Blog In The Night RSS 2.0
 Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Here are some of the sights from the new students moving in this past Saturday, as well as from the "Transition to Independence" ceremony.

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009 7:20:05 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] -

 Tuesday, August 18, 2009

 

On Thursday, we officially opened the year with our faculty-staff institute. Our speaker was Dr. Kathleen Gabriel of California State University, Chico. She is the author of a GREAT new book- Teaching Unprepared Students. I read about it in Inside Higher Ed, and once I read the book, I knew she would be a great choice.

The premise is that we have to do much more when working with unprepared students. Many HBCUs have a significant student population that comes from poorly performing schools, and in need of remediation. In Arkansas, over HALF of ALL STUDENTS require at least one remedial course in college. So we needed to hear new strategies.

She focused a lot of engaging the students, and that starts with knowing their names. She challenged us to know all of our students. I did a quiz and had 12 student leaders come before the institute, but only a few could name most. So we have a lot of work to do.

I'll be following up with our faculty especially. She challenged them to give points in the syllabus for each student meeting them during office hours so they can learn about the students. This was a great idea and I hope most faculty will at least try it.

 

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009 7:12:58 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] -

 Friday, August 14, 2009

Several weeks ago, over 100 alumni gathered in Memphis for the annual convention. Here are some pictures from the event.

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Alumni President Erma Williams

President Williams with new Memphis Mayor Lowery

 

Luncheon speaker Bishop Stephen Arnold

 

Regional directors and chapter presidents

 

Opening night mixer

 

Young alums

 

Closing banquet

 

The alumni choir

 

Banquet speaker Dr. Terry Esper

 

Golden alumni honorees

 

Dr. Kathryn Worthen

 

Friday, August 14, 2009 9:00:47 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [1] -

 Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Here is an article in today's local paper regarding an award we received yesterday to retrofit our campus.

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Higher-education sites win federal repairs aid
BY TRACIE DUNGAN AND CAROLYNE PARK
ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
Tuesday, August 11, 2009


   Public and private universities and colleges in Arkansas will get $42.5 million in federal stimulus funds to use for renovation, expansion and energy upgrades of campus facilities, Gov. Mike Beebe announced Monday.
   The University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and Arkansas State University at Jonesboro will each get $4 million of that amount. The University of Central Arkansas at Conway is getting $3 million.
   In addition to the money for higher education institutions, the governor said some state agencies, service providers and specialty schools will receive $26.6 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds.
   Altogether, it’s roughly $70 million in recovery funds this round. The governor’s office said Beebe still has $6.3 million left to allocate.
   In all, Arkansas’ estimated share of recovery funds for a wide range of agencies and services is $2.9 billion, according to the Web site recovery.arkansas.gov.
   Campus representatives welcomed news of the federal dollars Monday, saying crumbling or decrepit facilities will get a boost in a time of tight budgets.
   “It will be extraordinarily helpful,” said UALR Chancellor Joel E. Anderson. “Money to address critical maintenance needs is the hardest kind of money to get.”
   UA-Fayetteville will use its stimulus funds to shave a little off the price tag for its multimillion-dollar campus-maintenance proposal, said Don Pederson, vice chancellor for finance and administration.
   In January, the campus unveiled the most ambitious building-upkeep proposal in school history to the UA board of trustees. Then estimated at $218 million, it was described as a backlog of repairs and renovations that has been postponed for decades. The 15-year plan targets 16 buildings initially.
   The money is one-time funding, and there are certain restrictions, Pederson said. For example, athletic facilities or new construction are not allowed.
   UA-Fayetteville will use some recovery money for a dozen elevator upgrades in nine campus buildings: Mullins Library, the health, physical education and recreation building, the Sam M. Walton College of Business building, Kimpel Hall, the science building, the plant science building, Memorial Hall, the administration building and the off-campus Continuing Education building that the university bought about two years ago, Pederson said.
   Other UA projects include roof repairs and replacement for the physics building, Kimpel Hall, the health, physical education and recreation building, Memorial Hall, the Engineering Hall, the Human Environmental Sciences building, the music building, the Old Fieldhouse, the plant science building, and the Speech and Hearing Clinic, he said.
   In Little Rock, UALR’s $4 million in stimulus funds will be used to replace an aging and inefficient heating, ventilation and air-conditioning system at Fribourgh Hall on the west side of campus, Anderson said. The building is about 70,000 square feet and includes science classrooms, labs and faculty offices.
   “Fribourgh is 36 years old, and it’s in bad need of a new HVAC system with much more energyefficient equipment,” he said.
   The project is expected to save UALR money by reducing energy costs, Anderson said. It’s at the top of a list of more than $9 million in proposed projects UALR officials submitted to the Higher Education Department in early March.
   ASU will use its $4 million for several projects on the Jonesboro campus, including renovations and upgrades to physics, chemistry and biology labs, Provost Daniel Howard said.
   “We have labs that date back to the early 1970s that we have not been able to upgrade,” he said. “This is a tremendous infusion of $4 million. It has both immediate and long-lasting impact for our university.”
   ASU also plans to replace an aging boiler that serves several buildings on campus, upgrade elevators, and install more energyefficient windows in one of the residence halls, he said.
   UCA plans to make its $3 million in stimulus funds “stretch as far as possible” across several projects, said Jeff Pitchford, UCA’s vice president for university and government relations.
   Earlier this year, UCA submitted 47 proposed projects to the Higher Education Department. Among the top priorities are replacing roofs on the Burdick Business Administration building, Stadium Park Apartments and McCastlin Hall, which is one of the oldest buildings on campus, he said.
   Twenty-two buildings, including several dormitories, will be waterproofed, and more energyefficient lighting will be installed in several buildings.
   “It’s going to fund some projects that have been on our wish list for a while, but we’ve never had enough money for,” he said.
   UCA will request bids for the projects as soon as possible.
   “Hopefully, in between 30 and 60 days, we’ll have crews here doing this work,” Pitchford said.
   At Philander Smith College in Little Rock, construction already is under way on several projects designed to cut energy costs, said Walter M. Kimbrough, the college’s president. This spring, officials completed a full assessment of campus facilities and upgrades needed to improve energy efficiency.
   The college’s $500,000 share of the stimulus money will help pay for those projects, which total about $1.2 million.
   “This helps us jump-start what we’re trying to do immediately, and then there will be some savings for us as well over time. It was perfect timing for us,” Kimbrough said.
   While many of the college’s buildings were either built or renovated within the past decade, many weren’t built with energyefficient features, Kimbrough said. Lighting systems campuswide have been replaced this summer, and new heating and air-conditioning units are being installed in some of the older buildings, which date back 40 or 50 years.
   The projects are expected to save the college more than $100,000 in reduced energy bills annually, he said.
   “That money makes a big impact for us,” Kimbrough said. “We’ll be able to apply our stimulus funds immediately.”
   Henderson State University at Arkadelphia will use its $2.9 million in stimulus funding for campus renovations to Foster Hall, as well as energy-efficiency renovations to heating, ventilating and air-conditioning units, and lighting systems, said Charles L. Welch, HSU president.
   At ASU-Mountain Home, the funds will be used to replacing a heating, ventilating and air-conditioning system and make other energy-saving changes. The school also will replace carpet in hightraffic areas that “has deteriorated to a point of being a safety issue,” said John Davidson, vice chancellor for administrative affairs.
   “We expect that these modifications would decrease energy consumption and provide the college with cost savings that would exceed the initial investment within the next five to six years,” he said.
   “Unfortunately, we do not have the cash on hand to make these modifications currently and maintain sufficient cash flow for operations.”
   Matt DeCample, the governor’s spokesman, said that while the governor couldn’t quantify the jobs this batch of recovery funds would create, he estimated that “hundreds would likely be helped, both in job creation and creating work that could help retain other jobs.” 
  

 Information for this article was contributed by Michael R. Wickline of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and Julie Stewart for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
Stimulus funding
Gov. Mike Beebe today announced the distribution of $42.5 million of America Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds for highereducation institutions and $26.6 million in funding or potential funding for other Arkansas projects.


SOURCE: Gov. Mike Beebe’s offi ce Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tuesday, August 11, 2009 11:50:03 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [1] -

 Friday, August 07, 2009

Here is a report from Marian McPherson who spent a month in Atlanta.

The Prez

 

This summer (June 28- August 1) I worked with MARTA, which is the transit authority for greater Atlanta metropolitan area. I was able to gain experience in many different areas, from Public Relations to Research and Analysis. I learned a wealth of knowledge about the Transit industry, how a major Public Relations department works, as well as how to do Data Analysis.

 

In addition to my work experience, I also got to gain some life experiences by living in my own apartment in downtown Atlanta, learning how to get around by train, and meeting some amazing people in the ATL!  

 

Friday, August 07, 2009 8:13:32 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] -

 Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Here is a great story about one of our Rwandan students that appears in the current issue of SYNC Weekly.

The Prez

 

Building bridges

Arkansas college program helping to transform Rwanda

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

— Fifteen years after a systematic genocide led to the deaths of an estimated 1 million people, or around 20 percent of the population, in the small landlocked country, an Arkansas-based program is helping that nation to rebuild through education.

“The program was actually started by President [Paul] Kagame himself in 2006. The concept was that Rwanda would identify its best and brightest students in science and arrange to have those students educated abroad in other countries,” said David Knight, vice chairman of the Hendrix College board of trustees, who was on a visit to Rwanda in 2006 when he heard about the program launching at Oklahoma Christian University and contemplated how Hendrix could get involved.

Ultimately, the agreement was that a group of U.S. educators would travel to Rwanda and interview the students who scored highest in math and sciences on the country’s post-high school national examination. The very best of those would be offered scholarships, could earn a degree here, and would return home afterward to help rebuild their country. The focus on math and sciences, said Knight, was the choice of Rwanda, which lost many of its leading minds in the genocide. And unlike business or finance, advanced education in most sciences takes work in labs that just aren’t available in Rwanda.

So in the fall of 2007, a pilot group of four students came to the Conway college to study under the Presidential Scholars Program. They were so successful academically, Knight said, that last year 25 more students came over — and by then four other schools in Arkansas and one in South Carolina had joined the program. This summer, 52 more students have come and will start in the fall. At the same time, the number of participating schools has grown to 12 — a mix of both public and private universities and colleges — in five states. Since the students are educated in French, they first come to Arkansas for an intensive multi-week course in English before spreading out to their respective schools.

While the key to growth has been making it easy for schools to participate by handling all the program administration through Hendrix, Knight said, the key to success has been the students themselves. Collectively, at the end of last fall the group had a grade point over 3.7. Twelve of the 29 students here then had a perfect 4.0.

“Absolutely I’m a believer that this is a two-way bridge,” said Knight, who pointed out that while the students and their home country will benefit greatly from their American education, the schools themselves benefit from having these minds on campus. “They’re extremely intelligent, diligent and hard working.”

Alex Mugengana is a student from Rwanda studying at Philander Smith College
Photo by Shannon Sturgis
 
 

Alex Mugengana, Philander Smith College

Alex wants to help people. Studying chemistry, he hopes to be able to take his studies further into medical school and become a doctor, something that isn’t always available back home.

“People have to travel abroad from Rwanda to get medical care. There is not enough,” he said.

So coming here was “a great opportunity. We have colleges and universities back home, but they cannot compare with universities here,” he said, pointing to differences in labs, which actually allow you to practice what you study, and closer interaction with professors. And then there is the library where he works. An avid reader, he notes how accessibility to books is so much greater here.

But he hasn’t spent all his time reading. Like a lot of 20-year-old college students, he loves the Wii and has become a fan of TV’s 24 and Prison Break. He also has taken a liking to American football and basketball. Baseball, not so much.

The fourth oldest of nine children, Alex was not actually born in Rwanda, but in Tanzania, where his parents had fled in 1959, when the civil conflicts that persisted into the ’90s began. They moved back to the capital city Kigali in 1995, the year after the genocide, an event Alex doesn’t talk much about.

“It was a disaster for us,” he says, simply and sadly.

Being separated from his family is probably the hardest part of being here, he said, but he keeps in touch with them — less frequently the longer he’s here, not unlike most American college students.

“They are very proud of me. They encourage me to work hard,” he said. “It is a privilege to come and study abroad and get an advanced degree.”

Wednesday, August 05, 2009 9:32:12 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [1] -

 Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Terica and David are interns at the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center. According to their site (http://www.mosaictemplarscenter.com/):

The museum is dedicated to collecting, preserving, interpreting, and celebrating African American history, culture and community in Arkansas from 1870 to the present, and informs and educates the public about black achievements – especially in business, politics and the arts. Through special events, education programs, and ongoing research, the museum celebrates African American heritage in Arkansas.

Terica and David were Public Information Officer Interns. They both will have opportunities to work throughout the school year, since the museum is just a few blocks from campus. We recently received a great letter from their supervisor praising their work, and we love that kind of feedback.

The Prez

 

Wednesday, July 29, 2009 7:37:26 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] -

 Tuesday, July 28, 2009

This article appeared in Sunday's paper. I'm thankful the paper agreed to publish my piece, especially in light of the fact that I am criticizing their editorial staff for a limited world view. So they get points for printing my dissenting view.

The Prez

 

Sorry, Michael Jackson, it matters if you’re black or white

 

BY WALTER M. KIMBROUGH SPECIAL TO THE DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE


   Count me in that number of people worldwide who have been consumed with the events surrounding the death of Michael Jackson. Michael Jackson provided a great deal of the soundtrack of my life, from my first dances as an elementary school student where songs from Off the Wall were played, to Thriller being released when I was in high school and my neighbor Junior learning the entire zombie dance routine. In college, my fraternity exited a step show to Bad, and I Remember the Time I started my professional career. 


   Michael was an otherworldly entertainer. His music was fun and energetic, and he danced like no one before or since. He took the fledgling music-video format and created masterpieces that have not been matched. He is the world’s bestselling musical artist, with over 750 million albums sold. Within a week after his death, his albums dominated the Billboard charts again, selling almost 1 million copies.


   I realized the brother was a little strange. Okay, a lot. But the stories of an abusive father pushing a 5-year-old to become a star explain Michael to me. A commentator on BET recently remarked that this was the real life curious case of Benjamin Button. The young Michael was so mature for his age; the older Michael very childlike. Yet this complex man could claim me as a fan, as well as millions of people worldwide. Michael Jackson matters . . . except to the editors of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.


   Frank Fellone, deputy editor of the paper, recently noted in a column that some had called and written asking about the lack of coverage of Jackson’s death. Fellone explained why his death (and subsequent memorial) was not front page news. He indicated that the death of an entertainment figure “would not fit the definition of important, significant or consequential.” He also shared that the paper should be consistent, so Jackson was treated like Frank Sinatra in 1998.


   Why does our paper have such a narrow, homogeneous, and, frankly, white privileged view of important, significant, and consequential? I was once told by an editor when the paper did not cover James Carville’s lecture last year that he wouldn’t try to tell me how to run a college and I should defer to the professionals. So I looked at other papers to see how they covered the Jackson memorial.


   The USA Today, New York Times, and Washington Post ran front-page stories. My hometown Atlanta Journal-Constitution, as well as the Virginian Pilot and Cincinnati Enquirer, places I have lived, had front-page coverage. Our comparison cities for Better Together Metro Little Rock—Columbia, Tulsa, and Austin—all covered the memorial on the front page, as did neighboring papers in Dallas, Houston, and Oklahoma City.


   That’s a lot of front-page coverage, a lot of professionals saying Jackson was “important, significant and consequential.” In fact, Jackson’s memorial was front-page news in Berlin, London, Madrid, Brussels, Salvador, and Bogota. The mere fact that Michael caused 1.6 million people worldwide to request two of 17,000 tickets to attend his memorial, is statistically significant. Thirty-one million people watched the memorial on television—sounds important. He holds the record for most charities supported by an entertainer, and charitable giving is consequential.


   Fellone and company unfortunately determine what is newsworthy based on their limited world view. It doesn’t make them bad people; it just means they lack an appreciation of the diversity of our state and the world. For Fellone to suggest that Frank Sinatra is comparable to Michael Jackson is absolutely ridiculous. People in China didn’t give a damn about Sinatra. They passed out when they saw Michael. Sinatra was good. MJ created things we had never seen or heard before. He was the best. Fellone’s world view caused him to miss this point, and there aren’t different views at the paper to challenge his.


   Michael Jackson wanted to believe it didn’t matter if we were black or white. It does, and our statewide daily paper reminds us of this every day. Few stories are covered of importance to people of color. No substantive editorials considered the impact of Michael Jackson, yet an 800-pound pig that ends up in a pool is worth discussing. The pig ended up as front-page news. The day after the world watched the memorial and most newspapers had a picture from the event on the front page, we had a picture of a cloud of smoke from a bomb being destroyed in Afghanistan where we have been for almost eight years.


   Fred Zipp of the Austin American-Statesman wrote a piece in June entitled “What Makes Front Page News.” He listed 10 characteristics of a front page story. Off the bat, they use broader criteria to determine what qualifies as front page news. Zipp explains, “Done right, the page should inform and explain, surprise and delight. Done best, it’s a revelation.” The revelation for me is that until the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette embraces a diversity of thought, the public is cheated. They cheat themselves too.


   Defining what is newsworthy depends on your worldview; it’s completely subjective. Simply put, it often matters if you’re black or white when it comes to being printed in black and white.


   Sorry MJ.


   Walter M. Kimbrough is president of Philander Smith College in Little Rock.

 

Tuesday, July 28, 2009 7:06:24 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Comments [0] -

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