Monday, January 11, 2016

PEL & Residential Alumni & Students host Fun Day for children in crisis centers


Back row l-r: Unidentified residential student; Madeline Streilein ’18; Kyla Isakson ’19; Anjali Boyd ’19; unidentified residential student; Bob Albury PEL ’09; Anna Klingenberg ’15, Campus Activities Intern; John Alchin; Tina Horn PEL ’14; Steve Haftke  Front row l-r: Todd DeLozier PEL ’09; Jenna Behnke ‘15, AmeriCorps VISTA Intern in Office of Service Learning; Peggy Albury PEL ’13; Donna Littell ’75, PEL Marketing Coordinator; Pam Butler PEL ’19; Janice Umbarger-LeFebvre PEL ’19; Jerry Kyte PEL ’17; Elissa Alchin ’14; Jamison DeLozier; Not pictured are Dr. Ron Porter, Director of Service Learning,Connie Murphy PEL ‘08, Sydney Cavero, Maggie Cooper, Nick Dalton, Matthew de Braun, Jesie Felipe, Matthew Hein, and Alyssa Troxel.

by Amanda Hagood

On Saturday, November 14th, Hough quadrangle came to life with the sound of laughter as Eckerd volunteers welcomed 48 children and eight staff members from the St. Petersburg Salvation Army's Sallie House and Children’s Village, two crisis shelters serving local children, to a campus-wide fun day. A group of 30 volunteers, including PEL and residential students, alumni, staff, and faculty, hosted an array of activities for the young visitors, who played field games, read stories, created brightly colored sand pictures, learned about marine animals in touch tanks provided by the Galbraith Marine Science Lab, and ate lunch in the dining hall.

Rose Harris, Director of Children's Services for the St. Petersburg Salvation Army' Sallie House and the Children's Village, said the children and teens who attended ranged from age 1 to 17 and that the children seemed to thoroughly enjoy themselves.

Children created colorful sand paintings.
"We have volunteers who come to us," Harris said, "but it's not often that the children are invited to a college."

Harris noted that, particularly for older students, activities such as the visit to Eckerd can help them see new possibilities for their own futures.

"We are always in favor of keeping the kids busy, getting them out of the [shelter] houses, stopping negative patterns of behavior, and teaching them the importance of getting an education," Harris said. 

The event, sponsored by the Program for Experienced Learners and the Offices of Service Learning and Campus Activities, was spearheaded by PEL alumna Lisa Alchin ’14, with support from PEL Marketing Coordinator Donna Littell ’75. Alchin first began her relationship with Sallie House while searching for internship opportunities in Professor Haukur Matthiasson’s human development course.

“I wanted to immerse myself in the day-to-day lives of the children and the staff in the crisis shelter in order to deepen my understanding of their experiences and needs," Alchin said. "I also wanted to understand the organization with a ‘macro’ view—from counseling to politics to processes—every aspect.”

With a fellow student’s help, Alchin connected with Harris and developed an internship that allowed her to work closely with Harris in performing administrative duties. The internship exposed her to multiple facets of serving children in crisis.

Beyond this work, Alchin’s personal and professional interest in the field of child services continued to grow. “The internships left me wanting more,” she explained. “I knew then that I wanted to be a leader in the field of child services.” After graduation, Alchin continued her work with Sallie House as a volunteer, and she currently is pursuing a master's degree in Leadership in Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health at the University of South Florida.

Organizing the Fun Day event allowed Alchin to share her passion with a larger community, build upon her expertise, and create a positive experience in the lives of the young visitors.

“The volunteers were amazing and the children could feel that the people at Eckerd that day cared about them. The activities were the vehicle for meaningful and caring interactions with the volunteers and the children all day,” she said.

Left: An Eckerd student (r) shows a child some of the wonders of the sea at the Galbraith Marine 
Science Lab as part of the Fun Day event in November.

It wasn't just the children who benefitted, according to Jenna Behnke '15, AmeriCorps VISTA intern in the Office of Service Learning.

"The event brought multiple generations together for a day of fun and conversation," Behnke said.

Littell agreed, adding that PEL students and residential students don't often have the opportunity to work together on a community project.

"It was gratifying to watch so many different groups across campus come together for the children," she said.

Overall, Alchin felt the event was a great success, with participants from across the Eckerd community working together for the benefit of wonderful group of children, making the all important connection between the lessons learned in the classroom and the communities in which we live and work. Volunteers left with a clearer sense of the important work that Sallie House does for some of the most vulnerable members of our community, and the children left, as Alchin noted, with a broader sense of perspective about what the next chapters of their lives might hold. “Knowing that they are welcome [at Eckerd],” she noted, “could change their education trajectory in a positive way.”

The Sallie House Fun Day was one of several events organized by the PEL Alumni Advisory Committee, a group of alumni dedicated to engaging the alumni community and raising awareness of PEL in the broader Tampa Bay community. For more information about this group, please contact Donna Littell (litteldj@eckerd.edu) or visit the PEL Alumni Services page.

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Jan 16-23: FREE Author Events and PEL Student Appreciation Day

Writers in Paradise Evening Reading Series

The Writers in Paradise Evening Reading Series is free and open to the public. All readings take place in Miller Auditorium at Eckerd College and begin at 8:00 pm., followed immediately by author signings. A light reception and book sale begins at 7:30 pm. No tickets or reservations are required.
Eckerd graduate Dennis Lehane
 

PEL Student Appreciation Day 2016

for PEL students, alumni, faculty, and staff ~

January 23, 2-5 p.m. at the GO Pavilion on the main Eckerd campus -- 

bring your family!


Take a boatride and see the campus from the water!

Enjoy boat rides, games for all ages, music, a bounce house, and more at the PEL Student Appreciation Day on Saturday, January 23, from 2-5 p.m. 

We will gather under the GO Pavilion near the tennis courts and recreations fields. But feel free to explore the waterfront area and to wander the beautiful grounds of the Eckerd College main campus -- your campus!

The GO Pavilion is near the tennis courts and recreation fields.


Are you a tennis enthusiast?  Bring your racket for a free clinic with Professor Sergei Novikov!

Food and beverages are provided.

 

Explore Three Paths to Career Success at (FREE) Tampa Campus Lunch & Learn



The Tampa Campus is at 1300 Westshore Blvd. (south side).

Yes, there is such a thing as a FREE LUNCH!  Thursday, January 21 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m.

Eckerd PEL Tampa Campus at 1300 Westshore Blvd. (2nd floor) -- park and enter in back.

Students, alumni, friends, and employers are invited to attend.

 RSVP by calling 813-813-282-0002 or by emailing PEL@eckerd.edu.

 

Why do so many professionals reach mid-career and find they are not as satisfied with their career as they’d like to be?­  Many people have heard the expression “up or out” and think that moving up in their organization is their only career path option, regardless of whether managing others is of interest.

"We all have seen it happen in businesses, where someone who is strong as an individual contributor gets promoted into a management role and fails miserably," said Kathy McDonald, Director of Admisions and Recruitment for Eckerd College's Program for Experienced Learners (PEL). "Not everyone has the desire or interest to manage others, and moving up is not the only way to have a successful career."

Plus, McDonald noted, most organizations only have a small number of leaders. Most people will not end up in one of those positions via the Organizational Climber path. But that means most people need find other ways to succeed and to find personal satisfaction in their work.

“Some people prefer to build an expertise in one functional area to do so via the Master Craftsman path," McDonald explained. "And for those people who seek to constantly learn and grow, the Continuous Learner path recognizes that learning is what keeps work stimulating.”

 McDonald and Mary Anderson '10, a career specialist in Eckerd College's Career Services department, will discuss the three paths to career growth as well as provide direction in building successful networking strategies and in developing a personal brand at a January 21st Lunch & Learn. The free event will be held at Eckerd’s Tampa Campus at 1300 Westshore Blvd. and is open to anyone who would like to attend.  

A light lunch will be provided.  To RSVP for the event, call 813-282-0002 or email PEL@eckerd.edu. Career paths are not one-size-fits-all. Find out which path is for you!

Tampa Campus Grows: Expanding Opportunities at the Tampa Center Means Less Travel Time for Students

The Tampa Campus is in an office building at 1300 Westshore Blvd.
PEL students now will be able to complete 50% or more of their courses at the Tampa Center, thanks to a successful proposal submitted to the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) Commission on Colleges this past September.

Tampa Center advisor Alaina Tackitt, noted the success of the proposal should help current students and should attract new students.

"Because we now can offer more capstone courses at the Tampa Center," Tackitt said, "students won't face as much travel time to the St. Petersburg campus, making this a more convenient location for Hillsborough area people."

The success of this proposal represents the tireless efforts of the Eckerd faculty members and staff who worked to compile lengthy supporting documents and to answer the many questions posed by the SACS site committee. 

Before departing, the committee praised President Eastman and Dean Harrison for the high quality of the Program for Experienced Learners, noting that the students they interviewed cited both academic rigor and personal growth as significant parts of the PEL experience.

Go Tritons!

Eleven December Graduates, Seven Inductees, Alumni News, and a New PEL Baby!





courtesy of SweetClipArt.com
CONGRATULATIONS!!!

Warmest congratulations to these PEL students who completed their programs of studies and graduated in December 2015. :
Nancy Bebout (H), Organizational Studies
April D. Griffin (HH), Organizational Studies
Tonya Y. Holden, American Studies
Matthew Knight, International Business
Joy A. Langone (D), Human Development
Kelly A. McCann, Humanities
Kathleen A. Nix (HH), Creative Writing
Annie M. Sergeant (HH), Human Development
Tami L. Toms (D), Humanities
Rachael Wolff (HH), Human Development
Kristen M. Wright (HH), American Studies

H - Honors; HH - High Honors; D - Distinction


 l-r: Professor Catherine Griggs, Tami Toms, Jasmine Rothgeb, Noel Lake, Professor Gregory Padgett, JoAnn Miller, and Kristen Wright attended the induction ceremony for Phi Alpha Theta. Not shown are Kelly McCann and Valerie Martin.
BRAVO to the following PEL students who, along with several residential students, were inducted into Phi Alpha Theta, a history honor society, in November 2015:
Noel Lake     Valerie Martin
Kelly McCann     JoAnn Miller
Jasmine Rothgeb     Tami Toms
Kristen Wright

Alumni News

  •  Rev. Roy Allison '03 (Business Management), who subsequently earned a Master in Divinity from Nashota House and who serves at St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Tampa, was one of several area spiritual leaders featured in a recent Tampa Tribune article about Advent.
  • Anne Anderson '07 (Creative Writing), who subsequently earned an M.A. in Journalism from the University of Alabama, has been appointed director of blended and online learning at Eckerd College's Program for Experienced Learners.
  • Michele Bredal '15 (Visual Arts) has been appointed events and volunteer coordinator at Dunedin Fine Art Center.
  • Claudia Smith '13 (Management) recently earned her M.B.A. in Business Administration and Management through St. Leo University.
  • Thomas J. (T.J.) Stoll '15 (Management) has begun pursuing an M.S. in Finance through Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Scott Warfel '10 (American Studies), who subsequently earned an M.S.A. in film and media studies from Arizona State University, has been appointed director of performing arts at Ransom Everglades School in Coconut Grove, Florida.
Remembering . . . Karen Figg Salmon '89 and Edward Rubertas '02, PEL alumni, and Maurice Harris, PEL student, whose recent deaths we mourn and whose lives we celebrate.

Share your news with us by emailing pel@eckerd.edu. Please include the year you graduated from Eckerd and your major.

 

PEL Professor Helen Wallace is St. Petersburg's newest Poet Laureate / PEL Professor Peter Meinke named Florida Poet Laureate


The St. Petersburg City Council proclaimed Eckerd College Professor Helen Pruitt Wallace Poet Laureate of St. Petersburg, beginning in January 2016.

Helen succeeds Emeritus Professor Peter Meinke, who earlier this year was selected by a committee with the Florida Division of Cultural Affairs to be appointed Poet Laureate of Florida by Governor Scott.

Watch and listen to their WTSP Studio 10 interview here!

PEL Staff & Creative Writing Alums attend Helen Wallace's induction as St. Petersburg's Poet Laureate (l-r: Margret Skaftadottir, Patti Cooksey '97, Shantell Smithson '09, Anne Ney '07, Sonia Quinones '07, Angie Jones '12, and poet Wendy Buffington).

Faculty & Staff News

 
Amanda Hagood's sestina, "Wood Parade," won second place in the Final Draft: St Pete Stories contest sponsored by Keep St. Pete Lit

Wecome, Kathy McDonald, PEL Director of Admission and Recruitment!  With offices at both PEL campuses, Kathy will help us identify new potential PEL students across the Tampa Bay area. To learn more about Kathy, read Craig Anderson's article here, then stop by and say 'hello'!

New PEL Baby!



We rejoice with PEL Executive Director Amanda Hagood and her husband, Daniel Spoth, assistant professor of literature at Eckerd, in the birth of their son, James Claybrooke Spoth, who was born December 21, 2015.

This happy little guy arrived a bit earlier than expected, but both mother and son are doing well.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Business Class Skypes to China: The Business of Intercultural Communication


Left: Students in Tom Krzesinski's International Business class Skype with Sam Goodman, a Canadian-American businessman and entrepreneur who has lived in China for the last 20 years. 

Below: PEL Senior Becky Goodman introduces her brother, Sam, to the class. Sam, who Skyped in from Beijing, was just beginning his day as PEL students were just ending theirs.

 
By Amanda Hagood

What will be the impact of the recent relaxation of China’s one child policy on its aging workforce? To what extent has Chinese traditional medicine been integrated into its growing healthcare industry?

Kacee Quinn watches as Brijette Carter asks a question.
































































































Students in Tom Krzesinski’s International Business 260 course recently posed these and other questions in a virtual town hall conversation with international entrepreneur Sam Goodman.

Goodman, who was introduced by his sister, Becky Goodman, a PEL senior Business Management major, spoke to the group via Skype from his home in Beijing. He offered insights on Chinese culture and economics based on a wide-ranging career that has included founding a corporate catering business, negotiating for Westinghouse Nuclear to build a nuclear power plant, launching numerous online platforms for promoting tourist destinations and production houses, and publishing Where East Eats West: The Street-Smarts Guide to Business in China, which has been included in the MBA curriculum for Boston College, Rutgers, and the University of Texas.

Goodman said that while some differences are obvious, many differences are more subtle.

For instance, Krzesinski remarked later, when Goodman was asked what the concerns were over infringing on intellectual property rights, Goodman appeared to stumble over answering the question to the point that it appeared the Skype connection was being lost.

Thomas Psyche watches as Calvin Marshall asks about pollution.
"It took a bit for us to 'get it,'" Krzesinski said, explaining that Goodman was attempting to avoid Tom's question, important to international business colleagues. "He basically was telling us the concept of 'infringement' didn't exist."

In response to student Calvin Marshall's question about China's environmental policies, Goodman recommended students watch Chai Jing's 2015 documentary Under the Dome, which explores the issue of air pollution in China.

While the lively conversation, which lasted about 75 minutes, covered everything from China’s education system, to environmental issues, to the growth of Starbucks in Chinese cities, Goodman’s message remained consistent: do your homework. For any enterprise to succeed, it must be grounded in knowledge of local culture, Goodman said. Do your research, ask lots of questions, and understand the “little differences” that make a significant difference.

Editor's Note: An earlier edition of this article misidentified the student asking a question in the last image and in the corresponding text of the article. The correction was made on 12/08/2015.

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Welcome, Kathy McDonald!



Kathy McDonald, PEL's new Director of Admission and Recruitment

by Craig Anderson
In November, the PEL Program welcomed its new Director of Admission and Recruitment, Kathy McDonald. Kathy moved to the Tampa Bay area from Chicago eleven years ago with her husband, John, and children, Samantha and Liam. 

The family arrived in the Sunshine State in 2004, a year also marked by multiple hurricanes. “I wondered if the hurricanes were some sort of sign,” Kathy admits, “but we persevered.”

Prior to coming to Eckerd, Kathy served as the Associate Vice President of Marketing for Bisk Education, a role that helped prepare her for the PEL program. 

 “I have always wanted to work for an institution of higher learning,” Kathy says. “At Bisk, I came to appreciate adult learners and the unique needs that they have.” 

This appreciation for experienced learners made the PEL program seem like a perfect fit. 

“When I am out in the community and meet PEL alumni, there is always a tremendous amount of pride in the program,” Kathy says. She also recognizes that “a lot of people still don’t know that we are here, and that is an exciting opportunity.” 

Kathy points to the opportunities to learn and to grow as the element that keeps works fun. She also views her new position as the chance to help develop the next generation of leaders. 

One of the aspects of working in the PEL program that is exciting for her is the chance to help adult learners revisit their life goals, something she understands personally.

"In 2000, I fulfilled a dream I had had since I was in second grade when I co-authored a book, Creating Your Life Collage: Strategies for Solving the Work/Life Dilemma," Kathy said. The book was published by Three Rivers Press, a division of Random House. 

“For many [adults], there is a goal or a dream that may have been put on hold,” she says, “and now they have the opportunity to achieve it. Their dream may have been delayed, but they didn’t give up.”