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Clothing drive at GCU opens doors to foster children

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A girl who is in the foster care system picks out hair accessories Wednesday at the Back-to-School Clothing Drive’s New Clothes, New Beginnings event.

Story and photos by Ryan Kryska
GCU News Bureau

As John and Ali Rice sat in Grand Canyon University Arena and told the story of how one foster child turned into five, they said something that made a boy in a nearby seat turn his head.

It wasn’t, “Santa left the presents under the tree.” Or, “Look what Mom bought for you.”

It was actually a bit more complicated than that – just one word.

Adoption.

Just about any foster child would have reacted the same exact way. But this week, the GCU community has been able to help take finding a forever home off their mind – if only for a split second.

“They’ve been through a lot more than we’ll probably ever understand,” Josh Rice said.

The Rices were at GCU on Wednesday as part of the Back-to-School Clothing Drive’s New Clothes, New Beginnings event. In the past five years, the drive has brought tens of thousands of children onto campus to send them back to school with dress shirts, pants, shoes, backpacks, learning supplies, books, clean teeth and newfound confidence.

Two boys who are in foster care pick through wallets at the Back-to-School Clothing Drive.

But this year, the drive began its partnership with foster children organizations throughout the state. When the event ends Thursday night, 1,500 foster children will have gone home with packed bags.

Josh Rice says his five will go home feeling an inch closer to normal.

“It helps them feel like one of their peers,” he said. “They’re all going through together.”

The Rices will be adopting one of their current foster children. The other four are siblings. They said they originally brought home just one of the four but quickly learned that being with the lone sibling’s brothers and sisters meant more than just being tucked in bed at night.

So the Rices bought a new house with an extra bedroom. They bought a new car that could seat a family of seven. And they reunited a group of kids who have only truly known one real thing in their young lives – each other.

“At this moment in time, as we sit here in the Arena tonight, there are close to 15,000 children in Arizona’s foster care system,” said Dan Shufelt, President of Arizona Helping Hands, one of the organizations bringing the kids to GCU. “It’s this constant flow of children that we try to make a difference for.”

Shufelt’s organization started partnering years ago with the Arizona Friends of Foster Children Foundation, Voices for Casa Children and AASK (Aid to Adoption of Special Kids) to send Arizona’s children back to school with supplies.

But when the opportunity to join the clothing drive’s event came along, it was a no-brainer. The CEO of the event’s title sponsor, Gerald Wissink of the BHHS Legacy Foundation, connected with Shufelt to ask how many foster children could be squeezed in.

“I said, ‘Think you could do 1,500?’” Wissink said. “He said, ‘Jerry, I’ll do it.’”

Wissink then went to the Back-to-School Clothing Drive’s Executive Director, Karl Gentles, and the rest was child’s play.

“When I asked Karl to do it, he didn’t hesitate,” Wissink said. “We’re pleased we are able to provide what they need to be successful in schools. It makes a big difference for these kids.”

Earlier Wednesday, Shufelt was honored for the wave Arizona Helping Hands has made in the state’s foster child community. He received the Arizona Prevent Child Abuse Convention’s Everyday Heroes Award for the services his organization is providing.

“We feel really, really good about changing these kids’ lives,” Shufelt said. “You can see the smiles on the faces out here on all these children as they’re going through this process. You know, getting those hugs from the kids and the gratitude from the parents for helping out them and their journey is just huge. It’s so rewarding.”

And while Shufelt was receiving his award, the new clothes kept fitting and the new beginnings kept beginning. All morning, afternoon and evening, GCU board of directors trustee Dr. Jim Rice and others could be seen unboxing new shoes, volunteering from 7 a.m. to nightfall every day, while College of Education Dean Dr. Kimberly LaPrade kept children engaged, signing books to spread the notion that learning is fun.

“’You know, it’s amazing,” Shufelt said. “I mean, the whole back-to-school experience is a big deal, but it’s a really big deal for a child in foster care.”

Contact Ryan Kryska at (602) 639-8415 or ryan.kryska@gcu.edu.

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Related content:

GCU Today: GCU Arena transforms into back-to-school paradise

GCULopes.com: Lopes aid at clothing drive

KTAR (92.3 FM): Back-to-school drive starts Phoenix-area students off on right foot

The post Clothing drive at GCU opens doors to foster children appeared first on GCU Today.


Their expertise reaches students where they live

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From left, Resident Directors Rachel Patton, Katie Ellis and D.J. Heyward plan ahead.

Story and photos by Theresa Smith
GCU News Bureau

Some students like to sleep with a light on or prefer falling asleep with a television on. Others prefer a dark, quiet setting. Similarly, some students don’t mind an overflowing trash can or dirty dishes in the sink, while others cringe at smelly, unsightly messes.

With Move-In beginning Aug. 20, Grand Canyon University Resident Directors D.J. Heyward, Rachel Patton and Katie Ellis shared tips for living harmoniously in the resident halls and apartments and establishing relationships with their RD’s and Resident Assistants (RA’s).

“One of the benefits of living on campus is having an RA to support you, so students who really get to know their RA not only have a fun interaction with them, they are in the know with what’s going on in their living area and they attend community gatherings,’’ Heyward said.  “It’s especially important for a new student. Studies show that when students get involved in their community, it coincides with their academic success.

North Rim Apartments line the left side of Lopes Way with Papago Apartments North in the distance. Prescott Hall and Camelback Hall border the right side.

“We hold very tightly to the idea that we want our students to feel supported, to feel a sense of community. How can we make sure everyone is being reached, that no one falls through the cracks? … The RAs play a pivotal point in supporting their residents, so get to know your RA and RD and have open conversations with the people you live with. Do not be afraid to have tough conversations and to make a roommate agreement.’’

A roommate agreement is a list of considerations roommates make to each other, including what time lights will go out and what time devices are turned off.

“It should include what you are sharing,’’ Patton said. “Who is providing cleaning supplies? When are you cleaning? What time people go to bed, and not to slam the door.’’

Understanding each other’s differences is important.

“I think some of the conflict stems from being around people who are outside your normal background or people that were raised completely differently,’’ Ellis said. “So filling out that agreement, actually talking with your roommates, is the first step in being comfortable in your space. It helps prevent a lot of issues that could arise. ‘’

Heyward, Patton and Ellis are among 41 RD’s living in the residence areas. Heyward will oversee 500 residents and 10 RA’s in Papago Apartments, Patton is guiding 300 residents and 10 RA’s in Chaparral Hall and Ellis is responsible for 300 residents and six RA’s in Cactus Apartments.

With the opening of Jerome and Cactus, two new apartment buildings on the east side of campus, there will be an unprecedented number of students — an estimated 12,000 — living within GCU’s boundaries. That, in turn, requires the largest team of RD’s and RA’s in GCU history. After preparing all summer, including a three-day retreat July 18-20, the RD’s will spend two weeks in early August training RA’s who arrive on campus early to prepare for their leadership positions in the 21 buildings that house students.

Engaging activities at homes away from home

As the number of students living on campus continues to grow, the RD’s must adjust to meet the challenge.

“We want to make sure we are engaging students in a very creative way, so each summer as we sit down we want to talk about different ways to engage the residents, whether it is a fun way or an educational way and how can we better support them,’’ Heyward said. “We want to make their living area not only a place where they live, but also a place where they can learn and grow as individuals and students.’’

Among the activities, all of them designed to build community and facilitate friendships, is a stress-relief session in which students make stress balls (balloons with beans inside) and talk about their concerns. S’mores Night and Waffle Night are planned for various floors. Entire communities will gather for all-building Fall Festivals, featuring a live band and painting pumpkins. In the past, one living area used its budget to rent a mechanical bull.

The well-appointed lobby areas, with their comfortable couches and chairs, large flat-screen televisions and ping-pong tables, are a prime meeting place. So are the swimming pools adjacent to several of the buildings.

A view of colorful Prescott Hall and Roadrunner Apartments in the heart of campus.

 “We plan community gatherings once or twice per month, depending on the living area,’’ said Patton. “We follow a Community Learning Plan (CLP) in each living area to teach students important skills like conflict resolution and mental health awareness. Some of the activities are divided by floor. They are fun, engaging and at the same time educational.’’

Cooking lessons and laundry tips are part of the CLP, which is in its third year under Director of Resident Life Matt Hopkins.

“It is anything applicable to new incoming students or returning students who maybe haven’t lived anywhere other than home,’’ Ellis said.

In the cyclical nature of living on campus, many of the freshmen who become the most involved apply to become RA’s for their sophomore years.

“A lot of the time the students who are drawn to their RA’s are the ones who end up being interested,’’ Ellis said. “They are the ones who say, ‘Oh, I want to do what they are doing. I want to be involved in planning these events and be involved in being community within the building. The ones who ended up applying for RA were the ones who were very active in community and were the ones interested in bringing that forward for the rest of their GCU career.’’

Experience in faith focus 

Interestingly, Heyward, Patton and Ellis were not RA’s in college, yet they all share a similar background in terms of working with young people in faith-focused environments.

“The kind of people we hire have a love for the Lord, have a love for students and are willing to walk with students,” Hopkins said. “Here, we wire them into the student experience.”

Patton earned a bachelor’s degree in Special Education from Arizona State and a master’s degree in Christian Studies from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C., and then worked with high school students at summer camps and in campus ministry.

“I was led to this job because of the personal relationships we are able to have with RA’s and residents and how we’re able to walk with them at a really pivotal time in their lives,’’ said Patton. “What better way to do that than living in the same building with them and really do life with them, seeing them walk in and out of the building every day and being able to have intentional conversations and relationships with them. So that’s what drew me to this job.’’

Patton’s ministry training is implemented as she begins her second year as an RD.

“With my RA’s we do devotions together, I pray with them and for them,’’ she said. “We talk about the Lord. It is not a requirement to be an RA, but it is built into our relationships with them since they are pointed toward Christ. Even if I have residents who come and are having a difficult time and are not believers, a lot of times I end those conversations with, ‘Do you mind if I pray for you?’ Being able to bring my beliefs into it is a huge part of this job.’’

RDs often share their faith with students.

Ellis earned her bachelor’s degree in Biblical Theology and Photography from Sacramento State, whereupon she returned to her San Francisco Bay Area family home to work in youth ministry. 

“This job is a ministry opportunity,’’ said Ellis, beginning her second year as an RD. “We are not only influencing them, we are living life with them, so it is a lot different than most other jobs I could be doing. That is what drew me in; I love working with students one-on-one and getting to know RA’s. It is an incredible opportunity to walk with college students through a time where they are figuring out so much of what they are going to do next.’’

Heyward grew up in New Castle, Del., and earned a bachelor’s degree at ASU in Nonprofit Leadership and Management and a master’s degree in Leadership from GCU while working in a teen program at the Boys and Girls Club.

“I love being able to walk with students through the hard stuff and then celebrate with them when they have successes,’’ said Heyward, a fourth-year RD.

He rejects the perception among some residents that RA’s and RD’s are in “gotcha’’ mode.

“One thing that is important with our roles as RA’s and RD’s that some students don’t know is that we are not out to get them,’’ he said. “I think there is a bit of a stigma that RA’s are like the police. No one signed up for this job to be that. We all signed up to build community to support the students. Our RA’s are incredibly passionate about meeting the residents where they are and being able to support them and love them the best way that they can.

“Sometimes when you are doing life with people, it gets messy and that’s where that stigma comes from. But our heart and passion behind why we are in Residence Life is so that we can come alongside students while they are in this transitional period in their life. We want to help them and prop them up to be successful, not only in academia, but also in their life as they try to figure out who they are as an adult.’’

Contact Theresa Smith at (602) 639-7457 or theresa.smith@gcu.edu.

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The post Their expertise reaches students where they live appeared first on GCU Today.

GCU hoops champion readies children for school

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Ray Arvizu, who played on GCU’s national championship basketball team in 1978, presents a new bike to Tiana Garcia on Saturday during the Ninos Seguros Back to School & Safety Fair.

Story by Ryan Kryska
Photos by David Kadlubowski
GCU News Bureau

Ray Arvizu in his playing days.

Phoenix was in awe of Ray Arvizu in the late 1970s.

He was the Hispanic community’s shining star on the hardwood, having led Grand Canyon University to a national basketball championship in 1978 before trying out with the Suns, Kansas City Kings and San Antonio Spurs, and ultimately becoming the Mexican national team’s highest-paid player in the 1980s.

But Arvizu wanted to be more than just a sports icon for his community. He wanted to make a lasting impact, not just be a generational talent.

“When I came back (from Mexico), I knew I had to do more,” Arvizu said. “I was a big deal for south Phoenix, being a Hispanic player. … When you do something that successful and get recognition for it, you have to do more.”

Arvizu dove right into not-for-profit outreach in Phoenix. But 14 years ago, he and the late Robert Ortiz organized an event that has been providing thousands of children from diverse backgrounds with school supplies and safety lessons.

On Saturday, the annual Ninos Seguros Back to School & Safety Fair was held in GCU’s Antelope Gymnasium. Arvizu’s team gave away 2,500 backpacks stuffed with supplies and provided an outlet for cultural dancing and safety presentations. There was also a raffle for four laptops and bikes.

Arvizu and Ortiz started Ninos Seguros in response to a rash of drownings in the community, and it has blossomed into the multi-faceted event it is today.

Ray Arvizu goes up for a shot.

“The drownings were plaguing the community,” Arvizu said. “There was a lack of education. So we saw need within the diverse community to create an event for PSA (public service announcements).”

The event wraps the gym in booths that provide resources for the families in attendance. There is a stage where the safety presentations and dancing take place, and a line to the stuffed backpacks that snakes through the middle of it all.

“Thirty to 40 years ago there was so much need, even now, for discussions on diversity,” Arvizu said. “When going to something like this, you can tell the diversity. All I’ve ever tried to do is make everyone feel connected. Here is the beauty of this culture, here is the beauty of that culture.”

GCU’s College of Nursing and Health Care Professions has been at Arvizu’s event every year.

More than 15 people from the college were helping out Saturday. Nursing senior Lori Goldsmith was among them, passing out packets on exercise and healthy eating. Her colleagues to her right were checking children’s blood sugar, blood pressure and measuring their body mass index to get them thinking about being conscious of their health.

“I love that GCU gets involved,” Goldsmith said. “That’s a big part of being a Christian to me.”

Connie Colbert, Director of the Canyon Health and Wellness Center, has attended Ninos Seguros for the past four years. She said a great aspect of the college’s free checkup is if a child’s test shows something concerning, there are resources at the event that can step in, such as the Native health booth.

GCU nursing student Alex Bakker hula hoops with a girl at Ninos Seguros.

“We have so many resources, and there are so many people who do not have that,” Colbert said. “If we all do a little bit, we can make a bigger impact.”

Arvizu says he’s grateful to GCU for its support of Ninos Seguros. He says the transformation of his alma mater has been breathtaking, and he looks forward to continuing a working relationship.

“Grand Canyon has been so good to me,” he said. “I’ve been so blessed, so I’ve always given back. I’m very proud of my school.”

Contact Ryan Kryska at (602) 639-8415 or ryan.kryska@gcu.edu.

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Related content:

GCU Today: Clothing drive at GCU opens doors to foster children

GCU Today: GCU Arena transforms into back-to-school paradise

GCU Today: Nursing students post stellar licensure exam rating

The post GCU hoops champion readies children for school appeared first on GCU Today.

Antelope Intros: Cierra Burnett and Ryan Bredow

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Antelope Intros is a recurring GCU Today feature that introduces some of our new employees to the people around them in a way that is fun and informative. Employees are eligible to be featured in the month following their orientation.

CIERRA BURNETT

Cierra Burnett

Job title: Student Activities Coordinator

Job location: Main campus, Student Life Building

What attracted you to GCU? I’m a Southern girl at heart and never would have imagined that I’d move to Phoenix. A friend of mine suggested that I apply to work here, and I’m so glad he did. My staff — Meghan, Carly, Kayleigh and Scott — have made me feel at home even though I’m more than 1,400 miles away. I’m already in love and pinching myself right now because I still can’t believe it’s real!

What do you do for fun and where do you find that outlet? I am a dog mom to Prince, my 8-pound Maltese. When we’re not cuddled up watching a good rom-com, I love to go to Target and walk around for hours until my cart is full and my wallet is empty. I also love to read, write and sing like nobody’s watching.

What are you passionate about? I’m passionate about helping students, especially young women, realize the beauty of Esther 4:14. Each of us was created by God with intention “for such a time as this,” and He has graced each of us with a special calling that only we can walk in; no one else can do the work that God has set aside for you. I pray that I can be a light and encourage my students to embrace God’s amazing grace and love as they live out their purpose.

What are your favorite places or events in the Valley that you like to visit? I just moved here at the end of June, but so far my favorite places are campus (I mean, it’s GORGEOUS), downtown and the Chick-fil-A on Lopes Way (it’s like Cheers — I walk in and everybody knows my name).

Tell us something about yourself that most people don’t know: In high school I was actively involved in choir, theatre and spoken-word poetry, and I competed regionally in all three. A not-so-threatening triple threat. 

What are you most proud of? I’m most proud of my Memphis roots. Memphis is a city with a rich culture and the most incredible people in the world. There is a true spirit of resilience in the 901; we’re known as the city of “Grit ‘n’ Grind.” Being raised in that culture has helped me stand strong in the face of adversity and is a huge part of who I am today.

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RYAN BREDOW

Ryan Bredow and his family

Job title: Vice President, Marketing, Canyon Christian Schools Consortium

Job location: Main campus, Student Life Building

What attracted you to GCU? Pretty simple, actually: the mission and vision this place holds. I loudly applaud the efforts here to serve others and be part of supporting communities, and I am excited to champion the vision President Brian Mueller and his team have for making Christian education available to a growing number of people.

What do you do for fun and where do you find that outlet? I love hanging out with my wife and our three young kids. I know that’s probably cliche, but it’s the truth. We all love sports (especially Lopes basketball), so going to football, volleyball, basketball or baseball games (whether it be high school, college or professional) is always a highlight.

What are you passionate about? Bringing the saving name of Jesus Christ to as many kids as possible. I have a deep passion for connecting kids to Christ and building a relationship with Him through the transformational gift of Christian education. Growing and promoting that cause is something I absolutely love, and having the opportunity to do so professionally is a great blessing.

What are your favorite places or events in the Valley that you like to visit? Considering that we actually just moved here this month after 12 years in Colorado and three years in Wisconsin, we are excited to find out. We are totally new to the Valley (and to the state, for that matter), so we are looking forward to learning more about the culture here and exploring it further.

Tell us something about yourself that most people don’t know: I have been to all 50 states. No idea if that’s interesting or not, but I have found over the years that it isn’t very common. We love to travel, and my wife and I have established the same goal for our kids to see all 50 as well.

What are you most proud of? By the grace of God I have been able to be an engaged and visible father for our three young kids (Bella, 8; Bo, 7; Bryce, 2). My father was my hero growing up in large part because he was present, and I want to ensure that I am just as relevant in their childhood as my father was for me.

The post Antelope Intros: Cierra Burnett and Ryan Bredow appeared first on GCU Today.

Code.org links computer science teachers to success

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About 90 Arizona educators learned how to integrate computer science curriculum in their classrooms at recent Code.org teacher development workshops on the Grand Canyon University campus.

By Lana Sweeten-Shults
GCU News Bureau

Teachers in groups of three were tasked with finding out as much as they could, in six minutes, about a whole different kind of group of three: the star-nosed mole, Pacific Northwest tree octopus and the blobfish.

Some of the questions about these “strange-but-true animals:” “What does it look like?” “Where does it live?” “What does it eat?”

GCU and Science Foundation Arizona have teamed up with Code.org to provide computer science education to teachers around the state.

Some of the answers:

  • The blobfish? It was voted No. 1 on Animal Planet’s countdown of ugliest animals because, well, it looks like a gelatinous blob. Poor ol’ blobfish.
  • The star-nosed mole scoots its weird-looking tentacled nose against the soil so it can “feel” its way around, since it lives in the dark underground. It also can smell underwater and is the world’s fastest eater.
  • And the tree octopus – “Of course, that’s a hoax,” piped in one educator with an “aww” of disappointment resounding from his fellow teachers.

He was just one of about 90 Arizona educators recently attending free weeklong Code.org computer science education courses at Grand Canyon University. GCU partners with Code.org and Science Foundation Arizona to boost teachers’ computer science skills and help them teach those skills to their students.

Of course, the lesson wasn’t really to find out more about the star-nosed mole, Pacific Northwest tree octopus or the blobfish. It was to get the teachers to research a topic, then question the information they gathered.

“How do you know the information is correct? What makes the website you used trustworthy?” asked the facilitator of the middle-school level Computer Science Discoveries course, one of the two professional development programs offered by Code.org on the GCU campus (the other is Computer Science Principles, the course educators will use to teach high school-age Advanced Placement students).

The lesson on trustworthy and reliable websites is something the CS Discoveries teachers will bring back to their computer science classrooms in the fall, when they teach the introductory computer science course to their middle school students.

Teaching the teacher

Educators sharpened their skills on website building using the HTML and CSS computer languages, built interactive games in JavaScript using Game Lab, prototyped an app and, of course, answered questions about what makes a reliable and trustworthy website. Those were just a few of the lessons they learned.

“We’re training them to be better computer science teachers,” said Dina Lundblom, a coordinator for GCU’s Strategic Educational Alliances, which supports kindergarten through 12th-grade students and educators and fosters a college-ready culture.

Teachers studying Code.org’s CS Discoveries curriculum, aimed toward middle-schoolers, touched on everything from the HTML and CSS computer languages to strategies on how to determine whether a website is a reliable and trustworthy source.

The five-day summertime training, Lundblom said, is the launching pad for a yearlong program. Throughout the year, the teachers will return to GCU for quarterly workshops and also will get online and forum support.

Jasmine Goldstein, a teacher at La Cima Middle School in Tucson, spent some of her time in CS Discoveries problem solving a coding issue.

A line of coding on her screen turned pink, so she knew something wasn’t quite right, though she couldn’t figure it out. That’s when she turned to her “elbow partner” beside her for some troubleshooting help. He noticed that a backslash wasn’t in the right place.

She said she loves how so much goes into computer science: “There’s critical thinking, problem solving.”

Debbie Spear, one of the Code.org facilitators, agreed that critical thinking is so important when it comes to education, and not just computer science education.

“It’s so much more than just learning to program or debug,” Spear said. “We want our kids to experience problem solving, and that has been missed a lot by counselors and administrators. When they look at another elective for the kids to take, they see it as keyboarding, which it is not.”

Goldstein said, “We just had a lesson on strategies to use in debugging when we are writing code. … It could be as simple as the backslash is missing. But those are the things our students are going to come across in the classroom, so we’re kind of learning Code.org strategies, learning-from-other-teacher strategies and learning how to teach out of our classroom.”

A lack of skilled teachers

Goldstein is in her second year of helming computer science courses. She earned a degree in teaching, though she does not have a formal degree in computer science – the case with many of her fellow teachers in the Code.org Discoveries program.

They come from “all different backgrounds,” Goldstein said, with varied experience levels.

Spear said most teachers in the recent CS Discoveries course have taught computer science for one to three years. Only one has taught computer science for four to six years. Many have never taught computer science before.

Most teachers in the recent CS Discoveries course had 1-3 years’ experience teaching computer science. Code.org, which is the third year of partnering with GCU and Science Foundation Arizona, wants to train more educators to teach computer science.

“There’s no requirements right now for a computer science credential,” Spear said of teachers. “I’m from the state of California, so in the state of California, if you have a math credential, you can teach computer science.”

The lack of skilled teachers in the field – a field that continues to enjoy phenomenal growth — is just one reflection of the computer science education landscape across the country and how the Code.org training is trying to change that outlook.

Linda Coyle, Director of Education for Science Foundation Arizona, said the first year these teacher-enrichment courses were offered, 10 teachers took the course. Of those 10, seven ended up leaving education to take jobs in the computer science industry, where the salary is much higher. It’s just one example of how difficult it is to compete when it comes to finding and keeping good computer science teachers.

Corinne Araza, SEA’s Director of STEM Outreach and Program Development at GCU, said, “It’s so hard to find computer science teachers, and so we do need to depend on teachers who are interested in IT and computer science.”

Computer science marginalized

According to Code.org, computer science drives innovation throughout the U.S. economy, and the average salary for computing jobs is nearly double the state’s average salary of $46,290. Yet computer science remains marginalized throughout kindergarten through 12th-grade education. Organization statistics reveal that 13 states have adopted a policy to give all high school students access to computer science courses, and, of those, only five give all kindergarten through 12th-grade students access.

Those statistics also reveal how U.S. schools are behind in keeping up with the demand for jobs in the field. In Arizona, while computer standards are still being created for K-12, high schools are not required to offer computer science, even though, according to Code.org, more than 10,450 computing jobs are open in the state. That’s 3.3 times the state’s average demand rate. Furthermore, nearly half of Arizona’s schools lack computer science education. Only 16 percent offered AP Computer Science in 2016-17, and only 738 students took the AP Computer Science test in 2017-18.

“But they’re working on it,” Spear said of improving the computer science education landscape. “They’ve got the standards together and the framework and they’re working on it to try to make it so that it’ll be mandatory for all students. But each state is going to have to take this on themselves.”

Code.org wants access to computer science to be expanded in schools. That means training more computer science teachers and developing professional learning programs such as CS Discoveries and CS Principles. The nonprofit also wants to increase participation by women and underrepresented minorities.

According to Code.org, “Our vision is that every student in every school has the opportunity to learn computer science, just like biology, chemistry or algebra.”

Building community

“We work a lot on building community and figuring out who the stakeholders are and who can help to bring computer science to all of our kids — not just the ones at a handful of special schools,” Spear said.

The five-day, summertime Code.org courses were the launch of a yearlong computer science program. Educators will return to GCU throughout the year for quarterly workshops.

GCU, whose first computer science graduates walked across the stage in April, sees itself as integral to building that community. The University has partnered with Science Foundation Arizona, College Board and Code.org for three years in an effort to increase teacher knowledge in computer science, SEA Executive Director Carol Lippert said.

Coyle added how industry also has played a big part in these teacher enrichment courses. Schools often cannot afford to send teachers to a professional development program like the one offered at GCU, so several corporate entities have supplied grant money to cover the cost.

With these CS Discoveries and CS Principles learning programs, Spear said, it’s not just about giving students access to computer science in schools so the workforce can meet the demand for the burgeoning jobs in the field.

It’s also about supporting teachers.

The number of educators giving up a week of their summer to learn strategies to teach computer science has gone from 10 that first year to about 90 this year – a 900 percent increase in participation in just three years. And the teachers who attended did so on their own time, which shows how committed they are to preparing their students for the future.

“When you go to faculty meetings, how many teachers know computer science that you can talk about – what you’re passionate about? So here’s their opportunity,” Spear said.

“We need that support.”

You can reach GCU senior writer Lana Sweeten-Shults at lana.sweeten-shults@gcu.edu or at 602-639-7901.

Related content:

KTAR: “Arizona teachers trained to integrate computer science in their classrooms”

GCU Today: “GCU is paving the pathway to computer science”

GCU Today: “Students test their gray matter at summer institute”

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GCU Today: “Will Cyber Warfare Range have impact? Bank on it”

 

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Nursing learner nominated for research award

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Jean Cheek

By Ryan Kryska
GCU News Bureau

A Grand Canyon University online learner has been nominated by the hospital she works at for a Magnet Excellence in Clinical Research award.

Jean Cheek is a forensic nurse examiner coordinator at Virginia Commonwealth University Health System. She is pursuing her Doctor of Nursing Practice degree at GCU and has been successfully implementing her degree program research in the workplace — which caught the eye of the VCU Health System.

The health system wrote in its award nomination that Cheek “has made a significant contribution to evidence and evidence-based care to improve outcomes of victims of sexual assault. Her contributions are shaping how we practice … and care for this vulnerable population.” It added that her coursework and research have resulted in several clinical interventions that have been implemented or are in the planning stages.

The Magnet Recognition Program was developed by the American Nurses Credentialing Center to recognize health care organizations that provide nursing excellence, according to its website.

The award will be presented at the Virginia Nurse Association’s Gala on Sept. 22. Four other nurses have been nominated for the award, Cheek said.

“Being nominated for this award is a true honor,” Cheek said. “Our hospital promotes evidence-based practice, and many people engage in research. To think that the work that I have done (because of my work at GCU) has the attention of the hospital is humbling. I am very excited not only about the award, but that this award can bring attention to the field of forensic nursing.”

Cheek said the health system has implemented changes based on her research at GCU. Among the changes is that her level-one trauma center is developing a coping-skill training program for sexual-assault patients.

“Providing coping skills during the acute sexual assault exam decreased depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder,” Cheek said.

Another item from her studies is looking at telehealth. She said her team has been reaching out to sister hospitals to provide a sexual-assault examiner to help guide the exam. That way, patients don’t have to drive to an examiner.

“GCU has helped me become a better nurse on many levels,” Cheek said. “My research has not been limited to my project, so I feel that I have a more global perspective that I did not possess prior to this course. I am learning how to be a better nurse through understanding, education, awareness and leadership.”

Dr. Lisa Smith, Dean of the College of Nursing and Health Care Professions, said “increasing the number of doctoral prepared nurses in the clinical setting is critical to provide systems level leadership and to implement evidence-based research for improved patient outcomes.”

“The DNP degree at GCU is a rigorous program that provides graduates with relevant applicable knowledge to clinical, leadership and academic settings,” Smith said.

Cheek says she isn’t the only Lope in her hospital seeking a doctorate degree.

“I am fortunate because I have a great group of people that I have been with since the beginning,” she said. “We are supportive of each other and communicate often. We call ourselves the GCU Warriors because we will not give up the fight and determination that is needed to earn the right to be called doctor.”

Contact Ryan Kryska at (602) 639-8415 or ryan.kryska@gcu.edu.

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Related content:

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CBS5: GCU nursing students get state-of-the-art training

GCU Today: Nursing lessons come to life in immersive simulation

ABC15: Grand Canyon University nurses training with opioid addicts

GCU Today: Online nursing student earns DAISY Award

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Dr. Deb’s Mental Health Vitamin: ‘What love ain’t’

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Dr. Deb Wade

Dr. Deb Wade
GCU Vice President, Counseling and Psychological Services

Driving down the road and mindlessly listening to the radio a few days ago, I heard a line in a song that caught my attention:  “I may not know what love is, but I sure know what love ain’t (sic).”

This really piqued my interest and made my mind begin to wander. It is very true, as the line in the song intimates, that LOVE is hard to define, which opens the door for many interpretations.

As always, it is important to define love within the context of healthy love vs. unhealthy love. Let’s peek at the pitfalls as we identify what love IS, within the framework of what love “ain’t”

  • Love ain’t … Selfish. Real love places two people in a joined space where they create and share goals, dreams, fears, ambitions and ideas. When those whimsies are discounted, made fun of, ignored or negated but your partner’s needs and desires are considered important and significant, beware! Selfishness has entered the picture.
  • Love ain’t … Consuming. If you find yourself using a lot of mental and emotional energy trying to decipher your partner’s wants, needs and thoughts AND trying too hard to anticipate and interpret your role in the relationship so that it is always pleasing to the partner, beware! You’ve possibly become consumed by your task.
  • Love ain’t … Controlling. If you find yourself being told what to wear, who to hang out with, how to spend your time and your money, AND you find yourself working hard to meet all the “conditions” of the relationship, take heed! You’re most likely being controlled, not loved.
  • Love ain’t … Jealous. This one is tricky because, initially, knowing that your partner is jealous can feed flattery. BUT, when you get accused of flirting or cheating, when your partner is threatened by your enjoyment of your friends or hobbies, when s/he gets upset if you text or hang out with your friends, take note! It is no longer feeling like flattery, it is feeling much like CONTROL … see above!
  • Love ain’t … Isolative. When you find yourself being told to choose between him/her and your friends, insisting you spend all your time together, making you question your own judgment of your friends and family, and attempting to make you feel dependent on them for love, acceptance, money or worth…RUN! Love thrives within community, not in isolation.
  • Love ain’t … Gamey. Mind games have NO ROOM in a healthy relationship. For example, ignoring you until s/he gets his/her way, using gifts and apologies to influence your decisions or to get back into your good graces, blaming you for their poor decisions and being a master passive-aggressor are gamey at their best and extremely manipulative at their worst. Flee!
  • Love ain’t … Volatile. Threats, name-calling, swearing to your face and ANY aggressive physical contact must be taboo! In addition, blaming YOU for his/her anger is a passive-aggressive attempt at control, too! Unpredictable overreactions may make you feel as if you need to walk on eggshells around them or do things to keep them from lashing out, even to the point of evoking fear. This needs to be an absolute: When volatility enters the picture, opt out!
  • Love ain’t … Belittling. Healthy relationships empower you, make you feel good about yourself and seem to increase your sense of wonder and serenity. BUT if in your relationship you are made to feel bad about yourself, you endure rude and degrading remarks about yourself or your family, you are made fun of (even if it’s “just a joke”) or condemned for your talent or skills, this is NEVER OK … find the exit!

You know, at times all relationships experience a bit of drama or conflict or unsettlement, but there should always be remedy, repair and reconciliation … and we should NEVER take hits below the belt!

Like the song says, “we sure know what love ain’t” … and we must abide by this knowledge. If you find yourself in a situation above … run, exit, sprint and drive quickly away! After all, you are the child of the King; be sure that you are treated as such!

 

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Fitness Facts: Controlling your cholesterol

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Connie Colbert

By Connie Colbert
Director, Canyon Health and Wellness Clinic

If you have high cholesterol, you are at risk for heart disease. The effects of high cholesterol tend to develop over the course of many years and cause a condition called atherosclerosis.

Atherosclerosis is a hardening and narrowing of the arteries. Over time, plaque develop and silently and slowly block arteries, putting blood flow at risk. It’s the usual cause of heart attacks, strokes and peripheral vascular disease. Common effects of high cholesterol because of atherosclerosis include angina, coronary heart disease, heart attack and stroke.

It is important to know your numbers. Even thin, active people can have elevated cholesterol and not be aware. Our cholesterol levels are regulated by diet, exercise and genetics. Some families have a strong genetic predisposition to high cholesterol, and while diet and exercise may help lower levels, some people also might need the help of lipid-lowering medication to further decrease their risk of heart disease.

It is important to know your numbers so you can prevent this development of plaque, which will in turn place you at a higher risk of heart disease. This is a silent progression with no symptoms, so awareness is the first step.

The current recommendations for testing by the American Heart Association are once every 5 years in everyone over age 20 and more often if you are in a high risk category.

What is a high risk category? I am glad you asked!

Here are some factors, according to the American Heart Association, that put you at higher risk:

  • Family history of high LDL cholesterol
  • High blood pressure or type 2 diabetes
  • Smoking
  • Being overweight
  • Not getting enough physical activity
  • Eating too much saturated fat, trans fat and cholesterol – and not enough fruits and vegetables
  • Taking certain medicines, such as medicines to lower blood pressure
  • Eating too much sugar and starch
  • Not eating enough fruits, vegetables and unsaturated fat (like olive oil
  • Not eating enough fiber

What is normal and when should I be concerned? Below is a chart to explain the current guidelines.

The key to protecting your heart is prevention. Healthy eating and exercise are a start, but knowing your family’s health history and getting tested are important next steps to a healthier you!

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Three community leaders join GCU Board of Trustees

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New board members (from left) Marion Kelly, Peggy Chase and Dr. Lupita Ley Hightower.

(Aug. 1, 2018) – Grand Canyon University has added three esteemed community leaders to its Board of Trustees as part of the institution’s transition to a nonprofit status.

Peggy Chase, President and CEO of Terros Health; Dr. Lupita Ley Hightower, Superintendent of the Tolleson Elementary School District; and Marion Kelly, Director for the Office for Community Affairs at Mayo Clinic, have been added to the seven-member board that oversees the nonprofit university.

They join board chairman Will Gonzalez, who has served in the City of Phoenix Prosecutor’s Office for more than 20 years; Don Andorfer, former President of the Indiana Institute of Technology; Dr. Fred Miller, Medical Director at Bridgeway Health Solutions in Tempe; and Dr. Jim Rice, retired Superintendent of the Alhambra Elementary School District, as Board of Trustees members.

“These three incredibly successful leaders embody the spirit and purpose of Grand Canyon University and bring a wealth of expertise and energy to the Board of Trustees,” Gonzalez said. “We are fortunate to have them by our side as we revert to our nonprofit status and build upon the remarkable successes that both the University and its students have achieved.”

Chase has been a progressive health care leader and innovator for more than 30 years. Her commitment to service leadership has positively impacted health care public policy through her participation on local, state and national boards and committees. Recognized as a health management expert, she is often called on by other health care leaders and state agencies for her expertise on how to achieve successful outcomes.

Chase was recently named among the Healthcare Leadership Awards and Most Influential Women by Arizona Business Magazine as well as the Most Admired Leaders by the Phoenix Business Journal.

Hightower has worked for more than 20 years in education as a teacher, mentor/coach, principal, district level director and superintendent. She is the recipient of the Jane Romatzke Out-of-School Time Leader Award in 2014 and the National Education Leadership Award from Jobs for Arizona Graduates in 2015.

She is also a past president of the Arizona Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents and serves on the Executive Committee of AASA The National Superintendents Association.

Kelly has a strong background building solid neighbor, civic and corporate relationships for the Mayo Clinic. In addition to providing leadership in community affairs, he also shares responsibilities for institutionalizing diversity as a corporate objective within the strategic plan of Mayo Clinic.

Kelly’s vast experiences include teaching elementary education, working in the United States Senate, serving in the Indiana University School of Medicine administration and as Assistant Dean for Admissions and Student Affairs at Mayo Medical School. He was also an appointee in the former Bush White House administration as Special Assistant for At Risk Youth Initiatives at the United States Department of Labor, and as the White House Liaison for the Labor Department.

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About Grand Canyon University:  Grand Canyon University was founded in 1949 and is Arizona’s premier private Christian university. GCU is regionally accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and offers more than 225 academic programs, emphases and certificates for both traditional undergraduate students and working professionals. The University’s curriculum emphasizes interaction with classmates, both in-person and online, and individual attention from instructors while fusing academic rigor with Christian values to help students find their purpose and become skilled, caring professionals. For more information, visit gcu.edu.

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‘Moon,’‘Starcatcher’… theatre season heaven-sent

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College of Fine Arts and Production Dean Claude Pensis is preparing for a departmental move to the old Colangelo College of Business Building and rolling out the theatre department’s 2018-19 season, which includes everything from “Macbeth” to “Godspell.”

By Lana Sweeten-Shults
GCU News Bureau

According to Shakespeare, “The play’s the thing.”

And so it is at Grand Canyon University’s Ethington Theatre, which not only will dabble in a tragic must by The Bard – “Macbeth” – but a 1920s high-society comedy, a recent Tony Award-winner that tells the origin story of Peter Pan, a sobering Holocaust drama and the high-voltage, feel-good, high-energy, season-ending musical “Godspell.”

It will be a busy few weeks for the theatre department as it rehearses, builds sets, makes costumes and the like for the first play of the season. Around the same time, the department will be moving out of Colter and the Media Arts Complex to its new home in the old Colangelo College of Business Building.

College of Fine Arts and Production Dean Claude Pensis said of the theatre’s modus operandi when it comes to constructing its season, “We do Shakespeare or a classical work every season. Best we can, we try to find modern works and we try to mix it up. We will do a musical every year (in 2017-18 it was “Anything Goes”), and within there, we try to mix comedy and tragedy.

“‘Ring Round the Moon’ is most definitely a comedy.”

“Ring Round the Moon”
Aug. 24-26 and Aug. 31-Sept. 2

The theatre department didn’t waste any time casting the first stage production of 2018-19, which is under the direction of Michael Kary. Producers chose the cast before the spring 2017-18 semester ended, and rehearsals have been underway since the end of July to make sure the show is ready by the time it makes its debut Aug. 24-26, just in time for Welcome Week.

Christopher Fry adapted the dreamy, fairy tale-like 1920s-era comedy – the theatre has dubbed it “a comedic trifle of romance and love affairs” – from Jean Anouilh’s 1947 play, “Invitation to the Castle.” And Fry himself saw the comedy as “a charade with music.”

It follows the aristocratic love triangle between two identical twin brothers, the shy and sensitive Frederic and his seemingly heartless and aggressive brother, Hugo. Frederic aims to marry an heiress, though she is in love with Hugo. Hugo knows the marriage will be a disaster, so he decides to rectify all things by hiring a beautiful ballet dancer to catch Frederic’s eye at the ball. But all goes awry when the ballet dancer falls for Hugo, too.

Costume Designer Nola Yergen and Assistant Costume Designer Sarah Levinson, who recently brought home Best in Show awards from Costume-Con, are putting together sumptuous 1920s Belle Epoch costumes for the comedy. The play happens to mention a popular 1920s-era design house, Callot Soeurs (the Callot Sisters).

The high-society dresses of the era: “They’re very drooly,” Yergen said. “We’re pretty excited about it.”

The parody examines the relationship between love and wealth and, like fairy tells are apt to do, aims for a happy ending.

“Macbeth”
Oct. 12-14 and Oct. 19-21

If there’s any play that’s far away in temperament from “Ring Round the Moon,” it’s Shakespeare’s tragedy, “Macbeth.”

It’s the tale of a heroic Scottish general who, after hearing a prophecy from a trio of witches declaring he will one day become king, becomes consumed by ambition and is pushed by his wife to “screw (his) courage to the sticking place” – and to murder.

“It is a tragedy, and it’s really one of his most remarkable plays,” Pensis said, adding how the department will focus on the theme of how power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. “It’s a very complex, very fascinating play.”

While Shakespeare set “Macbeth” in the Middle Ages, GCU will try something a little different.

“We’re going to modernize it, to a degree, and the setting itself is going to, visually, be somewhat neo-Byzantine,” Pensis said. “What that means is, I’ve been hunting like crazy to find a period that kind of made sense. What we discovered is the fact that one designer kind of took the sort of mosaic sort of artwork you would see in Byzantine and turn that into fashion.

“The thing that’s kind of cool about the fashion aspect of it is, it’s all very young looking, which I think is going to be very, very helpful for a collegiate production and how to make it speak to your specific audience. I think this will go a long way in doing that.”

“Peter and the Starcatcher”
Nov. 16-18 and Nov. 23-25

One of the new entries on Broadway in recent years has been Tony Award-winning “Peter and the Starcatcher,” which Rick Elice based on the 2004 novel “Peter and the Starcatchers” by humor columnist Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson.

“It’s related, obviously, to Peter Pan. It’s a pretty new work, and it’s a lot of fun,” Pensis said.

The play, with music, imagines how a miserable orphan rises to become the fun-loving, adventurous boy who refuses to grow up. It lends backstories to not just the title character but Tinker Bell, Hook and Mrs. Darling.

“The major producer for that is Disney. It’s really more youthful and aimed toward kids,” Pensis said.

“Who Will Carry the Word?”
Feb. 8-10 and Feb. 15-17

The theatre department will then do a hard turn away from that bit of Neverland escapism by bringing to the stage “Who Will Carry the Word?”

“It is definitely a serious play – a Holocaust drama,” Pensis said.

The drama is based on the account of Charlotte Delbo, who was part of the French Resistance and was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau in 1942, where she was imprisoned for three years. The play tells the stories of a group of female prisoners, their friendships and the horrific circumstances in which they find themselves, from starvation to the unimaginable deaths of babies to the rats.

The title stems from the goal of these women – for one of them to survive so they can share what they lived through with the world.

“Godspell”
March 22-24 and March 29-31

Capping the season will be the classic bright, shining, hopeful and upbeat 1970s musical “Godspell.” It is the first major musical by Grammy and Academy Award winner Stephen Schwartz of “Wicked” fame with a book by playwright John Michael Tebelak.

Unlike most plays, which follow the trek of one story from beginning to end, “Godspell” groups together several Bible parables, mostly from the Gospel of Matthew. The vignettes are told by an energetic ensemble whose personalities play a big part in giving the musical life.

Some of the parables told: the Pharisee and the Sinner, the Good Samaritan, the Prodigal Son and the story of the rich man and the harvest, to name a few.

The musical’s best known number is “Day by Day,” though its varied score, which ranges from pop to vaudeville, also includes “All Good Gifts,” “Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord” and “Learn Your Lessons Well.”

Play performances for all the works in the five-play season are at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays at Ethington Theatre.

Season tickets are on sale and are $48 per person. Single ticket prices are $12 for adults; $10 for senior citizens age 55 and older, GCU employees, GCU alumni and military; and $5 for children. GCU students are admitted free.

For information, call the box office at 602-639-8880 or email the Ethington Box Office.

You can reach GCU senior writer Lana Sweeten-Shults at lana.sweeten-shults@gcu.edu or at 602-639-7901.

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Related content: 

GCU Today: Common thread for designers: Winning Costume-Con

GCU Today: ‘Major’ coup: Ethington cast’s performances spot-on

GCU Today: Rare elsewhere, chaplains are an Ethington Theatre tradition

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Theology Thursday: The Body of Christ exists at GCU

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Pastor Jim Miller

“But God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that lacked it, so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other. If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.” (1 Corinthians 12:24b-26)

By Pastor Jim Miller
GCU Corporate Chaplain

Confession time: I bite my nails. I’m not sure that it’s a nervous habit or an irrational fear of clippers, but it’s just how I pass my time. Until last week when I went a little overboard and, well, let’s just say that one of my fingers was pretty sore for a few days. I know, TMI.  So for those few days, even though overall I was healthy and in pretty good shape, all I could think about was how much that one fingertip hurt.  It was constantly on my mind. Can you see where this is going?

Paul is in this passage promoting a oneness, a depth of love among those who walk with Jesus, a community so interconnected that if one person is hurting, we all feel it. He tells us that being part of the Kingdom of God means understanding that we need each other, that when you hurt, I hurt, and when you succeed, I’m happy for you. And this is as true for us here in this workplace environment as it is in the church. This is more than just a job! The Body of Christ exists here in this place.

Take a minute to look around at the people surrounding you right now. How many of them are sore fingers? How many of them need you to be Jesus to them? Don’t look away until you determine how you’re going to come alongside them and speak life into them. 

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The next all-employee Chapel starts at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 15, in the lecture room of Building 71. Scott Hovater, online professor in the College of Theology, will bring God’s encouragement to us.

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Fall Chapel schedule features 6 first-time speakers

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The music of the Worship Team begins Chapel at 11:15 a.m. Mondays.

By Rick Vacek
GCU News Bureau

As the Grand Canyon University campus population keeps growing, so does attendance at Chapel. That’s only natural. But Chapel’s importance to students has remained consistent.

Joni Eareckson Tada, a quadriplegic whose ministry focuses on helping the disabled, is scheduled to speak at Chapel on Sept. 17.

“I think the attendance at Chapel is a byproduct of the community of students – who they are, what they value,” said Danielle Rinnier, Director of Spiritual Life.

That also is reflected by the wide range of speakers for the fall semester, including six Chapel newcomers.

Most notable among them is Joni Eareckson Tada, who still is sharing her incredible message 50 years after a diving accident left her a quadriplegic. She is the guest speaker on Sept. 17.

“That one was a no-brainer,” Rinnier said.

Tada’s ministry, Joni and Friends, aims to “accelerate Christian ministry in the disability community,” according to her website. Her headquarters is in Southern California, but the ministry has area offices in 15 states across the country.

The first newcomer of the semester is Mark Moore of Christ’s Church of the Valley, scheduled for Sept. 10.

“Lots of students either come from CCV or go to CCV, and we’ve heard that he is one of their most gifted communicators,” Rinnier said.

The other first-time Chapel speakers this semester are:

As usual, the semester begins with a talk by GCU President Brian Mueller on the first day of classes, Aug. 27.

Chapel meets at 11:15 a.m. Mondays in GCU Arena and is open to all GCU students, faculty and staff. It begins each week with 15-20 minutes of uplifting music by the Worship Team, a 30-member group of GCU students divided into three separate bands, and the speaker’s 20- to 30-minute talk follows.

Students also gather for Christian music and inspirational talks – usually by GCU staff members – at The Gathering, which meets at 8 p.m. Tuesdays in Antelope Gym.

The fall semester schedule for both:

CHAPEL

Aug. 27: Brian Mueller, Grand Canyon University

Sept. 3: No Chapel (Labor Day)

Sept. 10: Mark Moore, Christ’s Church of the Valley

Sept. 17: Joni Eareckson Tada, Joni and Friends

Sept. 24: Mia Koehne, Mia Koehne Music

Oct. 1: Dr. Tim Griffin, Grand Canyon University

Oct. 8: Brian Kruckenburg, New City Church

Oct. 15: Scott MacIntrye, Lighthouse Ministries

Oct. 22: Emma Tautolo, Athletes in Action

Oct. 29: Sean Moore, Faith Christian Center

Nov. 5: Robert Watson, Sun Valley Community Church

Nov. 12: No Chapel (Veterans Day)

Nov. 19: No Chapel (fall break)

Nov. 26: Ron Merrill, Heights Church

Dec. 3: Christmas Chapel

THE GATHERING

Aug. 28: Danielle Rinnier                          

Sept. 4: Local/Global Outreach Night        

Sept. 11: Dr. Tim Griffin                           

Sept. 18: Worship Night           

Sept. 25: Chase Kerrey                               

Oct. 2: Cory Tubbs                            

Oct. 9: Njenga Maina                                 

Oct. 16: Torrey Allen                                 

Oct. 23: Brian Kruckenberg                       

Oct. 30: Worship Night                     

Nov. 6: Brenna de Jong                              

Nov. 13: Chris Jennings                             

Nov. 19: No Chapel (fall break)

Nov. 27: Worship Night            

Contact Rick Vacek at (602) 639-8203 or rick.vacek@gcu.edu.

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Related content:

GCU Today: Worship Team strikes a chord at Chapel

GCU Today: A Chapel talk on forgiveness to never be forgotten

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Big for a Day bowling bash

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GCU News Bureau

Thanks to a community partnership with GCE’s Strategic Educational Alliances division, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Arizona recently had an opportunity to host its annual Big For A Day event in Thunder Alley. Joined by employee volunteers of Desert Financial Credit union, BBBSAZ provided an entertaining experience for almost 30 children on the organization’s waitlist. The crowd enjoyed some friendly competition over bowling and billiards, and BBBSAZ sent each child home with a backpack full of school supplies, snacks and GCU swag. When interviewed, one mom of a very happy Little said, “Today’s Big for a Day event was incredible! Keegan and I had so much fun — we even met a new friend that lives in a nearby neighborhood. Keegan is extremely shy and was hesitant to come out today but thoroughly enjoyed hanging out with his Big… we’re speechless.” Here’s a slideshow of the event. To learn more about mentoring opportunities, visit the BBBSAZ website here.

 



 

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Students will profit from GCU’s nonprofit transition

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Nate Carpenter (left), the 2017-18 Associated Students of GCU president, and his successor, Noah Wolfe, both talk passionately about what they and other students have experienced at the University.

Editor’s note: This story is reprinted from pages 8-13 in the August issue of GCU Magazine. To read the digital version of the magazine, click here

Rick Vacek, Theresa Smith, Lana Sweeten-Shults and Ryan Kryska contributed to this report
Photos by David Kadlubowski
GCU Magazine

The announcement of Grand Canyon University’s transition back to nonprofit status manifested into a celebration of GCU’s accomplishments the last 10 years … of how it got to this point and where it’s going … of the transformation of its campus and its west Phoenix neighborhood. But, most significantly, it was a celebration of what GCU has been able to do and will continue to do for students – students like Nate Carpenter and Noah Wolfe.

The two student leaders were insightful, eloquent and passionate as they spoke to the standing-room-only gathering on the fourth floor of the Student Union. Carpenter, the 2017-18 Associated Students of Grand Canyon University (ASGCU) president and now a University employee, and Wolfe, the new student body president, told the audience how their GCU experiences have helped mold them into curious learners, caring people and charismatic leaders.

GCU President Brian Mueller addresses the press conference. “We operated very much like a not-for-profit
institution for 10 years,” he said. “… Number one, we didn’t raise tuition when we could have done it very
easily. … Secondly, almost every single dollar
of profit made got reinvested into educational
infrastructure.”

Wolfe summed it up well when he said in his speech, “Regardless of our (nonprofit) status, the students are excited because students come first here. This university has proved that time and time again. … I know our student body is excited to pursue finding our purpose as we continue to pioneer the world of private education.”

Brian Mueller, who will continue as President of GCU and CEO and Chairman of the Board for Grand Canyon Education, Inc. (GCE), listed the reasons for the transaction, through which GCE sold GCU for approximately $875 million to a nonprofit entity that will retain the GCU name:

  • It puts GCU on a level playing field with other traditional universities with regard to tax status.
  • It ensures that GCU students and faculty have the same access to research opportunities and grants as other universities.
  • It opens up the world of philanthropic giving to GCU.
  • It allows GCU to be a voting member of the NCAA.
  • Most importantly, it better enables GCU to continue to freeze tuition, which it has maintained for 10 straight years on the ground campus.

Afterward, Mueller lauded the work of Dan Bachus, Chief Financial Officer, and Brian Roberts, Chief Administrative Officer and General Counsel, and their teams for pulling together a complicated challenge. “This has not been done very many times before and never done exactly like this,” Mueller said.

He added, “We feel good about how we did this, and the for-profit model and public investment, we think, should be rethought. There should be a way to make educational opportunities even greater in this country than they are today and not be so heavily reliant on tax dollars.”

Approximately 35 percent, or 1,400, of full-time employees under the previous GCE flag transferred their employment to GCU along with almost all of GCE’s 6,000 part-time and adjunct employees and student workers. That leaves approximately 2,600 full-time employees working for GCE, which continues to be publicly traded and will be able to outsource its educational services, advanced technologies and expertise to other universities and even Christian high schools.

One thing that will not change: the GCU campus culture. “Our student body, in and of itself, the core of who we are, is not changing,” Carpenter promised the audience.

Another kind of transition

Carpenter was one of only seven students in his graduating class at Trinity Lutheran School in Bend, Ore. He was incredibly successful there – student body president, National Honor Society president and captain of the basketball team – but he did not know a soul when he arrived at GCU.

Nate Carpenter

“From Day 1, I just wanted to meet as many people as I could because that’s the best way to hear people’s story and know what their heart is,” Carpenter said.

As a Resident Assistant (R.A.) his sophomore and junior years, his passion for his fellow Lopes grew, leading to his election as ASGCU president. In that role, he emphasized diversity and the expansion of clubs and organizations.

“Students can take what they are passionate about and create something with it and make it flourish (here),” Carpenter said. “That is so unique; it doesn’t take long processes and years to build to get something done. It can take a couple weeks. It might be stressful at times, but it is amazing when it comes to creating opportunities for our students.”

Upon his graduation in April with a degree in business management, Carpenter was hired as a university counselor. He plans to begin a dual master’s program at GCU in January, for Business Administration and Science of Leadership, followed by law school.

Carpenter is a keen-minded mentor to Wolfe, who aspires to be a minister, politician or community developer and relates well to GCU and its volunteer partnerships with west Phoenix, a neighborhood similar to his birthplace in Virginia.

“I was born into an impoverished community, a lot of what this (west Phoenix) community looked like a while ago, and that impacted me,” said Wolfe, who was adopted by two government employees (CIA and NASA) who moved the family to San Diego. Upon graduation from Foothills Christian High School, his life journey continued at GCU.

Noah Wolfe

“I think it was crazy for me coming to a new city, coming to a new college, and wondering what it’s going to look like,” he said. “I know there was some time in the early stages of my freshman year where I really asked the question, ‘Is this the place for me?’

“I have phenomenal people in my life, and my parents and my mentors just encouraged me to keep sticking it out, to invest in myself. When I decided to go all in on the opportunities here, that’s when things really turned around.

“This university loving and investing in me really pushed me to turn around and invest in other people. There was a commitment from President Mueller all the way down to invest in students.”

As an R.A., a Discover GCU student worker, a member of the Diversity Council, a community volunteer and now as ASGCU president, Wolfe utilizes his tender heart, galvanizing charm and exemplary speaking skills to lead the Lopes.

“All of those experiences helped me to see first-hand how really special this university is,” Wolfe said.

Research will be under microscope

Researcher Dr. Mike Mobley — his expertise is in spectroscopy and optics — has no problem cranking up the volume when it comes to providing the kinds of life experiences Wolfe referenced.

So it seems apt that Mobley, Executive Director of GCU’s Center for Integrated Science, Engineering and Technology, would be the University’s champion in spearheading its efforts to establish an office to develop grants – research grants included – as well as endowments, donations, philanthropic giving, scholarships and the like as GCU enters a new era as a nonprofit.

The office will administer new sources of income for the University, which didn’t qualify for most grants and similar types of giving in the past because of its for-profit status.

While the transition to nonprofit status will open new opportunities for research grants, GCU will remain primarily a teaching institution.

“The issue has been that there are a lot of foundations that support educational initiatives, community service initiatives, health care initiatives, and we’ve been excluded from those opportunities in the past,” Mobley said. “So that’s one major area. The other is in the area of federal grants. A significant portion of those grants are earmarked for nonprofits. So now (as a nonprofit), we’ve become eligible for those.”

The new development office is still being established and the University is close to naming a vice president to oversee it, but Mobley has been quietly and busily working in the background. He has been meeting with the University’s deans to define their strategies and how to leverage the new grant and philanthropic opportunities. He also has been tasked with devising a budget.

His focus, he said, will be on research initiatives – ones that will bring in more equipment to the University, for example, and more research opportunities for students.

GCU touts two major research initiatives, the first of which is the Center for Innovation in Research and Teaching. It focuses on the scholarship of improved teaching and learning outcomes and the presentation and publication of those best practices at academic conferences and scholarly journals throughout the country.

The other program, established just two years ago, is the Research and Design Program. About two dozen projects fall under the RDP umbrella, and about 40 faculty and staff and almost 290 students were engaged in one or more research initiatives in 2017-18. Those projects have been supported by the budget of the College of Science, Engineering and Technology (CSET) but now may find support in these other funding sources.

Sara Dial, former Arizona Department of Commerce director and Lead Independent Director of the GCE board of directors, said of GCU, “This is by far the largest economic-development success story that Arizona has ever seen, based on the number of jobs that have been created, the amount of capital invested in the economy and the thriving student graduates that are a part of our community.”

The projects have included:

  • Investigating Sonoran desert plants to learn if they tout medicinal properties;
  • Researching cyanobacteria to find out if they could be the answer to the world’s dirty fuel problems;
  • Creating an anatomical atlas;
  • Developing a bandage to help in wound care;
  • Measuring whether daily exercise is better than alternating exercise when it comes to lowering blood pressure.

Mobley emphasized that even with these new opportunities for research grants, GCU remains first and foremost, as it has been since it was founded in 1949, a teaching institution. “But we want to supplement that with significant research initiatives,” he said.

So, rather than immediate sweeping changes, expect to see a steady ramp-up in the University’s existing research programs.

“We’ve been on a great ramp-up. This (grant opportunities and the like) will just continue to improve that,” he said. “As we get to be a bigger and bigger university, as you go from 10,000 to 20,000 to 30,000 students, it’s very difficult to think about involving a whole lot of students in research and innovative activities unless you’ve got some sources of funding externally.”

Other opportunities

Outside of research grants for the sciences, Mobley said GCU is looking forward to grant opportunities elsewhere. He noted that many foundations’ charters limit their support to nonprofits, which means GCU’s new status could pave the way for help with community initiatives in the Murphy and Alhambra school districts.

Dr. Jim Rice, a member of the GCU board of trustees, said, “We have students attending our Christian university from all over the world, representing almost every culture that you can imagine. Yes, we are a very diverse university, providing full inclusion for all students preparing them to serve their communities, all in the glory of God and our savior Jesus Christ. That’s the real wow factor.”

Carpenter also is encouraged by the chance to be able to help the community more with such financial support. He is heartened, he said, by “those opportunities to be able to apply for grants, to be able to make an impact moving forward in the Murphy district, moving forward even further with the Alhambra district, to be able to better those communities, to be able to better the community that surrounds us and give opportunities.”

Jon Valla, a CSET assistant dean, sees chances for GCU to land student training and experience grants, which provide students with the experiences they need to be accepted into graduate or medical school. He also is excited about what the nonprofit transition means in terms of philanthropy.

“We will now be able to accept philanthropic gifts from alumni, parents, relatives and friends of the University,” Valla said. “Providing for equipment and other items that will significantly and directly enhance the experiences and training of future students is often a very attractive target for donors.”

Mobley said all these initiatives, research and otherwise, are again focused on the most important thing to the University: its students. “The heavy focus, unlike a traditional research university, is opportunities for our students,” he said. “That’s the thing that comes first as a teaching university.”

As it always has been and will continue to be, Mueller emphasized. When he arrived at GCU in 2008, the University still was recovering from the shock of facing bankruptcy and nearly closing its doors four years earlier. Asked about his level of excitement then compared to today, he replied:

“It was a combination of excited and scared because there were a lot of challenges. Whether we were going to make it out of the tough times was not absolutely clear. We’re just as excited as we were 10 years ago, but we’re much more confident and sure that this model has staying power.”

And its impetus comes from celebrating students.

 

 

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Dr. Deb’s Mental Health Vitamin: Avoiding extremes

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Dr. Deb Wade

Dr. Deb Wade
GCU Vice President, Counseling and Psychological Services

It seems to me that we are living in a world of extremes. Nothing new with that concept, but when you look beyond the concrete and peek into the depth, “extreme anything” can seem to derail mental health and serenity.

For example, to a world that puts a premium on speed, on productivity, on a crammed calendar, on myriad responsibilities and on multi-tasking and juggling, a day with nothing but “just being” can sound lazy, wasteful and downright disdainful.

And the seemingly oxymoronic truth is that the more gadgets, time-savers, devices and inventions we have to speed up production in order to give us more “time,” the less time we actually have!

The reality is … these mixed messages mess with mental health! Let’s examine:

  • Have you felt frazzled lately?
  • Do you have any emotional energy left at the end of the work/chore day?
  • Can you just stop, without feeling guilty?
  • Do you see all the things undone, instead of all the things accomplished?

It’s time for some mental health fine-tuning and balancing!

  • On one end of the spectrum, many of us are so deep into daily distractions and “being busy, busy, busy” that we miss out on moments and opportunities that can could actually get us into that place of “wow” – both personally and professionally. Then, when the reality of the missed opportunity surfaces, the reaction can be one of anger, frustration, powerlessness and a sense of being stuck. Yet … it was the busyness, in the first place, that promoted our missing the big opportunity! What a rat race and endless cycle. This FEEDS mental/emotional overload … and when it is extreme, it can eventually lead to depression or anxiety or myriad other psychological maladies.
  • On the other hand, not being busy enough is just as out of balance as being too busy. This lack of intentional action and structured busyness can actually promote detachment and avoidance of others and can lead to isolation and unhealthy amounts of solitude. Additionally, being isolated from others (whether it is physically, emotionally, geographically or spatially), at its extreme, can eventually also lead to a psychological funk that borders on depression/anxiety and a host of other issues.

What to do? First, let’s stop believing that being overly busy is something to take pride in. Because when you are solely focused on marking the to-do off your list and stamping the goal as “Done,” you may have just missed the joy of the ride itself.

Remember, busyness is about frenzy, frustration and urgency. Don’t let it destroy what you love … when you reach your goal and accomplish the task, you want to feel GREAT and give yourself a moment to savor the victory!

And, if you’ve fallen into isolation because you are doing very little, give your bootie a kick and get back into life! You, too, want to experience the joy of the ride!

Balance … what does it look like? You have …

  • Gotten rid of stuff
  • Pared down expectations of perfection
  • Let go of “friends” on social media who take joy in your defeats
  • Decluttered time-eaters
  • Thought more of what’s right and good, no longer concerning yourself with what’s going on with the Kardashians
  • Thrown away the Superman/Superwoman cape if it means you no longer have time for relationships
  • And, by all means, have decided to worry less about a clean house/garage and think more about the nuggets of beauty around you.

Now THAT’S balance … THAT’S living healthy!

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Fitness Facts: Oral health

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Connie Colbert

By Connie Colbert
Director, Canyon Health and Wellness Clinic

Did you know that brushing and flossing every day can help prevent disease in the rest of your body?

Improving your oral health can prevent tooth decay and gum disease. According to the Arizona Department of Health Services, “oral diseases have been linked to diabetes, heart disease and stroke.”

Conversely, your oral health also can be a reflection of the overall health of your body. For instance, if you already have a chronic condition such as diabetes, you are at a greater risk for oral disease, such as gingivitis, oral yeast infections (thrush) and mouth ulcers.

Why?

Like many areas of your body, harmless bacteria are present in your mouth. With our normal body defenses and good hygiene these bacteria are kept at bay, but a few factors may compromise our oral health and allow the harmless bacteria to become harmful.

Some of these include:

  • Poor oral hygiene leading to a buildup of bacteria
  • Medications that decrease saliva (such as decongestants, antihistamines, painkillers and antidepressants). Saliva is essential for washing away food and acids produced by bacteria. A consistently dry mouth makes you more susceptible to tooth decay.
  • Conditions that affect the immune system allow bacteria to grow more easily

According to Mayo Clinic.org, these conditions have been linked to poor oral health:

  • Endocarditis: an inflammation of the inner lining of your heart
  • Cardiovascular disease: Some research suggests that heart disease, clogged arteries and stroke might be linked to the inflammation and infections that oral bacteria can cause
  • Periodontitis: has been linked to low birth weight and premature birth
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Head and neck cancers

So to protect your overall health …

  • Brush your teeth at least twice daily with fluoride toothpaste
  • Floss daily
  • Eat a healthy diet and limit sugary snacks
  • Replace your toothbrush every 3-4 months
  • Schedule regular dental cleanings
  • Avoid tobacco

It is an investment you will not regret!

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GCU INsider: Handy tidbits with many applications

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Editor’s note: This story is reprinted from pages 24-25 in the August issue of GCU Magazine. To read the digital version of the magazine, click here

GCU Magazine

Any new ways for students to know what’s happening on campus?

GCU Engage, the new app from Student Engagement, has logins for students, staff and parents and is loaded with information. Its slogan: Keeping Lopes in the Loop. The map provides navigation around campus and the calendar lists Associated Students of Grand Canyon University and Canyon Activities Board activities and events managed by clubs and organizations. Along with personalizing the app to receive alerts from favorite clubs, Bible study groups and intramural teams, students can track their volunteer hours. The app creates a co-curricular transcript, enabling students to show potential employers a record of their community service and leadership experiences.

GCU Engage is a new app designed by Student Engagement. (Photo by David Kadlubowski)

INsider tip: “Students can create their own set of programming. They can customize their college experience, highlighting the things they want to do, not sorting through 583 events and activities.” — Jeremy Mack, Director of Student Engagement

When’s the first play of the Ethington Theatre season?

A week earlier than past years. Students arrived on campus in mid- July to start putting together “Ring Round the Moon,” which opens Aug. 24 – the Friday of Welcome Week. The rest of this year’s lineup is “Macbeth” in October, “Peter and the Starcatcher” in November/ December, “Who Will Carry the Word?” in February and “Godspell” in March.

INsider tip: “In addition to our regular Ethington schedule, we have a new theatre group. It’s a Christian theatre group that (GCU acting instructor/director) Michael Kary is going to head up for us. They will be performing at schools and churches around the Valley.” —Claude Pensis, Dean, College of Fine Arts and Production

What’s the most unusual new club?

The Medieval Combat Club enables students to participate in “larping” (Live Action Role Play). There are 126 clubs on campus, and the way this one began is typical – a group of like-minded students started getting together on a regular basis and decided to apply for club status, which was granted in 2017.

INsider tip: “I love that club, in particular, because it provides an area of community for students who might not have found it in any other club.” — Pablo Ciscomani, Clubs and Organizations Coordinator

What can we look forward to at Chapel this fall?

The most notable of the six first-time speakers is Joni Eareckson Tada, who has been a quadriplegic since she was injured in a diving accident at age 17. She has written more than 50 books on disability outreach, the goodness of God and the problem of suffering and will be here Sept. 17. Chapel is at 11:15 a.m. Mondays in GCU Arena, and students also can attend The Gathering at 8 p.m. Tuesdays in Antelope Gym.

INsider tip: “There are lots of amazing events that happen on campus, but Chapel is a consistent once-a-week experience and in a unique way represents the core of what GCU is about.” — Danielle Rinnier, Director of Spiritual Life

GCU newcomer J.J. Rhymes starred as a high school player in Phoenix and was a junior college All-American. (Photo by David Kadlubowski)

Who are the newcomers to watch on the men’s basketball team?

The Lopes have six new scholarship players, two of whom will not play in games until 2019-20 because they are undergraduate transfers (Isiah Brown from Northwestern and Carlos Johnson from Washington). Freshman Tim Finke, the most touted signing, is joined by his brother Michael, an eligible transfer who graduated from Illinois with one year of eligibility remaining. Trey Drechsel is also an eligible senior transfer from Western Washington. J.J. Rhymes, a Phoenix native, might have the largest immediate impact. The Rhymes family is renowned in Phoenix-area high school basketball, and this Rhymes was a junior college All-American at Hutchinson (Kan.) Community College last season. He could start on the wing opposite Oscar Frayer.

INsider tip: “J.J. is ultracompetitive and extremely tough. He can really get to the basket and score. He’s a bull down there. As far as getting to the basket and those type of things, I think he’s going to be very successful in the way that I will use him in mismatches, a lot like I used Josh (Braun) in the post.” — Dan Majerle, men’s basketball coach

What’s new on the food scene?

The big news, especially for budget-conscious students, is the arrival of Taco Bell. The popular eatery is taking over the top floor of Thunder Alley, and plans are to have it open by the end of September. But that isn’t the only new place. Pita Jungle is taking over the space previously occupied by the Lope Shop on Lopes Way, and Diamondback Apartments on the burgeoning east side of campus will feature Chick-fil-A, GCBC and Fresh Fusion.

INsider tip: “You can eat at Taco Bell seven straight days and not get tired of it … or, if you’re like me, seven times a day.” — Stephen Steininger, Executive Vice President, Associated Students of GCU

James Strassner and James Staff of 3-G Trim Inc., install a decorative wood ceiling in the new Lope Shop.

So where did the Lope Shop go?

It moved to the old Fleming Building, just south of Prescott Field, and is going big – it will have 9,500 square feet, five times its previous space, will feature huge new glass display windows, and will tempt shoppers with everything from a Nike concept store to a boutique, a women’s fashion department and a technology area.

INsider tip: “Late at night, if girls run out of mascara, they won’t have to run off campus to the store.” — Shelly Schrimpf, Assistant Director of Campus Retail and Licensing

What else is making the east side burgeon?

Five new structures are opening there this fall. The crown jewel is the Colangelo College of Business Building – the first two floors will be ready in August, the other two later in the semester. There’s also the new Canyon Activities Center, which will feature 10 multipurpose courts for students, a new parking garage right next to it on Missouri Avenue, and two new apartment buildings, Cactus and Jerome.

INsider tip: “The new CCOB Building will feature many collaborative work spaces for the community of learners – both students and faculty. The first floor has a spacious lobby where students can hang out, and faculty will be on that floor as well to make them accessible.” — Dr. Randy Gibb, Dean, Colangelo College of Business

Whew, that’s a lot! Any changes in the middle of campus?

The College of Nursing and Health Care Professions and the College of Theology switched places over the summer, which gave CONHCP two new labs in what is now the Natural Sciences Building. Theology is looking forward to having a ministry lab in its new digs, and the College of Fine Arts and Production will be able to spread out a little now that it’s in the old CCOB building.

INsider tip: “We’ll have two identical hospital suite simulation labs. The idea is that they are simulating nursing skills in a safe environment that is learning-focused.” — Dr. Lisa Smith, Dean, College of Nursing and Health Care Professions

There couldn’t be any other big construction projects on the horizon, could there?

Silly question. One of the oldest structures on campus, Building 18 (opened in 1984), is scheduled to be demolished during Christmas break and will be replaced by a four-story building that will house Admissions and Student Advisement, a new Antelope Reception Center and student lounges, among other things. There also will be three more apartment buildings going up next to Cactus and Jerome plus a parking garage at 31st Avenue and Camelback Road.

INsider tip: “We are really excited to be in the planning stages for the new Antelope Reception Center. The new ARC will create a more congruent flow for students and their families and will provide more space and privacy for students when meeting with Admissions. We are hoping to have an indoor/ outdoor feel to showcase the beautiful Arizona weather, especially in the winter months when we have a lot of out-ofstate visitors.” — Shannon Landers, Director of Campus Visitation and the ARC

 

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GCU, Habitat for Humanity project nears 200th home

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The first Habitat for Humanity volunteer opportunity of the school year will be Sept. 21.

By Ryan Kryska
GCU News Bureau

Grand Canyon University‘s Canyon Corridor partnership with Habitat for Humanity is nearing completion of its 200th home, but the help of GCU employees is needed to reach that goal. 

Cassandra Jarles, Habitat’s Director of Sponsor Relations, said the partnership has served 190 families in the corridor and in the Maryvale neighborhood since January 2015, on pace to reach 200 by the Oct. 27 Serve the City date. To make it there, GCU and Habitat will need employee volunteers to continue proving their dedication to the community.

Jarles said the Canyon Corridor connection with GCU was the first neighborhood revitalization project Habitat took on. Since inception, the partnership has provided more than $1.4 million in home repairs and more than 3,100 employees have volunteered.

There are many different tasks to do in Habitat projects, and many of them don’t require physical strength.

“Our partnership with Habitat for Humanity is the largest of its kind in the country, but what makes it even more significant is that it directly connects us with the neighbors around us. We don’t want to build this brand new campus and just isolate it from the rest of the community,” GCU President Brian Mueller said.

“It’s become part of the education process for our students and part of our employees’ desire to not just have a job, but a calling that serves a higher purpose. Years from now, when they drive through this neighborhood, they’ll be able to point to homes and schools and other parts of the community and say, ‘I helped do that. I made a difference in making this a middle-class community again.’”

Jarles said Habitat’s partnership with GCU has opened the door to helping other surrounding communities outside the corridor, such as Maryvale. She said the impact GCU is making on the community has built more relationships among neighbors.

“The homeowners really began to talk to each other,” Jarles said. “More and more people are embracing the partnership. Our Habitat trucks drive down and people wave. People have gone into their home and changed their shirt to purple for Serve the City.”

The revitalization has intertwined the University with the corridor, Jarles said.

“We no longer have two communities of GCU and the Canyon Corridor, you now have one. GCU just happens to be a university within the corridor,” she said. “That is what we’ve really seen and have been able to express to the community at large. There are not enough words we can say to express our gratitude to GCU.”

Debbie Accomazzo, GCU’s Community Outreach Manager, said the University has many outstanding relationships, but the one with Habitat is perhaps the best example of combining resources.

“I think we as employees have learned more about our place in this community,” Accomazzo said. “It’s not like we are saving these people — they already loved their neighborhood and their homes. We’re just offering resources and standing side by side as they make the improvements that they want.”

And there’s always painting …

Employees can sign up through the online volunteer portal. Accomazzo said “there’s a job for everyone no matter your fitness or ability to swing a hammer.”

“You’re going to get dirty and you’re going to love every minute of it,” she said.

Volunteer dates are listed a semester at a time. The first employee date in the fall is Sept 21.

Departments are encouraged to sign up together, and Accomazzo said she and Jarles are happy to meet any special requests.

“It’s a unique experience,” Accomazzo said. “It really takes that staff member away from their day-to-day life at their desk, and whether it’s with coworkers or fellow employees that they’ve never met before, they are able to contribute to the mission of GCU.”

Contact Ryan Kryska at (602) 639-8415 or ryan.kryska@gcu.edu.

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Related content:

GCU Today: CSET staff volunteers for Habitat for Humanity

GCU Today: Employees dig deep for Habitat, Donate to Elevate

GCU Today: GCU and Habitat for Humanity surpass 100 renovated homes

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Why diversity matters (and is organic) at GCU

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Editor’s note: This story is reprinted from pages 14-19 in the August issue of GCU Magazine. To read the digital version of the magazine, click here

Story by Rick Vacek
Photos by David Kadlubowski
GCU Magazine

The mission statement of Grand Canyon University’s Diversity Council declares that it is “composed of faculty and staff working in a collaborative effort, together with students, to promote and enhance the University’s efforts to maintain a diverse and unified campus community in alignment with the University’s Christian mission and vision.

Note those last nine words. That’s the key. GCU’s approach to diversity starts there.

Dr. Antoinette Farmer-Thompson

“Spirituality is the lens through which we view and accomplish the work of diversity – ‘Loving your neighbors as yourself,’ Mark 12:31,” said Dr. Antoinette Farmer-Thompson, the Diversity Council chair. “Yes, diversity means dialogue. But for us it also means, ‘How do you really help the people around you, how do you have real impact – not just for today, but for generations?’

“High quality, affordable education is one of the best ways – if not the best – of bridging equity gaps. That’s the foundational piece for our diversity efforts and, ultimately, truly being united in purpose, by purpose and on purpose.”

The Council, formed in 2015, has fostered an environment of open dialogue and thoughtful discussion with numerous opportunities for students to join in. And this year, more than ever, a traditional campus where 47 percent of the student population is diverse is focused on continuing the conversation with all students, new and returning, of every ethnicity, age, religion and socio-economic background.

The goal is to make them all feel included – everyone, without exception. Right from the start of Welcome Week, students will hear about the Diversity Office, opened last spring (it’s Room 150 in the Student Life Building). They will hear that diversity outreach always has been and always will be a priority, in light of GCU’s Christian worldview.

They will hear that diversity at GCU extends beyond the campus gates and right out into the neighborhood, where students regularly volunteer their time and energy. In fact, many students from the University’s multicultural neighborhood are on campus because of the University’s efforts to make a college education affordable for everyone.

They will hear about the clubs devoted to diversity.

They will hear why diversity is so important to the Associated Students of Grand Canyon University (ASGCU) and the Student Engagement team.

There will be socials devoted to international students and those from diverse backgrounds, including a cultural celebration that is a collaboration of the Black Student Union, Latino Student Union, Hui Aloha (formerly the Hawaiian Club) and Filipino-American Student Association.

Very intentional. But what’s interesting is how this all came together. Diversity affects students even before they set foot on campus, and it has happened organically.

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The Havocs, GCU’s nationally renowned cheering section, brings together students from a variety of backgrounds. (GCU photo archive)

“For in Him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through Him and for Him. He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.” – Colossians 1:16-17

No one is more passionate about the importance of diversity than GCU President Brian Mueller.

“It has always started with President Mueller,” Farmer-Thompson said. “I think it was always his destiny to be here. He loves God. It’s part of who he is, and as a Christian man, he lives out a Christian mission. Everything he does is with the good of people in mind. Therefore, diversity to him is not something that you think about and check off and have a strategic plan. The man has done it, just based on who he is from a spiritual perspective. It’s his heart for people.”

One of the reasons behind the University’s 10-year freeze on traditional campus tuition is Mueller’s fervent belief that America doesn’t promise equality, it promises equality of opportunity. He says students and families from all socio-economic backgrounds should have access to college and, in turn, a good job.

“What I’m most proud of in what we’ve done here is that we’ve set out to make private Christian higher education affordable to all socio-economic classes of Americans,” he said. “The reality is, education is getting unaffordable and therefore inaccessible to large segments of the population. Even state universities are becoming out of the reach for many people, but certainly private schools are way out of reach for most Americans.”

The tuition freeze has made GCU the exception and has resulted in a student population that is 28 percent Latino and seven percent African-American – both overrepresented in the lower socio-economic strata.

“It’s not that we came up with slick marketing plans to attract Hispanic and African-American students here; we just came up with a financial model that made it affordable,” he said.

“I think the thing that’s most important about this is that it combines the free market system with the Christian worldview. You put those two things together and you create an institution that’s based on Conscious Capitalism principles, and then diversity happens. It’s organic, which means it’s probably going to survive well into the future.”

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The Students Inspiring Students initiative has awarded full-tuition scholarships to local students, 91 percent of whom are people of color.

“Live in harmony with each other. Don’t be too proud to enjoy the company of ordinary people. And don’t think you know it all!”Romans 12:16

The tuition freeze is only part of GCU’s commitment to diversity.

It also serves its predominantly Hispanic inner-city community with the Learning Lounge, which provides free academic assistance for K-12 students. That led to the Students Inspiring Students initiative, which already has awarded 300 full-tuition scholarships to neighborhood students. Of the recipients, 91 percent are people of color, who then pay it forward as college students by working 100 hours per academic year in the Learning Lounge.

And local parents have another way to gain access to an education they otherwise might have considered unattainable for their families: If they work for the University, their children’s tuition is miniscule.

Part of the challenge is increasing awareness among parents who don’t speak English. One of the ways the University does that is with Casa Abierta (Spanish for “open house”), where monolingual parents are given a complete rundown of tuition, benefits, how to budget for college and how to apply for student loans.

Emily Belt and her daughter, Elisabeth

Emily Belt, Regional Director of Operations, Traditional Campus, takes great satisfaction in enlightening parents and students during the enrollment process and then continuing the conversation through the college experience. She remembers what it was like for her when she attended a small Midwestern college and had to figure out how to pay for it.

“No one ever talked to me about how I could leave school and not owe a ton of money,” she said. “No one ever discussed loan amounts with me. They just said, ‘You can’t pay for this? Here, this is what you need to sign, and we’ll get you a loan that pays for the rest of it.’ “We put plans in place where they can actually afford to go to college, and we teach them how to pay it off while they’re in college. Now they’re not starting off in a hole.”

A key part of those plans is giving students access to jobs, both on campus and in the community.

Approximately 2,500 students are employed by GCU, beginning a process that focuses on preparing all students, no matter their background, for what’s ahead in the working world.

Students who want to work elsewhere can access the Academic and Career Excellence Center’s Jumpstart for Jobs program, which gives them everything they need – resume assistance, interview and business etiquette tips, and instruction on how to act professionally – to get in the door and make a positive impression once they’re there.

There’s an annual clothing drive to get students the proper business attire (an acute need for some less affluent students), and they even can do mock interviews with representatives from outside companies to get a better feel for what the experience will be like.

“That, to me, shows we’re invested and supporting people who just need more support,” Belt said. “They don’t need handouts. They’re not less capable or less qualified. They just need a different level of support.”

*****

Timothy Jones

“Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind; and, love your neighbor as yourself.”Luke 10:27

When Belt and Student Services Manager Timothy Jones got the Diversity Office started last spring, the first thing they discovered was how much students didn’t know about what GCU already was doing in terms of diversity.

“People would say, ‘I wish we did this.’ And we’d say, ‘Well, we DO do that,’” Belt said.

Said Jones, “We weren’t trying to reinvent the diversity wheel. Most of the wheel is already in motion.”

The office’s location, adjacent to that of Jeremy Mack, Director of Student Engagement, speaks of its importance.

“What the office provides is, number one, a location for students to go to whenever they have an area of concern, a comment or a thought or just need a place to hang out and have a conversation,” Mack said. “It provides a physical space and a phone number. It connects students with the resources that already exist or creates resources that need to exist.”

Numerous programs already existed.

“We had a history. There was this component to the student experience that addressed and celebrated and affirmed the minority groups across the campus. From my vantage point, it was a wonderful thing to see unfold,” said Dr. Tim Griffin, Pastor and Dean of Students.

“But it’s OK to think through and take a step back and say, ‘Can we add some components to make this better?’ I think that theme has been played out in the development of the Diversity Office.”

One of the activities organized by the Diversity Office last spring was a speaker series with top-level, career-oriented topics, such as “Turning Your Vision into a Business,” “Pathways to Medical School” and “Pathways to Law School.” Diverse members from the Phoenix area were brought in to share their stories and give students a glimpse of what that option might look like.

ASGCU staged Human Library, where a wide variety of students shared details of their backgrounds and broke down the walls of stereotypes, and Diversity Speaks, a series of talks about important topics related to the subject. There was a full week of diversity activities, with each day devoted to a different ethnic group, as well as a one-day Cultural Fest that featured various types of dance.

Ruth Nsubaga

*****

“After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb.”Revelation 7:9

But perhaps there is no better example of how diversity plays out on campus than the African Student Association, which meets every other week. When it was formed two years ago, advisor Ruth Nsubaga stressed to the students that she wanted it to be more than a social club – she wanted them to gain new knowledge, learn new skills. They eagerly agreed.

For the first semester, that means bringing in outside speakers. The students become the speakers in the spring semester, sharing about their cultures.

“The cool thing about our club is that it’s not generally just African students – they can bring their friends,” she said. “All these different people are learning about all these different cultures. They’ve learned a lot of basic concepts about how to engage with each other and how to engage in conversation because there will be disagreements.”

And when they don’t see eye-to-eye, Nsubaga reins them in by reminding them of their Christian worldview and by practicing the Stephen Covey principles she espouses. “I need everyone to live out biblical principles and then the ‘Seven Habits of Highly Effective People’ and I think we’ll be fine,” she tells them. None of this would be possible without a student population that is on board with the importance of listening.

“Our students have embraced the diversity,” Mueller said. “We have all socio-economic classes represented and so many different racial and ethnic groups are represented, and yet when people walk through our campus, the most frequent comment we get from families is the students are kind, they’re considerate, they’re respectful, people seem happy here, we want our son or daughter involved in this kind of environment.

“Not only is it diverse; diversity has happened organically, which means it’s sustainable but is producing a very healthy culture.”

Students will get a taste of that culture right from the start of Welcome Week. ASGCU President Noah Wolfe is determined to see to that. “We want people to know that the minute they drive onto this campus and get out of their car, that they are part of the family, that we care about them and that they are valued regardless of who they are,” he said. “We’re going to give them incredible Lope treatment.”

That’s the kind of treatment Farmer-Thompson was talking about when she referenced the foundational piece for GCU’s diversity efforts. Her final thoughts on the matter delved even deeper:

“When I think about spirituality and the conversations we have had around diversity, for GCU these are inextricably linked. Dating back decades, we have always been mission minded and mission driven, which has resulted in a very diverse campus and team of people working here. Being united and being diverse is who we are.

“Many people miss the obvious: We have lived out our Christian beliefs and values through efforts that have truly transformed the lives of our students, staff, faculty and community. That is the truest and most effective way an organization can demonstrate diversity.”

GCU UNDERGRADUATE ETHNICITY 

Traditional campus (fall 2017)

White — 50%

Hispanic — 28%

Black or African-American — 7%

Two or more — 6%

Asian — 4%

Unreported — 4%

Other — 2%

Contact Rick Vacek at (602) 639-8203 or rick.vacek@gcu.edu.

The post Why diversity matters (and is organic) at GCU appeared first on GCU Today.

Theology Thursday: Rejoice in suffering?

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Corporate Chaplain Jim Miller

“Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.” (Romans 5:3-5)

By Pastor Jim Miller
GCU Corporate Chaplain

Oxymoron. You know, using words together that would seem to be self-contradictory. Like Microsoft Works. Jumbo shrimp. Or, in this case, rejoice in suffering.

Wait, what? Now I get what the word rejoice means. I did an extensive cross-referencing of the word a couple of years ago, pages of verses that helped define what the word is expressing. (What, that doesn’t excite you?) And what I found is that not only is rejoicing a very noisy thing (shouting, singing, praise, joy), it’s also a very glad type of thing, a positive emotional response — you can go almost so far to say it means happy. 

So … happy when I suffer? How is it that I can be glad that I’m suffering?

Well, first, it’s because we can be confident that God is using our suffering in our lives to bring about something that we need — it produces endurance and character and hope, and we need that! But it’s also possible to rejoice in suffering because we know that God is a good Father who loves us and is concerned about everything we are going through.

We don’t have to fear. We don’t have to be anxious. We don’t have to despair. Our suffering is bringing about something essential in us. And the God who cares about us is beside us in the midst of it. And that’s just terribly good and awfully nice.

****

The next all-employee Chapel is Wednesday, Aug. 15, from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Building 71, first floor meeting room. Scott Hovater, online faculty in the College of Theology, is the speaker.

The post Theology Thursday: Rejoice in suffering? appeared first on GCU Today.

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