Employee Anniversaries
The following employees are celebrating an anniversary soon. Please join us in congratulating them! (more…)
The following employees are celebrating an anniversary soon. Please join us in congratulating them! (more…)
Are you looking for career opportunities? Find them here! jobs.nmc.edu. (more…)
Congratulations to NMC’s Staff Excellence Award winner, Jan Root, Office Manager-Communications Academic Area
Jan is dedicated to helping both students and instructors daily, managing a near-constant flow of other people’s needs. With her Academic Chair on sabbatical, Jan has provided additional consistency and support for the interim chair and the new manager who transitioning of the Reading Writing Center. She is also behind the scenes, helping to streamline processes, scheduling and paperwork for one of the largest academic departments. She is efficient, trustworthy and a pleasure to work with.
Congratulations to NMC’s Team Excellence Award winners, Open Educational Resources (OER) Team
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NMC Jazz Groups will be in concert Saturday, April 20 starting at 7:30 p.m. in Milliken Auditorium.
TRAVERSE CITY — The community is invited to the Great Lakes Maritime Academy’s open “ship” showcasing the training ship State of Michigan from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 13. The day will include:
Tours will begin at the pier security gate entrance on the north side of NMC’s Great Lakes campus, 715 E. Front St. Low-heel, closed-toe, soft-soled shoes are highly recommended. The event will occur rain or shine.
Scott Fairbank
Great Lakes Maritime Academy
sfairbank@nmc.edu
(231) 995-1213
TRAVERSE CITY — Northwestern Michigan College announced today it will launch a new institute devoted to experiential learning and community engagement.
Experiential learning provides learners real world and hands-on opportunities preparing them for an ever-changing and diverse world. The purpose of experiential learning is to actively engage the learner through relevant and ongoing experience, critical problem solving and reflective practices. Learners who engage in experiential learning are more likely to persist through their college experience, graduate, and become lifelong, self-directed learners.
The Experiential Learning Institute is the next step in more formal college efforts to expand experiential learning college-wide, which began in 2016. It will collaborate with both on-campus and community stakeholders to engage students and the community, locally, nationally and globally. The Institute will connect the community and NMC by seeking creative partnerships, serving ongoing community needs, and preparing learners for future employment.
Kristy McDonald, director, said, “Experiential learning is important because students grow not only in their intellectual capacity but also personally, professionally, and civically. They have a greater capacity for empathy and compassion in the way they see themselves and the world.”
McDonald and several other faculty and staff have earned certification from the Experiential Education Academy, part of the New Jersey-based National Society for Experiential Education.
Sharing his enthusiastic support for this new initiative, NMC President Timothy J. Nelson said, “I’m excited about the outcomes we will see as our students combine doing with learning. The institute formalizes what many of our faculty and staff have done and embeds it through the college.”
Kristy McDonald
Director, Experiential Learning Institute and Business Instructor
kmcdonald@nmc.edu
(231) 995-1059
Godwin Jabangwe says life’s put him in the right place at the right time, taking him from his native Zimbabwe to an NMC classroom to another in Grand Rapids to Los Angeles.
Now the former visual communications student-turned-screenwriter will bring that serendipity full circle, taking Netflix audiences back to Zimbabwe after closing a “monster” sale for his first feature film, Tunga, inspired by the mythology of the Shona culture in that African country.
“Even now, it doesn’t feel real. It’s so crazy and unexpected,” said Jabangwe, 35, who attended NMC from 2007-2010 and discovered screenwriting while working in the Beckett Building computer lab.
“That’s actually how I started writing. I would have eight-hour shifts,” he said. “You reached the end of the Internet.”
Jabangwe’s deal is the first to come out of Imagine Impact, a talent incubator founded by Hollywood heavyweights Ron Howard and Brian Grazer (below, right) and headed by Tyler Mitchell (below, left) in 2018.
“They bring in talented writers who are seeking a breakthrough,” Jabangwe said. He’d been working on the Tunga idea but joining the Impact class, which paired writers with mentors, allowed him to focus. The experience ended in February with a pitch day to potential buyers, which Jabangwe called both “very exciting” and “terrifying.” Netflix won Tunga in a four-way bidding war. (Watch video of Jabangwe celebrating his deal.)
Though he’s a long way from NMC, where he followed his older brother, Succeed, Jabangwe’s path from Traverse City is one of steady progress. He lived in the NMC apartments and took his first film class here. The college was small enough that he could adapt to the U.S., but big enough to allow him to dream.
“I’d always wanted to be in film somehow,” he said. “NMC allowed me to settle into life in the United States without getting too much of a culture shock.”
(Spring international student enrollment stands at 48 students. International students help achieve NMC’s strategic direction of ensuring learners are prepared for success in a global society and economy.)
Following NMC, Jabangwe earned a bachelor’s degree in film from Grand Valley State University. He aspired to UCLA’s prestigious screenwriting program, but didn’t think he could get in. Instead, he enrolled in a master’s degree program in computer science. He got his acceptance from UCLA during class one day.
“I just got up and packed my bags and walked out,” he said. “I packed up my little car and drove to LA.”
Jabangwe will now continue development of the Tunga script. There is no announced release date yet.
The following college events and stories have appeared in the media in the past week. We want to share your media involvement too. Please send information about your NMC-related interview or appearance to publicrelations@nmc.edu. If possible, please include a link to the piece and information about where and when it was used.
Please note access to some stories may be limited by paywalls set up by the media outlet. This includes the Traverse City Record-Eagle, which limits free clicks to five per month. You may also read Record-Eagle articles in the print edition at the Osterlin Library.
Seats on 19-member NMC committee tentatively filled
Record-Eagle, March 29
And without much ado, the museum’s most valuable item
Ticker, March 28
NMC Presidential Search Committee members being chosen today
Record-Eagle, March 28
Boomerang Catapult invests more in Hybrid Robotics
Record-Eagle, March 27
Speaker at NMC during Sexual Assault Awareness Week
Ticker, March 26
Dams are high tech learning centers (scroll to p.10)
2019 Consumers Energy Hydro Reporter
From victim to survivor
Record-Eagle, March 25
Public forum scheduled re: NMC presidential search
Ticker, March 25
RE: OER textbooks
Record-Eagle Letters to the editor, March 21
Michigan Tech formalizes commitment to the Grand Traverse region
Ticker, March 22
Michigan Tech formalizes commitment to the Grand Traverse region
MTU News, March 21
NMC seeks people for presidential search committee
Record-Eagle, March 20
Kalkaska deputy honored (NMC law enforcement alumnus)
TV 9 & 10, March 20
Autonomous cars take stage
Record-Eagle, March 20
Sexual assault awareness week
MI News 26, March 19
Inuit art teaches harmony with nature
Patheos blog, March 19
Free spring break events at The Dennos
Record-Eagle, March 15
The Dennos Museum Center welcomes NMC faculty, staff, and community members back from spring break 2019 with a special discount for our upcoming concert with Aguankó on Friday, April 5. This Detroit-based band, led by percussionist and composer Alberto Nacíf, is steeped in the tradition of jazz infused Son-Salsa.
So bring the whole family for a wonderful night of Latin music and dancing. They will be performing for hundreds of local K-12 students in the morning, followed by the public concert at 8 p.m.
Following the link below, you can enter the code NMC to receive a 50% discount on all tickets.
Support the Next Generation of skilled workers in the Grand Traverse Area. TBAISD Career Tech construction students v. NMC Construction students in a “shed” sized out-building for auction — 5 tickets for $100 or $20 each.
Tickets are available at the HBAGTA Office. 3040 Sunset Lane, (231) 946-2305, now until the TBAISD Career Tech Spring Expo, which will be held May 1, 4–7:30 p.m. Drawing will be held at 7:15 p.m.
Read about what our Training Services team is up to including upcoming classes that you may be able to take for free using the tuition reimbursement benefit: https://mailchi.mp/nmc/nmc-training-services-april-2019-newsletter
This month read about Project Management, the Michigan Manufacturing Summit, Petoskey Plastics, upcoming workshops and more!
Bringing suicide awareness closer to home, one empty shoe at a time.
Suicide affects nearly every individual, though the signs are not always clear. A panel of local community experts will come together to provide support, resources, and information on this pressing issue. Join us in bringing together a broken community and learn how to help those in need.
Wednesday April 17 at 6 p.m.
Northwestern Michigan College: Scholars Hall (SH) Room 109
Panel Participants:
And more!!
For more information contact Lisa Blackford at lblackford@nmc.edu or call 231-995-1294
The Long Night Against Procrastination returns to Osterlin Library on Thursday, April 25 from 6 p.m.-2 a.m. Advisors, tutors, WRC staff and librarians will be joining forces and burning the midnight oil to help students tackle the end of the semester in festive style. Waves of free pizza will arrive at 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. with other free snacks, treats, coffee and soft drinks throughout the night. Come get the fuel, motivation and help you need to crush those final papers and exams!
Congratulations to the following finalists for the Staff Excellence Award and Team Excellence Awards! Winners will be announced on April 3, 2019 at the Retirement and Recognition Reception. Please RSVP to join us to celebrate successes of these employees!
Staff Excellence Award finalists:
Ashlyn Burke
Hagerty Center Events Coordinator
Paul Kolak
Counselor
Tina Ulrich
Director of Library Services
Patty Cron-Huhta
Front-of-the-House Coordinator, Great Lakes Culinary Institute
Jan Root
Office Manager, Communications Academic Area
Dan Wasson
Director of Systems & LAN Management
Team Excellence Award Finalists:
Academic & Career Advising & Academic Success Coaches:
Health Occupations Team:
EMT Online Course Review Team:
Open Educational Resources (OER) Team:
SLM Analysts & ITS Database Administrators:
Web Refresh Team:
iDance spring Opera House DanceCome enjoy a night of slow, waltz, salsa, tango, swing and other Latin dancing hosted by NMC’s iDance student group. Costumes encouraged but not required.
The theme is ‘The Greatest Showman’. From 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. we will feature a Mykl Werth Movement (MWM) basics workshop taught by Mykl Werth and dips and tricks workshop taught by Ashley Urbanus and Jon Vanhoose. Open dance then begins at 8 p.m., ending at midnight.
Ticket prices:
General admission- Workshop & Dance- $19, Dance Only: $15
Senior/Student Tickets- Workshop & Dance- $10, Dance Only: $8
Monday- April 8- Resistance Band Workout (Rooms will be identified in the calendar invites)
March Wellness Newsletter is available here.
The following employees are celebrating an anniversary soon. Please join us in congratulating them! (more…)