3 14 17 collegian fall vol 63 issue 16 final

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Collegian Cayuga Community College Auburn & Fulton, New York

cayugacollegian@gmail.com

CAYUGABRIEFS Women’s Studies speaker to present March 15th @11 AM The Student Activities Board in conjunction with the Professional Growth Committee, presents speaker Sally Sayles-Hannon in honor of Women’s History Month. Her speech “Important Figures, Facts, and Futures: Gender Inequality and Inequity” will be presented on Wednesday, March 15th beginning at 11 AM in Room M319 on the Auburn campus. Sally Sayles-Hannon is a Ph.D. candidate in Cultural Foundations of Education and former McNair Fellow at Syracuse University. She holds an M.A. in Women’s Studies from Texas Woman’s University and a B.S. in Liberal Studies with an emphasis in feminist pedagogies from Grand Valley State University in Grand Rapids, Michigan. As a diversity educator and active community organizer/ advocate in Central New York, Sayles-Hannon has a unique and critical interest in exploring issues of social inequality and education. She has been a lecturer/ instructor at four U.S. universities and colleges. Most recently, she held a lecturer position at Nazareth College in Rochester, NY in Social and Psychological Foundations of Education. Her recent research emphasizes the need to be critical of how civility functions in diverse classrooms; that is, to be aware of how our everyday “niceness” can, if we are not vigilant, reinforce and replicate the inequality we want to dismantle. She has shared her ideas and research at conferences and publications nationally and internationally. Notably, she was one of five invited critics for an author-meets-critics symposium of Meira Levinson’s important book, No Citizen Left Behind, which was later published in Studies in Philosophy and Education.

Join the staff of The Cayuga Collegian Just email:

cayugacollegian@gmail.com

Vol. 63 Issue 16

March 14, 2017

CCC SPARTAN BOWLER MAKES HISTORY! Andrew Kopec is the first-ever Spartan to win a USBC Sectional Singles Championship Andrew Kopec of Auburn is the firstever Spartan to win a USBC Sectional Singles Championship Friday, March 10th, in Allentown, PA. The Cayuga CC freshman finished first in the sectional out of 161 total bowlers which includes the best single bowlers from both four-year and two-year institutions. Kopec scored an incredible six-game total of 1409 pins and averaged 235/game to best Andrew Dekowski from William Patterson University by 16 pins. With his championship, Kopec is one of only five bowlers from the Allentown Sectional to advance to the USBC

Singles National Championships beginning April 18 in Baton Rouge, LA. Out of a total of four USBC sectional qualifier locations, (including Dallas, TX, Smyrna, TN and Addison, IL), Kopec was the lone bowler who topped the 1400 pin total at all sites which gave him the highest total score out of 722 bowlers from across the country! He also is the only junior college bowler in the country to advance.

Best of luck to Andrew as he moves on to the USBC Championships!

A conversation with CCC President Durant By Gabby Rizzo, editor-in-chief

Coming to the end of his second year as President, Dr. Durant gave some information about his background, his view of the college, and his thoughts on Governor Cuomo’s free SUNY tuition proposal. WHAT’S YOUR BACKGROUND, WHERE ARE YOU FROM? “I’m a native New Yorker, lived in New York my entire life, grew up in Northern New York, spent a number of years in the capital region, and then when I came out here in August of 2015 I relocated in Auburn.” HOW ARE YOU LIKING AUBURN? “I’m really enjoying Auburn, it’s a great community, it’s been very welcoming to me and to our family. I found the entire county to be supportive of the college, and it’s still inspiring to run into people all the time and meet people all the time who themselves have attended CCC, or their children have, and how many lives the institution has influenced for many many years and it’s great to be a part of that and to live and work in this community.” Is that what attracted you to CCC? “Yeah, you know, I was fortunate to come out here to interview and explore the community, and learn about the college, my wife and I thought it would be a great place to be, and certainly have the Finger Lakes, and proximity to a number of cities and still near our families, but we were really looking for a community that we could raise our family. We have four children, two school aged children who have acclimated nicely to their schools and just really enjoying it.” WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF ABOUT THE COLLEGE? “I’m proud to be apart of a community that I think is so dedicated. We have a dedicated and talented faculty and staff, our students are tremendous, they’re doing remarkable things in many different disciplines, and I’m just very honored to be a part of it, and to work with such amazing people, and to serve students, and just to be a small part of their own journey, and that’s just very rewarding work.” WHAT IS YOUR VISION FOR THE COLLEGE? “Our vision is to continue to be certainly student focused, we want to be an institution

that continues to have high quality programs that provide students pathway for transfer to four year schools. We want to continue to be responsive to commuting needs for program development and supporting local employers, and we want to make sure that we are continually being mindful of how do we support students and helping them reach their goals, so we want if students enroll and their goal is to graduate or to get a certificate or to transfer that we do our part to help support the student to achieve their goal and I think we’re very well equipped to do that.” HOW ABOUT ALL THOSE ROOM CHANGES? “So we are in what I’d say the infant stages of trying to evaluate our space and to see if there are creative solutions we could have to improve service, improve academic spaces to try to modernize our facilities, to help support our faculty and our students, and we know there’s been shuffling of services and of offices and certainly it’s not intended to create confusion or frustration, but I would say that we’re in a process of making sure that we are maximizing the facilities that we have and helping to support our faculty, and ultimately support our students in an improved way. We appreciate the patience of everyone because we know it’s not always easy but we’re hopeful to continue to make enhancements to our campus and our future. On the Fulton Campus, we continue to have similar discussions of what are some future needs that are maybe needed there, service wise and space wise, and having a number of conversations to really identify our next phase.” ANY ADVICE FOR GRADUATING AND TRANSFERRING STUDENTS? “You know as students are approaching their last semester and commencement, I always hope that students take a second to embrace the moment and certainly enjoy their last few weeks, take a few deep breaths, recognize that they’re accomplishing something important and that they worked hard to be at the point where they’re thinking of transferring and they’re looking at being a college graduate and those are remarkable feats, that should not be lost, and i know sometimes that we’re focused on getting through the semester and preparing for exams and

CCC PRESIDENT DR. DURANT midterms, and moving through that, sometimes it’s hard to take a few moments to say you know what, you should be proud of yourselves. You should recognize that this is an important moment for your journey and we’re very proud of you.” How about returning students? “Well, for returning students, I think it’s continually important for them to not only be mindful to keep focused on what their goals are and to keep working hard, but that there’s a prize in front of them that’s worthy to do. Also, I hope that our returning students are taking advantage of all that we offer, outside of the classroom as well, and that they’re building relationships with people and exploring all that we have both inside and out of the classroom, to really make sure that they have a meaningful college experience and the college, you know, sometimes it’s hard with our busy lives and all that we’re trying to balance and trying to focus on our studies, but there are a number of other ways to enjoy the experience itself, and develop relationships and friendships that are important. I continually encourage people to challenge themselves and take new endeavors if they can and college is a great place to be able to explore, specifically when it comes to events and other activities that the college offers. CONTINUED ON BACK PAGE

THE OFFICIAL STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE


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