2019 University Acceptances
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Appendix A: Name Index
1997 Directory of Pollution Prevention in Higher Education APPENDIX A: NAME INDEX Appendix A: Name Index • 141 NAME INSTITUTION DEPARTMENT # A Ahlert, Robert C. RAMS Environmental Inc. 183 Allen, David University of Texas at Austin Chemical Engineering 184 Allison, Richard University of Houston—Clear Lake Business and Public Administration 48 Anderson, Paul Illinois Institute of Technology Chemical and Environ Engineering 227 Andrews, Clinton J. Princeton University Public and International Affairs 367 Andrews, Richard U of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Environ Sciences & Engineering 366 Annis, Phillip (Jack) UW—Milwaukee Co–op Extension Solid and Haz Waste Education Center 169 Arnold, Matthew Mgmt Institute for Environ and Bus 61 Ashford, Nicholas Mass Institute of Technology Ctr for Tech, Policy & Indust Devt 368 Atchison, Michael University of Virginia School of Commerce 45 Atkinson, John University of Missouri—Columbia Engineering Extension 145 Atreya, Arvind University of Michigan Industrial Assessment Center 114 Austrian, Ziona Cleveland State College Great Lakes Environ Finance Ctr 62 Ausubel, Jesse Rockefeller University Program for the Human Environ 278 B Babatunde, Ade Minnesota Office of Env Assistance 170 Baillod, C. Robert Michigan Technological University Civil and Environmental Engineering 228 Baker, Craig M. Consumnes River College Environmental Technology Program 131 Baker, Kenneth R. Dartmouth College Business Administration 27 Ball, Terence University of Minnesota Social Sciences 313 Barker, John R. University of Michigan Atmospheric, Oceanic, & Space Sciences 386 Barnett, Stanley M. University of Rhode Island Chemical Engineering 115 Bawn, Kathleen University of California—Los Angeles Political Science 369 Becker, Monica M. University of Massachusetts—Lowell Mass Toxics Use Reduction Institute 116 Beckman, Eric J. -
Association of Social Work Boards Introduction This Handbook Was Designed to Help You Register for and Take the ASWB Social Work Licensing Examinations
® ASWB Examination Candidate Handbook Contents Introduction 1 About ASWB 1 Preparing to take the ASWB Examination 3 Make sure you are eligible 3 Register for the exam 4 Authorization to Test 6 Schedule your exam 7 Take the exam 9 Examination security 11 ASWB Security Tip Line 12 Monitoring of results 12 After the exam 12 Content outlines 15 Sample Questions 19 School codes 21 Index 26 Copyright © 2013 by the Association of Social Work Boards Introduction This handbook was designed to help you register for and take the ASWB social work licensing examinations. This is not a complicated process, but it is important that you follow the registration steps carefully. Missing a step, or making a mistake during registration, can delay your examination, or prevent you from taking it entirely. Take the time to read through this handbook before you start to register—it will make the examination process easier for you and for the people who will be helping you along the way. If you have any additional questions, you can call the Association of Social Work Boards at 1-888-579-3926. You may also find it useful to visit our website, www.aswb.org. Finally, congratulations on your efforts to become a licensed social worker. In the midst of the paperwork involved in applying for and receiving your jurisdiction’s license, it’s easy to forget that what you’re doing is very important—not only to you, but to the people you will be serving. About ASWB You will be taking one of the examinations developed by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB). -
Unrequited Love in Fall 2019, Or Where Did Umaine’S Admitted-But-Nonmatriculating Students Go?
Unrequited love in fall 2019, or Where did UMaine’s admitted-but-nonmatriculating students go? Data from the National Student Clearinghouse UMaine Office of Institutional Research and Assessment 19 December 2019 ________________________________________ The National Student Clearinghouse is a non-federal, independent, nonprofit organization that serves as a repository for student data on enrollment and degree attainment. More than 3,600 institutions of higher education participate in the Clearinghouse enrollment verification service, capturing over 99% of currently enrolled college students in the United States (http://www.studentclearinghouse.org/colleges/studenttracker/).1 The Office of Institutional Research and Assessment annually uses this service to obtain the names of schools that UMaine’s admitted-but-nonmatriculating undergraduate applicants chose to attend. The present report summarizes our most recent effort in this regard.2 Specifically, we determined the destination school for the 8,542 undergraduate applicants who were first-time students, had been admitted at UMaine for fall 2019, did not matriculate at UMaine, and according to the Clearinghouse, enrolled at another school instead.3 Caveat: These 8,542 students account for 88% of the first-time-student applicants who were admitted at UMaine for fall 2019 but did not matriculate here.4 The remaining 12% reflect the fact that some individuals did not enroll at any school in fall 2019, enrolled elsewhere but did not authorize the Clearinghouse to release their enrollment information, or enrolled elsewhere but the destination school is not a Clearinghouse participant. Thus although a marvelous data source, the Clearinghouse is not without imperfections. 1 The 2010 report College graduation rates: Behind the numbers (American Council of Education), though dated, includes an informative overview of the National Student Clearinghouse (see pp. -
Curriculum Vitae
Curriculum Vitae Susan Dewsnap Bates College, Olin Arts Center, 75 Russell St., Lewiston, ME 04240 207- 240- 6346 • s d e w s n a p @ b a t e s . e d u 2012 – Present BATES COLLEGE, Lecturer (2017 – present) Visiting Assistant Professor (2012-15) Department of Art and Visual Culture, Lewiston, ME EDUCATION MFA-CERAMICS, UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN, Lincoln, NE BFA-PAINTING, UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, Durham, NH Minor-Applied Mathematics (Magna Cum Laude) TEACHING EXPERIENCE 2017-Present BATES COLLEGE, Lecturer, Department of Art and Visual Culture, Lewiston, ME 2012 – 2016 BATES COLLEGE, Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Art and Visual Culture, Lewiston, ME 2008 – 2012 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN • Graduate advisor to 1st and 2nd year ceramic MFA candidates • Adjunct Faculty, Advanced and Beginning Ceramics: Sculptural forms, wheel throwing, hand-building, low-fire and high-fire glazing technology and gas and electric kiln firing for BFA majors and non-art undergraduates • Adjunct Faculty, Foundations/ Visual Literacy: Color Theory integrating the teachings of Itten and Albers with basic history and contrasts of color, color mixing, form, composition employing gouache paint mixing and color-aid papers 2006 – 2008 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN – Ceramics Teacher of Record Beginning Ceramics 2007 PENLAND SCHOOL OF CRAFTS, Assistant to Gail Kendall 2005 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN, GTA/Co-taught with Gail Kendall Beginning, Intermediate and Advanced Ceramics BATES COLLEGE, Short Term Faculty/Lecturer in Ceramic Art -
Employee Directory for Barton Community College
Employee Directory for Barton Community College Please note: to view the employee directory in more detail, please click on one of the links below to navigate to that section in this document. Voters Board of Trustees President of Barton Community College Assistant to the President Vice President of Administration Bookstore Business Office Facility Management Human Resources Printing Services Director of Athletics Coaches Sports Information Sports Medicine Director of Grants Chief Information Officer Information Services—Information Technology Director of Institutional Research Institutional Research Executive Director of Institutional Advancement Public Relations & Marketing Shafer Gallery Vice President of Instruction Academics Center for Innovation & Excellence Learning Resources Liberal Arts and Sciences Mathematics, English and Essential Skills Military Academics, Technical Education and Outreach Programs Healthcare & Public Service Education Workforce Training and Community Education Workforce Training & Economic Development Vice President of Student Services Admissions Child Development Center Educational Opportunity Center (EOC) Enrollment Services Financial Aid Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) Student Life Student Support Services (SSS) Testing, Advisement & Career Services Title IX Coordinator Upward Bound (BCUB) Upward Bound (CKUB) BOARD OF TRUSTEES | https://bartonccc.edu/community/boardoftrustees PRESIDENT | All phone numbers have a 620 area code unless otherwise indicated. * On-campus extensions are the last 3 digits of the phone number. Carl Heilman President A-Bldg., Rm. 120, 792-9301 [email protected] Ph.D. Iowa State University President Emeritus (Deceased) Jimmie L. Downing, Ph.D. PRESIDENT | Assistant to the President Amye Schneider Assistant to the President A-Bldg., Rm. 122, 792-9302 [email protected] A.A.S. Barton County Community College Lora Zink Administrative Assistant A-Bldg., Rm. -
Survey of College Students by the National Association
$160 NACE Member / $260 Nonmember Price The Class of 2014 Student Survey Report Results from NACE’s annual survey of college students 9 | 2014 Sponsored by National Association of Colleges and Employers 62 Highland Avenue • Bethlehem, PA 18017-9085 • 610.868.1421 www.naceweb.org ©Copyright September 2014 by the National Association of Colleges and Employers 2 | The Class of 2014 Student Survey Report | National Association of Colleges and Employers National Association of Colleges and Employers | The Class of 2014 Student Survey Report | 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary .......................................................................................................................3 Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 5 Plans After Graduation ..................................................................................................................7 Plans by Academic Program (Major) Other Factors Impacting Plans After Graduation Student Expectations and Preferences ...........................................................................................13 Career Preferences Employer/Job Preferences Salary Expectations Benefit Preferences Performance Expectations Target Industries The Job Search ............................................................................................................................25 The Use of Career Services Social Networking and the Job Search Internships ..................................................................................................................................38 -
Colleges Attending Fair As of September 9.Xlsx
Timberlane Regional High School College Fair Colleges Attending on Monday, 9/14 Colleges Attending on Tuesday, 9/15 Albertus Magnus College American International College Anna Maria College Bay State College Assumption College Boston University Bentley College Burlington College Bryant University Castleton State College Colby‐Sawyer College Central Maine Community College Northeast Catholic College Champlain College Daniel Webster College Clark University Emerson College Clarkson University Emmanuel College College of the Holy Cross Endicott College Curry College Franklin Pierce University Elms College Great Bay Community College Fitchburg State University High Point University George Mason University Husson University Gordon College Johnson & Wales University Green Mountain College Keene State College Hofstra University Lasell College Johnson State College Lesley University Lakes Region Community College Loyola University of New Orleans Lyndon State College Maine Maritime Academy Manchester Community College Manhattan College Massachusetts Maritime Academy Marist College Middlesex Community College Marymount Manhattan College Mitchell College Massachusetts College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences Montserrat College Merrimack College Mount Allison Michael's School of Hair Design NE Tractor Trailer School/HVAC Training Mount Ida College New England College Nashua Community College New England Institute of Technology National Aviation Academy NH Air National Guard Newbury College NHHEAF NHTI Concord's Community College Paul Mitchell Nichols -
State of Maine
State of Maine 2020-2023 Unified State Plan Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act 1 The State Workforce Board is committed to providing access, equal opportunity, and reasonable accommodation to its services, programs and employment. Please contact us should you require accommodation or alternative format materials. State Workforce Board Maine Department of Labor [email protected] (207) 623-7900 / TTY: Maine relay 711 www.Maine.gov/SWB 2 CONTENTS I. WIOA State Plan Type and Executive summary .............................................................................. 6 I.(a) Plan Type .................................................................................................................................................................. 6 I.(b)Executive summary .............................................................................................................................................. 7 II. Strategic Planning Elements .................................................................................................................. 9 II.(a) Economic and Workforce and Workforce Development Activities Analysis ............................... 9 II.(b) State Strategic Vision and Goals ................................................................................................................. 65 II.(c) State Strategy ..................................................................................................................................................... 73 III. Operational Planning Elements ......................................................................................................... -
Women Flood Portland, July 1925
Preserving History • Engaging Minds • Connecting Maine MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY WINTER 2014/20 15 THANK YOU TO OUR DONORS THE MHS LABORATORY Maine Historical Society I hope that many of you were able to stop in to visit our recent exhibition, Lincoln: The Constitu- tion and the Civil War. The traveling exhibition came courtesy of the American Library Associa- MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY Annual Report of Donors 2013-2014 tion and was installed in the lovely 2nd floor reading room of the Brown Library. It had scale, INCORPORATED 1822 was colorful, and took on important, timely themes that help put our Maine experience (and the We are pleased to have this opportunity each year to acknowledge you, our contributors, for your generous support of our work and our contemporary political climate) in perspective. mission. Together we raised $279,663 from 456 donors for the 2013-2014 Annual Fund. Your investment in Maine Historical Society assures the continued excellence of our educational programs for schools, exhibitions, lectures, publications, research services, and internet This represents a very big moment for MHS. Here’s why: resources—all the things that make MHS a unique and valuable institution. Thank you. Together we do great things. It is both a culmination of work done by many, many people over the past decade or so, and a The following gifts represent cumulative unrestricted gifts received for the Annual Fund from 10/1/2013 through 9/30/2014. OFFICERS glimpse of where MHS is headed. First, as you all know, the $9.5 million renovation of the Brown Research Library restored the library to its historical grandeur. -
2019-2020 Graduate Academic Catalog
Saint Leo University Graduate Academic Catalog 2019-2020 ii Catalog Home Announcements contained in this publication are subject to change without notice and may not be regarded in the nature of binding obligations to the University. The University reserves the right to change any provisions or requirements. When students matriculate with Saint Leo University, they come under the academic requirements of the edition of the University catalog at that time. Students may graduate under these academic requirements within a period of five years even though subsequent catalogs may change. Academic requirements include curriculum matters. Grading practices, tuition, fees, and other matters are subject to change at the discretion of the University and are not considered to be "academic requirements." Should new changes be to their advantage, students may graduate under the conditions of the newer catalog. However, because academic programs are subject to requirements imposed by outside accrediting or certifying agencies, such outside requirements shall supersede prior conditions. Saint Leo University is committed to policies that ensure that there is no discrimination on the basis of age, gender, race, color, creed, religion, national origin, or disability. Saint Leo University complies with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (as amended). Saint Leo University has a strong commitment to principles of equal employment opportunity and equal access to education. Saint Leo University does not discriminate on the basis of age, color, disability, ethnic origin, genetic information, sex, gender, nationality, race, religion, or veteran status, or any other category protected by federal, state, or local law in its educational programs, admissions policies, financial aid, employment, or other school administered programs. -
Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS When you need Help Page 1 Dorm Phone Numbers Page 2 Returning Checklist Page 3 Calendars School year calendar Page 4 College office calendar Page 5 Family Education calendar Page 6 Health Pages 7-10 Academics Pages 11-12 Policies and Procedures Dress Code Page 13 Packing List Page 14 Dean’s Area Page 15 Travel Pages 16-19 Technology Pages 20-25 Damage to School Property Page 26 Media Page 27 Emergency Response Page 28 Student Accounts Business office Page 29 Student Bank/Retail Store Page 30 Student Mail Page 31 Guide to Family Education Page 32 WHEN YOU NEED HELP! If you have specific questions concerning your student, please call: 1. Discovery Group Leader Please feel free contact your students Discovery Group Leader with any questions concerning your student. You will be given their name at registration. 2. Dean’s Area Dean of Students – Jesse Sataloff 207-433-7185 email: [email protected] Admin. Assistant – Patty Clark 207-443-7119 email: [email protected] Fax # 207-443-1450 3. Academic Office Dean of Academics – Rachel Folan 207-443-7115 email: [email protected] Registrar – Susan Dube 207-443-7141 email: [email protected] Fax # 207-443-7146 4. Family Education Executive Director of Family Ed. – Claire Grant 207-443-7117 email: [email protected] Director of Family Ed. – Mary Moore 207-443-7120 email: [email protected] Regional Coordinator – Pam Hardy 303-329-5420 email: [email protected] Family Education Coordinator – Kate Foye 207-443-7107 email: [email protected] Fax # 207-443-1450 5. -
Curriculum Vitae - Rose Marasco
CURRICULUM VITAE - ROSE MARASCO DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR EMERTIA OF ART, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE rosemarasco.com [email protected] 207. 780.1965 SOLO EXHIBITIONS upcoming 2018 Rose Marasco: index, Munson-Williams-Proctor Art Institute, Utica, New York 2015 Rose Marasco: index, Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Maine 2015 Patrons of Husbandry, Ogunquit Museum of American Art, Ogunquit, Maine 2014 New York City Pinhole Photographs, Meredith Ward Fine Art, New York, New York 2010-11 Projections, Houston Center for Photography, Houston, Texas 2008 The Invented Photograph, Universite de Bretagne Occidentale, Brest, France 2004-05 Domestic Objects: Past and Presence, University of Southern Maine; traveled to: Southwest Harbor Public Library, University of Maine Museum of Art, Bangor, & University of Maine at Farmington 2003 Circles, Sarah Morthland Gallery, New York, New York 2002 Open House: Margaret Jane Mussey Sweat, Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Maine 2000 Leafing, Sarah Morthland Gallery, New York, New York 1999 Ritual and Community: The Maine Grange, College of The Atlantic, Bar Harbor, Maine 1998 New England Diary, Sarah Morthland Gallery, New York, New York 1998 Rose Marasco Photographs, Port Washington Library, Port Washington, New York 1996 Ritual and Community: the Maine Grange, Latvian Museum of Photography, Riga, Latvia 1995 Tender Buttons: Women’s Domestic Objects, Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts, Lucy Flint-Gohlke curator 1992-93 Ritual and Community: The Maine Grange, with