Student jobs

Student jobs can be found on the Student MyNMC page under  “Jobs On Campus.”

  • Tutor – Accounting or Anatomy and Physiology
  • Admissions Assistant
  • Hagerty Center – Server, Bartender, Cook and Dishwasher
  • Fall Resident Assistant
  • Summer Resident Assistant
  • Summer Crew

Position vacancies

Are you looking for career opportunities? Find it here! jobs.nmc.edu. Current openings include:
Manufacturing Process/Fluid Power Technology Instructor
Hagerty Center – Server, Bartender, Cook and Dishwasher
Supplemental – Mail Courier

New Tool for Professional Development Planning – SilkRoad Learning

The Office of Human Resources together with the Professional Development Institute (PDI) are pleased to introduce SilkRoad Learning for all employees! This new software serves as the home for the Professional Development Institute catalog of in-seat, online and compliance courses.

Drop in workshops for orientation to SilkRoad Learning software:

  • Wednesday, 3/9/16: 11:15-12:45pm – James Beckett 217
  • Thursday, 3/17/16: 9:30-11:00am – James Beckett 202
  • Friday, 3/18/16: 9:30-11:00am – Les Biederman 35-37

 Benefits for all employees:

  • One easy-access site to review and register for PDI offerings
    • Identify training to support Learning Plans/Professional Development Plans
    • Review online course content you’ve already completed
  • One place to track ALL your professional development (internal and external)
    • Document external training, seminars you’ve attended
    • Download a summary report of all internal and external training
    • Print certificates

We would like the roll out to be as smooth as possible.  Here are resources developed so far:

  • An online, easy-access User Guide
  • Two people to call for assistance (myself at 5-1143 or Linda Racine at 5-2004)
  • Drop in workshops (dates listed above.)

We are also happy to meet with your department for a quick (15 minute) overview.  Let us know how.

Lori Hodek
Talent Development Coordinator

Two-for-one tickets to Matuto on March 18!

Matuto Quintet 1Please join us for Matuto on Friday evening (March 18) at The Dennos.  It will be a great night of music by this amazing band blending the music of the American South and the Latin sound of Brazil. Its Bluegrass meets Brazil!

Tickets at dennosmuseum.org  – Get two for one tickets by calling the box office 995-1553.

(more…)

Natural science scholarship accepting applications till April 6

If your intended major is Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Environmental Science, Geology, or Physics apply today for the W.R. Angell Scholarship and Peta Williams Memorial Scholarship. The selection criteria and applications are available from your instructor, by stopping into the Science and Math Office, or online HERE. Deadline for application submission is Wednesday, April 6, 2016. (more…)

Success story: Students fit in classes any which way they can

March 16, 2016

NMC students in classCredits in early childhood development were all that stood between Karin Cooney and advancement to the director position at Traverse City’s Angel Care child care. Yet Cooney needed to be at work Monday through Friday.

NMC’s child development program solved her conundrum. The classes are nearly all scheduled in hybrid formats, meaning limited face-to-face sessions, most offered evenings or Saturdays, with required online work in between. This semester she’s taking Human Growth and Development, which meets five Saturdays a semester. It’s been ideal.

“The class makes it seem like you’re a part of something, but I have the flexibility to do the coursework when I have the time,” Cooney said. (Above, students in a Saturday morning English class.)

Registration for the fall semester begins today, and students will see more courses are being offered in hybrid formats, also known as blended, which combine the benefits of face-to-face classes with the convenience of online.

Last fall, nearly 17 percent of NMC courses were offered in either online-only or hybrid formats. Such courses also mean fewer commutes, saving students time and money. Kalkaska resident Amber Marsh, 35, is enrolled in a hybrid English course that meets Thursdays, and an in-person class that meets Tuesdays and Thursdays.

“I am reluctant to take a course that mandates three drives into town,” Marsh said. But she added that some in-person is important. “I am leery to take an all-online class, as I have had such great success with the hybrid/face to face interaction.”

NMC Social Sciences instructor Cheryl BloomquistSocial Sciences instructor Cheryl Bloomquist said converting what was originally an entirely face-to-face course improved the delivery. Originally the Human Growth and Development course was offered seven Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The intensity left students brain dead by 2:30, she said.

In 2011 she converted the course, which now meets from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. five Saturdays, with additional content online.

“This hybrid combination is so much better in terms of piecing the information out,” Bloomquist said.

Time management in hybrid courses isn’t always easy for students, Bloomquist acknowledged. Last semester, she experimented with ending her face-to-face sessions in a computer lab so students could begin the online work with her available as a resource.

“That was really quite successful,” she said. “When they leave class, they’ve started their work.”

Cooney has been so impressed with the child development program that she’s contemplating requiring certain courses for her staff of 15, who care for 50 children.

“I’m willing to juggle my employees, so they can get the knowledge,” she said. “It only helps us.”

Find out how to register for classes at nmc.edu/register »

Success story: Students fit in classes any which way they can

March 16, 2016

NMC students in classCredits in early childhood development were all that stood between Karin Cooney and advancement to the director position at Traverse City’s Angel Care child care. Yet Cooney needed to be at work Monday through Friday.

NMC’s child development program solved her conundrum. The classes are nearly all scheduled in hybrid formats, meaning limited face-to-face sessions, most offered evenings or Saturdays, with required online work in between. This semester she’s taking Human Growth and Development, which meets five Saturdays a semester. It’s been ideal.

“The class makes it seem like you’re a part of something, but I have the flexibility to do the coursework when I have the time,” Cooney said. (Above, students in a Saturday morning English class.)

Registration for the fall semester begins today, and students will see more courses are being offered in hybrid formats, also known as blended, which combine the benefits of face-to-face classes with the convenience of online. 

Last fall, nearly 17 percent of NMC courses were offered in either online-only or hybrid formats. Such courses also mean fewer commutes, saving students time and money. Kalkaska resident Amber Marsh, 35, is enrolled in a hybrid English course that meets Thursdays, and an in-person class that meets Tuesdays and Thursdays.

“I am reluctant to take a course that mandates three drives into town,” Marsh said. But she added that some in-person is important. “I am leery to take an all-online class, as I have had such great success with the hybrid/face to face interaction.”

NMC Social Sciences instructor Cheryl BloomquistSocial Sciences instructor Cheryl Bloomquist said converting what was originally an entirely face-to-face course improved the delivery. Originally the Human Growth and Development course was offered seven Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The intensity left students brain dead by 2:30, she said.

In 2011 she converted the course, which now meets from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. five Saturdays, with additional content online.

“This hybrid combination is so much better in terms of piecing the information out,” Bloomquist said.

Time management in hybrid courses isn’t always easy for students, Bloomquist acknowledged. Last semester, she experimented with ending her face-to-face sessions in a computer lab so students could begin the online work with her available as a resource.

“That was really quite successful,” she said. “When they leave class, they’ve started their work.”

Cooney has been so impressed with the child development program that she’s contemplating requiring certain courses for her staff of 15, who care for 50 children.

“I’m willing to juggle my employees, so they can get the knowledge,” she said. “It only helps us.”

Find out how to register for fall classes at nmc.edu/register »

What’s Up World- Immigration/Migration: Doors, Windows, or Walls?

PowerPoint PresentationHosted by the Student Government Association and International Services and Service Learning. Join us for this exciting student talk series! Come join fellow students for a living room discussion on a specific global hot topic each month. Each discussion will be hosted by a student group, and one faculty/expert in that area.

Wednesday, March 16, from 8:30-10pm and Thursday, March 17, from 3:30-5pm in West hall Conference Room. (more…)

Rory Block performs at the Dennos Museum Center

Rory BlockThe Dennos Museum Center at Northwestern Michigan College will present the great female blues singer Rory Block on Saturday, April 2 at 8 pm in Milliken Auditorium. Tickets are $27 advance, $30 at the door and $24 for museum members plus ticket processing fees of $2 per ticket. Tickets may be purchased on line at www.dennosmuseum.org or by calling the box office at 231-995-1553. Also at www.MyNorthTickets.com or 1-800-836-0717. (more…)

Graduation cap/gowns pickup

cap and tasselCongratulations 2016 Graduates!

Pre-ordered caps and gowns will be ready for pickup approximately two weeks before graduation.

Did you miss pre-ordering your cap and gown? It’s not too late! Caps, gowns, and tassels are available at the bookstore. Stop in to the bookstore to pick yours up today! (more…)

Time to Check

It’s hard to believe we’ve just “sprung forward” and spring is surely on its way. That also means we’re getting ready to close out the third quarter of FY’16 and move into the home stretch for the year. This is a great time to take stock of both your departmental level operational plan goals as well as your individual goals in myPDCA. (more…)

Is ISIS a Threat to Central Asia?

TRAVERSE CITY — NMC’s International Affairs Forum continues its regular lecture series at 6 p.m. March 17 with “Is ISIS a Threat to Central Asia?” presented by Dr. Martha Brill Olcott, visiting professor, James Madison College, at Michigan State University.

The countries of central Asia, once part of the Soviet Union, are predominantly Muslim and have historically charted a course based on secular rather than religious principles. Do these secular traditions risk falling prey to the spread of Islamic fundamentalism? Does ISIS, now operating in nearby Afghanistan, pose a terror threat to aging autocratic regimes such as in Uzbekistan? Olcott, also a visiting professor at al-Farabi Kazakh National University in Kazakhstan, is America’s leading authority on Central Asia.

Tickets are $10 each and available at the door. Tickets are free for current students and educators.

IAF has also added an April 11 special fundraiser lecture to its spring lineup. Proceeds from tickets sales to “North Korea: The Hermit Kingdom” will support Traverse City Central High School’s Academic World Quest team’s trip to Washington D.C. for the national competition later in April. The 6 p.m. lecture at Traverse City Central High School’s auditorium will be presented by U.S. Air Force Major General (retired) Brian Bishop, former deputy chief of staff, UN Command and U.S. Forces-Korea. Bishop is a part-timeTraverse City resident and NMC flight instructor.

His wife, Linda Lindquist-Bishop, a champion sailor who was a member of the first all-women’s team to sail in the America’s Cup race, will introduce Bishop and discuss living in Korea. Tickets are $10 at the door and free for students and educators, though donations are appreciated.

Release date: March 14, 2016

For more information:

Karen Segal
International Affairs Forum co-chair
(231) 715-6064
jsegal_kpuschel@yahoo.com

NON-DISCRIMINATION POLICY NOTICE

Northwestern Michigan College is committed to a policy of equal opportunity for all persons and does not unlawfully discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, disability, genetic information, height, weight, marital status or veteran status in employment, educational programs and activities, and admissions. nmc.edu/non-discrimination

NMC International Dinner 2016 – April 14

ID cutoutThe NMC International Dinner will take place at 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 14 at the Hagerty Center on NMC’s Great Lakes Campus. Tickets are available online here, and a limited number of student tickets are available at the NMC Admissions Office for only $20.

The NMC International Dinner is presented by international students from around the world — don’t miss this opportunity to try a variety of course samplings from around the world. Performances by the Interlochen Arts Academy, NMC Jazz Ensembles and NMC students. (more…)

Kudos!

Kudos- Praise or respect that you get because of something you have done or achieved. (defined by Merriam-Webster.com)

Kudos to the following people and departments! If you know of co-workers who are going above and beyond, nominate them for kudos here! (more…)

Student jobs

Student jobs can be found on the Student MyNMC page under  “Jobs On Campus.”

  • Tutor – Accounting or Anatomy and Physiology
  • Admissions Assistant
  • Hagerty Center – Server, Bartender, Cook and Dishwasher

Position vacancies

Are you looking for career opportunities? Find it here! jobs.nmc.edu. Current openings include:
Manufacturing Process/Fluid Power Technology Instructor
Hagerty Center – Server, Bartender, Cook and Dishwasher (more…)

Get to know GMO- a panel discussion

FROM THE FIELDS TO A PLATEIf you are curious about GMO’s (Genetically Modified Organisms) and would like to be informed, please join the NMC Horticulture Club as we investigate the topic of GMO’s with panelists involved in various sectors of Agriculture. The panel will take place Monday, March 21 from 4 – 5:30 pm in the Health and Science Building, room 101.

Our panel will include small farmers, 800 acre+ farmer managers, agronomy agribusiness manager, a dietician, and more. Join us with your questions about GMO’s and hear responses from individuals from the agricultural sector. (more…)