Thursday, April 30, 2009

Meet Amy Comparon Tutoring Center Specialist


“The best moments of my time here at CCSJ are when I have the opportunity to see the light bulb go on, when they really get it,” Amy recalls with a smile. These moments of awareness and accomplishment are one of the things that propel Amy forward as the director of the tutoring center here at CCSJ. In the two years the tutoring center has been her hands, the center has grown in many ways. Amy has seen demand for the services continue to grow including more walk-ins and appointments. She has also seen the center grow from having only 2 computers and being very appointment driven, to an expansion including two rooms, (plus one for overflow) able to handle appointments and walk-ins with ease. The center also employs approximately 30 student tutors each year to assist fellow students with their studies. These tutors are spread out throughout the various class sections so that there will be a tutor available who is familiar with each professor and class section.
Additional resources have grown include the enhancement of Plato, a web-based based study aid originally used primarily to prepare students for Praxis, is now used as a study aid for many other classes as well. One college wide change that has driven growth at the center has been the advent of the learning communities this fall. “It is so helpful when the staff/faculty mentors physically bring their students up to the center to get help with their studies,” says Amy. In addition, she has seen a major shift in student’s attitudes the center. “It is no longer a place students are embarrassed to be seen, but many will just come, hang out and do their homework,” she observes. The tutoring center is just one aspect supporting the “family environment” here at CCSJ.

Amy has experienced this feel in many ways throughout her time here. A CCSJ graduate in 1999, Amy has served in the admissions office for 8 years before moving up to the tutoring center. “I have seen over the years and my time here that everyone really cares about the students, so many are on a first name basis, and no appointments are often necessary; you can just drop in to see someone,” she says when asked of her experience of CCSJ, culture. The tutoring center has evolved to serve this community based culture more and more effectively. Robert Torres, a student tutor here, finds great fulfillment in “helping students achieve success” and enjoys sharing his accounting expertise to help fellow students through their classes.



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Sunday, March 22, 2009

High School Guidance Counselor Podcast #2

Welcome to the second in a series of podcasts by CCSJ for Calumet region high school guidance counselors. Click on the arrow below to listen.








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Friday, March 20, 2009

Swing into Spring with First Tee


There is a unique opportunity available to all CCSJ students to volunteer in one of the fastest growing non-profit programs in the country. The First Tee of Hammond has been introducing the game of golf to kids (6 to 17) in Northwest Indiana for the past ten years. Located just a mile and a half south of campus at Lost Marsh golf club the First Tee offers its participants a 9 hole golf course, putting greens, and a driving range. Along with the chance to learn the game the First Tee also educates its students through a Life Skills experience program that promotes character development and the values taken from golf and crossing them over to everyday life.

Each year the First Tee is actively seeking members from the community to donate time to help shape young lives. Barry C. Tyler, the Executive Director says, “We are currently working diligently in order to improve our level of outreach along with our quality of programming. This will definitely be a big year for us as far as community involvement and without volunteers we will not be able to reach our full potential.” Here at CCSJ we strive to educate our students and staff members alike to find ways to serve in our local community. There is no time commitment whatsoever and oftentimes volunteers leave feeling like they received more than they gave. This is a great way to give back even if it is only a few hours a week. This also would be an asset to add to a potential resume in the future.

The First Tee program begins the first week of May and runs through the middle of October. If you are interested in learning more about the First Tee or would like to apply to be a volunteer you can reach their offices at:
Hammond Youth Golf Academy at Lost Marsh
901 129th Street
Hammond, IN 46320
http://www.thefirstteehammond.org
Barry Tyler Jr., Executive Director
BarryTyler@thefirstteehammond.org
(219) 932-4653

Seth Frank - CCSJ Financial Aid Counselor


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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Beyond our Borders



Attending a Catholic College such as CCSJ is a way to open your eyes to international events and to cultures other than your own. All students at CCSJ, in fact, will take Global Studies courses as part of their general education curriculum. CCSJ annual learning trips to Guatemala and Canada are open to all students. Student groups such as Los Amigos and the Black Student Union promote the exploration of non-white cultures. With this in mind, I recently traveled to Costa Rica and Nicaragua. As the son of a Chilean mother and a father who was a Director of the Peace Corps in Honduras, I have been blessed with international influences from my infancy. After graduation from college, I taught English as a Second Language both in my mother’s native country and later in Spain. During this time period, I was also fortunate enough to be able to travel through Mexico and Central America. Most importantly, I learned Spanish through this process.


My knowledge of Spanish has allowed me to learn a great deal from the residents of the countries in Latin America in which I have traveled. One of these conversations follows. While walking the main street in the old center of Managua, Nicaragua during my recent trip, I came across a sort of improvised shantytown built in what was clearly meant to be a city park. I was curious as to how this had come about. I stopped to speak with the children of a family who lived in one of the “houses.” The shelter consisted of a tarp strung over wooden posts (tree branches) pounded into the ground (see the photo above). The kids did not know why they were there. When I asked about their sleeping arrangements, they explained that the 12 members of the family who inhabited the space all slept on the ground. “On the dirt?!” I asked. “No. On pieces of cardboard,” the older of the children explained to me. Further up the street, I came across an elderly woman who was washing clothes in a basin between two more of the temporary shelters. I asked her why the shantytown had been constructed in the park. She explained that the residents had built the shantytown in protest. It turns out that the shantytown residents had worked previously in the banana industry in Chinandega Department, Nicaragua whose production had caused the workers serious health problems. The factory had been run by an American-Nicaraguan consortium. The workers demanded from the consortium compensation for their health problems. The consortium refused, and the Nicaragua government did nothing to help the workers’ plight, according to the elderly woman. As a protest, the workers had moved to Managua and taken up residence in the park. I admired the will of the factory workers and their determination to attain justice. I wished the woman well.

There were a number of encouraging signs that the region is progressing in positive ways, as well. I visited San Juan del Sur Nicaragua on my trip, a town that I had visited back in the mid- 80’s. Two decades ago, San Juan del Sur was nearly a ghost town. There was a single hotel in San Juan del Sur at the time, despite the fact that the town was adjacent to a beautiful beach. Running a fever at the time, there were no antibiotics available in the pharmacy. San Juan del Sur is now a thriving beach town with plenty of tourists both from abroad and from within Nicaragua. Open air restaurants line the beach. Clearly, tourism has proved a boon to the local economy. It remains to be seen whether the town becomes overdeveloped and loses its local charm.

While in Costa Rica, I learned that there was a very strong support system for both health insurance and retirement in that country. The taxi driver who took me back to the airport on my last day in San Jose told me that even he had been required to contribute. As a result, he was planning on living a fairly comfortable retirement within a few years. I was very impressed that a “third world” country such as Costa Rica had peacefully gone about creating a health and retirement system that appeared to be serving its population in very positive ways.

Though my trip to Costa Rica-Nicaragua had lasted just 8 days, I felt immensely wiser upon returning to my position at CCSJ. You can learn a lot from people and places that are forgotten by the glamorizing effects of mass media. Education is indeed a lifelong experience.


CW


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Sunday, March 1, 2009

CCSJ Athletics Keeps Growing

New for the 2009-2010 academic year at CCSJ are NAIA level sport's in wrestling for men and competitive dance for women. This will bring to 19 the total number of intercollegiate sports offered at CCSJ. Having grown up in Iowa City Iowa, I learned first hand about the excitement that a competitive wrestling team can bring to a collegiate institution. My alma mater, the University of Iowa, has produced 21 national championship NCAA wrestling teams. It was not unusual for Carver-Hawkeye arena to be packed with upwards of 17,000 screaming fans for big matches against such arch rivals as Iowa State and Oklahoma. We're looking forward to CCSJ's wrestling team creating a similar level of intensity on our home campus.

"It is our goal in the first year to bring in 20 wrestlers minimum (2 per weight class). There could be a good opportunity of exceeding this goal based on the response of having this program and the fact that we are the only NAIA school in Indiana to have the sport," states Peter Haring, CCSJ Athletics Director. The 20 wrestlers would give CCSJ two in each of the ten weight classes.

Competitive dance should also have an immediate impact this fall at CCSJ. "The first year target for dancing will be 12-15," states Haring. "That is average for those schools who offer competitive dance as a sport. The nice things about dance is that the roster could get up to 20-24 and there would not be a big conflict over participation time because they all would be actively dancing. Competitive dance will be a unique sport that will show our diversity as an athletic department. The team that will be organized will have the opportunity to add to the spirit and entertainment of our home sports while also getting the chance to train and compete for national recognition.”

With the new CCSJ Athletics-Community Center set to open in June of this year, the College will be set to confirm its title as the leader in intercollegiate sports in the Calumet region.


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Friday, February 27, 2009

FA Haiku #4

The Chosen


Must hand in your docs
If you’re verified this year
We’ll check it all out



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Sunday, February 22, 2009

FAFSA Completion Night and More!

Fresh on the heels of our Spring Semester Open House, The CCSJ Office of Admissions and Financial Aid wants you to know that we have another big event, FAFSA Completion Night, coming up this Thursday, February 26, from 5 p.m. - 7 p.m. in Room 420. This is your opportunity to complete your FAFSA with the assistance of a CCSJ Financial Aid Counselor. All you need to do is bring your (and your parents' if you are a dependent student) 2008 tax information with you and we will help walk you through the entire FAFSA process. Of course, you will be filing your form online through the main FAFSA website. If you are a dependent student we are hoping that you will invite your parents to attend the FAFSA Completion Night with you. HOep to see you there...

If you missed the Open House on Saturday, you missed out on a great opportunity to get to know the College. Dr. Barbara Goodman, Professor of English at CCSJ, delivered a stirring keynote address on the importance of academics at CCSJ. We offered an "All CCSJ Panel" segment in which Open House attendees were invited to fire questions at a CCSJ panel that included Dr. Eugene Finnegan, Professor of Religious Studies, Dionne Jones-Malone, Director of Student Support Services, Andy Marks, Director of Athletics Media Relations and head women's volleyball coach, and student Kenyetta Freeman. I gave a presentation on 10 great reasons to attend CCSJ. Finally tours were given of the college, and guests were invited to meet with admissions and financial aid personnel after the end of the event. It was a great day to be part of the CCSJ family.



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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Why We Vote

It seems like only yesterday that the maximum Pell Grant was stuck on $4050. With tuition increasing at a rate of 5-7% per year at most colleges, lower income students were falling further and further behind in their ability to afford a college education. From the 2003-2004 through the 2006-2007 award years there was no increase in the maximum Pell grant. In the last two years, the maximum award has increased to $4731. As I write these words, Congress is trying to hammer out a compromise on the House and Senate versions of the economic stimulus package put forth by President Obama. While there are details to be decided on in the bill, what is certain is that the maximum Pell will be increasing by $500.

At CCSJ one third of our students in Traditional programs receive the maximum Pell award and over half receive at least some Pell funds. Congress has also created the ACG and SMART grants in the last few years. These awards are designed to provide funds to low income students who take a rigorous curriculum at the high school level and for those who major in Math or Science related fields in the final two years of college. Also benefiting students is an annual decrease in subsidized loan interest rates that was mandated by Congress. The interest rate will decrease from 6.8% in 2007-2008 to 3.4% in 2011-2012. All of these changes reflect a growing awareness that we need a national commitment to helping students pursue a college education if we are to remain competitive as a nation.

It doesn't surprise me that recent polls show a growing awareness of the political arena among the U.S. college student population. With so much at stake, it is important that prospective and current students are aware that their votes count.

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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Independents Days

CCSJ is proud to be one of the 31 independent colleges of Indiana. Independent colleges do not depend on direct state funding for opertational expenses. ICI schools offer smaller classes on less expansive campuses, and, like CCSJ, in many cases are affiliated with founding religious orders. CCSJ offers the lowest annual tuition of any of the four-year ICI colleges and universities.

ICI's mission statement follows:

"The Independent Colleges of Indiana (ICI) develops and enhances the competitive standing of its 31 member independent, nonprofit, regionally-accredited, degree-granting colleges and universities and strives to assure opportunity and choice in higher education for all students."


Check out the graduation rates of students enrolled at ICI schools in comparison to students enrolled at public instiutions:

Percent Graduating in 4 Years
60% (compared to 29% at state institutions)
Percent Graduating in 6 Years
70% (compared to 52% at state institutions)
Percent of Alums w/Graduate or Professional Degrees
38% (compared to 23% of state graduates

Join CCSJ and experience the full ICI experience!



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Monday, January 26, 2009

CCSJ Admissions Classic

All prospective CCSJ students are invited at no charge to come see the Crimson Wave play crosstown rival PUC at the Hammond Civic Center on Saturday, February 7 with the women's basketball game beginning at 1 p.m. and the men's game tipping off at 3 p.m. Admissions staff will be on hand to give you an admissions packet and gift bag and to answer your questions. Check out WAVE highlights in the video below. CW





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FA Haiku #3 - FAFSA Time

FAFSA Time


The PIN it comes first
Ninety nine questions follow
We’re there for you now



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Monday, January 19, 2009

MLK Day: A Reason to Believe

Calumet College of St. Joseph has been called by U.S. News and World Report the most diverse liberal arts college in the Midwest. As we celebrate Martin Luther King Day 2009, CCSJ's diversity is no small feat. As a liberal admissions college, CCSJ pledges to admit any student, regardless of family income, who shows the potential for success at the college level. And we have been doing this for over fifty years. CCSJ may not have the ivy covered buildings or nine digit endowments of the institutions who deny more students than they admit, but for the students who attend our institution, in many cases, they are the first members of their family to advance beyond the level of high school and seek the dream of success in higher education.

Calumet College of St. Joseph offers the lowest tuition for a private, four-year college in the state of Indiana. The College also offers over $2,000,000 in need and merit based financial assistance. The fact that 49% of our first time students are of Hispanic or African American origin is a source of great pride at CCSJ. Ours is truly an institution with a big tent. All our welcome. All are given a chance to succeed. CCSJ reflects the diversity of the communities surrounding the campus. This is what Martin Luther King's dream symbolized. At CCSJ we live the reality of that vision.

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

CCSJ High School Counselor Podcast #1

Welcome to the first ever Calumet College of St. Joseph High School Guidance Counselor Podcast. Just click on the button below to hear updates on what is happening on the CCSJ campus. CW









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