West Liberty Getting Funds for Recycling Efforts

West Liberty University is getting a $24,760 grant from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection to continue its recycling efforts. The…

West Liberty University is getting a $24,760 grant from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection to continue its recycling efforts.
 

The school says the award will allow its voluntary recycling program to grow from its infancy into a full-fledged, mandatory program.

     The money will be used to help buy recycling storage buildings, recycling containers, a utility vehicle, recycling bags and an industrial scale.
 
     The funding program was made possible by the West Virginia Legislature through a $1 fee imposed on every ton of solid waste disposed of at state landfills. The money is available to any county, municipality, public or private entity in West Virginia interested in planning and implementing recycling programs or related public educational programs.
 

Many W.Va. Students Don't Earn Degrees in Six Years

Many in-state students at West Virginia's public higher education institutions don't earn a degree after six years. An annual graduation report shows…

Many in-state students at West Virginia’s public higher education institutions don’t earn a degree after six years.
 
     An annual graduation report shows fewer than half of in-state freshmen enrolled in fall 2005 earned their degrees six years later.
 
     West Virginia University was the exception. The university’s 2012 six-year graduation rate was 56 percent.
 
     Marshall University’s six-year graduation rate was 44 percent, followed by Shepherd University, 43 percent; and West Liberty University, 41 percent.
 
     Other schools’ rates were: Concord University, 38 percent; Fairmont State University, 34 percent, Glenville State College, 30 percent; Bluefield State College, 25 percent; WVU Tech, 24 percent; and West Virginia State University, 21 percent.
 
     The Charleston Gazette reports that higher education officials presented the report Monday to an interim legislative committee.
 

WVU Board Makes Recommendation for Interim President, Doesn't Announce Name

West Virginia University’s Board of Governors has recommended the hiring of an interim president.
 
     Without announcing a name, the board forwarded its recommendation for Jim Clements’ temporary replacement to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission. The commission meets Friday in South Charleston.
 
     WVU Board chairman James Dailey says the board is “thrilled” with its selection.
 
     The WVU board also set a goal of having a permanent president in place by next fall.
 
     Clements accepted the presidency of Clemson University in November.
 

Entrepreneurs, Small Businesses Owners With Big Goals Wanted

Colleges and technical schools in southern West Virginia are teaming up to encourage entrepreneurs.

Concord University, Marshall University, the Robert C. Byrd Institute for Advanced Flexible Manufacturing (RCBI), the Natural Capital Investment Fund and TechConnect West Virginia are collaborating to encourage tourism and advanced manufacturing across southern West Virginia.

Concord University and the Robert C. Byrd Institute are hosting a workshop to share business growth and opportunities in southern West Virginia.  The workshop will explain how the 3rd District Accelerator grant can help people who have businesses or business ideas reach their goals.

The 3rd District, or 3D, Accelerator provides integrated business support efforts and technical assistance, including grant writing workshops, training and more.

Small business owners, entrepreneurs and those interested in more information are encouraged to attend the workshop to learn how the 3rd District Accelerator grant can help them realize their small business goals.

It’s funded by the U.S. Economic Development Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Appalachian Regional Commission.

The workshop is scheduled for next Tuesday, Dec. 3 at the Mercer County Technical Education Center in Princeton from 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.

Marshall Professor Studies Use of Texting in Learning

An assistant professor at Marshall says texting students may be the next step in higher education learning.

One Marshall University professor thinks text messaging is a tool to reach college students across the country. Dr. Kay Swartzelder is an Assistant Professor in the College of Health Professions School of Nursing. She said the idea just made sense, to tap into one of the most used methods of media consumption that students use, their smart phones and text messaging.

“I look at it as students are our customers, it’s our job and as a professional I want to get my message to the students the best way and students learn different whether we like it or not,” Swartzwelder said.

But they don’t, said Swartzwelder. According to Swartzwelder the typical millennial, the term used for the age group that students make up, doesn’t learn in the old fashioned way. She said they no longer thrive in a setting that includes sitting in a classroom listening to lectures and taking notes. She said they are very interactive and are constantly consuming media at each turn.

“The students are changing, they multi-task, they are always doing 3 or 4 things at a time even when they are studying, they’re texting and listening to music,” Swartzwelder said.  

So Swartzwelder said she found a program that will allow her to send a mass text to a group of students. Her idea was to examine an online class she was teaching by separating the groups in the class. One group did things the traditional way, by responding discussion prompts on a message board each week. The other 60 students received text messages too. Students replied in a text through an application on their phone. While the overall test scores haven’t shown a substantial improvement Swartzwelder said the response discussions how a more attentive group of students.

"I look at it as students are our customers, it's our job and as a professional I want to get my message to the students the best way and students learn different whether we like it or not," Swartzwelder said.

The professor of nursing says the next step is using programs like poll in conjunction with the text messaging. Much like the widely used clicker programs found in new smart classrooms that allow students to select A,B,C, or D for an answer to a question and then see the percentages for each answer, the poll everywhere program allows students to respond using texting on their phone. Swartzwelder said it’s about finding new ways to help students learn the material.

Swartzwelder’s paper “Examing the Efect of Texting on Students’ Perception of Learning” has been accepted for publication in Nursing Education Perspectives.  

WVU Board Narrows List for Interim President

West Virginia University board members hope to select the school’s interim president early next month.
 
     The university’s Board of Governors spent more than four hours in closed executive session Thursday. Later, board chairman James Dailey said the list of potential candidates was narrowed but he didn’t say how many remain.
 
     The board meets again Dec. 3. Dailey said he hopes the board can take the narrowed list and wrap up the selection process.
 
     The board is looking for a temporary replacement for Jim Clements, who accepted the presidency of Clemson University earlier this month.
 
 

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