14
community gwinnettdailypost.com SECTION C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 LOOKING AHEAD Preczewski focuses on vision, not title For the first time in his career, Stanley “Stas” Preczewski is put- ting down roots. After he spent a career in the U.S. Army, Preczewski has worked at Georgia Gwinnett College since 2005, first as provost and now as interim president, the longest time he and his wife have lived anywhere. In their time together, they’ve moved 19 times. “It’s nice to have roots,” Precze- wski told the Daily Post in a recent interview in his office. “I know my neighbors’ names. They know me. We’re not packing again. So that stability is quite nice.” At the office, Preczewski said he and colleagues can communicate in shorthand and more efficiently because they know each other well, and what to expect. For the second time in his career, Preczewski is an interim president of a college institution, this time as GGC now counts 9,869 stu- dents — while class sizes remain at 22 — as it nears an eventual goal of 13,000 students. Yet because of his personality, and the way GGC was built, Preczewski believes the interim title doesn’t change the job description. “Whether you have interim be- fore you’re name, the decisions still have to be made and the responsi- bility is still the same,” Preczewski said. “You just have that word out front. I operate the same, whether it’s there or not there.” The appointment, which began on July 1, follows GGC President Daniel Kaufman’s recent move as the new president of the Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce. Precze- wski previously served as vice president for Academic and Student Affairs. Preczewski was also interim president of Georgia College & State University in Milledgeville from July 2011 through June 2012. While he learned some les- sons in his first stint as an interim president, Preczewski said GCSU’s more than 100-year-old history is a stark contrast to GGC still being in the development stages. There is no timetable for the Board of Regents to name an of- ficial president, spokesman John Millsaps said. The standard process for finding a college president includes the for- mation of two separate committees: a campus search committee and a Regents search committee. Preczewski earned a bachelor’s degree in engineering at Cornell University in 1980 and concurrent- ly received his Army officer com- mission. His other degrees include a master’s in engineering from the University of Massachusetts, a master’s in National Security Strat- egy and Planning from the United States Naval War College, and a doctorate in Higher Education from the University of Missouri. Preczewski met his wife, Jean, a legal assistant in Buford, 42 years ago and they have been married for more than 30 years. They have three adult children, each of whom hold the rank of captain in the U.S. Army. With a military background as a retired colonel, Preczewski said he makes decisions based on the mis- sion and the vision of the college. He also doesn’t treat the interim title as a sort of on-the-job inter- view for the permanent position. “I’ve never made a decision, ever, in my life that benefits me, in fact I’ve done things that have hurt myself,” Preczewski said. “We’ve always operated, and will always operate, in the best interest of the students. If we do what’s in the best interest of me, generally that’s not what’s best for the students. … There’s only one reason a college exists, there’s only one reason we have jobs. It’s because students choose to come here. They choose to come here because they’re suc- cessful here.” While the job description hasn’t changed, Preczewski’s duties have since he was provost, which he admitted to being largely internal to the campus. The president’s duties are largely external, and deals with every stake holder that touches the university: students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents, donors, legislators and the Board of Regents. “Everybody has a slightly dif- ferent twist of what they would like to see a college to do,” he said. “You’re job is to find that middle point. It’s not a science, it’s an art.” BY KEITH FARNER [email protected] File photos of the Georgia Gwinnett College campus. (Photos courtesy of GGC) SPOTLIGHT ON EDUCATION: GEORGIA GWINNETT COLLEGE Stas Preczewski See GGC, Page 9C

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Page 1: Spring Education Guide

communitygwinnettdailypost.com

SECTION C • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014

LOOKING AHEAD

Preczewski focuses on vision, not title

For the first time in his career, Stanley “Stas” Preczewski is put-ting down roots.

After he spent a career in the U.S. Army, Preczewski has worked at Georgia Gwinnett College since 2005, first as provost and now as interim president, the longest time he and his wife have lived anywhere. In their time together,

they’ve moved 19 times.

“It’s nice to have roots,” Precze-wski told the Daily Post in a recent interview in his office. “I know my neighbors’ names. They know me. We’re not packing again. So that stability is quite nice.”

At the office, Preczewski said he and colleagues can communicate in shorthand and more efficiently because they know each other well, and what to expect.

For the second time in his career, Preczewski is an interim president of a college institution, this time as GGC now counts 9,869 stu-dents — while class sizes remain at 22 — as it nears an eventual goal of 13,000 students. Yet because of his personality, and the way GGC was built, Preczewski believes the interim title doesn’t change the job description.

“Whether you have interim be-fore you’re name, the decisions still have to be made and the responsi-bility is still the same,” Preczewski said. “You just have that word out front. I operate the same, whether it’s there or not there.”

The appointment, which began on July 1, follows GGC President Daniel Kaufman’s recent move as the new president of the Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce. Precze-wski previously served as vice president for Academic and Student Affairs.

Preczewski was also interim president of Georgia College & State University in Milledgeville from July 2011 through June 2012. While he learned some les-sons in his first stint as an interim president, Preczewski said GCSU’s more than 100-year-old history is a stark contrast to GGC still being in the development stages.

There is no timetable for the Board of Regents to name an of-ficial president, spokesman John Millsaps said.

The standard process for finding a college president includes the for-mation of two separate committees: a campus search committee and a Regents search committee.

Preczewski earned a bachelor’s degree in engineering at Cornell University in 1980 and concurrent-ly received his Army officer com-mission. His other degrees include a master’s in engineering from the University of Massachusetts, a master’s in National Security Strat-egy and Planning from the United States Naval War College, and a doctorate in Higher Education from the University of Missouri.

Preczewski met his wife, Jean, a legal assistant in Buford, 42 years ago and they have been married for more than 30 years. They have three adult children, each of whom hold the rank of captain in the U.S. Army.

With a military background as a retired colonel, Preczewski said he makes decisions based on the mis-sion and the vision of the college. He also doesn’t treat the interim title as a sort of on-the-job inter-view for the permanent position.

“I’ve never made a decision, ever, in my life that benefits me, in fact I’ve done things that have hurt myself,” Preczewski said. “We’ve always operated, and will always operate, in the best interest of the students. If we do what’s in the best interest of me, generally that’s not what’s best for the students. … There’s only one reason a college exists, there’s only one reason we have jobs. It’s because students choose to come here. They choose to come here because they’re suc-cessful here.”

While the job description hasn’t changed, Preczewski’s duties have since he was provost, which he admitted to being largely internal to the campus. The president’s duties are largely external, and deals with every stake holder that touches the university: students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents, donors, legislators and the Board of Regents.

“Everybody has a slightly dif-ferent twist of what they would like to see a college to do,” he said. “You’re job is to find that middle point. It’s not a science, it’s an art.”

By Keith [email protected]

File photos of the Georgia Gwinnett College campus. (Photos courtesy of GGC)

SPOTLIGHT ON EDUCATION: GEORGIA GWINNETT COLLEGE

Stas Preczewski

See GGC, Page 9C

Page 2: Spring Education Guide

spotlight on education2C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 • gwinnettdailypost.com

Post-secondary education institutions call Gwinnett homeWhen it comes to post-

secondary education in Gwinnett County, there are a wealth of opportunities. Locals seeking a career that requires a college educa-tion need look no further than their own county.

Nearly a dozen institu-tions make their home in Gwinnett County, offering a variety of choices for just about any career or trade one might want to pursue.

Ashworth CollegeThe Norcross-based

institution offers diplomas in high school, college prep, specialized career and certification as well as associate, bachelor’s and master’s degrees.

According to its web-site, Ashworth is “a world-wide leader in comprehen-sive, nationally accredited

online education.”The college offers more

than 115 career-relevant online programs.

Nationally accredited by the Accrediting Commis-sion of the Distance Educa-tion and Training Council, the institution aims for a “lifestyle-friendly cur-riculum that let you learn when, where and how you want.”

For more information, visit www.ashworthcol-lege.edu, or call 800-957-5412.

Ashworth College is located at 6625 The Cor-ners Parkway, Suite 500, Norcross.

Brenau University’s Evening and Weekend College

Located in Norcross, the North Atlanta campus of-

fers undergraduate degrees in the fields of education, interior design and busi-ness. In addition, masters degrees in occupational therapy and nursing are of-fered at the local campus.

Programs are designed for people who work, and classes are offered in an accelerated format.

According to its website, Brenau aims to “challenge students to live extraordi-nary lives of personal and professional fulfillment.

“As students pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees or non-degree pro-grams at Brenau campuses and online, each prepares for a lifetime of intellectual accomplishment and appre-ciation of artistic expres-sion through a curriculum enriched by the liberal

arts, scientific inquiry and global awareness.”

For more information, visit www.brenau.edu or call 770-446-2900.

Brenau University’s North Atlanta Campus is located at 3139 Campus Drive, Suite 300, Norcross.

DeVry University Duluth Center

Located next to Gwinnett Place Mall in the Koger Center complex, DeVry University Duluth Center offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs in some of today’s fastest-growing career fields. In close proximity to Fortune 500 corporate headquarters, major financial institutions, and Atlanta’s thriving busi-ness and high-tech com-munity, DeVry University Duluth provides access to possible career opportuni-ties in a wide variety of industries.

The Duluth Center of-fers spacious classrooms, a fully wired computer lab, and a commons area. Once enrolled at the Duluth Center, students may also take courses at Atlanta-area locations or online.

For more information, visit www.devry.edu or call 770-381-4400.

Georgia Campus — Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine

Located in Suwanee, Georgia Campus — Phila-delphia College of Osteo-pathic Medicine aims to train students from Georgia and nearby southern states to practice osteopathic medicine and encourage them to locate locally upon

completion of programs.In total, enrollment at the

college is projected at 687 for the 2011-12 academic year, compared to 86 stu-dents in attendance when the campus first opened in 2005.

In total, 228 first year medical and pharmacy stu-dents at Georgia Campus-PCOM were presented their white coat jackets in No-vember during a ceremony at the Gwinnett Center for the Performing Arts.

Georgia Campus—Phila-delphia College of Osteo-pathic Medicine is located at 625 Old Peachtree Road N.W., Suwanee.

For more information, visit www.pcom.edu or call 678)-225-7500.

Georgia Gwinnett College

Still a new college, the institution continues to grow. Georgia Gwinnett College opened its doors on Aug. 18, 2006, as the nation’s first four-year pub-lic college founded in the 21st century and the first four-year public institution created in Georgia in more than 100 years.

Since 2006, the college has grown from 118 stu-dents to nearly 10,000.

According to its web-site, the college aims to “provide access to targeted baccalaureate level degrees that meet the economic development needs of the growing and diverse population of the north-east Atlanta metropolitan region.”

For more information about Georgia Gwinnett

College, visit www.ggc.edu, or call 678-407-5000.

Georgia Gwinnett Col-lege is located at 1000 University Center Lane, Lawrenceville.

Gwinnett CollegeThe mission of Lilburn’s

Gwinnett College is to pro-vide diploma and associate degree higher education programs.

“These programs of high quality are designed to prepare a diverse student population to meet the needs of employees in the legal, medical and business fields.”

“GC has its goal of preparing students aca-demically, intellectually, personally, and profession-ally for successful careers and advancement.

With day and evening classes available, students can get associate’s degrees in business, legal adminis-trative and medical assist-ing.

Students can also be-come certified in account-ing, massage therapy and computer operations.

For more information, visit www.gwinnettcol-lege.com or call 770-381-7200.

Gwinnett Technical College

Since opening in 1984, the local technical college has sought to provide career-focused education and training that support economic and workforce development in the com-munity.

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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 3C •gwinnettdailypost.com

spotlight on education

OptionsDuring its history, Gwin-

nett Tech has expanded its campus to include a variety of new facilities, including the new life sciences center, the corporate training center, environmental horticulture center, the computer training facility and the George Bus-bee International Center for Workforce Development.

For more information, visit www.gwinnetttech.edu or call 770)-962-7580.

Gwinnett Technical College is located at 5150 Sugarloaf Parkway, Law-renceville.

Saint Leo UniversitySaint Leo University’s

Gwinnett County location at 3555 Koger Blvd., has served the educational needs of adult learners in Atlanta for more than 30 years, of-fering bachelor’s degree pro-grams for working adults.

Based in Florida, the Du-luth satellite of this Catholic university offers graduate and undergraduate degrees in several subjects such as criminal justice, teaching and business administration.

Rooted in the 1,500-year-old Benedictine tradition, the University seeks bal-anced growth in mind, body and spirit for all members of its community.

According to its website, Saint Leo University aims to create a “student-centered environment in which love of learning is of prime importance.

For more information, visit www.saintleo.edu

University of Georgia Gwinnett Campus

The local satellite of Uni-versity of Georgia aims to be “a highly accessible and vibrant center of advanced

learning for non-traditional and working professionals in greater Atlanta and north-east Georgia.”

The campus offers 11 master’s degrees, four edu-cational specialist degrees, three doctoral programs and three graduate certifi-cate programs.

The full-service campus facility offers IT support, student affairs, a library, UGA Bookstore, security guards, 21 state-of-the-art programs, 60,000 square feet of learning space and computer labs.

The campus is lo-cated at 2530 Sever Road, Lawrenceville. For more information, visit http://gwinnett.uga.edu or call 678-985-6800.

University of Phoe-nix Gwinnett Learning Center

The University of Phoe-nix Gwinnett Learning Center in Duluth caters to adults who need to balance their educational needs with professional and fam-ily commitments.

It’s facilities are focused on those who are consider-ing changing jobs or want to advance within their current company, or are considering going back to school to earn a bachelor’s or master’s degree.

The local University of Phoenix location largely focuses on business and nursing degrees, but it also offers degree programs in technology, psychology and criminal justice.

The campus is located at 2470 Satellite Blvd., Duluth.

For more information, visit www.phoenix.edu or call 678-731-0555.

•From Page 2C

Student

Teach in

Gwinnett

County Public

Schools!

For information about student teaching placement in GCPS, please contact your field placement coordinator.

[email protected]

RECOGNIZED AS A TOP EMPLOYER

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Page 4: Spring Education Guide

your community4C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 • gwinnettdailypost.com

Local teen earns Girl Scout Gold AwardA Lawrenceville teen

has reached the highest achievement possible in Girl Scouting.

Virginia Harvey has earned the Girl Scout Gold Award. For her final project to obtain the award, Harvey produced a video on scolio-

sis surgery for the benefit of future scoliosis patients and their families.

“I selected this project because I wanted to share my experience with others,” Harvey said. “I was diag-nosed with a 38 degree curve of scoliosis in eighth grade.

Reading, my favorite activ-ity, became uncomfortable because I could not sit for any length of time without back pain. After two years of wearing a back brace, I elected to have scoliosis sur-gery. Although I read many brochures and websites, I

still went into the surgery with many questions. An in-formative video would have been very helpful to me,” Harvey said.

Harvey’s role was to plan the project, determine who would be interviewed, conduct the interviews of her

surgeon, her mother, her sister and herself, supervise the editing of the video and then distribute the video,

all of which took more than 80 hours.

“I had to use leader-ship skills of organization, research, time management and persistence,” Harvey said. “I hope that many, many people will learn something useful from the video as they watch it in future months and years.”

The video is on YouTube and will be available on the Children’s Orthopaedics of Atlanta website and will also be distributed to Atlanta area children’s hospitals for view-ing by patients and families.”

Harvey’s spine is now completely straight follow-ing the successful surgery

by Dr. Dennis Devito of Children’s Orthopaedics of Atlanta.

Harvey is a lifelong Gwinnett County resident and became a Girl Scout in fall 2001 when she was a kindergartener at Dacula Elementary School. She is in her 13th year of Girl Scouting with Troop 1517, Apalachee Service Unit, Girl Scout Council of Greater Atlanta. She is the first member of the Apalachee Service Unit to earn the Gold Award and will officially be presented the award as part of a coun-cilwide ceremony at the Fox Theatre in March.

Harvey is the the daughter of Patrick Harvey and Jen-nifer Pinson Harvey of Law-renceville and is a senior and honor student at Peachtree Ridge High School. She is an active member of First United Methodist Church of Lawrenceville.

— From staff reports

Virginia Harvey

Sugar Hill to host Medicare seminars

SUGAR HILL — An educational seminar on Medicare will be held next month at the Sugar Hill Community Center.

The seminar, called “Medicare 101,” will be held on March 4, and March 11. Geared toward residents who are approaching age 65 or retirement and find-ing themselves in need of Medicare, the classes will provide informa-tion and materials about

Medicare options avail-able.

A 30-minute Power-Point presentation will be followed by discussion and question and answer session.

The classes will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. and are strictly educational. No sales attempts will be made.

The Sugar Hill Com-munity Center is located at 1166 Church St.

After next month’s classes, seminars will also be held on April 1 and 8, as well as May 6 and 13.

By Tyler esTeptyler.estep@ gwinnettdailypost.com

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Page 5: Spring Education Guide

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 5C •gwinnettdailypost.com

spotlight on educationGTC continues to grow

Growth at Gwinnett Tech-nical College has continued in recent months as enroll-ment totals reached record levels.

Gwinnett Tech’s enroll-ment increase of 7.4 per-cent was the largest in the state for the fall term, ac-cording to figures released by the Technical College System of Georgia. That brought Gwinnett Tech to 7,180 students registered for fall classes, an all-time high, and double the number it was in fall 2000. The college also noted a 5.7 percent increase in credit hours taken, officials said in a news release on Thursday.

The spring semester, which began on Jan. 6, also appears to be keeping pace as enrollment is projected

to remain at about 7,000 students.

Late last year, Gwin-nett Tech President Sharon Bartels also outlined more details about the new $24 million campus on Old Mil-ton Parkway in North Fulton County scheduled to open in January 2016. Construction is scheduled to begin in April on the 100,000-square-foot building that will cost $6 million annually to operate, Bartels said.

“The technical college system never gets special allocation when we open new buildings, much less new campuses,” Bartels told lawmakers in an annual pre-General Assembly meeting in December.

Specific categories of students, and the ways they pay for school, also rose.

The largest spike in students came from those who are dual-enrolled

taking high school and col-lege credit simultaneously. That’s now 142 students, up 173 percent.

Students using the Hope Grant or Hope Scholarship jumped 32.6 percent in the first term after the restored 2.0 grade-point-average requirement went into effect. The Hope program is used by 37.9 percent of students.

Pell Grants were used by 48.7 percent of students, a 9.9 percent spike in the fall. And students taking classes exclusively online rose 14.5 percent to 798. There are 4,357 students who take a hybrid class, which com-bines online and in-class instruction, which is up 24 percent.

Veterans are also enrolling at GTC in greater numbers as the college now serves 320 veterans, an increase of 23.5 percent over the previ-ous fall term.

By Keith Farner

keith.farner@ gwinnettdailypost.com

Counselors encourage students to plan ahead for ACT, SAT

If there’s one piece of advice Gwinnett counselors give to students preparing for college, it’s start early.

Taking the PSAT in the 10th and 11th grade is a good start, so they’ll be familiar with that format on the SAT.

The U.S. College Board reports that the SAT and SAT Subject Tests are “a suite of tools designed to assess your academic readiness for college. These exams provide a path to opportunities, financial support and scholarships, in a way that’s fair to all students. The SAT and SAT Subject Tests keep pace with what colleges are look-ing for today, measuring the skills required for success in

the 21st century.”There are also plenty

of free websites to offer insights into the tests. They are www.testpreview.com, www.educationplanner.org, www.careersandcol-leges.com, and www.gacol-lege411.org.

Students considering tak-ing the ACT can use many of the same websites as well as www.actstudent.org.

Counselors also encour-age students to take each test more than once to become more familiar with the test environment, format and questions. Reading varied texts such as novels, political analysis and sports articles helps to improve vo-cabulary and reading skills.

On the SAT, some ques-tions are ordered easiest to

hardest, so some students may benefit by answering the questions out of order.

On the test day, dress in layers, wear a watch and bring a snack and water. Counselors also encourage students to bring an ap-proved calculator with fresh batteries, several No. 2 pen-cils and a pencil sharpener.

The ACT Test is a cur-riculum- and standards-based educational and career planning tool that as-sesses students’ academic readiness for college, while the SAT focuses more on reasoning and critical thinking skills students need for academic success in college.

Colleges in Georgia will typically accept either the SAT or the ACT.

From StaFF reportS

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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 7C •gwinnettdailypost.com6C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 •

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8C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 • gwinnettdailypost.com

Winn Holt educator named Science Teacher of the Year

A Gwinnett science spe-cialist was recently honored by teachers across the state for the work she does explor-ing the world of science with her students.

The Georgia Science Teachers Association se-lected Tracey Rivers, a K-5 science specialist at Winn Holt Elementary, as its 2014 Elementary Science Teacher of the Year. GSTA formally honored the veteran educator during the 2014 GSTA An-nual Conference in Macon.

Each year, the organiza-tion recognizes excellence in science teaching through its awards and recognition program. The organization selects a “Teacher of the Year” for each level of K-12 and higher education.

Rivers began work in Gwinnett County Public Schools as a substitute teach-er in 1997 and later taught at Simonton Elementary for three years before she moved to Winn Holt in 2004.

GSMST student named Intel semifinalist

Willie Jin of the Gwin-nett School of Mathematics, Science, and Technology is a semifinalist in this year’s Intel Science Talent Search, the nation’s most prestigious pre-college science competi-tion.

Annually, students enter-ing the Intel STS compete for $1.25 million in awards. Only 300 students are an-nounced as semifinalists each year. From this select pool, 40 finalists are then invited

to Washington in March to participate in final judging, display their work to the public, meet with notable scientists, and compete for the top award of $100,000.

GSMST Physics and Engineering Teacher Sheila Harmony also won a Teach-ing Tool Grant of $625 from the Armed Forces Com-munications and Electronics Association-Atlanta division.

Nesbit principal named Arts Educator of the Year

Nesbit Elementary Prin-cipal Clayborn Knight was named Arts Educator of the Year during the Fusion: Third Annual ArtWorks celebration.

ArtWorks! Gwinnett is the nonprofit, tax-exempt arts organization supporting the arts in Gwinnett County. Art-Works! promotes and builds support for art and cultural opportunities to enrich all of Gwinnett County.

North Gwinnett High Tannery Row winnersNorth Gwinnett High stu-

dents competed in the third annual Tannery Row High School Art Competition. 2-D winners from North Gwin-nett High are Hae Reem Park, first place, and Jennifer Park, third place.

3-D winners from North Gwinnett High are Savana York, second place, and Em-

ily Toomer, third place.

Osborne Middle Lego team wins second place

The Osborne Middle Firehawks Lego League Ro-botics Team, led by Osborne Middle sixth-grade science teacher Steven Clark, won second place in state compe-tition. More than 500 teams competed at the University of Georgia in the championship tournament.

Kohl’s Cares Scholarship Program

In 2014, Kohl’s will honor more than 2,300 youth who are making a positive impact in their communities with nearly $400,000 in scholar-ships and prizes. Ten top winners will receive $10,000 each.

Last year, 69 students from Georgia were recog-nized for their outstanding volunteer efforts. Nomina-tions for volunteers, ages 6 to 18, will be accepted through March 14 at kohlskids.com.

Two nominees from each of the more than 1,100 Kohl’s stores nationwide will win a $50 Kohl’s gift card, and nearly 200 will win regional scholarships worth $1,000 toward higher education. Kohl’s will also donate $1,000 to a nonprofit organization on each national winner’s behalf.

Tracey Rivers and Winn Holt Elementary students ob-serve a science project during the local school Winn Holt Elementary science fair. (Special Photo)

Good News from Schools

Keith Farner

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spotlight on educationGGC

Meanwhile, Preczewki is proud to share reten-tion statistics that show 87 percent of students who started in August remain on campus, a two percent im-provement from last year. The school’s new advising center is also credited for a three-fold increase in reten-tion of at-risk students.

Preczewski also said keeping costs low contin-ues to be a priority as GGC is $40 a credit hour cheaper than the next closest four-year only college, despite getting less state money.

And he hasn’t looked at other institutions or sought advice from other presi-dents because the GGC model hasn’t been done

before, and the school has already broken records for accreditation and enroll-ment growth.

“What pieces of other colleges can we do on a large scale,” he said. “We’re taking the best that’s out there and putting it together in one institu-tion for everyone.”

Asked about potential growing pains for the school, Preczewski balked at the term because of the plan in place since it opened.

“A growing pain is something that happens when you say, ‘Gee, we didn’t know that was go-ing to happen,’” he said. “We’ve been very proactive from day one of staying out ahead of what’s next.”

Complaints of parking problems from students last fall were not necessary, because Preczewski said the college has plenty of parking; it just may not be where students want it, or close enough to classroom buildings.

“Before, you literally could get the parking spot next to your class,” he said. “Now, you have to park farther away.”

So the July opening of a $30 million Allied Health and Science Building, which will bring another 1,000 students, is just another step in an ongoing building process that has included dining and resi-dence halls and expansion of academic buildings.

“Dr. Kaufman’s vision

was to have a crane on this campus, somewhere, for 10 years,” Preczewski said. “And so far we’ve had a crane on this campus every year since we opened the doors. Everything has hap-pened according to the plan from 2006, and we haven’t varied from that because it’s working quite well.”

What’s next is largely based on making the col-lege more efficient.

GGC opened a call center last fall to answer general questions while employees in the admis-sions office can tend to students face-to-face. Previously, the college accepted about 20 of those calls a day; now it counts more than 200.

Preczewski would also

like to add a career services employee in every school, and add new majors.

“We’ve thought about this for a year and now we’re ready to put the resources in place and we know what outcomes we want to have,” Preczewski said. “Now we simply just execute.”

Last year, the General Assembly agreed to a six-year draw down of $1.375 million per year for GGC. Preczewski said the college can handle the drop in funding because it knew it was coming and planned for it.

“We’ll take the cut, since we know it’s coming, and it will have no effect on the quality of our education,” he said.

Institutions around the country are beginning to take notice of GGC’s success, for reasons that include managing with less money. Preczewski said he’s been invited to speak about GGC’s model at national conferences. And he’s proud to share the recent U.S. News & World Report No. 5 ranking that GGC received for Southern public colleges.

That has helped market the college by word of mouth, and Preczewski said the college officials have been surprised that they didn’t have to do as much marketing.

“Success breeds suc-cess,” he said. “We’re getting a reputation for quality.”

•From Page 1C

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 9C •gwinnettdailypost.com

Page 10: Spring Education Guide

lifestyles10C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 • gwinnettdailypost.com

Why happy families need 12 great relationshipsI love my family. We

were on a group tour recently. One of our fellow tour members, a woman we didn’t know prior to the trip, who had shared a bus, hikes and meals with us for a few days, said, “I can tell you all really enjoy being around each other.”

It was one of the nicest compliments I’d ever got-ten.

Our family isn’t perfect, but our observer was right, we do enjoy being around each other.

I realized in that mo-ment, creating a happy family is about multiple relationships. Each person has an individual rela-tionship with every other member.

In a family of four,

there are 12 relation-ships. Each person has a personal relationship with the other three. That’s six total relationships. Then there are two sides to each relationship, so that means 12 dynamics in play.

The same exponential relationship model applies at work. Even if everyone has a good relationship

with the leader, if one team member dislikes another, it has a chilling effect on the entire group.

Case in point, my younger brother and I ruined many a family trip (and dinners, and TV nights, and zoo, museum, Dairy Queen trips, and just about every other thing my mother tried to plan) with our constant fighting.

In any group, if one re-lationship, or even one side of one relationship is out of whack, it makes every single other relationship worse.

My colleague Seth Kahan (www.visionar-yleadership.com), says the exponential relation-ship dynamic is actually a mathematical formula: 2

n – (n + 1) where n is the number of people in the group. This formula factors in the sub groups, trios, quads, etc., that occur in any group of more than two. For a family of four, the exponential number is 11, 24 - (4+1) = 16 - 5 = 11 total relationships. Which doesn’t include the two sides of each relationship. But you get the point.

No matter which formu-la you use, the exponential relationship concept rein-forces what you already know, families, and groups, are complicated.

Imagine how much different our family trip would have been if one of our kids had been angry with one of the parents. Actually you probably

don’t have to imagine it, you’ve likely made that trip yourself, as have we.

Imagine, or remember, what a work team is like when two key players have an unspoken disagreement. You can feel the tension in every meeting.

So, what does a leader or parent do with this infor-mation? You have to create conditions that enable your team to have successful, independent relationships with each other. Yes, I know it’s more work, but you will ultimately benefit. Here are three tips to get started:

1. Set aside time to spend with each member alone.

2. Provide team mem-bers with space and time to get to know each other individually, outside the

larger group.3. Set an expectation that

people will put time and effort into their relation-ships.

The last one is critical. Many work places, and many families, focus ex-clusively on output, creat-ing the best product, doing the project faster, or getting the best grades. But one of the secrets to creating great output is through mutually supportive, enjoyable re-lationships. The team that dislikes each other is rarely innovative or successful, much less fun.

Group relationships are complex. But they’re worth it.

When you look around the table and realize, we all really like each other, you’re destined for great things.

Forget Perfect

Lisa McLeod

Tales of the hot pink luggage

Some missing something or the other required me to prowl through closets at Mama’s house. That’s when I found it. I pulled it out and smiled broadly, warmed by the memories it evoked.

You know the feeling I am sure. You find something that somewhere back in time meant so much but years have passed and you have forgotten its existence. Then you find it and it’s like run-ning into an old friend who reminds you of happy times.

You would probably laugh if you saw it — a piece of hot pink Samsonite luggage. I’m laughing now because it’s part of a three-piece set that includes a beauty case (a thing of the past), a tote bag and a 22-inch Pullman. What that luggage — so 1970s — means to me can never be adequately summed up here. But let me try.

When I was just a kid, the age where I still tugged on Mama’s apron strings and sat in Daddy’s lap, my small arm reaching up and stretching partway around his neck, I loved suitcases. I was fascinated with what they represented — travel to somewhere different than where I was. My family nev-er traveled for they couldn’t afford to stop working long enough to take time off. In my entire growing up, my parents and I only took one true vacation — two weeks when we traveled to West Virginia and Pennsylvania to visit some of Daddy’s fam-ily and stayed in Holiday Inns along the way and ate at Howard Johnsons. It was a grand adventure.

I was 11 that summer and so thrilled that I planned my wardrobe for two months. Mama and I sewed and made me the most wonder-ful set of clothes for the trip including a polyester blazer with a light gray background scattered with tiny navy-colored anchors because nautical was trendy that summer. It had gold buttons with anchors on them and I thought it was the smartest, chicest garment I had ever seen. I was so happy to be able to pack a suitcase and go on a trip.

When I was still that little apron-strings-tugging girl, I played often with a piece of brown, real leather Samsonite luggage which I

was always packing with clothes and pretending to go to New York on book business. When I was in the seventh grade, I began to beg for pretty luggage. I had seen the hot pink, stylish Samsonite in Belk department store and I was captivated. If only I had it, I told myself, then surely travel would find me and take me off to see the kind of things of which I read — airplanes, big cit-ies, taxi cabs and historic places.

It took two birthdays and one Christmas to get those three pieces of luggage and each one received made me happy beyond measure. I still have all three since I brought that one home from Mama’s. Two pieces have flight tags from the old Eastern Airlines which went out of business 25 years ago.

When I got home, I set the Pullman at the foot of the stairs, intending to take it to the attic. But, for days, I couldn’t. It made me smile every time I saw it and reminded me of how a girl’s childhood dreams came true. Every one of them.

Just recently I bought a new set of luggage that is designed with bright, cheery colors all over it. It makes me happy just like the little girl who sat in her daddy’s lap. Tink laughed as I wheeled it to the check-out counter.

“One thing’s for sure — you’ll be able to spot that at baggage claim,” he said.

I adore it. I baby it and scrub marks off of it when we return home because, just like the hot pink lug-gage, it reminds how child-hood dreams came true.

Now, that’s a nice piece of baggage to carry around.

Ronda Rich is the best-selling author of “There’s A Better Day A-Comin.’” Visit www.rondarich.com to sign up for her weekly newsletter.

Ronda Rich

Gwinnett Daily Post

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Page 11: Spring Education Guide

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 11C •gwinnettdailypost.com

Proud to be an American as a way of lifeProud to be an American.

For Leslie Watkins of Snell-ville, that is more than a song title. It’s a way of life.

As a proud and active member of the William Day Chapter — Daughters of the American Revolution, Watkins spends her days traveling around presenting

living history presentations on lifestyle during colonial times.

Working with her broth-er-in-law, Bruce Maney, a member of the Button Gwinnett chapter — Sons of the American Revolution, they carry their “Travel-ing Trunk,” one of 13 such

visual aids supplied by the Georgia Society of the SAR. Dressed in period cos-tumes, Watkins and Maney display more than 130 items people used during the time of the American Revolution.

While their presentation is extremely entertaining, it is not mere play acting. Yes,

Watkins has a B.A. degree in speech and theater, but add to this her M. Ed. in English, multiple state cer-tifications including Gifted Education and 32 years experience in her field, with 24 of those years spent teaching at Brookwood High School.

Her Education Out-reach Program is geared towards the Fourth Grade Social Studies Performance Standards and fully comple-ments the curriculum. Having spent years training Gwinnett County Public School teachers to accu-rately assess students on Gateway essays, Watkins is skillful in addressing specific educational objec-tives in a 15 to 60 minute presentation.

Taking the subject mat-ter beyond the text book, Watkins and Maney make lessons real with such items as buffalo horns, a quill pen and a turtle shell with rattles. Maney dresses like a continental soldier, but this program does not include any weapons. However, they dramatically present details of military battles and survival battles of every day life, adding humor when they can by call-ing boys’ corn husk dolls “homemade action figures.”

Watkins said her favor-ite part of the program is performing a first person narrative of Nancy Hart, who even if she hadn’t had bright red hair would have been considered one of the most colorful characters of her time.

Wearing a red wig and getting into Hart’s spunk and spirit, Watkins says her goal is to empower fourth grade girls to realize they can do whatever they need to do.

Since 2010, Watkins and Maney have visited more than 200 schools and interacted with over 18,000 school children and there is evidence of a positive correlation between their presentation and students’ CRCT scores. And the best part of the program is that it is entirely free.

But you don’t have to be a fourth grader to get in on this act. Watkins and Maney perform for historical organizations, genealogical societies, senior groups and historic events. They also lay wreathes on newly dis-covered the graves of Patriot soldiers.

Their next Gwinnett ap-pearance will be at the Winn House on Feb. 22, George Washington’s birthday, to commemorate Georgia History Month. (More info: www.gwinnetths.org )

To schedule a program, call Bruce Maney at 770-972-1751 or email [email protected].

Susan Larson is a writer from Lilburn. Email her at [email protected].

Susan Larson

Artists talk rescheduled for upcoming Wednesday

After last week’s ice, local arts enthusiasts will still have an opportunity to participate in an artists talk in Snellville.

The Snellville Arts Commission event can-celed last week has been rescheduled for 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at City Hall.

The event features artists Tracie L. Hawkins and Bill E. Leavell.

Hawkins is a Stone Mountain art gallery owner who is an oil painter and fiber artist. Her art is isn-pired by nature and histori-cal events.

Leavell, who manages a Stone Mountain gallery, uses graphite and charcoal to capture the human spirit. His work is inspired by the human face and the emo-tion it portrays.

As part of Black His-tory Month, the artists’ work titled “Fabric of Our Emotions,” will be on dis-play at City Hall through Feb. 28.

By Camie youngcamie.young @gwinnettdailypost.com

Page 12: Spring Education Guide

12C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 • gwinnettdailypost.com

PET OF THE WEEK

Each week the Gwinnett Daily Post will feature an animal available for adoption at the Georgia SPCA, which is located at 1175 Buford Highway, Suite 109, Suwanee, GA 30024. The hours of operation are Mondays through Fridays 11 a.m. until 7 p.m., Saturdays 11 a.m. until 5 p.m., and Sundays 1 until 4 p.m. You can see the rest of the adoptable cats and dogs at www.georgiaspca.org.

Marvel is a two-year-old Boxer/English Bulldog mix.She came to the SPCA from a rural animal control shelter with nine puppies. She is heartworm posi-tive but is being treated for it. Marvel is very playful and accepting of other dogs.

GWINNETT GAB

Dacula eatery to offer bingo, biscuits, soda

The Potter’s Country Cookn’ in Dacula, in partnership with C&C Consulting Services, is holding breakfast Bingo from 9 to 10 a.m. every third Tuesday, with the next event scheduled for Feb. 18. In addition to Bingo, the restaurant will

offer biscuits and sodas for $3.

The Potter’s Country Cookn’ is at 1955 Gravel Springs Road. For more information on the event, call 770-940-1727.

CarFit Program offered at center

On Feb. 25, the Center-ville Community Cen-ter will host the AARP

CarFit Program from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Open to individuals who hold a valid driver’s license, the 20-minute, interactive, customized educational program is intended to improve driver safety. Drivers will learn the safest “fit” for their vehicles and receive recommendations on adjustments, adaptations and local resources.

Drive-ins are wel-come, and the center is at 3025 Bethany Church Road in Snellville. For more information, call 770-985-4713.

Gwinnett Gab ap-pears in the Thursday and Sunday editions of the Gwinnett Daily Post. To submit an item to Gwinnett Gab, email [email protected].

Gwinnett Daily Post

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Page 13: Spring Education Guide

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 13C •gwinnettdailypost.com

Obama, Facebook and the culture of narcissism

Queen Victoria of Eng-land, who had an era named after her, was famously modest in her dress — and her personal style dominat-ed two continents for more than two decades.

In terms of women’s fashions, the Victorian Era was known for its high necklines, long sleeves and floor-dragging hems. Leg-end has it that table skirts first came into vogue during that time period because people didn’t even want their furniture showing any leg.

We’ve seen in our own country how leaders can set the tone for public mores and popular fashion. A de-cade of liberalism in Wash-ington during the 1960s ushered in the extreme fads of the “mod” era. Ten years later, Ronald Reagan’s ge-nial conservatism returned us to button-downs, pressed slacks, and neat haircuts.

Today we have a president whose most remarkable quality is an awe-inspiring narcissism. This is the guy who used the personal pronouns “I” and “me” 64 times during a 64-minute speech — the 2014 State of the Union, delivered just last month.

The same guy assured us, during the 2008 campaign, that “we’re the ones we’ve been waiting for.” His most significant contribution to pop culture remains an idealized, modern-art poster featuring … drum-roll, please … himself. (“But se-

riously, folks, it’s not about me ….”)

He also made headlines a few months ago (with some help from Denmark’s charming Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt) when he notoriously posed for a “selfie” during Nel-son Mandela’s memorial service. Thousands rushed to “favorite” the resulting Tweets.

Is it any wonder that, under Obama, America has become the land of the “me” and the home of the “fave?”

This sad state of affairs is certainly apparent anytime we turn on the television, now more rife than ever with that most unrealistic of genres, the “reality show.” Such programs, which typically have little enter-tainment value (except, per-haps, for voyeurs), function primarily to enable people with tragically low self-es-teem to pursue the personal attention they crave.

Then again, maybe those shows are realistic. Maybe we’re a society now equally divided between the

attention-hounds and the voyeurs — with many of us, perhaps, some combina-tion of both.

We can observe this growing societal narcis-sism, too, on social media sites like Facebook and Instagram. I have Facebook “friends” (some of them family members) who seemingly post a selfie a day. Often they’re bizarre shots, taken at odd angles and in unusual situations — and, not uncommonly, in modes of dress that would once have been considered inappropriate.

Someone please tell me: Is such behavior not, at its most basic level, a pathetic cry for attention?

Several decades ago, developmental psycholo-gist Jean Piaget theorized that children at around two years of age pass through a stage he labeled “egocen-trism,” in which they view themselves as the center of the universe. They typically outgrow that stage by age four, he believed.

Obviously, Piaget never watched reality TV or had a Facebook account — or anticipated an Obama presidency.

Rob Jenkins is a lo-cal freelance writer and the author of “Family Man: The Art of Surviv-ing Domestic Tranquility,” available at Books for Less and on Amazon. Email Rob at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter @FamilyManRob.

Rob Jenkins

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14C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2014 • gwinnettdailypost.com

SCHOOL LUNCH MENUSELEMENTARY SCHOOLMondayCrispy chicken sandwich, hot diggity dog, veggie chicken nuggets, pinwheels, baked beans, steamed broccoli, seasonal fruits and veg-etables

TuesdayBig Daddy’s Pizza, BBQ pork sandwich, black bean pizza, deli fresh subs, pea-nut butter and jelly sandwich, spinach side salad, mellow yellow corn

WednesdayCheesy boat; oven roasted

chicken; vegetarian burger; signature salads; fresh mini carrot; local green beans; seasonal fruits and veg-etables

ThursdaySeasoned baked wings; old world lasagna; lasagna marinara; deli fresh subs; peanut butter sandwich; garden salad; honey roasted veggies

FridayPancakes and sausage; catch of the day; yogurt basket; pinwheels; hash-brown sticks; kid’s cole slaw;

seasonal fruits and veggies

MIDDLE SCHOOLMondayBig Daddy’s pizza, fiesta burrito, vegetarian pizza, deli fresh subs, signature salads, steamed broccoli, garden salad

TuesdayCrispy chicken sammie, mam-ma mia calzone, vegetarian burger, wrap ’n’ roll deli wraps, signature salads, local green beans, fresh cut fruit

WednesdayOven breaded chicken; mini

corn dogs; old school mac and cheese; classic Italian subs; signature salads; bold baked beans; fruit salad

ThursdayTex Mex nachos; cheese filled breadsticks; black bean pizza; wrap ’n’ roll deli wraps; signature salads; roasted zucchini; mellow yellow corn

FridayBig Daddy’s pizza; chicken and waffles; yogurt basket; deli fresh subs; signature salads; hashbrown sticks; baby carrots and dips

HIGH SCHOOLMondayOld school mac & cheese, Big Daddy’s pizza, Gwin-nett’s best burger, veggie burger, wrap ’n’ roll wraps, signature salad, boneless Asian wings

TuesdaySeasoned wings, Big Daddy’s pizza, chicken ten-ders, empanadas, homestyle sammie, signature salad, mix and match Mexi

WednesdayOven roasted chicken; Big Daddy’s pizza; Bahn Mi

sandwich; veggie burger; turkey avocado sub; signature salad; Thai rice bowl

ThursdaySpecialty flatbreads; Big Daddy’s pizza; ultimate hot dog bar; golden grilled cheese; wrap ’n’ roll deli wraps; signature salad; fiesta burrito

FridayTex Mex nachos; Big Dad-dy’s pizza; Italian meatball sub; black bean pizza; deli fresh subs; signature salad; Cuban sandwich

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