergraduate at the University of Colorado.
As a graduate student at the University of Michigan, I was fortunate
enough to teach sections of that institution's core Honors Great Books course;
as a member of the Department of English at the University of West Florida, I
was one of the founding faculty of the UWF Honors Program (1989), and I was
named Director of the University Honors Program in 1999. I remember clearly the excitement that my
students and I felt when we attended our first conference: the 1999 NCHC conference
in Orlando, and I've been back every year with students, faculty, staff, and
administrators in tow. I cannot thank NCHC and all the marvelous colleagues I
have met over the years enough for all I have learned at the national
conference, and my three years of service as a member of the NCHC Board of
Directors has only deepened my indebtedness to my friends in Honors. (more)
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Nominee for Secretary
Robert "Bob" Spurrier Oklahoma State University
Bob
Spurrier is Director of The Honors College and Professor of Political
Science at Oklahoma State University. He originated our annual
"Developing in Honors" workshop and founded NCHC's Satellite Seminar
(now managed by Phi Theta Kappa). He is co-developer of the new "Best
Honors Administrative Practices" series of NCHC conference sessions
that will be part of our Washington conference. The author of numerous
articles in the Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, Honors in Practice, Forum for Honors, and The National Honors Report,
Bob has presented many national conference sessions on the "nuts and
bolts" of honors administration. He is the co-author of NCHC's Assessing and Evaluating Honors Programs and Honors Colleges: A Practical Handbook
monograph. In addition, he is the author of books and professional
journal articles on American law and government, and has been
recognized by a variety of awards for his teaching and advising. (more)
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Professional Nominees for Board of Directors
Kyoko Amano University of Indianapolis
I would be thrilled to serve on the NCHC Board of
Directors. I have served on the University of Indianapolis's Honors College Faculty
Committee since 2004, taught two Honors freshman English courses, and directed two
Honors projects. I have attended the NCHC
annual conferences every year since 2006.
In my capacity as an Honors faculty, I brought UIndy's Honors students
to NCHC conferences and enjoyed the student-centered culture of NCHC.
UIndy Honors College
and I have benefited from the support the NCHC provides for institutions,
faculty, staff, and students in developing Honors colleges, especially when
UIndy's Honors Program became an Honors
College in 2005. UIndy's Honors College has grown tremendously
since then. In 2005, the retention rate
between junior year and graduation with distinction was less than 50%, with an
overall program retention rate of 10%.
Now, the retention of the junior class is 91.6% with an anticipated
retention to graduation of 81%, and the overall retention rate in the Honors College
is 62%. UIndy
Honors College
now offers Harris Manchester College
(Oxford University) Scholarship, has the Honors
Studio for meetings, and provides the Honors & Scholars floor option for
housing. Also, the quality of Honors projects has improved. I would like to join the board to help carry
out the NCHC's mission and advocate academic excellence and social
responsibility. (more)
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Jerry Herron Irvin D. Reid Honors College Wayne State University
I am honored to be considered for a position on the National
Collegiate Honors Council Board of Directors. As a faculty member,
administrator and scholar for nearly 30 years, I have never been as proud or
excited to hold a position as the one I hold now: Dean of the Irvin D. Reid
Honors College at Wayne State University in Detroit. I learned the value of the
NCHC at the beginning of my tenure as Honors Director - starting in 2002 - when
I first consulted a new NCHC friend who provided valuable programmatic and
development advice necessary to secure enhanced funding from university
leadership, the funding that would make it possible for our program to grow and
develop. (more)
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Joe King Radford University
I have been a faculty member in the Department of Psychology
at Radford University since 1981. My background is in Neuroscience (undergrad
in Biology and Grad
School in Psychology) and
for many years I maintained a collaborative research laboratory in which
students were responsible for all the research projects conducted in the lab
and served as co-authors on publications and presentations that came out of our
research. (more)
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Kim Klein Shippensburg University
I am
seeking a term on the NCHC Board of Directors because I have seen first-hand
the profound impact that Honors education can have on students, faculty,
institutions, and the community. I
believe that NCHC has a unique opportunity and role to play as a leading advocate
for innovation in higher education to meet the global challenges our students,
faculty, and institutions face in the 21st century. (more)
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Steve Kramer Southwest Minnesota State University
I currently serve as president of the
Upper Midwest Honors Council. I am also
the director of the Honors Program at Southwest Minnesota State University, a
position I have held for seven years. In addition, I will be entering my fourth
year as chair of the Department of Foreign Languages, Humanities and Philosophy
at SMSU. SMSU is a small, public liberal
arts university and a long-time affiliate of the NCHC. I believe that this combination of experience
has prepared me well for addressing the kind of budgetary, planning and
programmatic questions that the Board of Directors faces. (more) |
Elizabeth Latosi-Sawin Missouri Western State University
I
have now been the Director of the Honors Program at Missouri Western State
University for four years. I wrote proposals for our faculty (two of which were
delivered at the national conference that took place in St. Louis a few years
ago). I participated most recently in the NCHC Faculty Institute in Lincoln,
Nebraska in 2007 and have just edited a booklet of faculty participants'
writings and photos for the group and the Board.
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Larry Levinson Governors State University
Serving both as a faculty member and as an honors
administrator, I passionately believe that honors programs are a means of
creating an enriched integrative learning community that extends the "great
conversation" of the academy (R.M. Hutchinson) beyond the classroom.
At Governors State University I first served for four years
as the Honors Director of the College of Arts and Sciences. In 1998, I oversaw
the development of a university-wide honors program that stresses interdisciplinary
learning and civic engagement. Ever since then, I have served as the University
Honors Director and Chair of the Faculty Honors Council. Our Honors program has grown to include honors
seminars (whose yearly theme is taken from the NCHC conference), an annual
honors retreat, student participation in regional honors conferences, and a
service learning project. I have served
two terms as the president of the HCIR (Honors Council of the Illinois Region)
where I worked toward expanding its membership and organized three student
research conferences. (more)
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John Loughney Westfield State College
Beginning with my attendance at the Albuquerque site visitors workshop,
I pursued NCHC Site Visitor accreditation, which was awarded in 2008.
As listed in my footnote, I have also had other roles associated with
honors accreditation.
My interest in being selected for the NCHC Board arises from a sense that I could bring at least six dimensions to such service:
- significant,
decades-long honors teaching, program development, and program
oversight at a public, four-year, comprehensive college
- experience of honors program coordination within the very large,
multi-level (university; four-year; community-college), multi-campus
(27 institutions) state system in Massachusetts
- practical experience from attending and consulting at recent NCHC national conferences
- site-visiting experience, along with various roles involving accreditation on my own campus over the past thirty years
- a history in recent years of involvement with others who either taught or were enrolled at the NCHC Albuquerque workshop
-
a career-long academic specialization in "organizations," pursued
through the humanities, arts, and social sciences, and
interdisciplinary programs (Women's Studies; American Studies; Latin
American Studies, Film Studies, and Ethnic & Multicultural
Studies). (more)
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Jaskiran Mathur St. Francis College
My name is Jaskiran Mathur, I am the Director of the
Honors Program and Associate Professor of Sociology at St. Francis College in
Brooklyn, New York.
Lydia Lyons was kind enough to appoint me to the
NCHC committees for 'Small Colleges' and 'International Education' last year. Much to my
disappointment, a fractured knee from an accident earlier in October 2008
prevented me from attending the Annual Meeting in San Antonio and deprived me
of an excellent opportunity to meet with numerous NCHC members and office
holders. I am really excited about the October 2009 meeting especially as we
have two proposals accepted, and the venue is close enough to afford a larger
contingent of students and faculty! (more)
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Student Nominees for Board of Directors (2-year term)
Jamie Beko University of Indianapolis
Hello,
my name is Jamie Beko and I am a junior at the University of
Indianapolis in Indiana. My chosen major is social work with a
concentration in community organizing. One reason I chose to
follow the path of being an honors student is that the honors college
at UIndy has allowed me to take the school's motto of 'Education for
Service' to a much higher degree. I have been able to participate
in many different community service projects. I am also a
Presidential Assistant, Campus Ambassador, and a member of the Social
Work Association; all while volunteering at several Indianapolis
non-profit organizations (i.e Damar Services, Indianapolis Animal Care
and Control, and Second Helpings) and working part-time at a small
non-profit organization that helps the elderly. I am pursuing a
degree in social work because I have a strong passion to continue this
service for my entire life. (more)
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Alex Cler Eastern Illinois University
Hello everyone! My name is Alex Cler, and I'm a finance major at
Eastern Illinois University. Currently, I am very actively involved in
the honors program at EIU. I am a member of the local Association of
Honors Students and a Presidential Scholar. The latter is geared
towards integrative learning and enriching a student's experience in
honors, college, and life. My integrated learning project is an
internship with SCORE, a small business consulting organization run by
the federal government. (more)
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2009 Board of Directors
President
Lydia Lyons, Hillsborough Community College
President-Elect
John Zubizarreta, Columbia College-South Carolina
Immediate Past President
Hallie Savage, Clarion University of Pennsylvania
Vice President
Bonnie Irwin, Eastern Illinois University
Secretary
Bob Spurrier, Oklahoma State University
Treasurer
Rolland W. Pack, Freed-Hardeman University
Ginny Atkinson, Central Arizona College *Amanda Bowman, Columbia College-South Carolina Bernice Braid, Long Island University-Brooklyn Ellen Buckner, University of South Alabama Elizabeth Callahan, Saint Louis University *Sarah Fann, University of North Carolina-Wilmington Annmarie Guzy, University of South Alabama Greg Lanier, University of West Florida Kathy Lyon, Winthrop University Jay Mandt, Wichita State University *Roxanne Moralez, Texas State University-San Marcos Rosalie Otero, University of New Mexico Doug Peterson, University of South Dakota Jim Ruebel, Ball State University *Ann Schnitzenbaumer, Ball State University Rick Scott, University of Central Arkansas *Pratik Talati, University of Alabama-Birmingham *Nathan Torno, Texas A & M University
*Student Member
NCHC Staff Cynthia M. Hill, Executive Director 402-472-9155 Carolee Martin Brink 402-472-9150 Judy Smith 402-472-9150 Trish Souliere 402-472-9172 Betty Talley 402-472-9151
(trivia question answer: D.) $1000 |
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