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A Tea-lightful Business

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A Tea-lightful Business

“There is a large warehouse-like building in Brooklyn called ‘Industry City’, which used to be a factory but has been completely renovated,” says Queens resident Soomee Suh.  “Earlier in the year, my business partner Chantha Uy and I thought, ‘This is the perfect place to launch our business.’”

And they did.

This fall, Ninja Bubble Tea officially opened its doors inside of Industry City. An open, airy, storefront, Soomee explains what bubble tea is, and how it works.

“Bubble tea originated in Taiwan and is basically a dessert you can drink. After the tea is vigorously shaken in a special machine, a layer of foam forms on the top, and you can drink the tea cold or warm,” she says. “At our store, we offer the teas in various degrees of sweetness, and flavors include Lychee, Green tea, Black tea, and more.” The flavors are enhanced with little chewy, tapioca/honey balls that float around the drink.

Adds Suh: “I find regular coffee too acidic, and I love sweets. Chantha and I always wanted to start a business together, which is how Ninja Bubble Tea came about.”

In 2011, the friends tried to launch a gummy bear company, but business didn’t take off, and they decided to rebrand and try again.

“I’ve had this Bubble tea store idea in my head for over a year,” says Suh. “It’s been fun designing different ways to enjoy tea, and we’re working on an eclectic food menu as well.”

She adds: “I came up with the name ‘Ninja Bubble Tea’ because when drinking, the tapioca balls ‘surprise you’ in your mouth like a ninja, and I thought, ‘Hey! What a great name for the store.’”

Back to BMCC

Suh and Uy have an interesting back story. Friends who met in an accounting class at BMCC in the 90’s, they are both registered nurses, and balance their nursing jobs with the management of Ninja Bubble Tea.

Suh explains that she and Uy were concerned about finding stable jobs post-9/11, which led them into the nursing field.

Besides, working for a few years as full-time nurses granted them time to research entrepreneurships and generate revenue.

Suh graduated from BMCC in 2000 with a Business Administration degree, and obtained a nursing degree from a vocational school on Long Island. When she’s not at the storefront, she works as a pediatric nurse.

Uy graduated from BMCC in 2001—also with a degree in Business Administration—took some nursing pre-requisite classes at BMCC, then pursued nursing at Long Island University Brooklyn. She currently works as a family/homecare nurse.

“BMCC was the foundation for my first college experience,” Uy recalls. “It is priceless when a college can offer you professional growth and opportunity with a dose of reality. Plus, because of BMCC, I also walked away with a lifelong friend and business partner.”

Adds Suh: “Uy and I have been friends since we were teenagers and I wouldn’t want to open a business with anyone else.”

Around the clock

It was absolutely hard to balance our nursing jobs with the opening of Ninja Bubble Tea,” says Suh, adding that they have assistance from another friend who helps operate the business but isn’t an owner. “We worked around the clock.”

Besides taking business courses at a college like BMCC, Suh advises aspiring business owners to take advantage of mentoring services. In the planning stages, the entrepreneurs sought career guidance from staffers at Score and the U.S. Small Business Administration, which helped them shape their business and marketing plan.

Says Uy: “The idea of owning your own business is wonderful, but it also requires true patience, dedication to your goals, and more importantly, you can’t give up when faced with obstacles.”

Stop by, say hi

Ninja Bubble Tea’s open space has artwork on the walls and the owners are inviting anyone interested in hosting a class at the storefront to inquire.

“We want to utilize our space to the fullest, whether you want to host an art class or poetry reading here one day, or display your work on the walls,” says Suh, adding, “And we really want BMCC students to stop by and say hello—we’d love to meet you!”

The official Facebook page for Ninja Bubble Tea is here.


Top of the World

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Top of the World

Thanks to a collaborative effort between BMCC and Silverstein Properties (SPI), the Shirley Fiterman Art Center in BMCC’s new Fiterman Hall is now presenting a special exhibit, Top of the World, which documents the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site after the tragic events of September 11, 2001.

The exhibit showcases the work of SPI Lead Photographer Joe Woolhead, as well as that of over a dozen other featured artists: Michael Bowles, Michael Calcagno, Kelsy Chauvinas, Fred Conrad, Carl Glassman, Ben Jarosch, Tim Hetherington, Chris Hondros, Noel Jefferson, Erika Koop, Elinor Milchan, Spencer Platt, Vicky Roy, Tim Schenck, David Sunverg/ESTO and Nicole Tung.

The exhibit’s opening on November 12, 2013 was timed to coincide with the opening of the new Trade Center skyscraper, just a block away, and a catered reception in the Fiterman Art Center—replete with jazz standards played by Raven Williams on the Center’s Steinway grand piano—was held on November 26.

An inspiring endeavor
Friends of BMCC, faculty and special guests attended the exhibit’s reception and viewed the photographs that capture the transformation that took place at the World Trade Center site—from the aftermath of the devastating attacks, to the rise and completion of 4WTC, the first tower to open on the World Trade Center site.

A brief program was introduced by Doris Holz, BMCC’s VP of Development.

“BMCC provides academic excellence, affordability and a pathway to success for more than 24,500 students a year,” she told the evening’s guests, gathered in the North Gallery.

“Many of our students are the first in their families to attend college and for many, BMCC represents the opportunity to transform their lives and their families’ lives, for the better.”

BMCC President Antonio Pérez congratulated Joe Woolhead and the other photographers, and welcomed the guests.

“Many of you are probably here for the first time,” he said. “We’re the largest undergraduate institution in the city … and our past with Larry Silverstein and the World Trade Center really began back in 2001,” on the morning of 9/11.

At around 5:00 p.m. that day, he said, when World Trade 7 fell, “it was leaning against our building,” and the devastation to Fiterman Hall was irreparable.

“It took us 11 years and $325 million to take down the old Fiterman Hall and rebuild it to what it is today,” he said. “We will always be interlocked with Larry [Silverstein] and World Trade 7, and now Larry has been generous enough to say that we can use One World Trade Center’s top floor for our fundraising gala this year, and for those of you that are in the area, we’d love to see you there.”

Dara McQuillan, SPI’s Senior VP, Marketing & Communications, also spoke.

“Larry Silverstein hired me ten years ago to make sure that everything was documented the right way,” he said, referring to the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site.

His first call, he said, “was to an Irish construction worker I had shared an apartment with in Sunnyside, Queens—that was Joe Woolhead. He’d spent ten years working in construction, was badly injured on a Chase Manhattan project, and had taken up photography as a hobby. I’d seen some of his photographs and said, ‘You should be a photographer. This is really cool stuff’—and he’s been photographing this project ever since.”

Joe Woolhead spoke last, giving an overview of the World Trade Center’s reconstruction.

“Two years ago Larry Silverstein and his team opened 4 World Trade Center, and members of the public were able to walk onto the 16-acre site for the first time since 9/11,” he said.

“At around the same time, One World Trade Center was proclaimed the tallest building in the United States. And a few months ago, the Port Authority opened the East/West connect—all giving us a spectacular sense of what’s to come over the next few years. I have had the privilege to follow and document the work that has gotten these projects to this point and I hope that these photographs give you a sense of the people and the effort that went into, and continues to go into that endeavor.”

A “spirit of survival”
Jim Miller, a helicopter pilot whose company, NJ Choppers, specializes in aerial photography, flew Joe Woolhead in for dramatic close-ups of the World Trade Center site.

“It was very historic,” said Mr. Miller. “We felt honored to be chosen as the helicopter company to fly Joe.”

One flight, on the day of the opening ceremony of One World Trade Center, is indelibly implanted in his memory.

“It was a beautiful morning, we took off about 6:30 in the morning,” he said.

“We were over the top of the building by about seven o’clock, and we flew for almost two hours around it, waiting for the program to start. I was kind of like a Nascar driver, just making left turns around it, very slowly, and I could see this huge bolt—you could almost see the writing on the bolt—and two guys with hammers were whacking this thing, and that was the first bolt they were putting into the spire … It was very nice to hear recently that the architects decided it really is a spire and it really is the tallest building in the United States.”

“It’s beautiful, very emotional,” said Sue Miller, wife of Jim Miller. “We were here for this. We lived this,” she said of the photographs, many of which show the aftermath of 9/11.

“We have a spirit of survival, that we’re going to come back better, and we’re going to come back stronger. It makes me very proud to be an American. The pictures are magnificent, and this is a magnificent facility. I’m truly honored to be here.”

The “inspiration to go forward”
The photographs in Top of the World encompass breathtaking views of Manhattan and New York Harbor, taken from the open cage of the Tower as it went up.

They also show moments of quiet pride as iron workers, scaffolders, engineers and others do their part in making happen, the rise of girders, glass and steel.

Joe Woolhead has photographed everything from the first pieces of steel being fabricated at Banker Steel in Lynchburg, Virginia, to the bolts on the spire of World Trade 1.

He credits some of his insight as a photographer on the project, to his early career as a stonemason.

“The tools are different, the technique is different, but photography is still a demanding activity if you’re in the field, and you’re working on a construction site,” he said.

“I find that having spent many years working construction, I’m able to appreciate the work ethic on the site, and I can also appreciate the work that the workers are doing, and how hard it is, I can get into their mindset in a way and I’m able to get fairly good photographs sometimes.”

President Pérez commented that the exhibit is “a magnificent show of all the scenes and sights that took place in the rebuilding of the World Trade Center, and there’s one special section that shows BMCC and Fiterman Hall being built. You’ll see things that you’ve never seen before. You’ll see New York City being rebuilt, and feel the inspiration that we can bounce back from setbacks, that we are inspired to go forward.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: Top of the World at the Shirley Fiterman Art Center in BMCC’s Fiterman Hall, 245 Greenwich Street in Lower Manhattan, is open to the public on Tuesdays through Saturdays from 12 noon to 6:00 p.m.

Lights Out!

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Lights Out!

From his home in Manhattan’s financial district, BMCC student Paul Borri couldn’t help noticing that the lights in nearby commercial buildings burned bright 24 hours a day—even when the buildings were locked, unoccupied and unused.

“This was a ridiculous waste of electricity as well as a cause of light pollution, which is harmful to people and wildlife,” he says. “So I decided to do something about it.”

Putting people and animals at risk

Borri drew up a petition, collected 45 signatures from neighbors, and presented his case at a meeting of Community Board 1. Apart from the extravagant wastefulness of keeping the lights on around the clock, he said in his statement to the Board, “there’s also evidence that it’s a health risk for humans, both for sleep deprivation and a reduction in tumor-suppressing melatonin.”

Light pollution is also detrimental to wildlife, he noted, “confusing migrating birds and causing them to crash into illuminated buildings.”

The easiest and most effective way to address the problem, Borri suggested, would be through the installation of occupancy sensors.  “These are motion detectors that would shut off the lights when they aren’t being used,” he explained.

The Community Board agreed and drafted a resolution that outlined the environmental, economic and health hazards created by commercial light pollution.

“The technology, such as sensors, timers and dimmers, already exists, and has been proven to mitigate light pollution,” the Board noted, calling attention to the fact that the city does not currently regulate commercial light pollution.

Seeing the light

In its resolution, the Board urged the City Council “to look into the feasibility of the creation of standards and regulations pertaining to commercial light pollution.” It also requested that “our State and Federal  representatives tighten the environmental standards for commercial light emissions.”  The resolution passed by a 35-0 vote and was sent to the attention of City Council member Margaret Chin.

Borri, who has been diagnosed with a developmental disorder, is an active member of Beyond the Limits, a BMCC club for students with disabilities and those interested in disability issues. He is also involved with the CUNY Coalition for Students with Disabilities (CCSD).

He recently discussed his anti-light pollution campaign with Beyond the Limits faculty adviser Jessica Spalter, who suggested the possibility of linking it to CUNY’s ongoing energy conservation initiative.

Meanwhile, Borri’s efforts have won plaudits from his downtown neighbors, fellow students and, of course, Community Board 1, which congratulated him “on his research and advocacy.”

Where in the World?

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"Where

Virtually every aspect of human activity from agriculture to zoning is impacted and shaped by geography.  But while conventional maps depict borders, physical features and place names in precise detail, they shed little light on the way people interact in a geographic context—with the world, their environment, and each other.

Now, Geographic Information Science (GIS), a fast-growing field that marries human geography with social science, promises to revolutionize geography, with profound and far-reaching benefits.

This year, professors Emily Anderson, chairperson of BMCC’s Department of Social Sciences and Human Services Department, and Chin-Song Don Wei, of the Department of Computer Systems, received a $300,000 grant from the National Science Foundation in support of Fostering Student Success in Geospatial Technology,  a project focused on developing and implementing five courses within a GIS program at the college.

Building skills to address critical challenges

The courses, offered jointly by the two departments, “will help students build their knowledge of GIS and gain the critical thinking and analytical competencies needed to address some of today’s most compelling social issues,” says Wei.

In addition, workshops and other resources will help faculty become conversant in GIS and its related software.

“GIS is an incredibly powerful and flexible tool for mapping and analyzing spatial relationships and their impact on people and how they live their lives,” Anderson says.  “I can’t think of an area where it isn’t relevant—the private sector, healthcare, forensic science, environmental protection, construction, disaster relief.”

Indeed, GIS is already used widely by businesses, governments, and scientific research organizations. And, with the state of the art advancing rapidly, even more exciting possibilities are on the horizon.  A case in point: storm-tracking and disaster preparation.

“With GIS, the technology is getting better and better every day,” Wei says. “Meteorologists can not only locate a storm, they can literally see it, and visually track its path and trajectory with incredible accuracy.”

While GIS enables faster and more effective responses to superstorms and other major weather events, Anderson adds, “it can also help us plan far ahead into the future around issues related to sustainability and climate change.”

With courses in the basic information sciences (computer programming, database, remote sensing, and GIS), mathematics (pre-calculus and statistics) and geography (human geography, population geography and environmental conservation), BMCC’s GIS curriculum will offer internship opportunities and prepare graduates for entry level positions in the field.

The curriculum also facilitates seamless transfer to senior colleges, such as Hunter College, with 60 credits towards a BA in Geography with a concentration in GIS.

Fitting the curriculum to the setting

To be sure, BMCC is not the only community college to offer a degree in GIS, but it may be the first with a curriculum that focuses on GIS applications to urban development.

“A degree program in Kentucky, where the emphasis might be on forestry, or Arizona, where deserts are the dominant feature, would differ from a program in a major urban location, where the planning needs are totally different,” says Wei. “The idea is to fit the curriculum to local needs. “

In a real sense, GIS lies at the intersection of science and the study of human behavior.

“It’s a field that marries scientific skill-sets with insights into how people interact with other and the world around them—and the consequences of those interactions,” says Wei.

Adds Anderson, “One of the things I find most exciting about GIS is its interdisciplinary nature. Instead of placing the sciences in one bucket, and the arts and humanities in another, GIS combines them in a way that can truly improve our lives.”

Examples of a Map and multiple layers in GIS application:

City Planning Commissioner Amanda M. Burden and Department of Information Technology & Telecommunications (DoITT) Commissioner Carole Post announced launch of ZoLa, the Zoning and Land Use web application, which provides a new and simple way to find a wide range of land use information in interactive, highly-readable map layers pertaining to a particular property, or to the city at large.

Reading, Writing, and The Deep

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Reading, Writing, and The Deep

“The Black Man in Contemporary Society,” a course offered through BMCC’s Center for Ethnic Studies, was taught this semester by professor and author Zetta Elliott.

“Some of you are probably surprised to come in and see me at the front of the classroom,” she tells her students on the first day of class.

Many assume the professor will be a man of color, she explains, so she asks them, “What makes me qualified to teach this class? and they’ll say, ‘You’re Black’. And I’ll say, ‘Am I?’ And they’ll say, ‘Well, mostly … you’re African American’. And I’ll say, ‘Actually, I’m an immigrant. I’m Canadian’. “

Confronting assumptions, it turns out, is what the class is all about.

“We talk about stereotypes of Black men,” says one of her students, Kuhinur Jahan, who emigrated from Bangladesh, in 2010.

“Professor Elliott makes us think deeply about Black community in New York and the contribution of Richard Wright, Malcolm X and other writers.”

Elliott explains that she has studied gender for many years, “and one of the reasons I started off being interested in Black masculinity was because I wanted to end violence against women—but when I started studying masculinity I realized that the majority of the victims of male violence were other men and boys.”

It falls to reason then, “that if you have men and boys in your life that you love and care about, we have to be invested in the construction of masculinity,” she says, and guides the class as they consider the question, “How do Black boys evolve into Black men?”

Students write essays examining these ideas, and their readings center on biography and autobiography.

“We start with Byron Hurt’s essay ‘Redefining Manhood’,” she says. “We read The Life of Frederick Douglass, Richard Wright’s Native Son, and Malcolm X’s autobiography. We read a section of Don Lemon’s book, Transparent—he’s the CNN anchor who came out as gay a couple years ago and he’s a conservative Black man.”

Other readings, she says, “include Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow; we did an excerpt of Mike Tyson’s memoir, Undisputed Truth, and we finish up with Jay Z.”

Readers become writers
A challenge in teaching the class, Professor Elliott says, is that it seems many college students “do not read recreationally—and if you aren’t reading for fun, and you don’t think reading is fun, then having to read for class is tedious and a chore.”

One of her goals is to helps students understand “the connection between being a good reader, and being a good writer.”

“They have so many dreams and aspirations,” she says, “but when you ask them, ‘How is writing going to feature in your life? When do you see yourself writing?’, a lot of them say they just don’t.”

Professor Elliott is determined to change that reality.

“In almost every text I teach,” she says, “either the person writing the memoir or the protagonist says, ‘Reading opened up my mind, it made me feel mentally alive, it showed me how the world actually worked’, and the students write an essay about that.”

In the process, they also tackle the mechanics of writing.

“Every time we do writing assignments, Professor Elliott helps us outline it first,” says Kuhinur Jahan. “She’ll give us clear direction about citations.”

Another strategy the students use is peer review, “where we read each other’s papers,” says Jahan, “and whenever I read someone else’s paper, I see they have different ideas than in my own.”

Mirror, then window
When students have texts that are a mirror, Elliott says, and reflects their lives or their neighborhood, they become much more invested.

“But then you have to go beyond that, to texts that are a window,” she says. “They can’t only expect to read texts that give them a reflection of their own world.”

Kuhinur Jahan is one student whose life is probably not reflected—at least not literally—in the course’s assigned reading.

“I’m the one and only student in the class whose first language is not English,” she says. “My relatives told me, community college will be good for me because they really care about people whose first language is not English.”

Professor Elliott relates to the experience of international students, she says, because, “as an immigrant, I often share their ‘outsider’ perspective. I remember how desperately I wanted to fit in when I first moved to NYC to study, and it took time for me to feel less self-conscious and more willing to share my culture and history.”

She has also observed in her class, the positive impact of Jahan’s perspective—that of a South Asian woman—on Black masculinity in the U.S.

“She can talk about the way people stereotype her, and have limited expectations of her, based on her accent, or her appearance, and don’t want to actually engage with her and find out who she is and what she knows,” Elliott says.

‘What if?’
Zetta Elliott is a widely published playwright, essayist, poet and novelist.

Her young adult novel, A Wish After Midnight, was released in February 2010; her second novel, Ship of Souls, was published in 2012, and her latest novel, The Deep, was released this year.

Both Ship of Souls and The Deep are ‘speculative fiction’, Elliott explains, a genre that encompasses fantasy and science fiction, as well as paranormal, horror, and alternate fiction.

The books are also considered “urban fantasy,” she says, because they involve ghosts, spirits and “fantastic” elements.

“The landscape is really important to me,” she says, “and the idea that something marvelous or fantastic can happen in a place you consider so everyday and ordinary.”

She remembers a discovery within the landscape of her own Brooklyn neighborhood that triggered a central story idea for The Deep.

“I was walking up Flatbush at Grand Army Plaza,” she says, and near the famous arch, she saw—though it seemed highly improbable—what looked like an elevator.

“It had a sliding door and buttons on the side, and then I got up close, and realized it’s just a public toilet—you put your quarter in and the door opens—but that idea, that you could take an elevator and go down really deep beneath Brooklyn, stuck with me, and I kept coming back to those two words, ‘What if?’”

Elliott’s 2012 novel, Ship of Souls—a finalist for the 2013 Phillis Wheatley Book Award, and a Booklist Sci-Fi/Fantasy Youth Title—involves malevolent forces existing beneath Prospect Park, Brooklyn, and earthbound ghosts of Revolutionary War soldiers.

The Deep, equally fantastical, “plunges readers into a dangerous, underground world policed by members of ‘The League’, a secret group of women and men who use their intuitive abilities to detect energy surges far below the earth’s surface,” according to a review in the online journal, Black Girl Nerds.

Black girl in a space suit
“African American writers struggle so hard to get published, and one of the things publishers have said is, ‘There’s no market for your book’,” says Professor Elliott.

“They assume that Whites don’t want to read books about Black people—which is not true—and they also assume that Black people just don’t buy books.”

The African American novelist and poet Alice Walker “kind of blew that apart,” says Elliott, “and so did Terry McMillan, Tony Morrison, and others, but now publishers are more interested in ‘street lit’; they’re interested in really gritty, graphic urban tales, and if you’re a writer of literary fiction it’s hard for you.”

Recently, she pitched a story idea to Bitch magazine, about Black girls needing heroes, prompted by a phenomenon she sees in popular culture.

“All these young adult novels are being made into movies,” she says, “and you think, ‘Black girls go to those movies, too, so what would it mean if they went to a film and it was the Black girl in a space suit?’”

Her decision to self-publish The Deep at this time, rather than accept a publisher’s offer to release it in 2015, came from realizing, that those young girls “have been waiting all this time—I’ve been waiting all this time. I didn’t have books like that when I was growing up.”

She’s also hoping to finish another novel over winter break.

“Writing within the academic calendar, I do have a bit more flexibility, which helps a lot,” she says.

Meanwhile, she shares her insights as a reader and a writer, with each new class of students she meets at BMCC.

“She’s very organized. She’s very helpful,” says Kuhinur Jahan. “Even if she’s on vacation, if you send her an email, she responds, and when I see her I want to be like her. She looks confident.”

Helping Healthcare Workers Build New Career Skills

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Helping Healthcare Workers Build New Career Skills

BMCC will partner with the Wadhwani Foundation and 1199SEIU/United Healthcare Workers East in the launch of Race to a Job, an innovative job training initiative for healthcare workers in New York City.

Enrolled in the Medical Assistant Specialist program at BMCC’s Center for Continuing Education and Workforce Development, these workers will upgrade their skills and gain “stackable” credentials—competencies, skills and certifications they can accumulate over time to advance their careers.

Established in 2003, the Wadhwani Foundation provides technical support and training for individuals seeking to enter high-demand job markets—especially those that do not require four-year college degrees. With more than 360,000 members, 1199SEIU/United Healthcare Workers East is the largest local union in the world.

Sealing the partnership

The partnership agreement was signed on December 17 at a ceremony in Fiterman Hall. Among those taking part were Wadhwani Foundation CEO Dr. Ajay Kela; BMCC President Antonio Pérez and 1199 SEIU Director Viviana Abreu-Hernandez standing in for 1199 Director Sandi Vito.

“Upgrading the skills of people who are already engaged in their field of choice enables them to earn industry-recognized credentials, and seek higher-level positions with their current employer,” says BMCC Dean of Continuing Education and Workforce Development, Sunil Gupta.

“It also makes it possible for them to increase their family income enough to pursue the goal of earning a longer-term, higher education degree.”

The Race to a Job training will be provided online, with some live classroom sessions, and use state-of-the-art, interactive, multimedia, and gaming technologies.

“This instructional method supports the hectic schedules of working participants, and will serve as a model for other educational programs around the U.S.,” says Dr. Kela.

Participants will have ready online access to their instructors, as well as the opportunity to interact with each other through digital-support networks. Courses will also be offered through a cloud-based delivery system that supports both online and offline learning.

Getting started

The first step in the Race to a Job pilot project will be to digitize the Medical Assistant Specialist curriculum already in use at BMCC, and jointly developed by BMCC, Lehman College, New York City Small Business Services, Community Health Care Association of New York State, and the New York Alliance for Careers in Healthcare.

Technology vendors will be selected through a rigorous RFP process to build the new digital content.

“What Massively Open Online Courses (MOOCs) have done for access to academic education is what the Race to a Job initiative seeks to do for the delivery of workforce education,” says Dr. Kela.

Eventually, the Wadhwani Foundation hopes to expand Race to a Job to additional community colleges and adult education partners throughout the U.S.

“Race to a Job is not about replacing instructors with technology but about leveraging technology and opportunity networks to enhance the quality of learning,” Dr. Kela adds.

“By making full use of the technology tools available to us and examining new ways to deliver workforce preparation, we can enhance the learning experience for individuals and empower them to move ahead in their careers.”

 

Paramedic of the Year

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Paramedic of the Year

No one wants to experience a medical emergency. But if you do, this is the person you want on your side: BMCC alumnus Michael Blecker, who recently received New York State’s highest honor for paramedic, the 2013 ALS (Advanced Life Support) Provider of the Year award.

Blecker’s nomination for the prestigious award was triggered by his saving the life of a fellow paramedic, who was having a severe allergic reaction to strawberries.

“I was called back to the base, and by the time I got there, her throat had closed,” he says. “She had broken out with hives and couldn’t speak. Within 11 minutes she was intubated, medicated, and she made a full recovery.”

Acting quickly, Blecker applied a risky—and life-saving—emergency procedure called Rapid Sequence Intubation, where the patient is paralyzed through medication and a tube is placed into the trachea.

For that swift response, he was honored at the New York State Vital Signs EMS Conference in Buffalo, last October.

Before that, he was recognized at the Westchester Regional EMS Council’s 40th Annual EMS Awards Ceremony in Sleepy Hollow, New York.

“There are 18 EMS administrative regions,” Blecker explains, “each with its own council. You’re nominated at the regional level, then one of those awardees is selected for the state award.”

A paramedic student during 9/11

Michael Blecker grew up in Athens, Greece, and moved to Brooklyn, New York with his family at age 15. As a teen, he worked in a veterinarian’s office and earned an associate degree in veterinary technology at SUNY Delhi, before attending BMCC.

His exposure to lab procedures, biology and other areas in his veterinary technician classes “gave me an advantage in the paramedic program,” he says.

Also by then, he was working as an EMT—Emergency Medical Technician—at Empress EMS in Yonkers, and his perspective on emergency response deepened with the attacks on the World Trade Center in September 2001.

“I spent three days helping out,” he says. “We slept in Stuyvesant High School, and the Staten Island ferry terminal. We did mostly search and recovery—a lot digging.”

Classes at BMCC resumed by the end of that semester, and in the weeks of heightened awareness after 9/11, he was called out of Professor Gene Ianuzzi’s toxicology lecture, to respond to an emergency.

“There was a mass case of food poisoning in Yonkers,” he said, “and at first we thought it might be a biological emergency. I showed Gene the message on my phone and he said, ‘Go and be safe’. The faculty at BMCC was great. They make the classes interesting, and I’ve kept up with them over the years.”

Professor Iannuzzi is now Director of BMCC’s paramedic program, which “presents a high level of intensity,” he says. “A lot has to be learned in a relatively short period of time. We jokingly tell everyone at the beginning of class, ‘Say goodbye to your family and friends—you’re not going to see them for a year!’”

BMCC, he points out, “was the first accredited paramedic program in the state. We’re doing many more EMT courses than we used to. We’re out in front, as far as getting medics into degree programs.”

Building a career with specialized training

“As a paramedic I have been able to use more skills than I did as an EMT,” says Michael Blecker.

“I have a more comprehensive knowledge base about pharmacology, certain medical interventions, intubation, electric therapy of cardiac rhythms, and cardiology in general,” he says.

In addition, he has earned specialized certifications through the NYS Department of Health and FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency).

This training covers Weapons of Mass Destruction Awareness, Hazardous Materials, the federal Incident Command System, and other areas.

Now working as a Lieutenant in the Special Operations Division at Empress EMS, Blecker is the go-to expert for decontamination, and other specialized responses.

“For example,” he explains, “there might be a construction accident at a site where asbestos is present, or a radiological emergency in a lab.”

He also supervises BMCC paramedic majors as they complete their clinical rotations through “ride alongs” with EMT teams, and he has taught in the paramedic program at the former St. Vincent’s Hospital in Manhattan.

No two days the same

“It’s a great field to be in now,” says Michael Blecker. “I think there’s always a need for paramedics—if you have a good head on your shoulders, and you’re a responsible person.”

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that between 2012 and 2022, the total number of EMT and paramedic jobs nationwide will increase by 23%, nationwide.

It’s also a line of work in which the skills and protocols evolve constantly.

“The technology and equipment changes,” says Blecker. “Medicine changes. The pre-hospital cardiac monitors have probably advanced the most, since I started in the field.”

Asked to share an exciting story about his day-to-day work, he is at somewhat of a loss.

“Where do I start?” he says. “Each day is different. No two days have been the same. That’s what I love about my career. Things happen when you least expect them to happen.”

Mr. G meets Dr. Pérez

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On his video segment “It’s a G Thing,” WPIX channel 11’s chief meteorologist Irv Gikofsky — or as he is popularly known, “Mr. G” — interviews BMCC President Antonio Pérez.

Their conversation takes place in President Pérez’s office on the college’s main campus, and moves from the levity of admiring his collection of antique toys, to the gravity of his days shepherding the BMCC community through the attacks of September 11, 2001.

To see the three-and-a-half-minute interview in its entirety, click HERE.

Mr. G meets Dr. Pérez


Former BMCC Professor Elizabeth Strout Long-Listed for Award

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Former BMCC adjunct professor and Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction writer Elizabeth Strout is among 16 contenders for the world’s most valuable prize for a single short story—£30,000, or about $40,500.

The EFG Short Story Award, sponsored by the British newspaper Sunday Times, is open to any novelist or short story writer from around the world who is published in the United Kingdom (UK).

Elizabeth Strout is the author of four books of fiction, most recently the novel, The Burgess Boys. She won the Pultizer Prize in 2009 for her collection of linked stories, Olive Kitteridge, now being made into an HBO series.

The winner will be announced in April 2014.

Opening Doors by Speaking Clearly

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Opening Doors by Speaking Clearly

Thanks to the vision and generosity of the Harold and Helen Derfner Foundation and of its trustee, Jay Lieberman, BMCC will soon house a state-of-the-art Communication Center where students from every department can refine their basic speaking skills.

The Center’s development will be spearheaded by BMCC communication studies professors Lee Ritchey—who brings to the classroom, many indispensible lessons learned from voicing hundreds of commercials and appearing in over 30 feature films and television shows—and Hollis Glaser, chairperson of the Speech, Communications and Theatre Arts department.

“This semester the Communication Center committee—headed up by Professor Helen Huff, the department’s former Non-Native Speech Coordinator, and including professors Benjamin Haas, Judy Noble and Lee Ritchey—will review software and hardware for the lab,” says Professor Glaser.

“They’ll look at possible lab setups, and begin planning for personnel. Also, we’ll focus on helping the faculty get ready, by incorporating sessions at the Communication Center into their curricula.”

Slated to open in late Summer 2014, the Center will be located in BMCC’s main classroom building at 199 Chambers Street, S-635.

Lifelong tools for success

Not only students, but faculty and staff are welcome to use the Communication Center as a valuable resource on campus.

Participants at the Center will strengthen their confidence and skills with a variety of linguistic exercises, working at soundproof computer carrels, and with headphones. The room will also be set up to accommodate group discussions, lectures and presentations.

According to the National Communication Association, there are 74 communication centers at colleges or universities around the country—ironically, though, only four are housed in community colleges.

“Here at BMCC, our students come from a huge variety of backgrounds,” says Professor Glaser. “Many are speaking English for the first time, or learned a version of English at home from parents who don’t speak it as their first language.”

While the field of communication “does not prescribe how people should talk, we look at how people talk, and we study it,” she explains.

“We appreciate the compelling drive our students have, to continue their educations and enter their careers, and we know they want to comport themselves professionally—yet they find themselves at a disadvantage in situations such as interviews, where if they don’t speak a particular way, they won’t get that first important internship or job.”

The new Communication Center will support those students by providing lifelong tools to express their talent and intelligence—whether in a conversation, interview or classroom presentation.

The goal is clarity, not ‘accent reduction’

Lee Ritchey guides students to examine their own pronunciation, and shares valuable strategies useful in “code switching,” or moving back and forth between languages and dialects—a skill that many young New Yorkers have practiced all their lives.

“I was always really good at doing dialects,” he says.

With hundreds of diverse acting credits—a few years ago, he played Sigourney Weaver’s husband in the movie Infamous—and experience working as a dialect coach with actors, he has a rich understanding of how speech is formed.

“For example, if you are an actor speaking with a Russian accent, you use the back of the mouth, or throat, to create words,” he says, “and if you’re speaking with an English accent, you form words from the front of the mouth.”

He finds that his students at BMCC benefit from that understanding, and from exercises such as learning the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).

“We help them recognize that alphabet of sounds in their own and other’s speech,” he says, “and once they’ve identified their own linguistic patterns, they can adapt them for more clarity and better communication.”

Professor Ritchey is emphatic though, on one point: “I tell my students, ‘I don’t want you to sound like me’.”

“The goal isn’t ‘accent reduction’,” he says. “It’s actually individual pronunciation and pace—not accent—that determines your understandability.

In addition to exploring the physical deliver of words, he helps students build awareness of the non-verbal and cultural aspects of exchanging ideas, understanding and being understood by others.

“Our discipline is communication,” says Professor Glaser, “so we look at human communication across many situations. We study interpersonal communication, we study mass media, mediated communication—I’m sure there are a hundred dissertations out there right now about Twitter.”

On the other hand, she says, “We do not study grammar, we do not study phonetics—but then it became evident that our students needed that kind of support, even outside their English classes.”
And now, they’re going to get it.

Professor Zetta Elliott Featured in Harvard Seminar

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On February 24, Ethnic Studies Professor Zetta Elliott will present a talk in the Canada Seminar at the Weatherhead Center for International Studies at Harvard University.

“I left Canada 20 years ago in part because I wasn’t able to get published and didn’t have the option of studying with Black scholars at the graduate level,” says Professor Elliott. “I think I was invited to participate in the Canada Seminar because my scholarship addresses racism in Canadian publishing and the impact on African Canadian children.”

Her talk, “The (Revolving) Door of No Return: Memory, Migration, and Magical Thinking,” will center on her work-in-progress, The Hummingbird’s Tongue, “which is an exploration of memory, migration, and mental illness in Canada and the Caribbean,” and follows her search for information about her paternal grandmother—and namesake—“who allegedly died in an Antiguan asylum in the 1950s.”

The Hummingbird’s Tongue, Elliott says, “considers the ways mental illness has impacted my family and my own creativity as a children’s book author of fantasy fiction. Drawing inspiration from Dionne Brand’s experimental memoir, A Map to the Door of No Return: Notes to Belonging (2001), I attempt to weave my own ‘biomythography’ starting with a seminal text I consumed as a child: Margaret Wise Brown’s The Little Island (1946).”

 

Celebrating African Heritage Month

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Thanks to the efforts of a long list of BMCC students, staff and faculty, the Opening Ceremony to this year’s African Heritage Month took place in the first-floor lounge of BMCC’s main campus building with spectacular live music, dance and spoken word performances.

Therapy, a Caribbean band from Kaptain Productions, filled the open area with the uplifting, new world energy of reggae, soca, salsa and hip hop music.

This year’s theme, “Black Struggle and Achievement,” and its celebration of the African diaspora was echoed in the recurring image on posters and other materials, of a remarkable semi-abstract painting, “Faces in Trance,” by well-known Brazilian artist Ernani Silva.

VP of Academic Affairs Michael Gillespie delivered opening remarks, and Nontraditional Career Academic Advisor Peter Roberts shared a few words of remembrance, honoring BMCC staff person Isabel Cummings.

New Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams was the event’s guest speaker, and there were performances by the African Student Association—in traditional costume—as well as spoken word by Nuyorican Café poet and BMCC student Michael Wicks.

A free buffet—well worth the long line—showcased African, Caribbean, African-American, Asian and Latin dishes. This taste of the African diaspora was sponsored by the BMCC Student Government Association (SGA), and provided by Richard Halem and MBJ Food Services, who reached out to a variety of ethnic restaurants in New York City.

Office of Accessibility Director Marcos Gonzalez blended history, culture and art in a spirited demonstration of the African roots in Latin dance and salsa, and closing remarks were delivered by Professor James Blake.

In addition to the leadership of Dean Michael Gillespie—and the spearheading of opening events by Professor Blake and Student Advisor Yvonne Padmore—other faculty and staff who worked hard to make this year’s African Heritage Month happen include Everton Barrett, James Bartow, Tishana Daniel, Juliet Emanuel, Sheriney Frederick, Brandon Graham, Ashtian Holmes, La-Dana Jenkins, Freda McClean, Trianna Nunes, Carla Redux, Lesley Rennis, Peter Roberts, Iona Samuels, Tybirius Scott and Thomas Volpe.

For a listing of more African Heritage Events this month, click here.

Seeing Stars

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Seeing Stars

Both Science Professor Quinn Minor and his student Macarthur Young are fascinated by the stars.

“Originally, I was into physics more than astronomy,” says Professor Minor, “and examining questions like, ‘How did the universe start?’”

Then, he says, at the University of California, Irvine where he earned his Ph.D., “I met a bunch of cosmologists; theoretical astrophysicists, and I realized a background in physics is essential to understanding astronomy.”

Professor Minor’s student, Macarthur Young, also loves astronomy and science. In fact, he taught science at the elementary school level in Brooklyn for nine years—till he lost his vision to retinitis pigmentosa in 2008.

“It caused my retina cells to degenerate,” he explains. “I also have a linked condition, progressive loss of hearing, and the overall disorder is Usher Syndrome.”

Strategies for learning

For Macarthur Young, losing his sight, then his teaching job presented what felt like insurmountable challenges.

“I was very, very scared, and went into a deep depression,” he says, “but a therapist realized my potential, and encouraged me to go back to school.”

His first day at BMCC was in Fall 2013.

“I walked into the main plaza and for the life of me, I couldn’t find the front door,” he says. “A young lady helped me and took me all the way to my first class, and my worries about attending school here evaporated.”

He also got in touch with the BMCC Office of Accessibility, and a counselor on staff, Kokou Doumassi—“He’s amazing,” says Young—acquainted him with strategies such as sending a textbook’s ISBN to the publisher, who then provides a PDF version of the book so it can be read aloud with the assistive software, JAWS.

The Office of Accessibility also linked Young with volunteers who act as readers of his classroom materials, and thanks to another software program, Kurzweil, he can scan documents to be saved in an MP3 format, enabling him to listen to them without assistance.

He’s even found a way to write papers.

“I do the research myself, and I have a little bit of vision, so I use a marker to write really large on special paper with thick lines, then one of my readers transcribes it to a digital file, which I can review and edit with assistive software.”

Realizing his true potential

Astronomy, Macarthur Young admits, “is a very visual class,” and when he first started attending, “I wondered if maybe I had bitten off more than I could chew—there was a disconnect between me and material being projected to a screen.”

Right away, he spoke with Professor Minor.

“He asked more questions than anyone in the class. He contributed a lot to the dynamic of the class,” Minor remembers, but Young told him, “I don’t want to just pass this class. I want to realize my true potential.”

The two began to meet regularly. “He would explain diagrams and pictures in more detail,” says Young, and the sessions were going well, but Professor Minor believed that with the right accommodations, his student could excel even further.

He consulted with a colleague, Professor Saavik Ford, “and she had heard of this machine, a swell-form graphic machine that ‘puffs up’ images so you can actually feel them,” he says.

Next, he met with BMCC’s accessibility counselor Kokou Doumassi, who found one of the machines in the CUNY Assistive Technology Services (CATS) department at Queensborough College.

There, Professor Minor met with Assistive Technology Specialist Shivan Mahabir.

“He was incredibly helpful,” he says. “First we photocopied the materials on special paper, then we ran them through the swell-form machine, and any place where the ink is, it puffed up to a 3D image.”

Reading the planets

Professor Quinn also went to Michael’s, a crafts store, for ideas on how to make the material more accessible.

“I got bubble stickers, and Macarthur placed them, for example, to show the trajectory of a planet,” he says.

“I remember the first time I plotted something on a grid,” Young says.

“We were looking at Venus, how it rises and sets different times of the year. Professor Minor brought the swell image copy, I ‘read’ it with my fingers and he explained it to me. I was able to plot every single movement of the planet Venus at different times in its rotation, based on that.”

Because of the class, he says, “I have been able to explain to my friends concepts like, how long the sun is going to live, or what a meteor shower is.”

His background in science and math gives him a certain advantage.

“The other students didn’t have the prior knowledge I had, and Professor Minor was good at reaching out to them, too,” he says.

“He took time to make sure we all understood, before he moved on. Even the big astronomical terms—like ‘planetesimals’, tiny particles that coalesce to form the planets—he made accessible.”

‘I’m ready’

Counselor Doumassi’s advice to blind students is to undergo training with the New York State Commission for the Blind before they start classes.

“That way they’ll be familiar with the assistive software,” he says, “so they can use it right away to keep up with assigned reading materials. Also, the Commission helps them orient themselves with buildings on a campus, and going from one floor or one classroom to another.”

He also urges students with disabilities to make contact with the BMCC Office of Accessibility as soon as they enter the college.

“We’re here to support their success as students and also to work with their professors,” he says.

Macarthur Young has benefited from following that advice.

He’s also been active in the BMCC students with disabilities club, Beyond the Limits, led by David Joseph, a blind student majoring in Human Services.

“He’s one of my best friends now,” says Young, who enjoys the club’s focus on goals and academics.

His own goal is to teach science to blind students in grades one through eight, through the New York Institute for the Blind—using swell-form graphic images and other strategies he’s applying now.

“I love science,” he says. “After BMCC, I really want to do something at Hunter College, to pursue a degree in environmental science.”

While sight loss is a relatively new development in his life, he has already accomplished a great amount.

“Being here, feeling welcome and comfortable, gives my life a purpose,” he says.

“I had a 4.0 grade point average last semester, and I was invited to apply to the Vassar Summer Program this year. If BMCC is any indication of what I’ll experience wherever I go, I’m ready.”

 

BMCC at the MLA

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BMCC at the MLA

Every year, the Modern Language Association (MLA), hosts a convention attended by its 30,000 members from over 100 countries.

This year, among the hundreds of presenters at the convention were BMCC English Professors David Bahr, Chamutal Noimann and Joyce Zonana.

The 2014 MLA convention, held in Chicago, explored the theme “Vulnerable Times,” addressing “vulnerabilities of life, the planet, and our professional disciplines, in our own time and throughout history,” writes MLA President Marianne Hirsch.

The purpose of the theme, she says, was “to illuminate acts of imagination and forms of solidarity and resistance that promote social change.”

BMCC’s three presenters—in separate sessions—addressed that theme from the perspective of their own areas of scholarly research and expertise.

(Re)constructing a fragmented childhood

Professor David Bahr, known for his research and scholarship on American literature after 1945 presented on a panel entitled “The Creative-Critical Dissertation.”

“The roundtable convened six early-career academics whose dissertations straddled the creative-critical divide and do not fit neatly within the existing disciplinary paradigms of scholarship,” says Professor Bahr.

“My paper examined the challenges and rewards of my project, which employs theories of life-writing and autobiographical texts in four distinct genres–fiction, poetry, essay, and comics–as a means of theorizing and (re)constructing my own fragmented childhood in foster care.”

Randall Jarrall: ‘The Stuff of Legends’

Professor Chamutal Noimann organized a panel sponsored by the Children and Young Adult division of the MLA, in commemoration of the centennial of the birth of American poet Randall Jarrell.

“Jarrell was a prolific and influential literary critic, poet, essayist and novelist,” she says. “He was a talented teacher and singular writer for children. Jarrell’s collaboration with the late Maurice Sendak is the stuff of legends.”

Professor Noimann, who is known for her scholarly work on children’s, young adult and Victorian Literature, pulled together panelists including Patricia Oman of Hastings College, “who interpreted Jarrell’s children’s book Animal Family through the lens of animal studies in a talk entitled ‘The Child is the Animal in Randall Jarrell’s Animal Family’.”

Another panelist, poet Molly McQuade, revisited Jarrell’s essay “The Age of Criticism,” she says, as well as three of his poems, while Harvard University professor, poet and critic Stephen Burt presented his paper “Randall Jarrell’s Impossible Children,” and treated attendees to a short selection of Jarrell’s as-yet unpublished verse.

Finally, Richard Flynn, a professor at Georgia Southern University and author of Randall Jarrell and the Lost World of Childhood “responded to all the papers and concluded a worthy celebration of a true American master.”

‘The Sultan and the Slave’

BMCC Professor Joyce Zonana’s MLA presentation, “Revisiting ‘Feminist Orientalism’ in the Twenty-First Century,” was part of the panel “Approaches to Feminist Orientalism: The Enlightenment to the Contemporary.”

Professor Zonana actually coined the term “feminist orientalism” in her much-reprinted 1993 article, “The Sultan and the Slave: Feminist Orientalism and the Structure of Jane Eyre,” which appeared in the journal Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

Feminist orientalism, she explains, “is the use of stereotyped, negative images of Muslim and other Eastern women by Western feminists who displace ‘the source of patriarchal oppression onto an “Oriental” or “Mahometan” society’, thus figuring their own projects as ‘the removal of Eastern elements from Western life’.”

In her talk at MLA, she spoke of how she would write her noted article today, “focusing not so much on negative images of Muslim or Eastern women (which are plentiful), but exploring instead positive, empowering images, using as examples the storyteller Scheherazade from The 1001 Nights and the characters in Shahrnush Parsipur’s novel, Women Without Men.”

Who will represent BMCC in 2015?

Next year’s MLA convention, scheduled to take place January 8-10 in Vancouver, will explore the theme, “Negotiating Sites of Memory.”

For submission and other deadlines pertaining to that convention, click here.

From BMCC to the Rubin

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From BMCC to the Rubin

Two years ago, Business Management Professor Michelle Wang came up with an innovative approach to career planning—one that would link the seemingly disparate worlds of business and Himalayan arts.

“My hope was to help business students develop a strong sense of humanity through museum visits and teaching,” she says. “In that way, they could become leaders who care about people, community, society and the world.”

In 2012, Wang became the first BMCC faculty member to receive a faculty fellowship award from the Baruch College-Rubin Museum of Art Project, “which recognizes the important role that arts play in enhancing students’ development,” according to a Baruch-Rubin statement. Wang’s research study explored how integrating Himalayan arts in career-planning classes can impact students’ self-esteem, job search self-efficacy and career decision-making.

Self-discovery through art

During the fall 2012 semester, Wang accompanied a group of 25 career-planning students on a visit to the Rubin Museum of Art on West 17th Street.

Her objective, she says, “was to explore students’ learning experiences from the museum visit and to discover, if possible, how the use of museum objects supported their learning through the stories and teachings behind five selected museum objects—Shakyamuni Buddha, Yellow Jambhala, Mahakala,, Durga and the Wheel of Existence.”

Wang’s students attended a 45-minute tour that focused on these and other objects. Later, they responded to a series of questions from a museum visit booklet Wang designed.

“With guidance by two museum curators, and through participation in an after-visit group discussion, the students were able to see connections among the artwork, career planning concepts, and their personal life endeavors,” Wang says.

Career planning and development is a process that begins with helping students to gain self-understanding and to develop and refine their goals accordingly. A job search is a self-exploration journey that helps students to find their uniqueness, strengths, skills, and personality.”

Even if students cannot realistically be expected answer the question “Who am I?” fully within a brief 15-week period, Wang adds, “they can begin inquiring and embarking upon their discovery journey in college.”

Fostering “literacy of the heart”

Wang’s research draws upon a wide array of teachings and religions. “Aristotle taught that educating the mind without educating the heart is no education at all,” she says.

“Art is literacy of the heart—and integrating arts in a career planning class can support a student’s journey through self-exploration.  Through a deeper understanding of the self, each student can set realistic educational and career goals and develop an action plan to reach his or her desired goals, and so a successful career and life.”

Wang has documented the students’ museum visit experience in a short video, “From BMCC to the Rubin.” She has also co-developed a career search workbook “Finding Your Way in Life through the Mandala” with Dr. Laura Lombard, Head of Adult and Academic Programs at Rubin Museum of Art.

“My study was designed to enable the students to expand their understanding of self-knowledge to include self-worth, and character development above and beyond subject comprehension and skills,” Wang says. “They will be able to make appropriate decisions, set meaningful goals, make plans, and take the best possible actions.”


Auditors Without Borders

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 Auditors Without Borders

When Chika Arita arrived in New York from Tokyo recently, among the top items on her agenda was a meeting with Professor Achraf Seyman of BMCC’s Accounting Department.

Arita is a section chief in the Administrative Evaluation Bureau of Japan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, with responsibility for auditing the performance of government entities in terms of efficiency, effectiveness and transparency. “Our role is similar to that of the General Accounting Office in the U.S,” she explains.

Proficiency in auditing: What it takes

Arita traveled to the U.S. to gain insights into how government auditors are trained in this country—“the competencies they’re expected to acquire, and the way colleges and universities develop and implement appropriate training methodologies,” she says.

Her visit, which was sponsored by a U.S. Department of State leadership program, involved a busy schedule of meetings with auditing professionals in academia, government, and business.

In meeting with Seyam, Arita sought to tap the knowledge and perspectives of a highly accomplished professional. In addition to his academic background, Seyam has nearly two decades’ experience in auditing and accounting for companies, government agencies and not-for-profit organizations. He met with Arita at the college on February 19.

“In order to do performance auditing for the government, you actually need more knowledge and experience, and a broader skill-set than you would as a private sector auditor,” Seyam noted.

“What are the key attributes an auditor needs to have?” Arita asked.

“Good communication skills are the most important,” Seyam said. “You also need an understanding of IT, good decision-making skills, professional judgment, superior critical thinking skills, and an ability—and willingness—to learn and teach as part of the audit process.”

Making things clear

Arita, who is fluent in English and earned a Bachelor’s degree in French language and literature, followed up with a question about communications skills: Why are they especially important?

“Because once you’ve completed an audit, you’ll need to write a report in which you convey your findings clearly and understandably,” Seyam noted. Another aspect of communication skills is a facility for speaking with people at every level of the organization.

“Auditors collect information in a number of ways—through interviews, observation, and analysis of data,” Seyam said. “You need to be able to interact with everyone—department heads, HR, CFOs, CEOs, controllers—in order to get the information you need.” He also addressed some of the differences in the how auditors ply their trade in different countries.

In the U.S., he said, “auditors tend to have more freedom and flexibility in applying their professional judgment than they would in other countries.”

 

The Height of Fashion

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The Height of Fashion

Ron Wallace will be the first to tell you that he wasn’t born with a pencil in his hand.

“Growing up, I couldn’t draw much, but I was good with computer graphics programs like Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop,” he says. But by the time he was in eighth grade, he knew what he wanted to do with his life. When he enrolled in BMCC, he found teachers who were ready and willing to help him achieve his dream—to become a fashion designer.

Wallace graduated in 2012 with a degree in Multimedia in Arts; today, at 22, he heads his own design company—an exciting enterprise called NAMM Clothing that is garnering widespread media attention and a growing clientele.

Long Hours, sleepless nights

Wallace’s line of urban men’s ware reflects his personal aesthetic vision and his success is the product of persistence, a passion for excellence, and an appetite for hard work. “Like most entrepreneurs, I have a lot of sleepless nights,” he says. “But I’m not in this alone.”

At BMCC, he says, “I had some amazing professors, like Alizabeth Towery and Josephine Culkin, who helped me sharpen the skills I’d picked up watching YouTube videos. They showed me that even without knowing how to draw, I could bring fashion and graphics together.”

After graduating, Wallace started his company, always with the thought of someday going back to school to continue his studies in fashion design—“most likely at a place like Parsons or FIT,” he says.

In NAMM’s early days, the business consisted largely of crafting screen-printed t-shirts that were sold on the street and in one store. “But in that one store, we sold out in three weeks, so I knew I had something,” he says.

Last year, Wallace connected with Manufacture New York, a hybrid fashion incubator and factory that provides independent designers with the resources, tools and support to build their own businesses.

“I found out about Manufacture New York through a Facebook ad and ‘liked’ it,” Wallace says. “They were starting a pilot program to provide a shared workspace for clothing and jewelry designers, and I immediately messaged the CEO, Bob Bland to tell her I was good at construction and would be happy to help in any way.”

Bland took Wallace up on his offer and, on an August morning last year, he found himself pouring concrete and knocking down walls at the pilot space, in the heart of Manhattan’s Garment District.

Drawing attention

In addition to providing Wallace with a workspace fully equipped with machinery and computer workstations, Bland gave Wallace a wealth of pointers and guidance on how to build his business, provided him with introductions, and, he says, “taught me everything.”

His participation in New York Fashion Week earlier this month brought a wave of interest from the media—and from other designers, who called to congratulate him on his success.

Wallace’s design ideas can come from anywhere, and at any time—“from the colors and shapes I see all around me, and sometimes from surprising places.” Recently, he was watching a cartoon with his nephew, when inspiration struck. “I took out my laptop and started drawing,” he says.

His designs are colorful, but not outlandish. “I call my customers middlemen—people who want to stand out without being loud,” he explains. “For example, I like shirts with a splash of color—but not a lot of in-your-face graphics.”

When New York Fashion Week ended, Wallace had planned to take a much-deserved break, but found his days taken up with media interviews, and thinking ahead to his spring 2015 collection. He is also hoping to show his designs at Paris Fashion Week.

“Eventually, I want to take my company worldwide,” he says. “If you want to be a leader in urban men’s ware, you can’t limit yourself to New York.”

One High School. Twelve Months. Five Remarkable Kids

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One High School. Twelve Months. Five Remarkable Kids

It’s difficult to watch the documentary film, “I Learn America,” without feeling profound admiration for the five resilient high school students whose stories it tells—and without gaining a new appreciation for what it means to be an immigrant teenager in 21st century America.

“Being different is like a part-time job,” says Sandra Staniszewski, currently a BMCC multimedia arts major and one of the five students profiled in the film. “You are half yourself and half the time you try to be someone better for the people to show how you want to be. What I want to be is myself.”

Born and raised in Poland, Sandra emigrated to the U.S. with her older brother in 2009. “My mom had come here often to work and earn money to send back home,” she says. “It was important to her that my brother and I stay in Poland and complete our schooling.”

Later, her father emigrated to the U.S., and for the next six months sister and brother looked after themselves. “It was stressful,” Sandra says. “I had a tough time staying focused on my studies.”

Coming to America

After joining her parents in New York, Sandra was enrolled in eighth grade at a school in Brooklyn’s Greenpoint section. “All I heard there was Polish,” she recalls. “I felt I’d never learn to speak English.” The following year, she transferred to Lafayette High School. She couldn’t have made a better choice.

Dedicated to serving newly-arrived immigrants, the International School at Lafayette had more than 300 students from over 50 countries, speaking more than 50 languages. “I really wanted to meet people, but language was a barrier,” Sandra says. “English is hard to learn, and when you’re a teenager, just fitting into a new, unfamiliar environment is stressful.”

It was the school’s rich cultural diversity that made all the difference. “I met kids from all over the world who had faced the same challenges I was dealing with,” Sandra says. “We all became comfortable with each other.”

Getting it on film

Not surprisingly, when filmmaker Jean-Michel Dissard set out to make a documentary about a year in the life of five immigrant high school students, he chose Lafayette as his focal point.

“Jean Michel didn’t choose the five students in the film,” says Sandra. “The students chose him. He spent a lot of time walking around with his camera, and as he did, about 20 kids, including me, started following him.”

Dissard encouraged the students to ask questions; later he interviewed them individually, drawing out their stories. “Eventually, the group came down to the five you see in the movie,” says Sandra. The four others are from Myanmar, Guatemala, Pakistan and the Dominican Republic.

Dissard’s intent had been to provide a way for Sandra and her classmates to tell their stories. “But he realized the film could do much more—and perhaps even help change attitudes and laws,” Sandra says. Last year, “I Learn America” was screened for the first time at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington.

“We were very nervous, since we didn’t know how people would react,” says Sandra. “But it was crucial that this film be seen by lawmakers and other government officials, and that they understand the realities of young immigrant life in this country.”

For many, she notes, emigration is not a choice but a mandate. “They came because they had to—because their parents were here, or they had lost their families back home, or for other compelling reasons.”

Many came at great personal sacrifice—or personal risk. Brandon, one of the five in the film, journeyed alone from Guatemala to America to reunite with his mother, crossing the desert by himself. 

Audience reaction

Since its initial screening, “I Learn America” has been seen by audiences at schools, theaters and other venues throughout the U.S. and Europe and generated tremendous excitement and encouragement.

The students often tour with it, interacting with local people and, in some cases, leading workshops for immigrant children. Recently, the film was shown at the Nantucket Film Festival.

It was during the making of “I Learn America” that Sandra received her Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), extending her permission to live and study in the U.S. for two years. After graduating from Lafayette, she began her studies at BMCC in 2012.

“My teachers in the Media Arts and Technology department have been incredibly caring and supportive,” she says. “Professor Jody Culkin has been especially helpful, and has always been open to new ideas.”

Sandra expects to graduate from BMCC in 2016 and continue her studies at a senior college. She’ll renew her DACA for another two years—but by then, perhaps, the Dream Act, which would grant permanent residency to young immigrants like herself, will have become law as the nation gains a deeper and better informed appreciation of the immigrant teenager experience.

“In making “I Learn America,” we started out telling five separate stories, but it’s really one story,” she says. “And the struggle of immigrant children today is everyone’s struggle.”

 

Editor’s Note: Sandra’s inseparable classmate at Lafayette High School, Jennifer, who is from the Dominican Republic, also attends BMCC.

Going Green

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Every year at BMCC, a traditional Irish feast celebrating St. Patrick’s Day raises money so that no student goes hungry, or has to drop out because he or she can’t afford a Metrocard.

This year’s celebration, held in Richard Harris Terrace, was more successful than ever. With proceeds slated for the BMCC Emergency Fund, the sixth annual Saint Patrick’s Day Lunch provided live dance performances and a delectable corned-beef and cabbage lunch prepared by MBJ Food Services.

The buffet-style banquet even included a dozen loaves of homemade Irish soda bread baked and donated by Bridy Diviney, mother-in-law of BMCC Administrative Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, James Boyle.

A worthy cause

Pat Splendore, Director of the BMCC Annual Fund in the Office of College Development, led the organizing committee and welcomed the audience.

“As some of you know, my maiden name is ‘Malloy’,” she said. “That’s how I got into organizing the St. Patrick’s Day Party back in 2008. This event is close to my heart for a lot of reasons, but first and foremost is that it meets a very immediate need–helping our students when they are suddenly facing a crisis. I’m delighted to see a full house this year, in support of this important cause.”

John Gallagher, Director of the BMCC Media Center, initiated the event six years ago with his friend and colleague Terrence Dunne, who is on staff in the College Computer Center.

“The purpose of the event has always been to support the BMCC Student Emergency Fund,” Gallagher said.

“For a lot of our students, a Metrocard is the difference between a good semester and dropping out. Our ticket price is only $25—but that will get a student to school for a week.”

Raffle donations

Kim O’Donnell, secretary to the Computer Information Systems department, scoured the BMCC neighborhood for raffle donations from local businesses.

Gift certificates, books and other items were contributed by Belita Nail & Spa, Century 21, Duane Park Patisserie, The Mysterious Bookshop, Tribeca Pizzeria, Tribeca Cornerstone Grill, Tribeca Tap House and Woodrow’s.

Adding a touch of elegance to the raffle event, jewelry designer Eileen Pérez donated two of her hand-crafted necklaces distinguished by fire-polished Czech glass beads, and crocheted with silk thread.

Live dance performance

The event’s highlight was a lively program of jigs, reels, accordion playing, musical spoons and even “nonsense singing,” an old English and Irish tradition in which song lyrics are replaced with impromptu syllables.

Punctuating their beat with Irish dance clogs, dancers from the renown Niall O’Leary School of Irish Dance regaled the audience with their energy and talent.

Dance troupe leader Niall O’Leary—an All-Ireland and World Champion—was joined by Stacie Sousa and Kristina Varade—the latter of whom is also a professor of Italian in the Modern Languages program at BMCC.

“I’ve been dancing since I was 14; I actually started pretty late,” says Professor Varade.

“I’m actually of both heritages, Italian and Irish, and I’ve never been able to pick one over the other. My professional life has led me to look at both Irish and Italian culture—I earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature with a specialization in Italian and Irish literature—and now, I’m learning Gaelic.”

Next year’s celebration

If you’d like to donate a raffle item for the 2015 St. Patrick’s Day Luncheon, please contact Kim O’Donnell at 212 220-1476.

 

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Saint Patrick’s Day Committee included James Boyle, Kay Conway, Robert Cox, Jodie Culkin, Terrence Dunne, John Gallagher, Katherine Kavanagh, Kim O’Donnell and Pat Malloy Splendore

Strategies of a Premier Community College

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Strategies of a Premier Community College

“Our continuing goal is to be the premier Community College in the nation,” said BMCC President Antonio Pérez as he opened this year’s State of the College address in Theatre II on the BMCC main campus.

“In 2013, Community College Week ranked BMCC as Number 2 among all the two-year colleges in the nation for awarding degrees to African Americans and Number 4 nationally, in awarding degrees to underrepresented students in general.”

The President went on to highlight strategies leading to those outcomes.

Strategic Goal #1: Excellence in Teaching, Research and Learning

“Our faculty are world-class scholars and teachers,” said President Pérez, adding that since last spring, “we have added 38 full-time faculty. We now have almost 550 full-time faculty members teaching at BMCC.”

Another highlight he shared was a new partnership between the American Association of Advertising Agencies and BMCC, CUNY and the NYC Department of Education.

This collaborative effort will establish the Manhattan Early College School for Advertising (MEECA), the President said, and “pipeline high-potential youth into the industry,” providing graduates “with a credential, a high-school diploma and associates degree at no cost.”

He also talked about BMCC’s proposed Community Health and other associate degree programs that will address workforce demands in areas such as gerontology, animation and motion graphics.

In addition, BMCC is creating a certificate program in Health Informatics, as well as Liberal Arts programs in History, Sociology and Psychology.

Strategic Goal #2: Student Success and Retention

President Pérez discussed the academic challenges many students face, and supports in place to address them, including the BMCC Innovation in Reading and Writing Initiative, the Quantway Network in Mathematics and the BMCC Freshman Learning Academies.

For example, he said, “In our developmental writing courses we have incorporated grammar diagnostic software that allows faculty to determine students’ specific areas of weakness in mechanics, so that lessons or small group work can be tailored to their specific needs.”

That and other measures have resulted in the CATW writing exam’s pass rate going from approximately 39% to 62%, he reported, “the highest in CUNY.”

Another form of academic support is being provided by the Manhattan Educational Opportunity Center (MEOC), President Pérez announced, explaining that MEOC now offers free developmental instruction on the BMCC campus, while the CUNY Start program out of the Center for Continuing Education and Workforce Development continues to build students’ ability to pass the CUNY entrance exams.

The President also shared that BMCC is currently the leading Quantway College in the nation, with the pass rates for BMCC’s Quantway students significantly higher than in traditional algebra classes.

Other initiatives to build students’ academic performance include the Freshman Learning Academies, which significantly raise student pass rates, and the BMCC Enrollment Management Team.

Generous friends of the College

A program close that is “close to my heart,” the President said, is the Early Childhood Center, which received over a quarter of a million dollars last year to help support its daily operations and ensure the academic success of BMCC students who are parents.

Even more student support will be possible in the next few years, he said, thanks to generous friends of the college including the Carroll and Milton Petrie Foundation, which will provide a grant of $300,000 over three years, to build students’ skills.

Donations to the college in general have risen, the President shared.

Last April, he said, the BMCC Foundation sponsored a 50th Anniversary Celebration for the College on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, raising over 800,000 for the BMCC Foundation Scholarship Fund—nearly double the amount raised in 2011.

This year’s Scholarship Gala, “Reaching for the Stars: The Next 50 Years at BMCC,” will be held on the 54th floor of the newly opened 4 World Trade Center building.

Other celebrations include last September’s Steinway Soiree—the College’s first—in the Shirley Fiterman Art Center featuring guest artists Paul Shaffer, Roberta Flack, Art Garfunkel, Lew Soloff and Peter Cincotti, and showcasing BMCC’s talented art and music faculty, the President said.

Most recently, in December, BMCC received a major gift of $250,000 from the Derfner Foundation to establish a new Communication Center, which will help BMCC students improve their speaking and presentation skills.

Strategic Goal #3: Organizational Effectiveness and Accountability

During the last year, BMCC submitted its Periodic Review Report to the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.

The College was reaffirmed for accreditation and “commended for establishing a variety of methods and process for assessing the strategic plan and for using those results to promote institutional renewal,” said President Pérez.

The college’s plan addresses a number of issues including physical space, “and it is important to note that BMCC is fully committed to the goal of a sustainable future,” said the President.

“We are halfway through the 10-year BMCC Plan for Sustainability which includes ambitious goals for energy conservation, curriculum and education, procurement, waste management and recycling.”

In addition, he said, when the BMCC roofing project is completed, the college will embark on the installation of a 300+ KW solar panel array which will be the largest such installation in Manhattan.

“This will greatly reduce the College’s carbon footprint,” said President Pérez.

Strategic Goal #4: Global Engagement and Economic Development

“Since BMCC began, we have been clear that our mission was to serve the residents of New York City,” the President told the audience in Theatre II.

Supporting this mission is a $3 million Health Information Pathways grant from the US Department of Labor “which will establish the only Health Informatics Specialist Certificate Program in the City of New York,” he said.

The President also noted that “together with a $2 million CUNY TAACCCT grant and the $2.8 million Health Lattice Program grant from the US Department of Labor, BMCC has become a leader in the field of Health Information Technology.”

He added that BMCC was the first Community College in the United States to have been awarded a Race to a Job grant by the Wadhwani Foundation, an international private foundation focused on workforce development.

“BMCC students arrive from all over New York City and the world,” President Pérez said in closing.

“It is our obligation to ensure that the skills, knowledge and competencies that our students build through their experiences at BMCC prepare them for personal and economic success, as well as full and responsible participation in the 21st Century global community.”

To read the President’s address in its entirety, click here.

 

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