March News

School Psychology Program Gets National Approval

Georgian Court University’s Master of Arts in School Psychology/Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study program has been awarded national approval/recognition (conditional) by the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP). The announcement comes after the review of GCU’s 270-page application attesting to the program’s adherence to NASP’s training standards regarding program content, coursework, and field experiences.  NASP is one of the Specialized Professional Associations of the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). The association, which has given GCU conditional approval, represents more than 25,500 psychologists who work in schools, counseling centers, and other educational and health settings.
 
In its report to GCU, reviewers from NASP were very positive and complimentary, says Joseph Colford, Ph.D., director of the university’s school psychology program, whose alumni work with school-age children in schools and in a variety of other settings.  In schools alone, the demand for psychologists is high as they collaborate with school teachers and staff in addressing students’ academic and mental health needs, family issues, and other barriers to learning.
 
The awarding of NASP approval/recognition allows program graduates to earn the NASP’s Nationally Certified School Psychologist (NCSP) credential, a designation that employers often look for as they screen applicants for jobs.

Learn more about the GCU M.A. in School Psychology. 

Green to Gold: Georgian Court Wellness Center Takes Environmental Honors

Georgian Court University was awarded LEED gold certification for its Wellness Center, the university's eco-friendly athletics and academic building that highlights the school's commitment to environmental responsibility.

The 66,000-square-foot Wellness Center incorporates structural and aesthetic features that conserve energy and water, and make the most of sustainable materials. The recent Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) gold rating stems from the university's conscious efforts to construct a facility that works for students and the environment.

The LEED gold certification reinforces Georgian Court's holistic approach to promoting balance and well-being across the board, says GCU President Rosemary E. Jeffries, RSM, Ph.D. “The Wellness Center is more than a place where we can work toward physical wellness; it's evidence of the many ways we can grow and still be in concert—not conflict—with nature,” she says, noting the Sisters of Mercy's core value of respect for all living things. “And while the environment certainly benefits, so does the GCU community. The Wellness Center is a prime example of how we can work together toward sustainability.” Read more 

OceanFirst Foundation Awards $50K Grant to Georgian Court

OceanFirst Foundation of Toms River has awarded a $50,000 grant to Georgian Court University for scholarships that will help high school graduates from the Jersey Shore area pursue higher education. Georgian Court is one of four area colleges and universities to receive a share of the $200,000 that OceanFirst Foundation awarded for scholarships for tuition, fees and books to incoming full-time freshmen for the fall semester of 2010. GCU will evaluate scholarship applications and select 20 recipients to receive $2,500 awards. Selection decisions are made completely independent of OceanFirst Foundation. Scholarship applicants must reside and graduate from a high school within OceanFirst Bank’s market area, which includes all of Ocean County, select communities in Monmouth County, and Monroe Township in Middlesex County.

“Georgian Court University has always worked hard to help students find ways of financing their college dreams,” says GCU President Rosemary E. Jeffries, RSM, Ph.D. “Through the generosity of the OceanFirst Foundation, 20 deserving GCU freshmen this fall will be one step closer to their goals.” Read more 

New Year Brings New Leaders, New Location for GCU at Woodbridge

Georgian Court University at Woodbridge offers its first 2010 information session for prospective students on Thursday, January 21, from 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. The session will be held at the site’s new location at One Woodbridge Center, Suite 905 on the 9th floor. During the session, advisers will explain the programs offered, provide information on ways to pay for classes, offer online registration, and describe courses you will need to complete your degree.

GCU at Woodbridge’s new site is convenient to the Garden State Parkway, New Jersey Turnpike, Route 287, and Routes 1 and 9. Across the street from its previous location, GCU at Woodbridge’s new home offers convenient and well-lit parking, a student lounge, and four classrooms. In addition, a cafeteria on the fourth floor of the building is available to students. Read more 


GCU Welcomes 13 New Faculty Members in Fall 2009
Come back each month for more profiles!

Pamela E. Lowry, Ed.D., joins the School of Education as an assistant professor of education/special education. She recently served as supervisor of special services for the Little Silver, New Jersey, Board of Education, where she was responsible for overseeing special education programs, IEP development and implementation, and professional development. Dr. Lowry has also lectured at Monmouth  University, the College of New Jersey, and Rutgers University. She holds a Ed.D. in Special Education from Rutgers. For more information about the School of Education, click here.

Russell McDonald, Ph.D., joins the School of Arts and Humanities as an assistant professor of English. He comes to Georgian Court from Pennsylvania State University, where he held a postdoctoral teaching fellowship in the Department of English, where he taught upper-level literature course, general introductory literature courses, and first-year writing. Dr. McDonald also held a Mellon Foundation Postdoctoral Teaching Fellowship at Kalamazoo College. He holds a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Michigan.For more information about GCU's Department of English, click here.


The Write Stuff

English DepartmentGCU English major Katie Morgan is headed to Philadelphia this month to present her take on author Louise Erdrich’s thought-provoking novel, The Painted Drum. Katie’s presentation was recently selected by the Mid-Atlantic American Studies Association (MAASA), which will hold its conference at LaSalle University in mid-March. Katie will also join MAASA’s roundtable for undergraduate participants during the meeting. MAASA is a regional chapter of the well-known American Studies Association.

Learn more about the B.A. in English and student publications like The Fountain Spray and The Lion’s Tale.

 

A Watershed Moment

What does it take to get children thinking about water conservation? Just ask GCU science education students who designed a curriculum to help middle-school youngsters to examine their water consumption habits. The work of GCU’s Amanda Traina and Jen Mettielo is currently featured in the Barnegat Bay Beat, a quarterly publication of the Barnegat Bay National Estuary Program. The two also taught young learners how to share what they know about water conservation to motivate others, says Louise Wootton, Ph.D.,  CU professor of biology. The GCU student materials also were presented at the recent Alliance for New Jersey Environmental Education conference.

Learn more about GCU’s biology program and check out the GCU water conservation education project.

 

Critical Information

Whether they’re online, on the phone, on their laptops, or playing games with competitors a world away, today’s students are only one click away from the latest info on any given topic.

But having instant access isn’t enough: students must be able to collect information, analyze it, apply it to problems, and use what they’ve discovered in ways that are meaningful and effective.

In short, they must have information fluency---a skill experts define as the ability to incorporate information literacy, computer literacy, and critical thinking across academic fields, media formats and life experiences.

Georgian Court University faculty recently joined others from across the country to explore the topic during the 2010 Information Fluency in the Disciplines Workshop in Literature conference in New Orleans. GCU was selected from a field of 80 applicant teams vying for spots at the gathering. Co-sponsored by Association of College Research Libraries and the Council on Library and Information Resources, and funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the highly selective workshop included about 20 faculty teams representing independent colleges across the country. GCU’s representatives were: Paul R. Cappucci, Ph.D., an associate professor of English; Mary Chinery, Ph.D., associate professor of English and associate dean of Arts & Humanities and Sciences & Mathematics; and Mary Basso, M.L.S., humanities librarian.

Learn more about English and the GCU School of Arts & Humanities.

 

STUDENT LIFE/WILD

There’s so much happening on the GCU campus. Visit us often for highlights of Student Life programs and Women in Leadership Development (WILD), our renowned women’s leadership program. 

 

Alternative Spring Break


ServiceOnly a few weeks after lending a hand to families still suffering from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, GCU student volunteers are at it again---this time spending their spring break helping out in Camden.

The trip, headed by Tina Geiger, RSM, director GCU’s Service Learning program, is the latest example of the university’s commitment to helping others. The university recently was named to the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll, making this the fourth consecutive year that the Corporation for National and Community Service has recognized GCU’s dedication to volunteering, service-learning, and civic engagement.

Learn more about service learning at GCU.

 

Celebrating Women: Past and Present

Where do women turn for wisdom? That's one of the questions addressed in the Secrets of Women, a March 15-31 display of timeless tidbits and little-known facts about femininity. Members of Women in Leadership Development want the campus community to reflect on the information displayed in the lobby of the GCU Arts and Sciences building, and contribute their own examples of sage advice.

"We're hoping to create more awareness of women's issues, and at the same time, cultivate an appreciation of the shoulders on which we stand," says Georgian Court graduate assistant and MBA student Sandrine Holloway. 

WILD also will host a double-header film session at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 10 in the Little Theatre. Moviegoers will see two screenings of The Women, the 1939 classic and its 2008 remake. Both films explore themes of love, loyalty, marriage, friendship, and the difficult choices women must sometimes make.

In its third Women's History Month activitity, the women's leadership group will host Ladies Evening Out: A Fancy Hats Affair, at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, March 29 in GCU's historic Casino auditorium. Hats, often an expression of style and personality by the women who wear them, are the focal point of the sit-down dinner and entertainment event. The program is free to the GCU community; admission is $10 for the general public and those who attend without hats.

The point of it all, says Ms. Holloway, is to celebrate womanhood and have a good time. "We hope to inspire a feeling of what it means to belong to sisterhood of support," she says, "and most of all, have fun!"

For information, e-mail Alleyne Thomas at thom9691@georgian.edu.



Compassion through Fashion


When GCU students take to the runway next month, it won’t be to turn heads. Instead, models in the SGA-sponsored fashion show want to create global awareness about female access to education and raise enough money to send 1,000 impoverished African girls to school.

The April 7 show benefits the ongoing efforts of Mercy Global Concern, a project of the worldwide Sisters of Mercy at the United Nations. Mercy Global Concern estimates it takes about $50 to ensure that an African girl gets to go to school. GCU’s Student Government Association last fall pledged to work with Mercy Global Concern to help fund scholarships for girls across the continent. The campus goal is to raise $1,000 by May, says SGA president Brynn Walzer.

Learn more about SGA and student life programs at Georgian Court.

 

Youngsters Get the Royal Treatment

ExceptionalSo what happens when Ariel, Pocahontas and Belle meet members of the GCU Council for Exceptional Children? You get a very successful program for youngsters with autism and developmental disabilities, says Lynn DeCapua, Ph.D., a GCU assistant professor of education and licensed psychologist.

“Our GCU students created and implemented a very creative, multi-sensory program for youngsters with developmental disabilities,” says Dr. DeCapua. In their initial presentation at Cedar Grove Elementary School in Toms River, the GCU students led four learning stations, including Under the Sea with Ariel, Catch a Dream with Pocahontas, Beautiful Music with Belle, and Tigger Time.  

The chapter’s goal was to give youngsters a chance to engage in an enjoyable activity while developing their communication and interpersonal skills.

The Disney-themed activity has since sparked the interest of coordinators behind the Council for Exceptional Children’s national convention, slated for April 21-24 in Nashville. Students Nora O'Neill, president of the GCU chapter, and Allison Ripoll, vice president, will travel to the gathering to discuss their project in a poster session at the convention.   

 
Learn more about GCU and the Council for Exceptional Children.



 

 

Georgian Court University Presents

Interested in Georgian Court University Events?  Learn More

Check out our Spring 2010 Programs
The Spring 2010 Mosaic is here! Learn More 

Lectures-In-Song with Fred Miller
What would America be without immigrants? More specifically, what would American music be without the rainbow of foreign cultures that blended so indelibly into the American landscape during the 19th and 20th centuries? Join Fred Miller for an evening of unforgettable Irish-American songs. Enjoy a multicourse dinner of regional cuisine paired with traditional music and a multimedia presentation on the artist over dessert and coffee. Irish Presence in American Song will be Friday March 12 at 6:30 PM in the North Dining Room. $35 per person includes a multicourse dinner and presentation, reservations are required. Learn More

New Program!
The
 McAuley Institute for Lifelong Learning is a new institute tailored for audiences aged 50 or older who want to take advantage of college-level courses without tests, grades, or credits. The first five-week course for 2010 is 20th-Century Irish Innovators. This class, led by Hannah Means-Shannon, Ph.D., GCU lecturer in English, will consist of a study of five major Irish writers and three major genres spanning the literary developments of the 20th century. Learners will examine the Irish impact on the birth of modernism following World War I as well as the Irish invention of postmodernism in the wake of World War II and after. This class begins Friday, February 26, and runs through April 9 from 10:00 a.m.- 12:00 p.m.  Learn More

A Healthier You on The Horizon
Spend an evening with renowned Native American sculptor and Faith Keeper of the Oneida Wolf Clan, Diane Shenandoah. Through oral traditions and song, she will share Haudenosaunee legends and moral lessons, impart the importance of the social, spiritual, and emotional well-being of her people. Join award winning sculptor Diane Shenandoah, March 15, 6:00 PM in the Little Theater. It is $5 per person, FREE to current GCU students with I.D.; reservations are required. Learn More 

Vegetarian Society Presentation
The Georgian Court University Vegetarian Society will host "Veganism to Activism with Jasmin Singer," on Wednesday, March 17 at 5:30 p.m. in the Little Theatre. Ms. Singer, campaign manager for the animal rights organization Farm Sanctuary, will emphasize the health benefits of eating a plant-based diet. She will also discuss the problems that industrial farming creates for the environment, animals, and consumers. This program is free and open to the public; however reservations are required. Please RSVP by sending an e-mail to jc89877@georgian.edu.

 

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