DCC Professional Development Report 1993 - 1994

Table of ContentsPage

Introduction...... 2

Current Year Activities:

Professional Staff Workshop Opportunities

DCC Professional Staff Development Workshops...... 3

Professional Staff Retreats3

DCC In-service Computer Training Courses...... 4

Tuition Reimbursement Support

DCC Tuition Reimbursement5

SUNY Tuition Waiver6

DCC Tuition Waiver6

DCC Credit Courses Audited6

DCC Credit-free Course Attendance6

Grant Support

Improvement of Instruction Grants7

Publishing/Royalties...... 8

C. B. Schmidt Award8

DCC Foundation Mini-Grant Awards ('93-'94)...... 9

Individual Professional Fund Allowance11

Encouraging Funding from External Grants...... 11

External Grants12

Professional Leave Support

Conference Attendance15

Contact Hour Release Time16

Sabbatical Leaves

Faculty ('93-'94)...... 17

Administrators ('93-'94)...... 18

Professional Staff Recognition

Length of Service19

Faculty Promotions and Tenure20

Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Professional Service...... 21

Administrative Three Year Term Appointments...... 21

NTE Promotions...... 21

Next Year Preview:

Grant Support

DCC Foundation Mini-Grant Awards ('94-'95)...... 22

Professional Leave Support

Sabbatical Leaves

Faculty ('94-'95)...... 25

Administrators ('94-'95)...... 26

INTRODUCTION

Dutchess Community College had 147 full-time faculty, 286 adjunct faculty and 69 administrators during the fall semester of the past academic year, 1993 - '94. Commitment to the development of all the professional staff at Dutchess Community College is a continuing goal of the institution. This Professional Development Report shows not only the diversity and quality of activities undertaken by the professional staff, but also the willingness of the College to commit time, personnel, and financial resources to support these activities.

The Office of Academic Affairs administers Tuition Reimbursement, SUNY Tuition Waivers, DCC Credit-free course attendance, conference attendance, Improvement of Instruction Grants, contact hour release time, faculty sabbaticals, faculty promotion & tenure, the C. B. Schmidt and DCC Foundation Mini-Grant Awards, and the Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Professional Service.

The Office of Human Resources Management administers the DCC Tuition Waiver, the Length of Service Awards, and sabbaticals and term appointments for administrative staff.

The Office of the Registrar administers audits of DCC credit courses.

The Business Office manages external grants, coordinating with the principal authors.

In-service computer training is conducted by the Computer Center.

The Professional Staff Development Committee, in conjunction with the Office of Academic Affairs, coordinates a full program of staff development workshops.

Many people helped to provide information used in this report. Special thanks go to Cathy McCue for the material on external grants, Nancy Clark for the figures from the Business Office, Irene Miller and Paul Higgins, Alice Kelleher, Johnni Freer, and Chris Turner. The cover was designed by Camilo Rojas.

This is the second year DCC has published a Professional Development Report. The Office of Academic Affairs is pleased to present this summary of professional development at Dutchess Community College for 1993 - '94. We hope you share in the continuing pride we feel for the fine accomplishments of our colleagues and ourselves.

Madison K. Finley, Associate Dean of Academic Affairs

PROFESSIONAL STAFF WORKSHOP OPPORTUNITIES

DCC Professional Staff Development Workshops

Identifying At-risk Students

Assessing Educational Resources at DCC

Services Available for At-risk Students

Portfolio Assessment

Academically Under-prepared Students

Dealing with Difficult Students

Classroom Management Techniques

Multi-media Software

Word Perfect Office and E-Mail on the Internet

Daedalus Conferencing

MathCad

AIDS

Year of the Woman

Environmental Studies

Generation X Confronts the Bemires

Stalking the Fossil Mollusks

Decameron III

Health Care Programs

Professional Staff Retreats

Academic Team Workshop: Departmental Affairs CouncilPlanning Retreat

Quality Council: Quality Training Retreat

Many academic departments also conduct retreats on a regular basis.

PROFESSIONAL STAFF WORKSHOP OPPORTUNITIES

DCC In-Service Computer Training Courses (offered each semester)

Introduction to Personal Computers & DOS3 hours

Introduction to Networking3 hours

WordPerfect Office3 hours

Introduction to WordPerfect 5.19 hours

WordPerfect 5.1 (Intermediate)9 hours

WordPerfect 5.1 (Advanced)9 hours

Wordperfect 5.1 Specifics (COLUMNS)3 hours

Wordperfect 5.1 Specifics (GRAPHICS)3 hours

Wordperfect 5.1 Specifics (MERGE)3 hours

Wordperfect 5.1 Specifics (TABLES)3 hours

Wordperfect 5.1 Seminar3 hours

Introduction to Lotus 1-2-39 hours

Lotus 1-2-3 (Intermediate)9 hours

WSLAN to Access APPAC & HIRIS2 hours

DASH (Degree Audit Student History)2 hours

Introduction to APPAC & Reports2 hours

IMPRESS & UMI Periodical Abstracts3 hours

How to Recognize & Handle Confidential Data1 hour

Scanner operation1 hour

The Internet1 hour

Special training for individual departments also can be arranged. Contact the Computer Center.

TUITION REIMBURSEMENT SUPPORT

DCC TUITION REIMBURSEMENT

Thirty-eight faculty and administrators received support totalling $20,038.10.

Fall 1993*

Gloria AyalaSt Charles

Domenica Bellacicco

Julett Butler

Lowell Butler

Dorothy Decker

Patricia DeLessio

John DeMadaler

Thomas Denton

Roy Gross

Joseph Hanafee

Henry Horwitz

Karen Ingham

Larry Johnson

Kathleen King

Carolyn Lampack

Deborah Langenau

Linda LaRou

Barbara Liesenbein

Erin Mabey

Patria MesteyPerez

Holly Molella

Margaret Moran

Deborah Most

Victoria Passikoff

June Pierson

Geraldine PozziGalluzi

Richard Reitano

George Stevens

Francis Whittle

* Fall listings include those who file for courses in the Fall but who may plan to take those courses in the Spring or Summer. All applicants are encouraged to file in the Fall for available funds. Second and third opportunities to apply for remaining funds occur prior to the Spring and the Summer.

Spring 1994

Thomas Denton

Maryann Longhi

Elisabeth Maset

Carol Stevens

Wendy Walker

Summer 1994

Bruce Cassel

Louise Cooper

Jackie Goffe-McNish

Richard Malboeuf

TUITION REIMBURSEMENT SUPPORT

SUNY Tuition Waiver

Six members of the professional staff used SUNY Tuition Waivers totalling $2,600.00:

Tim Decker

Pamela Duda

Toni Emery

Laurie Scott

Joanne Tucker

Mareve Van Voorhis

DCC Tuition Waiver

Thirty-one members of the professional staff used the DCC Tuition Waiver for themselves and/or their immediate family members to take DCC credit courses at no charge. The total amount of the College contribution to this benefit for the Fall '93 and Spring '94 semesterswas $21,482.

DCC Credit Courses Audited

Three members of the professional staff audited DCC credit courses.

DCC Credit-free Course Attendance

Forty-three approvals were issued for DCC professional staff to take job-related credit-free courses, with a total tuition amount of $2,688.00.

GRANT SUPPORT:

IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTION GRANTS

Twenty-nine faculty and administrators received support totalling $24,046.52.

Fall 1993

Loretto Canfield

Jacqueline GoffeMcNish

Spring 1994

Gloria AyalaSt. Charles

Philip Arnold

Lauren Cherney

Gerald Hamel

Martin Hochhauser

Karen Ingham

Susan Lafosse

James Miller

Deborah Most

Darleene Peters

George Stevens

Lois Stewart

Mareve Van Voorhis

Anthony Zito

Summer 1994

Jacquelyn Appeldorn

James Brazee

Jacqueline GoffeMcNish

Johanna Halsey

Gerald Hamel

Henry Horwitz

Karen Ingham

Susan LaFosse

Anne Landry

Linda LaRou

Tanya Marcuse

Mark McConnaughhay

Patria MesteyPerez

Geraldine PozziGalluzi

Diana Staats

Judith Tavel

Joanne Tucker

Mareve Van Voorhis

GRANT SUPPORT:

PUBLISHING/ROYALTIES

Under a new program this year administered by the Office of Academic Affairs, three DCC faculty members donated royalties from the sale of manuals they had written to the DCC Foundation. The manuals were developed using Improvement of Instruction funds and were published by an outside publishing house. Royalties will continue to be paid to the DCC Foundation until the original Improvement of Instruction grants are repaid. The three faculty members are:

Madison Finley -Academic Computing Guide

Jessica Gerson -Avoiding Plagiarism

Jody Sterling - Avoiding Plagiarism

GRANT SUPPORT:

C. B. SCHMIDT AWARD

Until his death in 1968, C. B. Schmidt served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Dutchess Community College. His ten years of service to the college guided it during a period of rapid growth. He was actively concerned with the expansion of Dutchess' curriculums as well as its physical facilities. Mr. Schmidt's contributions as Chairman of the Board were recognized by the professional staff with the establishment of a development fund in his name.

The criteria for awards has been the "anticipated contribution to the development of the DCC professional staff."

Members of the 1994 C. B. Schmidt Awards Committee were David Schmidt (family member), Wesley Ostertag, Johanna Halsey, Joan Mazza, Barbara Liesenbein, and Madison Finley (Chairperson). After careful consideration, the Committee recommended the following award:

Dana VanderHeyden, Assistant Registrar, will receive an award of $700 to identify colleges with effective and innovative advising programs for full-time students, visit several campuses, and present specific recommendations for advising models that would be suitable at DCC. An objective of this project is to retain a greater proportion of our full-time students, especially in Liberal Arts.

DCC FOUNDATION MINI-GRANT AWARDS 1993 - '94

The purpose of the DCC Foundation Mini-Grant Program is to encourage innovative activities or projects by individuals or groups of the professional staff that will have a significant impact on students and college life. The maximum award for any application or single project is $3,000.00. All applications were considered in this first year of the new program, but priority was given to projects that address one of the two college objectives for this year:

Improving Relationships with Area High Schools, or

Promoting Student Success

Members of the 1993 DCC Foundation Mini-Grant Awards Committee were Martha Afzal, Susan LaFosse, Toni Doherty, Ronald Kupin, Dana VanderHeyden, and Madison Finley (Chairperson). After careful review of the twenty-three applications, the Committee recommended the following distribution of awards, totalling $15,000:

NAME:AMOUNT:PROJECT SUMMARY:

Himelstein/Cutonilli$1,200ASSET Test in high schools

Rosenthal, Evelyn 595Encyclopedia CD-ROM software

Walker / Mabey 1,000Laptop computer for Admissions

Biasotti / Tavel 1,900Algebra CD-ROM software

Wills, Robert 275BRIC awareness poster contest

Norton, Joe 1,830Local history database

English faculty 1,600High school outreach

Math faculty 1,600High school outreach

Biology faculty 1,600High school outreach

Flynn, James 1,500Architecture software

Smith, Tim$1,900High school leadership training

Some projects received partial funding. A more detailed description of each funded project follows:

Howard Himelstein, Associate Dean of Student Personnel Services, and Alexander Cutonilli, Director of Admissions, administered the standardized academic battery "ASSET" test free of charge to all interested high school juniors in two area high schools. The placement report provides course placement recommendations that coincide with entering DCC students, and provides guidance for students preparing to enter DCC. The pilot project provides greater articulation with area high schools and affects between 300 - 400 students. The budget included ASSET scoring for 400 students, two training sessions for high school guidance counsellors, and two workshops to orient DCC faculty.

Evelyn Rosenthal, Assistant Librarian, received funds to purchase for the Library the New Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. This multimedia software includes 21 volumes of the Academic American Encyclopedia with graphics, sound, and video sequences to increase retention and learning.

Wendy Walker, Coordinator of Adult Career and Education Counselling, and Erin Mabey, Admissions Counsellor, received partial funding toward the purchase of a laptop computer used in a combined effort between the Offices of Admissions and Counseling & Career Services. The laptop helps to increase DCC's visibility efforts at high school visits and other off-campus locations, and attract more potential students.

Mary Biasotti, Acting Assistant Director of Academic Services, received partial funding to purchase one set of ModuMath interactive laserdisk software in Elementary Algebra. Several hundred developmental math students, especially in MAT 091, are able to do independent study in the Learning Center.

Robert Wills, Instructor, Department of Engineering Science and Industrial Technologies, received full funding for a poster contest to increase awareness of bias issues on campus. The project has the support of the Bias Related Issues Committee (BRIC). The budget is for materials and cash awards.

Joseph Norton, Instructor, Department of History, Government and Economics, received partial funding to complete his project to develop a local history database. The database will reside in the Library and will offer a community service to local high schools, businesses, students, and anyone interested in local history. The database will serve as a bibliographic storehouse of information of the kinds and locations of archival materials held locally. The New York State Education Department now requires state and local history courses to be incorporated into the high school curriculum.

James Flynn, Professor, Department of Engineering Science and Industrial Technologies, purchased a software package that complements three-dimensional AutoCad software used in the Architectural Technology program at DCC. The software is used by approximately 50 architecture students each semester to explore the newest presentation techniques.

Timothy Smith, Director of Student Activities, received full funding to establish a Leadership Training Center on the DCC campus. The program offers state-of-the-art training to 300+ students from area high schools who are involved in student government, clubs, organizations, sports teams, or serve as class officers. Training involves setting goals and objectives, dealing with conflict, and programming.

Three academic departments, English & Humanities (O. Howard Winn), Mathematics, Physical & Computer Sciences (Johanna Halsey and Anne Landry), and Allied Health & Biological Sciences (Sharon Fowler, Arthur Pritchard and Andrew Scala), each received funding to conduct high school outreach projects. Each project involved research of a topic critical to the department, and meetings between high school faculty and DCC faculty.

GRANT SUPPORT:

INDIVIDUAL PROFESSIONAL FUND ALLOWANCE

Each member of the professional staff is entitled to be reimbursed up to $350.00 per year toward the purchase of books, journals, subscriptions, computer hardware and computer software. Purchases are approved by the staff member's department head, and must be job-related.

As of July 25, 1994, a total of $43,196.62 had been spent from this fund this year.

The DCC Individual Professional Funds, commonly known as the "Book Allowance" fund, also may be used to defray costs to attend professional conventions, conferences, and seminars.

GRANT SUPPORT:

ENCOURAGING FUNDING FROM EXTERNAL GRANTS

Grants Task Force

A Grants Task Force was formed in Fall 1993 to create procedures to assist grant seekers. Members of the task force are:

Madison Finley

Gail Hermosilla

Susan Hochhauser

Maryanne Kinsella

Cathy McCue

Wesley Ostertag

Arthur Pritchard

SPIN

Donated to the College by the DCC Foundation, SPIN (Sponsored Program Information Network) is a computer program that allows grant seekers to search for potential funding sources. The program was placed on the college local area microcomputer network and is available by contacting the Computer Center for instructions.

The INTERNET

The College now has transparent access to electronic mail, or E-Mail, over the Internet. Available to all users of the campus local area network, our new campus connection through SUNYNET allows professional staff to communicate with colleagues throughout the SUNY system and beyond. Future Internet capabilities such as file transfer protocol will be provided when testing is complete.

GRANT SUPPORT:

EXTERNAL GRANTS

The following grants total $1,283,493 in additional outside funding to DCC. Please note that this figure is not an unduplicated figure, because many of the grants are ongoing over several years, as indicated below. Actual expenditures for each grant are available from the Business Office.

GRANT NAME PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR

NSF-Math/Physical Science ExploritoriumAnne Landry

Funds from the National Science Foundation will provide for the purchase of computer equipment to permit the gathering and analysis of data to facilitate continuing work on inter-disciplinary courses throughout the curriculum. ($47,018 over two and one-half years)

C-STEP Mary Mucci

The Collegiate Science and Technology Entry Program provides funds for supplemental tutoring for students taking courses that are preparatory in nature to maximize student success in programs that lead to professional licenses and careers in scientific, technical, and health-related fields. The CSTEP coordinator assists in solving problems that may interfere with a student's pursuit of his or her education and career. ($84,900)

VATEA Mary Mucci

Funds are provided to improve or create programs or courses of study. Currently, the funding is providing for lab assistants in the Business Education and Academic Resource Centers, a Development Education monitor, and partial funding for a Disabled Student Services Coordinator. Also provides funds to upgrade equipment for certain programs. ($94,274)

Dutchess Model/CooperativeArthur Pritchard

Demonstration Program

The program goal is to offer a year-long high school science course for historically under-represented and under-served students which provides a proactive nourishing education experience leading to increased interest, involvement and productivity in science learning, high school graduation and their increased access to licensed professions and occupations that can be entered through two-year college program. ($25,000)

Z.B.G.A. (Zoos, Botanical Gardens and Arthur Pritchard

Aquariums) 3-years

Funds are provided by the National Heritage Trust for support of Norrie Point Environmental Site in the Mills/Norrie State Park to make full use of the unique natural systems and cultural richness of the park. DCC conducts a wide variety of education programs, activities, conferences and experiences offered in credit and credit-free opportunities to fulfill these goals. ($23,926/year over three years)

EXTERNAL GRANTS continued

Dutchess/Putnam County D.S.S. TrainingLaura Caputo

Provides funds for Department of Social Services staff members to improve their job-related skills and competencies; to improve opportunity for them to earn college credit toward an associate degree or a certificate which could lead to career advancement; and to enhance their intellectual and personal development which could lead to modification of attitudes and have a positive impact on their job performances. ($206,800 total: $112,000 from Dutchess Co. and $94,800 from Putnam Co.)