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| Alaina Tackitt, at far end, leads Tampa session. |
by Anne W. Anderson
photos by Anne W. Anderson
PEL
students met recently with faculty program coordinators, academic
advisors, and other staff members recently to learn about new course
offerings, about the best order in which to take courses, and how to
take advantage of new articulation agreements and other opportunities.
About
a dozen students attended each session -- the first was held in Tampa
on Tuesday, July 19, and the second was held in St. Petersburg on
Tuesday, July 26.
At the Tampa session, PEL Academic
Advisor and Director of Writing Services Alaina Tackitt handed out
individual degree plans to students attending and reminded them briefly
what to look for on the report.
Program coordinators Catherine Griggs (American Studies and
Humanities), Naveen Malhotra (Business Management and Management), Anne
Geroux (Human Development), and James Welch (Organizational Studies)
described new courses and opportunities within their respective
disciplines, including
articulation agreements with Nova Southeastern
University, Stetson University College of Law, and Florida State
University.
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| (L-r) Christel Dykes, Madeline Fugate, and Kimberly Kelsey-Johnson read through material. |
Eckerd graudates have met the basic
requirements of every accredited college in the United States, in that
they have completed a major course of study, have completed general
education requirements, and have completed a certain number of courses.
The articulation agreements recognize that Eckerd's courses align
closely with ones the graduate schools require in their undergraduate
programs and that Eckerd students are thus prepared for graduate level
work.
Tackitt explained that elective courses --
the ones often seen as what is left over after the major and general
education requirements are met -- are what can make a student's degree
stand out.
"If
you have open electives," said PEL Associate Dean of Faculty, Margret
Skaftadottir, "look for courses that will stretch you and be a little
different from your major."
Childhood in America
(AM334H), for instance, was mentioned as a course that could be useful
to students in many different types of majors from human development to
business, especially considering the number of businesses that market
products to children and their parents.
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| (l-r) Alaina Tackitt, Professor James Welch, Sabrina Webby, Professor Anne Geroux, and Daryl Osburn. |
Tackitt also handed out draft versions of the 4-Term Schedule, then
walked through the courses, many of them new, being offered throughout
the year.
Professor Naveen Malhotra noted there are two new
focus areas in Business: Entrepreneurship and Healthcare Management.
Professor James Welch pointed out that a number of students who took the
Grant Development (MN318S / Fall 2) course this past year were actively
using the course to apply for grants.
Other
opportunities for students include the SIFE/ENACTUS program, the Life,
Career, and Personal Financial Planning course, and the PEL Honors
Program. PEL Honors Program students Daryl Osburn and Yadira Montes
Rivera encouraged students to consider applying for the program.
Following the group session, students and discipline coordinators broke into program-specific meetings.
Anne W. Anderson is PEL's director of blended and online learning
and also is co-editor of The PEL Connector.