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GCC interns learning an 'incredible amount in a very short time' at NIH

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Sara Tenda, a 2013 Germanna Community College graduate, is spending her summer as part of a group working on developing better treatments for high-risk neuroblastoma patients.
She’s doing lab research at the Cell & Molecular Biology Section, Pediatric Oncology Branch of the National Cancer Institute, near Bethesda, Md.  According to the National Cancer Society Web site, neuroblastoma is a form of cancer that develops in the nervous system of embryos and fetuses and affects young children.
Sara Tenda

Tenda and fellow Germanna student Ulisses Santamaria are part of the 2013 National Institute of Health Community College Summer Enrichment Program. It’s intended to boost the number of community college students who plan on careers in health care and research as they transfer to four-year colleges and universities.
In addition to doing full time research in a laboratory or on an NIH project, they take courses and attend workshops.
Tenda and Santamaria are early success stories for Germanna’s new Experiential Learning internship program.
“It’s much more intense than I expected it to be,”  Tenda, who is transferring to Virginia Commonwealth University says of her internship. “There has been quite a learning curve for me. It’s an incredible amount in a very short amount of time. That makes it very intense.”
She says she hadn’t decided whether she wanted to go into medical research or become a practicing physician. Now Tenda is leaning toward clinical research or becoming a physician. She plans to apply to medical school after getting her bachelor’s degree at VCU.
Tenda, who is 36 years old, lives in Spotsylvania County. She’s a graduate of Potomac High School in Dumfries.
Ulisses Santamaria
She said Cathy Walsh, her Biology 101 instructor at Germanna: “was extremely helpful. She wrote the letter recommending me-- and she must’ve done a very good job, because I’m here.”
Santamaria, an 18-year-old Spotsylvania County native and Courtland High graduate, is being mentored by Dr. Alon Poleg-Polsky in research involving the structure and function of the retina at the National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke in Bethesda. The work involves investigation into how the retina performs preliminary image processing and transmits visual information to the brain.
In an email, he says he’s been studying contrast sensitivity in mouse retinal ganglion cells.
The work is not for the squeamish.
Santamaria writes: “We take mice and we unfortunately do kill them (very quickly, I promise), and then we extract their eyes and place them in a petri dish full of a saline solution and a carbogen (carbon and oxygen) tube to keep the cells in the eye alive. Then we cut open the eye and clean it out until only the shell of the eyes and the retina is left. Then we cut the retina in half to have two specimens to work with per eye. Then we take the retina and mount it onto a harp (A square wire of platinum with nylon strings going across it to keep retinas in place), and then put it into a profusion chamber (means that it's kept at the body's temperature, and constantly having saline solution in the chamber using a setup akin to a drip IV in a hospital) under a confocal microscope and view it using a monitor.”
Like Tenda, Santamaria says he’s learning a lot in a short time and he loves it.
Santamaria says Dr. Trudy Witt, an assistant professor of biology at Germanna,  is one of the teachers who made a difference for him.
For more information on Germanna’s internship program,  email Cheri Ober, its coordinator,  at cober@germanna.edu or go to http://www.germanna.edu/Students/Experiential_Learning_Center/for_students/

GCC Center for Workforce Dean Martha O'Keefe named to national board

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Martha O’Keefe, Dean of Workforce and Professional Development at the Germanna Community College Center for Workforce and Community Education, has been appointed to the board of the National Council for Continuing Education and Training.

NCCET, which is based in Columbus, Ohio, is committed to keeping members up to date on new trends and cutting edge programs from across the country.

O’Keefe was appointed one of three At-Large Directors.

She has worked at Germanna for 12 years. She says of her work at GCC’s Center for Workforce: “It's an opportunity to directly impact the lives of others, by opening doors and possibilities that might otherwise have been closed to them.”

In November 2012, O'Keefe received the Patricia Lacey Metzger Award for achievement during the 19th annual Leadership Colloquium for Professional Women at the University of Mary Washington.

Center for Workforce Dean Martha O'Keefe

Germanna to offer classes at UMW's Dahlgren campus

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Germanna Community College will begin offering classes in partnership with the University of Mary Washington at UMW’s Dahlgren campus for the fall 2013 semester on Tuesday, Aug. 20 as part of a pilot program to gauge interest.

The first three classes Germanna will offer at Dahlgren are Calculus with Analytic Geometry 1, Calculus with Analytic Geometry 2 and Introduction to Engineering.

 “Germanna is continuously seeking new ways of responding to the educational needs of area active duty members of the armed services, veterans, and their families,” said GCC Vice President for Academic Affairs and Student Services Ann Woolford.

 “Hundreds of potential students at the various Dahlgren installations would find the UMW Dahlgren campus accessible and convenient,” Woolford said, “Germanna is exploring how it may offer these students meaningful college programs designed to meet their specific needs. To that end, we are exploring several options of program delivery, including online, hybrid, and face- to-face classes leading to a certificate or degree.”

The three classes  are part of the college’s Engineering curriculum. Students who earn an Associate of Science degree in Engineering at Germanna and transfer to a four-year college or university  are on a less expensive path to  a Bachelor of Science degree in Engineering. Dr. Davyda Hammond, Germanna’s Engineering Department chair said.

 Because Germanna has guaranteed admission articulation agreements with both the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech,  Hammond said: “If you get at least a ‘B’ in all your engineering and science and math classes at GCC and an overall GPA of 3.2, you’re guaranteed admission into the schools of engineering at  U.Va. and Virginia Tech. They get so many applications at Tech that automatically knowing you’re getting in is a real advantage.”

Germanna Recruiter Kimberly Viarella will present information sessions for potential students on Wednesday, July 31 at the Dahlgren campus.

1500 - 1600     Assistance with application and admission paperwork for Aug. 20, 2013 classes

1600 -  1700   Overview of Germanna programs.

1700 - 1800     Germanna representatives will answer questions and accept unofficial transcripts.

For more information, call Germanna Recruiter Viarella at 540-834-1961 or email her at Kviarella@germanna.edu.

The UMW Dahlgren Campus Center for Education and Research opened in January 2012, and is designed to support the continuing educational and professional development of the region’s engineers, scientists, and administrative professionals by providing educational programs, services, and leased facilities to the Naval Support Activity South Potomac commands, defense contractors, and the professional community.

 The center is located at 4224 University Drive in King George County.

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Germanna names C. Douglas Elliott VP for Institutional Advancement

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C. Douglas Elliott has been named Vice President for Institutional Advancement at Germanna Community College.  He will also serve as Executive Director of the GCC Educational Foundation.

His responsibilities will include planning, leadership and implementation of all college fundraising initiatives, grant writing, planned giving, endowment, scholarships, and alumni research and records, grant writing, planned giving, scholarships and alumni and parent engagement programs. He will also be responsible for planning, leadership and implementation of all college marketing and public information activities and high-level support for community and government relations activities. Elliott will lead a team of development and marketing/public information professionals and administrative staff.

He was an instructor for a number of years at Rollins College’s Philanthropy and Nonprofit Leadership Center.

 Elliott has served in leadership positions in advancement and marketing for a diverse group of nonprofit institutions from higher education to social service agencies to global entities such as the Smithsonian Institution and the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children.

At the Smithsonian, he was Director of National Development from 1997-2003. At the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children, he served as Vice President of International Development and Marketing from 2003-2006.

Previously, he had served as vice president for several publishing firms and then as president of his own award-winning company, Elliott & Clark Publishing, which he founded.

He coauthored two books, Florida Rediscovered and Vietnam:  Images from Combat Photographers.


Elliott is an avid outdoorsman and student of American history.

 
C. Douglas Elliott

Germanna twins won't let cystic fibrosis limit or define them

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Germanna Community College students Cristina and Valentina Scholes want people to know that life with cystic fibrosis can be good. They refuse to allow the disease to limit or define them. It’s a tough life, they say, but it can be one of fulfillment, of joy and of hope.
Cristina and Valentina Scholes

It can be debilitating, and those with the disease have shorter life expectancies.
And yet bubbly Cristina and Valentina, who are in the business administration program at Germanna, are practically bursting with excitement over what’s been happening in their lives. They’re close to earning their associate’s degrees at GCC and have been part of the internship program at the college.
The twins, who are graduates of Colonial Forge High School, say they hope they can be role models for other young people battling the disease.
In the 1950s, children born with the genetic defect weren’t expected to live long enough to go to grade school. Today, according to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, those with the disease live “into their 40s, 50s and beyond.”
“Doctors and researchers are finding so many new treatments and medications,” Cristina says. “With all these treatments and meds it's easier to function normally. But it is a hard disease to live with because of the maintenance part. If we skip a treatment we get sick then have to be hospitalized for three or four days. We need a flexible job that is willing to work with us. Health insurance is very important.  I feel like there isn't enough information about cystic fibrosis for people to really understand it.”
Valentina and Cristina say many still do die from the disease, but that they believe if people with cystic fibrosis take care of themselves they can live a “normal” life. “But what is normal?” Cristina says. “Everyone has struggles and I think ours just motivate us. We strive to be more and to become better. Each day is a gift on this earth and we are happy to be doing well and finding jobs. I hope we can inspire other people with cystic fibrosis to do the same. I think with any disease it's mind over matter.”

Grandfather, grandaughter take classes together at Germanna

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History classes at Germanna Community College have become very personal for Culpeper High School graduate Courtney Hall.

Hall, 26, has been taking Germanna classes like American History with her 81-year-old grandfather Larry Corbin, who lived through World War II; fought in the Korean War and lived through the Cold War and saw the Berlin Wall fall; saw America win the race to the moon and sweated out the Cuban Missile Crisis and the war in Vietnam.

Courtney Hall and Larry Corbin

Corbin has been taking advantage of the fact that the Virginia Community College System offers free tuition for senior citizens auditing classes.


To be eligible for free tuition for audit of credit courses or for taking non-credit courses, not to exceed three courses per term, a person must meet the criteria including the following:


Be 60 years of age or older.

Be a legal resident of Virginia.

Be admitted to the college as a student.


Auditing a course requires the approval of the appropriate division chair or director. And there must be an empty seat in the class.

 

Corbin said he’s enjoyed taking classes at Germanna for a number of reasons, including the fact that in auditing them, he hasn’t had to take tests.
 
“He leaves taking the tests and writing the papers to me,” Hall said.
 
“He adds so much to the classroom conversation and participation because he lived in a different era and he’s able to bring so much more to the discussion “ Hall said. “We all read about it and learn about it, but he lived through part of it and can give his perspective, which is neat.”
 
  “I’m a history buff,” Corbin said.  He said he enjoys interaction with the professors.
 
He said rather than buying a history book, be pulled one of the volumes of “Six Thousand Years of History,” published in 1899, off his book shelf at home.  “Funny thing is, nothing changed,” Corbin said. “I didn’t see much revisionism.”
 
 He said his granddaughter and his daughter,  Courtney’s mother Marcie Corbin, who works at Germanna as Administrative Assistant to the Vice President for Academic Affairs and Student Services, convinced him to start taking classes. He’s taken six so far, including history, sociology and biology.
 
“It’s her fault and her mother’s fault,” he joked. “They thought maybe I had too much time on my hands and I needed to go do something.”
 
 “I said, ‘Hey, it’s one night a week,” Hall recalled.
 
The family lives in the tiny Culpeper County community of Mitchells.
 
Hall graduated  from Culpeper High in 2005 and went to Virginia Tech, where she earned an associate degree in agriculture.
 
She soon changed her mind about her career path.
 
  “I grew up on a farm but I wanted to teach,” she said. “I want to be with the special needs students. In order to do that, I had to start over. She expects to graduate from Germanna in the spring of 2014. She then plans to transfer to the University of Mary Washington.
 
  While she’s taking classes at GCC, she’s working at Yowell Elementry School as a Para educator   supporting special needs students.
 
  “I graduated from the school of hard knocks,” said Corbin, who’s originally from Rhode Island, but has lived in Virginia since 1955.
 
Who Corbin was a high school dropout who earned his GED in the Army, which recognized his potential. He was a sergeant first class, but his superiors saw him as officer material. He earned a year and a half worth of college credit when they had him tested. And they offered to send him to officer candidate school.
 
 “I said ‘No thanks, but thank you.’ He said the North Korean military targeted officers and “as fast as they could turn out second lieutenants, they were killing them.”
 
 Before taking history classes together at Germanna, Corbin told his granddaughter little about his time in the military. She said classroom discussion led to him showing her his expert marksman badge, dog tags and other memorabilia.
 
When he returned to civilian life, he spent 28 years working for the Pentagon Federal Credit Union, and moved up fairly quickly. “I did alright,” he said. He said that 40 years ago, he didn’t need a college degree, but couldn’t hold the same jobs now without one.
 
Corbin jokes that he has to take classes with Hall so he can “keep her in line,” but his pride in his granddaughter is clear. In addition to working with special needs students at Yowell Elementary, she’s been babysitting, given riding lessons, cleaning out horse stalls-- working full time while going to Germanna.  She does all of this because she wants to help children with disabilities.
 
The feeling is mutual.
 
 “I’m proud to have him with me,” Hall said. “Not very many people get to take classes with their 81-year-old granddad.
 
 

Student ID photo sessions begin

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 Student Activities has announced the student ID photo taking schedule for the next two weeks. SA will schedule more sessions after Aug 23. Student IDs are not required unless students are in the nursing program or ride the Fred Bus. These sessions are for photos only. IDs will be sent to the Welcome Center where the photo was taken unless other arrangements are made. They may be picked up at Locust Grove Campus, Fredericksburg Area Campus and Daniel Technology Center Welcome Centers or the main desk at the Stafford County Center seven to 10 days after the photo session.
  
Day
Month
Date
Time
Campus
Bldg/room
Mon
Aug
12
10am-12pm
FAC
Dickinson 100A
Tues
Aug
13
10am-12pm
&2pm-5pm
FAC
Dickinson 100A
Wed
Aug
14
2pm-5 pm
LGC
205H
Thur
Aug
15
9am-12 pm
FAC
Dickinson100A
Fri
Aug
16
10am-12 pm
FAC
Dickinson100A
Mon
Aug
19
9am-11pm
DTC
2nd Floor Lounge
Tues
Aug
20
9am-11pm
SCC
Lobby
Wed
Aug
21
10am-12pm
& 2pm-4pm
FAC
Dickinson100A
Thur
Aug
22
12pm-2pm
& 4pm-7pm
FAC
Dickinson100A
Fri
Aug
23
10am-12pm
FAC
Dickinson100A

Germanna honors Dean Gilkey with scholarship fund

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The Germanna Community College Educational Foundation has established a scholarship fund in Mary Blessing Gilkey’s honor.  She passed away in June at age 55 after a long battle with an autoimmune disorder.

Dean Mary Blessing Gilkey

 During Gilkey’s time as dean of nursing and health technologies at Germanna, she oversaw the doublingof the program’s size.

  Dr. Patti Lisk was named to the post in July.

  Germanna celebrated Gilkey’s life during an eventThursday at the college’s Daniel Technology Center in Culpeper.

 During the event, Lee Kirk, President and CEO of Culpeper Regional Health System, said that when Gilkey succeeded Jane Ingalls as dean,  the college already had “an excellent nursing program. She raised it higher.”

 Germanna President David A. Sam called her “a force of nature” who made good things happen. He noted that even during her final days, she was texting friends and colleagues from her hospital bed to ask how they were doing. “She couldn’t stop being a nurse,” Sam said.

Donations to the Mary Gilkey scholarship fund may be made online. They may also be made by mail. Checks should be made out to the Germanna Community College Educational Foundation with “Mary Gilkey” in the memo and sent to GCCEF, Germanna Community College, 2130 Germanna Highway, Locust Grove, Va. 22508.


Paying it forward: A better life for us all

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Doris Buffett's mother told her she wasn't smart enough to go to college. Warren Buffett was, their mother said, but not Doris.
Young Warren, Doris and Bertie Buffett

Their mother was wrong.
Now philanthropist Doris Buffett, founder of the Sunshine Lady Foundation, explains how paying it forward through Germanna pays off for our community.




GCC's Adult Career Center reaching out to community

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There’s nothing like getting out in the community to see where the needs are.

Michelle Beverage, Adult Career Coach and coordinator of the Adult Career Center, often presents to various organizations about what she does for those looking to re-enter the work force. But partnering with existing organizations enables the Center to do even more.

Next Wednesday, Michelle will collaborate with Thrive, a non profit organization that offers comprehensive holistic services to women and their families, at the Virginia CARES site. Together, they will help women ex-offenders with resumes and interviews. Michelle will also share the process she goes through with each person who visits the Adult Career Center.

--Susan Carter Morgan

The Adult Career Center is funded by a U.S. Department of Labor ETA grant award. This announcement is the creation of the grantee and does not necessarily reflect the official position of the USDOL.

 



Germanna Bears bear down, claw and kick way to championship

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Rob Lewis wanted to play ball.

 And when he began taking classes at Germanna Community College last year, he wanted to feel connected.

He heard Germanna had a men’s club flag football team that played in a league. But he learned it had disbanded.

 Lewis thought to himself, “You know what, I’m going to be here and it’d be nice to represent the school.”

Rob Lewis, center, during a GCC Bears time out

 So, with much support from GCC Student Activities, Lewis founded the Germanna Bears Flag Football Club.

 He set up practice times at Loriella Park, hoping people would come out for the team.

 They did.

  And in their inaugural season, the Bears took the Fredericksburg Field House Men’s Flag Football League spring championship, finishing 6-3 and beating the second-place Ducks in the title game, 31-22.

  League play at the Field House, which  is seven on seven indoors on a small arena style  field enclosed with Plexiglas and netting on an artificial turf surface, is totally alien to the kind of back yard two-hand touch quality most associate with flag football. The game the Bears play is surprisingly fast and intense. Everyone is an eligible receiver and the pressure on quarterbacks to get rid of the ball before being “sacked” is high.

The Germanna Bears go on offense
 
  A good field goal kicker is a deadly weapon in the Fredericksburg Field House Men’s League and the Bears may have had the best in Andy Clohan, who was the place kicker for the varsity football team at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point before transferring to Germanna.

 “He’s clutch,” Lewis said. “He’s really good.  He adds another dimension. A lot of times you get near the goal line and when it comes down to fourth down you can play it conservative when you have a good kicker. If you get those (field goal) points it makes a big difference.”
 

A Bears opponent team from Spotsylvania huddles.

The championship Bears team’s roster consisted of Andy Clohan, Collin Douglas, Tyrone Ellis, Jon Kimmel, Robert Lewis, Tyler Ricchiuto, Antonio Russell and Brandon Wilson.

 The Bears are well into the summer season at the Field House now and considering whether to play in the fall, Lewis said.  Either way, he said, they will continue to practice at Loriella Park and play pickup games from about 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Sundays. He said all Germanna students are welcome to come out. For more information, call Lewis at 540-621-8147.

 
 Bears players watch and wait to enter a game.

 

Prevention with TIPS Incident Management System

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Germanna has launched an online incident reporting platform called TIPS (Threat Assessment, Incident Management and Prevention Services), making it easy for students, faculty and staff to confidentially report concerning behaviors or incidents.
Bullying, threats to harm, verbal abuse, harassment, assault and battery, domestic violence, weapons, harassment, suicide risks, stalking, hazing, alcohol or drug possession, theft, vandalism and suspicious activity may be reported anonymously.
If someone has information about incidents that warrant concern for the safety of students, faculty or staff, they can access TIPS next to the E2Campus icon on the GCC Web site home page at www.germanna.edu, select their Germanna location and anonymously report the information.
 
 

Register now to vote in Virginia's Nov. 5th election

Germanna co-sponsors 'Freedom at the Gates: African Americans in Civil War Virginia'

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“Freedom at the Gates: African Americans in Civil War Virginia,” the next lecture in the Madison County Civil War sesquicentennial series, is set for 7 p.m. Monday, Sept. 9 at Madison County High School, featuring Prof. Ervin L. Jordan Jr. of the University of Virginia.
Germanna Community College is a co-sponsor of the series, which is open to the public, free of charge.
He notes in his book Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Virginia that as the Civil War began,

 “more African Americans lived in Virginia than in any other state- 490,000 slaves and 59,000 free blacks.”

Lead scientist and engineer at NSWC teaching engineering for Germanna

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 By ELLIOTT FABRIZIO, NSWC Dahlgren Division Corporate Communications

FREDERICKSBURG, Va. (NNS) -- "You ever notice how old men sit around and talk about how the sky is falling and two or three decades later, there's a new set of old men sitting around talking about how the sky is falling?"

  


 Dr. Walter Sessions (U.S. Navy photo by Elliott Fabrizio/Released)


Dr. Walter Sessions, a lead scientist and engineer at the Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division (NSWCDD), moonlights as a professor for Germanna Community College where he educates the next generation of engineers and scientists to ensure his hypothetical question remains true.

"It's nationally known that we have a huge abyss coming when there will hardly be any scientists and engineers," said Sessions.

The desire to fill that abyss with passionate and talented science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) professionals led Sessions to the new electrical engineering program at Germanna.

In August 2013, he began teaching two fall semester classes - Electrical Circuits I and Introduction to Engineering.

As a lead scientist for NSWCDD's Electromagnetics and Sensors Department with an engineering doctorate, he may seem overqualified for entry level instruction, but Sessions says those with the most experience are precisely who should be teaching.

Paris in June: Germanna trip open to all

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Chambord Kalesi
 
Germanna Community College is offering a comprehensive June trip to Paris and the Loire Valley . The trip is open to alumni and other members of the community as well as students.
“It is a historical and cultural trip with days in Paris and then castles, and then a WWII focus, “ said Maury Brown, an English instructor at the college and one of trip’s organizers. “We will be there for the 70th anniversary of D-Day. We will be on the beaches at Normandy on June 10.

“Part of Germanna’s mission is to offer opportunities for personal enrichment, and those making the trip may discover a new love for history, art, literature, or philosophy along the way.”
There will be an informational meeting about the trip to France at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept.  17 in room 318 of the Dickinson Building at Germanna’s Fredericksburg Area Campus in Spotsylvania. Attendees will learn more about the trip, and where the group will go, why these sites are important, what the cost of the trip covers, and how to sign up. The meeting will last about an hour, Brown said.

She said the tour group will include people of all ages.
“We have many people in their 50s signed up already,” Brown said. “The trip is comprehensive. All transportation costs (flight, bus, metro, etc.) are included as is a full breakfast every day and authentic French dinners. All hotel accommodations are also included, as are all entrance fees to the sites.

Those on the trip will have priority access into the sites, have the planning done for them and have the full time services of a multilingual guide, and two Germanna professors, one English and one history. “The only other money you'll need is spending money; everything else is covered with prices locked in,” Brown said. Those who register by Sept. 30 receive a $100 discount on the cost of the trip.
  Included in the package:

 -A Seine River cruise 

 -Viewing Paris from the Eiffel Tower

 -Shopping in the Latin Quarter Stops at the famous Opera House, Napoleon’s Arc de Triomphe, and the Notre Dame and Chartres cathedrals, the Louvre, Versailles, the Chateau de Chenonceau and Chateau de Chambord castles, the Mont St. Michel monastery, the medieval Troglodyte villages and the walled seaport of St. Malo.

-For World War II history buffs, there will be a visit the Arromanches museum, cemetery and beaches.

"You'll get the chance to relive The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Three Musketeers, Les Miserables, and WWII liberation,” Brown said.

For those under age 23 who sign up by Sept. 30, the trip is $3,199 (including all transportation--air, ground, water--, lodging, breakfasts and dinners, entrance fees, guides and educational materials. For those over age 23 who sign up by Sept. 30, the trip is $3,574. After Oct. 1,  the cost goes up $100 for either group.

Registration requires a $99 deposit, then  monthly payments may be made by  check or credit card.

"It boils down to about $300 per day for students and $350 per day for adults," Brown said. "That includes all expenses except spending money, and prices won't fluctuate. Not bad when you look at all we are doing, the cost of round-trip airfare to Europe, etc." Those under age 23 may be in triple or quad lodging  on some nights. Those over 23 will be in single- or double-occupancy lodging for the entire trip.



Girl Scouts helped point Germanna 'Women of Distinction' in right direction

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Two current Germanna Community College leaders and a former GCC professor were honored at the Commonwealth of Virginia Girl Scouts Women of Distinction Awards Thursday night at the University of Mary Washington’s Jepson Center.

Dr. LaZalia Richardson, who retired from teaching English at Germanna a year and a half ago after a stroke, talked about the joy of teaching students at all levels “to read and to write and to develop their cognitive skills.”
Dr. LaZalia Richardson and husband Xavier Richardson


She noted that her daughter Christina has become a teacher and often texts her excitedly: “’Mom! She got it! He got it! They got it!’ She understands that she grows taller metaphorically each time she reaches down and teaches a child.”

Dr. Patti Lisk, Germanna’s Dean of Nursing and Health Technologies, said Girl Scouting pointed her in the right direction career-wise, even though she hated camping out.

She said that after spending a week camping out as a Girl Scout, “I can remember going home, soaking in the tub and wondering why did people camp? I learned that vacation for me is not camping.  Vacation for me is a resort with sheets and fine food.”
GCC Dean of Nursing & HealthTechnologies Patti Lisk


 Dr. Lisk recalled that her Nancy Nurse Doll helped her earn a Girls Scout First Aid badge.  “The Nancy Nurse Doll had a button in its stomach and you would push it and she’d say ‘”My tummy hurts,’ or cough. The job of the child was to make the doll feel better. Then the doll would say ‘I feel better now.’ “

 Now, she said, she works with high tech human simulators in Germanna’s Virtual Hospital  that mimic human illnesses and respond to treatment by either getting well or “dying,” depending on the knowledge of the students.

“The Girl Scouts started to prepare me for my adult life and helped me recognize things I would be good at and things I wouldn’t,” Dr. Lisk said.
Germanna VP for Workforce Development Jeanne Wesley


Dr. Jeanne Wesley, Germanna’s vice president for workforce development and community relations, noted that three women from college were being honored last night and that a past honoree, former GCC Dean of Nursing Jane Ingalls, was in the audience.

“You can see that Germanna Community College can handle strong women,” she joked. “And we need to be strong because of what we do.

“We send students from this area to the top universities in the nation, including some in Virginia,” Dr. Wesley said.

“We train technicians… we provide apprenticeships.. . We change lives. We break cycles of poverty and we’re very proud of it.”

  Dr. Wesley joked that the Girl Scouts helped her find her career path when “I sold truckloads of cookies.”

 She also had a camping story.

   “We were camping somewhere in the middle of the night, and we began to hear howls, screams, and then out tents started flapping.

“And the Boy Scouts who were doing it, “she said as the crowd laughed, had lived up to their credo by being prepared to wreak havoc on the Girl Scouts. “But the experience only made us stronger.”

Since 2000, Girl Scouts of the Commonwealth of Virginia has honored women “for their stellar accomplishments, tireless endeavors, and selfless service to the Greater Fredericksburg community.”


2013 Women of Distinction honorees pose for a group shot.

Tutor's determination to make it as writer a great example for students

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Chris Williams stays pretty busy when he isn’t working as a tutor in Germanna Community College’s Writing Center.

 The Germanna graduate writes about politics, history, culture, race and music for the Huffington Post, the Guardian, The Atlantic, Ebony and Wax Poetics. 

 When he’s not tutoring or writing, he’s usually working social media to further his writing career.

Williams, a 32-year-old Spotsylvania County native and Courtland High School graduate, grew up in the Massaponax area. He earned his associate’s degree at Germanna, his bachelor’s degree at Virginia Commonwealth University and spent a month at the University of the West Indies in Barbados studying history as an ambassador for VCU.

 “It’s been fun,” he said about his first semester at Germanna’s Writing Center.  “I really enjoy the people I work with.” He said Tutoring Services Coordinator Ann Lyons made him feel comfortable immediately. Of working with GCC students, he said: “I’m learning from them as well. It’s been a wonderful experience. I feel blessed.”

His reporting experience includes covering Capitol Hill and the White House in 2011 as a freelancer for the National Newspaper Publishing Association. 

Williams said he got his start working for two years as a freelancer without getting paid. He was writing mostly for startup publications to show what he could do.

 “The media is changing so much,” he said. “A lot of publications are really tight on money.”

He said freelancing is an arduous process. 

“The key is the pitch,” he said. Even after an idea is approved, the freelancer generally must then produce a piece the editor likes before seeing any money.

 Williams spends much of his time developing contacts via social media.

 He said Facebook and, to a greater extent, Twitter, “changed the trajectory of my writing career.” Social media, he said, has provided him access to people he otherwise would not meet.


Never stop building a network of contacts.
Research publications--and their editors.
Pitch ideas other reporters are missing.
Pitch several ideas at a time.
Create an online portfolio.
Share the wealth by hooking others up with jobs.

Germanna history Prof. Rich Gossweiler honored for 45 years of service

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History Prof. Rich Gossweiler was recognized for 45 years of service during today's Learning Day at the Daniel Technology Center in Culpeper. 
Dr. Rich Gossweiler honored by Germanna President David A. Sam

Dr. Sarah Somerville was recognized for 30 years of service; Rick Brehm and Asst. Prof. Delois McCormick were recognized for 25 years; Valerie Miller and Assoc. Prof. Phyllis Smith for 20 years; Chief Craig Branch, Dean Pam Frederick, Assoc. Prof. Frances Lea, Prof. Karen Mittura, Sandra Monroe, Asst. Prof. Mike Shirazi and Beverly Unkle for 15 years; Assoc. Prof. Sherlyn A. Farrish-Barner, Susan Brown, Assoc. Dean Paula Gentry, Dean Shashuna Gray, Melba Morrozoff, Nancy Noel, Ron Williams and Assoc. Prof. Samantha Wilson for 10 years and Rosie Henderson, Michael Hurley, Kelly Rudnik and Dr. Jeanne Wesley for five years.

'From Bored Rebel to Proud Nerd: My Journey Through Germanna'

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GCC graduate and tutor Jessica Perez delivered the following speech, "From Bored Rebel to Proud Nerd: My Journey Through Germanna," to an auditorium filled with faculty and staff today at the Daniel Technology Center. It earned her a standing ovation.

Jessica Perez


Every Germanna student has a story. My story began when I was in the ninth grade when my math teacher imparted some advice to my mother during a meeting: "Mrs. Leonard, sometimes parents have to face the fact that their child is not very smart." The child she was speaking about was me and for the duration of my time in high school, I viewed its walls as a prison, and I became an expert at breaking out. And, if I was stuck behind the prison walls, I was determined to make the time interesting for my fellow students and teachers. 
On the day that all the seniors in my class were picking up their caps and gowns, my principal called me into the office to inform me that I would not be able to attend graduation unless I served thirty-three detentions in three days. She then went on to tell me that the reason why colleges were very selective was to ensure that they would not allow students like me. Though, in her defense, I think she was still mad at me for buying dead fish and hiding them all over the school as a prank. To be honest, her words didn't really affect me because I knew that I was not going to go to college; I was not smart enough and, even if I was, I did not have any money to pay for it. So, I left her office laughing because my time in prison was coming to an end. Freedom was upon me.
After high school, I began to work retail. As my high school boyfriend, later my husband, worked his way to an M.B.A., I worked my way through the ranks of retail management. In 2003, my husband landed a job with the government, and we moved from Ohio to Virginia. I soon began working as a manager at the Barnes and Noble in Springfield. And, I loved my job. I was surrounded by books, coffee, and great people. The hours, however, were exhausting. Anytime I would seem to be particularly exhausted, my husband would bring up the idea of going back to school. For many years, I placated him when he brought it up. I feigned my consideration of the subject because in the back of my mind, I still heard my ninth grade math teacher: "Mrs. Leonard, sometimes parents have to face the fact that their child is not very smart." I faced that fact, I did not need to prove it.
One day, my husband won. I must have been extremely tired because next thing I knew, we were filling out an application on the Germanna website and figuring out where and when I would be taking the COMPASS test. 
While driving to take the test, I was surprised at how close the Locust Grove Campus was to my house in Lake of the Woods. It's funny how you can live somewhere and have no idea what is around you. Of course, this is also the feeling I had as I took the test. It is still a bit of a haze for me, but I do remember that afterward, I met with a counselor who seemed extremely pleased with my test scores. She informed me that I tested into English 111 and Math 03. When I asked her what Math 03 was, she explained that it was a developmental math, but that I scored really high for someone who had been out of school for more than a decade. Of course, all I heard was "developmental math," and again, the words of my ninth grade math teacher began to play in my mind:" Sometimes Mrs. Leonard, parents have to face the fact that their child is not very smart."
Ann Lyons, Jessica Perez, Diane Critchfield

A couple of days later, I spoke to my advisor, Diane Critchfield. She wanted to arrange a meeting to help me register for classes. By this time, however, I knew that this whole college thing was a mistake, but I was going to try it to make my husband happy. So, I decided that when I went to meet Ms. Critchfield, I would be honest with her. She seemed amused. In fact, her response to my little disclaimer was to sign me up for her English 111 class. 
That first summer of school was amazing. I found myself enjoying learning again. Not only that, but I no longer viewed school like a prison. Every person I encountered throughout the day was so nice and helpful. Every morning the person behind the cashier window wished me a good morning, and Security always waved good-bye as I drove away. When I needed help with Blackboard, the people in the ACC happily walked me through the steps. When I needed help finding online journals for a research paper, the librarians patiently assisted me. Even those who I had never spoken to would smile at me as I walked down the hallway. I began to look forward to going to school. Not just for the classes, but also for the environment. Needless to say, I did not fail my first semester at Germanna, and I began to venture out and take classes at the Fredericksburg Campus and Daniel Center where I had similar experiences.
However, this did not completely convince me that I had the ability to succeed. I viewed each new semester as a new opportunity to fail. Especially because there was a math class involved. But, at the end of my first year, I received an Academic Award for English, and at the ceremony is when I met Ann Lyons for the first time. She asked me to come by the Locust Grove Tutoring office the following Tuesday to talk to her about becoming a tutor.
We had a nice conversation about what it means to be a tutor and how I would tutor writing. But then, Ann dropped a bomb on me, she asked me how I felt about tutoring math. And, I must add that only Ann Lyons would think my reaction was a positive in terms of hiring me because I turned white. I swear that the very idea caused my stomach to drop. She hired me on the spot.
Now, at this point, I have talked a lot about people who believed in me, but when did I begin to believe in myself? That has an interesting answer. 
As I was taking my own math classes, I also began tutoring people who were taking math classes that I had already taken. For some reason, maybe because it was not my math anymore, concepts that seemed very difficult to me began to make a lot of sense. Soon, I was able to explain a math concept in several different ways. This coincided with my own math classes seeming to be easier to me. I actually enjoyed my Math 152 class with Mr. Nickens so much that I took his Math 240 class that I did not need. Others began to notice this change before I did. It was not until I took a trip with Dr. Sam to Richmond that I realized what happened.
I was invited to go down to the State Assembly, along with many other students, to represent Germanna students. Because I lived out in Locust Grove, Dr. Sam offered to pick me up at the Locust Grove Campus. I thought that we were meeting everyone else at the Fredericksburg Campus, and it was not until we were passed the 126 mile marker on I-95 that I realized that I was wrong; we were on our way to Richmond, just me and Dr. Sam. But, Dr. Sam was very engaging. We talked about a variety of subjects until we landed on tutoring. He asked me what subject I liked to tutor the most, and the answer came out of my mouth before I could even think about what I was saying: math. 
That was the moment that my old ninth grade math teacher's words left my brain altogether. Those words had haunted me for almost twenty years, but at that moment, a simple answer to a simple question banned them from my mind forever. 

You see, all of you make up the experience that students have here at Germanna. Each of you play a part on a student's journey to better themselves. Some of the students that come here were not great students in high school. Some had horrible experiences with a teacher who did not believe in them. Some students have not been to school in many years and lack confidence in themselves and what they can bring to the classroom. I was all of these students. And I would like to thank all of you for the smiles you gave me in the hallway, the words of encouragement in the classroom, and for believing in me when I was not ready to believe in myself. Because whether or not I personally met you along my own journey, you were part of it, and I thank you for making Germanna Community College the place where people like me can come and realize our potential. Thank you.

Jessica Perez went on to become a Virginia All American Scholar and graduated summa cum laude from Germanna.

 
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