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  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 1

    At Germanna Community College, we know we must not waste our

    greatest resource--the potential of all of the people in our communities.

    That potential lies not only in the minds of the young, but in the untapped

    abilities of workers who must be retrained especially in fields where there

    will be high-wage jobs.

    An educated workforce creates a better economy for us all, translating into

    higher pay for local people and a better quality of life for their families,

    helping existing businesses be more profitable, attracting new employers

    from outside the area and helping to spawn start-up companies. An

    educated community makes for better citizens and brighter futures for all.

    With your support, Germanna will continue to expand to meet our

    communities’ needs.

    With your support, we will move forward with plans for a permanent

    campus in Stafford County and continue to seek ways to better serve

    Caroline and Madison County residents.

    With your support, we will continue to expand our Fredericksburg Campus

    in Spotsylvania, to grow our respected nursing program at our Locust Grove

    Campus in Orange County, offer new programs at our Daniel Technology

    Center in Culpeper and offer classes at Dahlgren.

    Germanna is working hard to respond quickly to provide students with the

    knowledge, skills and attitude that lead to jobs that pay well and give local

    companies a competitive edge in a challenging global market.

    Nearly 80 percent of Germanna students remain in our area after

    completing their college work, investing the skills they’ve learned in their

    local communities. Secure in that knowledge, we must continue to prepare

    students for jobs in STEM fields, as engineers, as workers trained in

    cybersecurity, and as nurses and other health care professionals to meet our

    communities’ needs

    To meet those needs, we have grown to become the seventh largest of 23

    schools in the Virginia Community College System. We have opened

    new locations, created new programs and services, all during the most

    challenging of times.

    Now we must work and grow together to help sustain local economic

    recovery and build future prosperity. Together, we can make a difference in

    both good times and bad. I hope you find in this report further evidence that

    the investment of your taxes, your donations, your employees and family

    members as students, all have paid and will pay great dividends far into the

    future.

    Sincerely,

    Dr. David A. Sam, President

    The President’s Message

    “Let us think of

    education as the

    means of developing

    our greatest abilities,

    because in each of

    us, there is a private

    hope and dream

    which, fulfilled, can be

    translated into benefit

    for everyone...” --John F. Kennedy

  • 2 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    MissionAs a public, comprehensive community college, Germanna

    provides accessible, quality educational and training

    opportunities that meet our communities’ changing learning

    needs.

    This Mission is achieved through:

    • Courses, programs, and services that enable students to gain

    access to and succeed in higher education;

    • Associate degrees and courses that prepare students to

    advance to and succeed in four year colleges and universities;

    • Training and services to develop successful employees who

    meet employers’ specific needs;

    • Training, associate degrees, and certificates for students to

    enter and succeed in the workplace; and

    • Services and support for community and economic

    development.

    VisionGermanna Community College is recognized as the region’s

    leader and preferred partner providing excellence in accessible

    educational opportunities and related services to our

    communities. Our quality learning experiences enable students

    to participate effectively in the social, economic, political,

    intellectual, and cultural life of their communities. Germanna,

    a dynamic learning organization, is the premiere gateway to

    personal and community development.

    ValuesOur values influence our thoughts, guide our decisions, mold

    our policies, and help determine our course of action. Student

    learning and success are at the heart of all that we do and are

    demonstrated by:

    Passion for learning and teaching, Integrity, Culture of service,

    Excellence, Stewardship, and Respect.

    Strategic Initiatives1. Become a Learning-Centered college, where quality teaching

    and support services foster student learning and success.

    2. Develop outreach efforts, programs, and services that fulfill

    the promise of affordable access to educational opportunities

    and workforce development for all the constituents of our

    service area.

    3. Develop partnerships and alternative resources to better

    enable the College to achieve its mission.

    4. Invest in people through professional development,

    recognitions and rewards systems.

    5. Develop systems of continuous improvement and a culture

    of accountability to be better stewards of the resources and

    mission in our care.

    Who We Are...Germanna Community College is a public institution of

    higher education in the Virginia Community College System.

    As a comprehensive community college, Germanna provides

    quality, accessible, and affordable educational opportunities

    for the residents of the City of Fredericksburg and the

    counties of Caroline, Culpeper, King George, Madison,

    Orange, Spotsylvania and Stafford.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 3

    Student Statistics

    2011-12 Awards

    College Transfer Degrees 1008

    Career Technical Degrees 149

    Career Studies Degrees 268

    Certificates 54

    Total Awards 1479

    2011-12 Graduate Demographic

    Headcount

    Graduates 890

    Female 595

    Male 295

    African-American 110

    Asian 23

    Caucasian 660

    Hispanic 58

    Native American 2

    Pacific Island 24

    Unknown 13

    2011-12 Graduates Awards

    890 1479

    Passing GED Scores

    2011-12 414

    2011-2012 Majors

    Associate of Arts & Sciences (AA&S) Business Administration

    Education

    General Studies

    General Studies - Psychology Spec.

    Liberal Arts

    Science

    Associate of Science (AS) Engineering

    Associate of Applied Science (AAS) Business Management

    Early Childhood Development

    Information System Technology

    Networking

    Nursing

    Nursing Comm. Program

    Police Science

    Technical Studies

    Certificates Dental Assisting

    Early Childhood Development

    Fine Arts

    Fire Science Technology

    General Education

    Graphic Communications

    Police Science

    Practical Nursing

    Practical Nursing -EVHS

    Career Studies Certificates

    Caroline County (557)

    Culpeper County (779)

    Fredericksburg City (629)

    King George (411)

    Madison County (254)

    Orange County (616)

    Other (620)

    Spotsylvania County (3742)

    Stafford County (3243)

    Jurisdiction Headcount 2011-12

  • 4 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Germanna in the News

    Germanna Ranked in Top 50 for Enrollment for

    2010-11 by Community College Week

    Despite the August 2011 earthquake that resulted in the closing

    of the V. Earl Dickinson Building for repairs, Germanna

    Community College was among the Top 50 fastest-growing two-

    year colleges in America for 2010-2011, according to the 2012

    rankings compiled by Community College Week.

    GCC was ranked 45th in the nation with a 2.6 percent increase in

    enrollment comparing Fall 2010 and Fall 2011, climbing by 197,

    from 7,582 to 7,779.

    The Dickinson Building was reopened and fully operational in

    January 2013 for the beginning of the Spring semester.

    Germanna President David A. Sam said the ranking shows the

    college continued to serve the community without missing a beat

    despite the quake. The increase in enrollment that semester also

    bucked national trends in enrollment, which were beginning to

    reflect a downturn.

    IES Design Award

    The Germanna Community College Science & Engineering

    Building and Information Commons at the Fredericksburg

    Area Campus that was designed by Clark Nexsen Architecture

    and Engineering, won four Illumination Engineering Society

    Illumination Awards of Merit for 2013. The green building is

    designed to save energy by automatically adjusting lighting and

    raising and lowering blinds to use natural light more efficiently.

    The IES Illumination Awards provides a unique opportunity for

    public recognition of professionalism, ingenuity, and originality

    in lighting design based upon the individual merit of each entry

    judged against specific criteria.

    LEED Silver Certification for SEBIC

    Germanna’s new Science & Engineering Building and

    Information Commons, which opened in 2012, was officially

    certified “Silver” for Leadership in Energy and Engineering

    Design (LEED).

    Features of the “green” building include a vegetative roof that

    provides natural insulation, a rain water harvesting system used

    for flushing toilets, sensors that automatically turn off lights

    and adjust window shades, a wind turbine capable of powering

    laptops and charging cell phones and laboratory exhausts that

    harvest heated or cooled air to cut down on heating and cooling

    costs.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 5

    U.Va. RN to BSN Program Classes at Germanna,

    via Interactive Video

    A new agreement between the School of Nursing at the

    University of Virginia and the Virginia Community College

    System, including Germanna Community College, will guarantee

    admission to the school’s RN to Bachelor of Science in Nursing

    program.

    The part time, 21-month program is designed to make it easier

    for full-time working nurses to get their BSN. There will be one

    class a week, with a clinical settings program in the second year

    that allows students to practice what they’ve learned in class.

    “Germanna has gone a little further,” said Dr. Patti Lisk, Dean

    of Nursing and Health Technologies at GCC. “We have made it

    possible for students to attend the University of Virginia classes

    here on campus at Germanna through interactive video for their

    first year of study.” She said the classes will be broadcast from

    U.Va. to Germanna and that students at GCC will be able to

    converse with University of Virginia faculty as if they were in the

    same classroom.

    Prevention with TIPS Incident Management System

    Germanna has launched an online incident reporting platform

    called TIPS (Threat Assessment, Incident Management and

    Prevention Services) from Awareity, making it easy for students,

    faculty, staff and others on campus to confidentially report

    concerning behaviors or incidents.

    Bullying, threats to harm, verbal abuse, assault and battery,

    domestic violence, weapons, harassment, suicide risks, stalking,

    hazing, alcohol or drug possession, theft, vandalism and

    suspicious activity may be reported anonymously.

    If someone has information about incidents that warrant

    concern for the safety of students, faculty or staff, they can access

    TIPS from GCC’s website at www.germanna.edu, select their

    Germanna location and anonymously report the information.

    Drop It! Donations Total $300,000 after

    2013 Challenge

    When Culpeper’s Drop It! The Healthy Living and Weight

    Loss Challenge 2013 wrapped up, it had produced a total of

    over $300,000 in donations to Germanna’s Nursing and Health

    Technologies programs since the annual event began in 2010.

    Joe and Linda Daniel and the Culpeper Regional Health System

    have donated funds toward Germanna’s nursing and health

    programs since the beginning.

    Germanna President Dr. David A. Sam said the college is grateful,

    “We want to thank the Daniels for their long term support for

    Germanna in many ways, especially the nursing program and

    health care programs. Thanks in large part to them; Germanna

    now graduates two RN classes a year in December and in May.”

    “We also deeply appreciate the long partnership with Culpeper

    Regional Hospital and Culpeper Regional Health Care System.

    They provide clinical instruction, and clinical sites. They’ve

    contributed $1 million over the years to our programs.”

  • 6 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Experiential Learning – NIH Internship

    Program

    Germanna student Ulisses Santamaria, the son of

    immigrants from El Salvador, has always wanted to be a

    doctor—so much so that as a child he became his own

    first patient.

    “I’ve always had a thing for medicine,” he says. “Even as a

    kid, I was kind of my own doctor. If I had cuts or bruises,

    I’d fix them myself and I was pulling my own teeth out

    when they were ready.

    He has worked as a volunteer at the Spotsylvania

    Regional Medical Center, mostly in the emergency room

    and has now become one of the early success stories

    for Germanna’s new Experiential Learning internship

    program. Through the program, Ulisses has landed an

    internship at the National Institute for Health.

    He will be mentored by Dr. Alon Poleg-Polsky in research

    involving the structure and function of the retina at the

    National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke in

    Bethesda, MD. The work will involve investigation into

    how the retina performs preliminary image processing

    and transmits visual information to the brain.

    The Faces of Germanna

    CANstruction Event 2013

    Germanna’s ”MeCANical” engineering team won the

    Engineering Ingenuity award during a contest sponsored by

    Stafford County Schools and 99.3 The Vibe.

    Ten teams collected thousands of cans of food for the

    Fredericksburg Area Food Bank, and then built structures at the

    Spotsylvania Towne Center. The Germanna engineering students’

    American flag design was titled “Silver Linings.” All the cans from

    the competition went to feed area families in need.

    The team consisted of Germanna engineering students Sarah

    Kaufman, Ethan Flore, Philip Olson, Tyler Moore, Chris

    Coleman, Leif Walde, Brian Keefer, Chris Boyce, Jordan

    Barringer and faculty advisor Dr. Davyda Hammond.

    Germanna Applied Engineering Club

    The Germanna Community College Applied Engineering Club

    and Dr. Davyda Hammond put on a strong showing at the ASME

    Student Professional Development Conference at the University

    of Virginia March 24, 2013.

    The club and its Diverse Remote-Operated Inspection Device

    (D.R.O.I.D.) robot took second place for student design. Over 50

    engineering students from Germanna, James Madison University,

    the U.S. Naval Academy, VMI, Old Dominion University and the

    University of Virginia competed.

    The Germanna club placed in all of the

    competitions: 2nd Place - Student Design

    (D.R.O.I.D.) and 2nd Place, Web Page Design

    - Tristan Jones; 2nd Place, Poster Presentation -

    Andrew Hallet and 4th Place, Oral Presentation

    - Brian Keefer.

    The GCC club built the robot “with the Fukushuma

    power plant meltdown disaster in mind. It has

    the ability to navigate into areas too dangerous

    and restricting to send personnel.” Two on board

    cameras allow the user to see what is going on. It’s

    able to manipulate instruments from 10 inches

    away with its probe.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 7

    Fulfilled Dream of Playing Division I Football

    Former Germanna Community College and Brooke Point High

    School student Daniel Rodriguez, who earned both a Bronze Star

    and Purple Heart while serving in the U.S. Army in Afghanistan,

    saw his dream come true in 2012.

    He made the Clemson football team as a walk-on and led the

    Tigers onto the field carrying an American flag prior to the team’s

    Oct. 21, Military Appreciation Day win over Virginia Tech.

    Rodriguez’ fight was far from over after tours of duty in Iraq and

    Afghanistan that saw him wounded and decorated for valor.

    He returned home with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and night

    terrors. Using the G.I. Bill, he attended Germanna, and he credits

    GCC with helping him decompress.

    GI Jobs Magazine included Germanna in its 2013 list of Military

    Friendly Colleges.

    “My time at Germanna was incredible,” Rodriguez said. “In

    a nutshell, I made the transition from combat to classroom.

    Germanna really made me feel at home. There’s been nothing but

    support. It’s been awesome. I loved it.”

    Phi Theta Kappa Inducts New Members

    Students were honored as the Germanna Community College

    Alpha Lambda Psi chapter of Phi Theta Kappa held its annual

    induction ceremony on April 16, 2013 at GCC’s Daniel

    Technology Center in Culpeper. PTK is an international honor

    society for two-year colleges.

    The ceremony is held to acknowledge the academic achievements

    of students who have achieved a 3.5 grade point average and have

    completed 12 credits toward a degree program.

    During the induction ceremony, students pledged an oath to the

    chapter, signed their name into the induction record book and lit

    the ceremonial candle.

    Robert Lewis - Student Representative

    Robert Lewis wanted to make a difference, and he realized that

    to do that, he needed to go to college. He got a federal grant and

    enrolled at Germanna.

    “It’s a blessing to me to be able to be here and be able to get

    my education and I’m going to try to make the best of it,” the

    Chancellor High School graduate says.

    He attended a student leadership conference in Roanoke, where

    he heard a speaker talk about facing one’s fears.“Whatever it is

    holding you back, just face it,” he says he was told.

    “I guess I fear failure,” he said. “I’d hate to invest so much time

    and energy in my education and not come out above average. I

    want to excel.”

    He became a student representative on College Council and was

    part of a student delegation from Germanna to lobby legislators

    to keep higher education affordable and accessible on Every Day

    is Community College Day at the General Assembly.

    “One of the things I’ve noticed is that a lot of students are

    going through the motions,” he said. “They don’t take the time

    to become involved and engaged. If you slow down and keep

    your eyes and ears open a lot of doors will open for you, a lot of

    opportunities for really great things. Too many people pass those

    opportunities by.”

  • 8 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Sarah Pfeiffer - Student Tutor

    Sarah Pfeiffer is from Molin, Germany. So when she needed a

    part-time job, she thought about working at GCC’s Tutoring Cen-

    ter, helping others learn to speak her native tongue, but ended up

    tutoring German, English, math, biology and chemistry.

    “I actually just walked over there to ask if they might need a

    German tutor,” she says with a laugh. Then [GCC Coordinator of

    Tutoring Ann Lyons] asked me how my English was. I ended up

    tutoring everything I’ve taken so far.”

    She plans to pursue a master’s degree in biology at the University

    of Mary Washington, then continue to dental school at Virginia

    Commonwealth University.

    “I love it at Germanna,” she says. “Everybody is really helpful.”

    She says she’s grateful to the Germanna Educational Foundation

    for the Raynold “Randy” Collier Glazebrook III Scholarship

    and the Steve and Nancy Jones Scholarship, which she says have

    “made a huge difference”.

    Kim Casey, R.N.

    It’s been nearly three decades since Kim Casey was in high school

    back in her home town of Rochester, N.Y. and very ill with an

    autoimmune disorder.

    “The nurses made a very big impact on me,” she says. “So I

    decided that’s what I would like to do.”

    She began studying to become a nurse, but as a Navy wife, she

    had moved 20 times in 22 years before her husband Mike retired

    in 2009 and took a job at Dahlgren.

    Finally, in 2009, at age 44, she was able to resume her nursing

    studies at Germanna Community College.

    She was impressed with the Germanna faculty, and she says, “The

    clinical aspect I received here was even better than I expected it

    to be, due in part to the Virtual Hospital ,” which has high-tech

    human simulators.

    At Germanna, she was a model student. She received The

    Florence Nightingale Award for her class. It’s presented to the

    graduate deemed the most helpful and inspirational to the class.

    She was accepted to work in the Virginia Commonwealth

    University Massey Cancer Care Clinic in the Palliative Care Unit

    during the summer of 2012 as a nurse extern.

    In March, she was offered a full time position at the Massey

    Cancer Center as a clinical nurse in the Bone Marrow Transplant

    Unit.

    At age 47, she passed the state nursing board exam and officially

    became a Registered Nurse.

    The Richmond hospital will pay for her to pursue her BSN, as

    well as any other degree.

    She says she’s leaning toward a career as an oncology nurse.

    “Blackboard Collaborate” - connects students to tutors.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 9

    Haleigh Funk, LPN

    Her father’s battle with cancer started Haleigh Funk on her way

    to becoming a nurse.“My dad had cancer when I was in the first

    grade,” Funk said. “And he let me inject shots into his stomach.

    Since then, everybody has said I ought to be a nurse.”

    Her father has recovered and is doing well, but Haleigh hasn’t

    forgotten the experience.

    At 18, she completed Germanna Community College’s Practical

    Nursing program at Eastern View High School in Culpeper and

    became an LPN.

    At 19, she graduated from Germanna’s Registered Nursing

    program during Spring 2013 Commencement ceremonies.

    “The sky is the limit for this talented young woman,” commented

    the late Dean of Nursing and Health Technologies, Mary Gilkey.

    “It’s definitely been a journey, and there’s been a lot of hard work,”

    Funk said. But it’s been rewarding.”

    She hopes to work at Culpeper Regional Hospital, and plans

    to eventually get her bachelor’s degree to specialize in geriatric

    nursing.

    Anita Newhouse

    Anita Newhouse didn’t believe she was college material.

    Germanna’s Fall 2012 Commencement speaker says she came up

    with every excuse she could not to enroll there.

    “The truth is,” she says, “my self-esteem and confidence were

    so low that I honestly didn’t think I would be successful. I

    thank God I listened to a friend who convinced me to enroll

    at Germanna in 2000. She suggested taking one class at a time

    until I was used to that and then taking more than one class each

    semester. As time passed, I became more confident and I held my

    head higher.”

    She was 29 years old when she started at GCC. Her goal was to

    earn a bachelor’s degree by the time she was 40. She graduated

    from the University of Mary Washington when she was 34.

    Along the way, she received a Virginia Community College

    System Chancellor’s Fellowship.

    By age 36, she was the manager of Germanna’s Welcome Center

    at the Daniel Technology Center in Culpeper, which brings

    together counseling, financial aid and admissions resources to

    help students in that area find the answer to any questions they

    have, overcome any doubts they have,

    and get off to a flying start.

    She says she can identify with “the

    hesitation, the anxiousness, the worry

    and the fear” some students feel as

    they enter college.

    “If you have the burning desire to do

    it, follow your dreams and don’t let age

    or anything else hold you back from

    what you want to do. Believe me, you

    can,” Newhouse says.

  • 10 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Jenny Stone - SGA President

    Jenny Stone isn’t a typical college student body president. This

    Germanna Community College Student Government Association

    leader and Falmouth resident is 40 years old, and her 21- and

    20-year-old sons plan to join her as students at GCC.

    She’s survived two bouts with cancer. She says her first cancer

    surgery took place when she was 22 in 1994. During her second

    cancer surgery in 2007, she had a cardiac event on the operating

    table and a major heart attack and quadruple bypass followed a

    year later at age 35.

    When doctors told her that her heart disease had become serious,

    she said: “I’m not allowing this to stop or slow my life down. I

    decided long ago not to dwell in my illnesses

    or let them define me.”

    She had to abandon her catering business

    because of health setbacks and found herself

    again at Germanna.

    She’s studying psychology and plans to get

    her associate’s degree, then transfer to the

    University of Mary Washington for her

    bachelor’s and possibly Marymount for

    postgraduate work.

    She has been a Sunshine Lady Foundation

    Scholar through the Germanna Educational

    Foundation.

    Jenny Stone says GCC’s faculty has been

    “inspirational,” particularly psychology

    Professor Evan Gorelick.

    She said she hopes her psychology studies lead

    to work helping police officers who are under

    stress, as well as family counseling.

    Virginia Van Valzah

    Stafford County Sheriff ’s Office Deputy Virginia Van Valzah has

    turned a learning disability into what she calls an “addiction to

    learning.”

    Deputy Van Valzah, a Germanna graduate, was the college’s

    keynote Spring 2013 Commencement speaker.

    The determined 26-year-old has battled ADHD and dyslexia

    since she was a child. When she enrolled at Germanna, she

    applied advice from one of her teachers at James Monroe High

    School to break courses down into easily digestible chunks and

    spent a lot of time in the Tutoring Center.

    “Class sizes at Germanna are small enough that you get that one-

    on-one attention you need to thrive,” she said.

    During the commencement

    ceremony, students heard Virginia

    Van Valzah’s message that there’s

    no shame in having a learning

    disability.

    After earning her associate’s degree

    at Germanna in 2006, she went on

    to a bachelor’s in administrative

    justice at George Mason University

    in 2008 and a post bachelor’s

    certificate and master’s in criminal

    justice at Virginia Commonwealth

    University in 2011. Using flash

    cards to study, she compiled a 3.7

    grade point average at VCU.

    She’s now a court security deputy

    for the Stafford County Sheriff ’s

    Office and a training officer. She

    teaches criminology at Germanna

    as an adjunct faculty member.

    “I’m addicted to learning and I’m

    trying to pass on my addiction to

    other people,” she said.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 11

    The Faces of Germanna - Staff & Faculty

    Mary Gilkey

    Germanna Community College’s Dean of Nursing and Health

    Technologies Mary Gilkey passed away Tuesday, July 25, 2013 at

    VCU Medical Center in Richmond at the age of 55. She had been

    battling an autoimmune disorder for some time.

    “With the passing of Dean Gilkey, Germanna has lost a leader

    whose boundless energy and enthusiasm helped the college

    double the size of its nursing program and graduate two classes a

    year,” said GCC President Dr. David A. Sam. “Our communities

    have lost a champion for quality health care for all their citizens.”

    “Dean Gilkey worked diligently with area hospitals to anticipate

    and meet health care needs ,” Dr. Sam said.

    “She loved her students and the college dearly. The students she

    inspired will be her legacy. She will be missed.”

    Ode to a Nurse

    She is a symbol in her immaculate white,

    Softly treading through the stillness of the night,

    Quick to cope with a sudden emergency,

    She is that wonderful nurse who is on duty;

    Day in and day out the constant rounds she will make

    Weary, tired, the patient, she does not forsake,

    Gently caressing the crying, frightened child,

    Tenderly caring for the bedridden senile;

    She is the nurse, the beautiful Angel in white.

    She is like a star, shinning ever so bright,

    Many tears, and smiles along the way she has seen,

    But she will stand up, ‘ever like a great Queen.

    - A. J. Sam

    Dr. Richard E. Mezo

    Dr. Richard Mezo, an adjunct professor at Germanna, a veteran

    of the U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force, an author and a poet, passed

    away on July 6, 2013 at his home in Stafford County at the age 74.

    His 2008 anti-waterboarding op-ed column, “Why it was Called

    Water Torture,” appeared in The Washington Post and The Free

    Lance-Star.

    Dr. Mezo taught English language and literature at universities,

    colleges, and high schools in the United States and overseas

    and on military bases. He taught composition, literature and

    developmental English part-time at Germanna’s Fredericksburg

    Area Campus in Spotsylvania.

    Dr. Mezo was the author of a number of books, including:

    Concepts and Choices: A Writer’s Companion and Personal

    Advisor, Essential Structures: A Guide to English for Readers and

    Writers, Nothing’s Out of Place and Recovering Argument: A Guide

    to Critical Thinking and Writing.

  • 12 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Germanna Employees Honored at Innovations

    Conference in Dallas - Roueche Excellence Award

    Named in honor of John E. and Suanne D. Roueche, leaders in

    the community college field and early proponents of the idea

    that every college employee has a role in how well students learn

    and succeed, the awards celebrate outstanding contributions and

    leadership by community college faculty and staff.

    The Germanna winners for their work in 2012 are: Celestine

    Cool, former Manager of the ACC and Testing Services, Garland

    Fenwick, Facilities Manager, Winferd Stevens, Coordinator of

    Disability Services and Michael C. Farris, former Financial Aid

    Coordinator. Farris returned to his hometown as Director of

    Financial Aid at Randolph College in Lynchburg in February, but

    continued to teach at GCC.

    “I am easily motivated just with watching our students grow and

    succeed knowing that our services had a hand in helping them on

    their way,” Cool said. “Communication, perseverance, and vision

    are my key strategies. Communication is the key to a strong

    relationship with students as well as the college community.

    Perseverance is necessary to implement resources when they

    are needed and money is tight, and vision for the future; always

    thinking ahead of new initiatives that will keep improving the

    quality of our services. “

    “As a Facilities Manager, I am inspired and motivated to provide

    the most effective and efficient facilities,” Fenwick said. “I feel

    by providing safe and well maintained buildings and grounds, it

    creates an atmosphere that contributes to student learning. “

    “This is a great honor and I would like to thank all the great

    people that are working in community colleges who are giving

    their heart and soul to helping others,” Stevens said.

    “I am truly honored to have been selected for this award,” Farris

    said. “I will continue to work hard so that students can achieve

    their dreams. Thanks to all who helped make this possible.”

    More than 800 colleges are League members. According to its

    website, “The League is spearheading efforts to develop more

    learning-centered community colleges through its Learning

    Initiative. The goal is to assist community colleges in developing

    policies, programs, and practices that place learning at the heart

    of the educational enterprise, while overhauling the traditional

    architecture of education.”

    Excellence in Education Awards at New Horizons

    Ann Lyons and her team won first place on the project of

    “Beyond Face-to-Face and Online Tutoring: Bb Collaborate

    Connects Students and Tutors” in the category of Improving

    Student Success—Institutional.

    Julie Mersiowsky collaborated with other institutions and won

    first place on two projects of “LOGO” and “TOTAL” for both

    categories - Best Practices in Teaching Face-to-face, Online and

    Student Success and Innovative Use of Technology in the Face-

    to-Face and Online Classroom.

    GCC Center for

    Workforce’s O’Keefe

    Wins Women’s

    Leadership Award

    Germanna’s Martha O’Keefe

    received the Patricia Lacey

    Metzger Award during the

    19th Annual Leadership

    Colloquium for Professional

    Women at the University of

    Mary Washington.

    O’Keefe is Dean of Workforce and Professional Development at

    Germanna’s Center for Workforce and Community Education.

    The Metzger Award honors those who “uphold high standards in

    their personal and professional lives while fulfilling a career goal

    of significant nature.”

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 13

    2012 President’s Recognition Awards

    The recipients of the 2012 President’s Recognition Awards were

    Michelle Norton, Paula Gentry, Nick Morgan, Cheryl Huff and

    Tina Lance.

    Chancellor’s Faculty Fellow for 2012-13

    Germanna’s faculty member, Professor of Nursing Karen Mittura,

    was selected as a Chancellor’s Faculty Fellow for 2012-13. Karen

    is one of three faculty members across the Virginia Community

    College System to receive this award.

    In addition to being recognized for her outstanding work as a

    faculty member, Professor Mittura has been awarded a one-year

    fellowship to continue her studies. She will pursue a Doctorate

    of Nursing Practice in Educational Leadership at Case Western

    University.

    Special Certificate from the Governor for a High

    Rating on Emergency Planning

    The Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia on behalf of the

    Office of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs & Homeland Security

    recognized Germanna Community College for its outstanding

    and exemplary initiatives in the areas of all-hazards emergency

    preparedness. This certificate honors the hard work, leadership

    and overall dedication to students, faculty and staff at Virginia’s

    Colleges and universities.

    Those who lead our emergency planning included: Craig Branch,

    Rick Brehm, Garland Fenwick, Jacque Larsen, Ollie Burton and

    many more.

    Dr. Davyda Hammond

    Her mother passed away when she was 5 and her father

    was unable to care for her, so at the age 12, she moved to

    Birmingham, Alabama to live with her grandmother.

    Her life had taken a turn for the better thanks to her

    grandmother. So it rankled her when, as a child, she would see

    shady mechanics take advantage of her, charging her a lot and

    refusing to explain what was wrong.

    When she was 12, her teachers in Alabama told her she should

    become a math teacher. She knew that math was important to

    engineering, and she says with a smile that she thought to herself

    back then, “Well, engineers, they learn about cars.”

    By the time she was in college, she would take her grandmother’s

    car to a dealership and confidently and firmly say: “This is what’s

    wrong. Don’t tell me anything else is wrong with it.”

    In 2012 she did some research and found that more job openings

    were listed for electrical engineers across Virginia than for

    mechanical engineers.

    Until now, Germanna’s Associate of Science degree in

    Engineering program focused on mechanical engineering and

    engineering science.

    Seeing a need, she pushed to add a concentration in electrical

    engineering at Germanna and succeeded.

    Dr. Hammond explains that because Germanna has guaranteed

    admission articulation agreements with both U.Va. and Virginia

    Tech, “If you get at least a ‘B’ in all your engineering and science

    and math classes at GCC and an overall GPA of 3.2, you’re

    guaranteed admission into the schools of engineering at U.Va.

    and Virginia Tech. They get so many applications at Tech that

    automatically knowing you’re getting in is a real advantage.”

  • 14 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Cheryl Huff

    The Virginia Community College System considers rising

    textbook costs a hindrance to enrollment and student success.

    According to the Virginia College Board, the typical student

    spends about $1,000 on textbooks.

    In the Spring of 2013, the VCCS awarded grants to faculty

    members who went to work finding ways to use free Open

    Educational Resources in classes and research to bring down the

    cost of textbooks.

    Cheryl Huff, an associate professor of English and humanities

    at Germanna Community College, was one of 12 VCCS faculty

    members awarded $3,000.

    The Chancellor’s Reengineering Task Force supported the OER

    grant effort for use in classes with high enrollment, including

    English, psychology, biology, business, chemistry, history, math

    and information technology.

    The grant will pay for work designing an English 112:

    Composition II class that uses only OER. It is to be piloted in the

    Fall semester of 2013 and the Spring of 2014.

    She said students will save on textbooks while learning about

    high quality, free resources they can use for years.

    Professor LaZalia Richardson by Nancy W. Noel, Instructor of English at Germanna

    Community College

    The August 2011 earthquake shut down Germanna

    Community College’s largest building until January 2012. But

    another event that took place last year shook the college to its

    core with deeper and longer-lasting consequences. Temporary

    loss of bricks and mortar couldn’t begin to compare to the

    loss of professor LaZalia Richardson, who retired to focus

    her energy on recovering from a March 2011 stroke. Her

    contributions to the community and Germanna’s students,

    faculty, and staff are too numerous to list.

    The Fredericksburg native and James Monroe High School

    graduate’s character, dignity, integrity, intellect, and her passion

    for teaching make her irreplaceable.

    At Germanna, she held many leadership positions, among them: English Department coordinator, member of the Faculty Senate, and

    chair of the College Council. She taught composition and literature at GCC for 24 years, specializing in American literature and the

    Bible as literature.

    Dr. Richardson changed students’ lives because she genuinely loved them. She held students to a very high standard, yet never failed to

    provide what they needed to meet it. There was always a cluster of students waiting outside her office door for academic help, advice,

    coaching, and mentoring. She did not merely teach. She shaped lives.

    In recognition of her service to college, the college’s English Department has established a scholarship in her name through the GCC

    Educational Foundation. Her legacy will live on in those she so believed in and loved so much—the students.

    Germanna is a far better place because of her.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 15

    Alison Gauch Hieber

    Germanna’s first Dean of Enrollment Services has overseen some

    significant changes since she joined Germanna in 2012.

    She has overseen the expansion of Germanna’s Welcome Center

    concept, which brings together counseling, financial aid and

    admissions resources to help students more easily find the answer

    to any questions, overcome any doubts and get off to a flying

    start.

    She has overseen the hiring of Veterans Support Counselor

    Robert Dixon and the continuing development of Germanna

    President Dr. David A. Sam’s vision for a Veterans’ Center.

    “When I arrived,” she said, it was to pull together enrollment

    pieces—financial aid, admissions and recruiting.”

    Dean Hieber has 25 years of experience. Her first job out of

    college was as Assistant Director for Admissions overseeing

    transfers at James Madison University. She then worked at the

    University of Mary Washington for 19 years as Associate Dean

    for Admissions before coming to Germanna.

    When she was doing her undergraduate work at James Madison

    University she majored in marketing.

    “But I like to say I double-majored in student life,” she said.

    “We had a fabulous vice president for student affairs who said,

    ‘You know you don’t have to leave college.’ “ Dean Hieber then

    proceeded to get her master’s degree in higher education at the

    University of South Carolina.

    “What I find most enjoyable is the people”, she said. “I have great

    people on my team and I enjoy seeing them come together to

    help a student. There’s a lot of possible energy.”

    She said she also enjoys working at Germanna because

    “community colleges can address the needs of students who are

    blocked because of their environment such as needing to work

    full time to take care of a family while pursuing a degree.” She

    said Germanna is “a breath of fresh air” to students who need a

    chance to overcome obstacles.

    Robert M. Dixon

    Germanna’s new Student Veterans Support Counselor

    understands what it’s like to be deployed in Afghanistan and he

    understands what it’s like to make the transition from active duty

    to civilian life.

    Robert M. Dixon had a 22-year career in the U.S. Army, serving

    during the Gulf War as part of Operation Desert Storm and as

    part of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. He retired

    as a lieutenant colonel.

    “Veterans returning to civilian life face a transition that

    sometimes is difficult to make,” Germanna President Dr. David

    A. Sam said. “From structured jobs, they must find a career

    among too many options. Combat veterans may need more than

    career counseling.”

    “This position was a next step in developing Germanna’s Center

    for Veterans’ Retraining and Support,” Dr. Sam said. “Here

    veterans can find help in translating their military training into

    college credit. Here they can explore career options. Here they

    can connect with resources from the Veterans Administration

    to pay for their education. Here they can connect with other

    veterans who understand, as Bob Dixon does, what it means to

    be a veteran.”

    “I’m grateful to have the opportunity to help the young men and

    women who have given so much already,” Dixon said. “Education

    is so important to setting our veterans up for the rest of their

    lives—it’s the difference between just getting by and having a

    good life.”

  • 16 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Shashuna Gray

    Germanna’s new dean of Arts and

    Sciences said, “I love Germanna and I

    believe in it 100 percent. I really believe

    in the community college system.”

    She has 19 years of college teaching

    experience, eight of those in the

    Virginia Community College System.

    A doctoral student in Old Dominion

    University’s Community College

    Leadership Program, Dean Gray has

    both a Bachelor of Science degree and

    a Master of Science degree in biology

    from Alabama State University.

    She spent the last year serving as acting Dean of Arts and Sciences. Before that, she was

    teaching biology and microbiology. She believed that through teaching biology she could

    ease the anxiety many have about the study of science in general. “I wanted to make the

    students feel comfortable in the classroom and make a difference,” Gray said. “I have a

    passion for teaching and for helping students succeed.”

    At Germanna, she said, helping students succeed goes well beyond the classroom

    Germanna students, “find themselves in an environment where they can come to faculty

    when they have other problems -- not just enrolling in classes and having their financial

    aid approved. Both on the credit side and through the college’s non-credit Workforce

    Development side, she says, “We’re able to provide students skills and opportunities they

    might not otherwise have a chance to develop, and to find their passion.”

    C. Douglas Elliott

    C. Douglas Elliott was named Vice

    President for Institutional Advancement

    at Germanna will also serve as Executive

    Director of the Germanna Community

    College Educational Foundation.

    His responsibilities will include planning,

    leadership and implementation of all

    college fundraising initiatives, grant

    writing, planned giving, endowment,

    scholarships, and alumni research

    and records, and parent engagement

    programs. He will also be responsible for

    leadership of all college marketing, public

    information and media relations activities

    and high-level support for community and government relations activities. Elliott will

    lead a team of development, marketing and public information, media professionals and

    administrative staff.

    Elliott has served in leadership positions in advancement and marketing for a diverse

    group of nonprofit institutions from higher education to social service agencies to global

    entities such as the Smithsonian Institution and the International Center for Missing and

    Exploited Children. Previously, he had served as vice president for several publishing

    firms and then as president of his own award-winning company, which he founded,

    Elliott & Clark Publishing.

    He coauthored two books, Florida Rediscovered and Vietnam: Images from Combat

    Photographers.

    Employees Years of Service

    45-Years of Service

    Richard Gossweiler

    30-Years of Service

    Sarah W. Somerville

    25-Years of Service

    Richard Brehm

    Delois McCormick

    20-Years of Service

    Valerie Miller

    Phyllis Smith

    15-Years of Service

    Craig Branch

    Pamela Frederick

    Frances F. Lea

    Karen Mittura

    Sandra Monroe

    Mike Shirazi

    Beverly Unkle

    10-Years of Service

    Sheryln A. Farrish-Barner

    Susan Brown

    Paula Gentry

    Shashuna Gray

    Melba Morrozoff

    Nancy Noel

    Ronald Williams

    Samantha Wilson

    5-Years of Service

    Rosie Henderson

    Michael Hurley

    Kelly Rudnick

    Jeanne Wesley

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 17

    New Automotive Technology Center in Stafford County

    In April 2011, the Stafford EDA approved a $75,000 grant toward

    bringing GCC’s automotive program to a location on Blackjack

    Road off U.S. 1 near the county airport.

    “It’s a state of the art facility we can afford,” Dr. Sam said. “We can

    double enrollment at low cost.” The new center has the capacity

    to serve about 150 students.

    Michael Adams owns the 1.5-acre site and his JON Properties

    development firm built the facility. Germanna leases 11,000

    square feet for auto labs, classrooms and office space.

    The Germanna automotive program is certified by the National

    Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE), a certification

    group that certifies professionals in the automotive repair and

    service industry.

    The 24-credit automotive technician certificate includes training

    in the ASE areas of engine repair, suspension and steering,

    brakes, and electrical systems. The 26-credit automotive

    diagnostician certificate includes training in the ASE areas of

    automotive transmission, manual drive train, climate control,

    and entire performance.

    Commencements

    Germanna’s 2012 Fall Commencement,

    held at the Fredericksburg Expo Center,

    saw 571 students receive a total of 942

    associate’s degrees.

    Germanna Welcome Center Manager

    Anita Newhouse, the commencement

    speaker, told graduates she came

    up with every excuse she could not

    to enroll at Germanna because of a

    lack of confidence. Once she did, her

    self-esteem rose and she graduated from both GCC and the

    University of Mary Washington.

    During Germanna’s 2013 Spring Commencement ceremony,

    503 students received a total of 854 associates degrees, and

    certificates.

    They heard Germanna graduate Virginia Van Valzah’s message

    that there’s no shame in having a learning disability and that

    sometimes people with disabilities can be the best at a job.

    Opening of Germanna Offices at Central Park

    Germanna Community College officially opened new offices

    for its Educational Foundation and the office of Marketing and

    Public Information at the Central Park Corporate Center at 1320

    Central Park Blvd. in October 2012.

    GCC has campuses in Spotsylvania County and Locust Grove

    and centers in Stafford and Culpeper counties. No classes will be

    offered at the Central Park location.

    Germanna President Dr. David A. Sam thanked the Rappaport

    Companies for donating the space for three years. He and Jane

    Wallace, President of the GCC Educational Foundation, cut the

    ribbon to open the new facility. About 100 local business people

    and friends of the college looked on.

    Events

  • 18 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    2013 Nursing Idol Competition

    Faith Resto of Fredericksburg won the RN portion and

    Emily Lunceford of Caroline County won the LPN phase of

    Germanna Community College’s Third Annual Nursing idol

    competition held at the Daniel Technology Center in Culpeper.

    The competition, held before a crowd of about 400 nursing

    students, faculty and local healthcare officials, is a combination of

    American Idol and Who Wants to be a Millionaire? without the

    lifelines, and the ER. Students answer questions from a panel of

    medical expert judges on how they would handle cases.

    “Nursing Idol is a wonderful way to demonstrate the quality of

    our nursing program and students,” said Germanna President

    Dr. David A. Sam. “These young people have to stand up in front

    of all their peers and answer extremely tough questions under

    pressure–in many cases, questions you would expect a doctor to

    answer. They demonstrate all that they learned and that they are

    able to think on their feet critically and solve problems and it’s

    exactly the kind of thing they’ll have to do in the real world.”

    “Under pressure, they’ll have to apply everything they know. It

    shows that we’ve got a fine program with great teachers and great

    students,” Sam said.

    Students display the poise developed in GCC’s high-tech Virtual

    Hospital at the Locust Grove Campus, where computerized

    human simulators are used.

    Startup Weekend Fredericksburg

    Startup Weekend, which helps fledgling entrepreneurs launch

    companies, was held at Germanna’s Fredericksburg Campus in

    Spotsylvania in partnership with the GCC Center for Workforce

    & Community Education.

    Part of a global movement to inspire, educate, and empower

    individuals, teams and communities, Startup Weekend

    Fredericksburg was a 54-hour event designed to support

    creative, focused, and collaborative innovation. It helps

    participants form a team to work on a concept and refine it, then

    pitch it to investors so they can launch a startup.

    “We have the facilities and support, and we work closely with the

    business community, so it’s a good fit,” said Germanna’s Martha

    O’Keefe, Dean of Workforce and Professional Development.

    Germanna’s Center for Workforce provides training and

    professional development for the region’s business community,

    including courses and programs supporting small businesses.

    And, she pointed out, two-year college degrees are available, also

    meeting the needs of businesses in Germanna’s service region.

    “We work closely with the region’s offices of economic

    development to respond to workforce needs,” Dean O’Keefe said.

    “We work collaboratively with offices of economic development,

    K-12 school divisions, other higher education schools, Chambers

    of Commerce, etc. to help connect the business community to

    programs and resources.”

    She said Germanna’s Center for Workforce pivots quickly to meet

    the needs of local businesses, including those of startups.

    There have been over 1,000 Startup Weekend events held in

    478 cities around the world and from these events over 8,000

    startups have been created. Organizers say Startup Weekend is an

    opportunity to get experience that enhances creative and critical

    problem-solving, to try new skills, and to get expert instruction

    on new methods of brainstorming.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 19

    College Board

    2012Germanna Community

    College Board

    Doug Rogers, Chairman

    Orange County

    Catherine Washington

    Vice Chairman

    Stafford County

    Sherry Gravatt

    Caroline County

    Angela Greene

    Spotsylvania County

    John H. Jenkins

    Culpeper County

    Teri McNally

    City of Fredericksburg

    Harold “Dick” Scheibe

    King George County

    William Thomas

    Culpeper County

    Ann G. Tidball

    Madison County

    Greetings from the Germanna Local College Board,

    There is no doubt in my mind that Germanna Community College’s service region will

    continue to be a leader in coming back strong from our nation’s economic downturn.

    I believe that part of our area’s economic resurgence has to do with the over 600,000

    Germanna credits that have accumulated over the years. Those credits benefit not only

    our students and their families, but local businesses and our entire communities.

    Nearly 80 percent of Germanna students remain in our area, putting what they’ve learned

    to work. An educated and trained workforce is critical to keeping existing businesses

    competitive and attracting new ones that bring with them more good jobs that pay well.

    We continue to work hard at priming our region’s economic pump:

    • As Stafford County celebrates its 350th Anniversary, we join with the county’s

    Economic Development Authority and Board of Supervisors in working to ensure

    a prosperous future. In August 2013, we opened a high-tech new Automotive

    Technical Center to complement our Stafford County Center, which has been bulging

    at the seams since it opened in 2009. GCC is one of three colleges offering classes at

    the new Stafford Technology & Research Center. Now the county urgently needs a

    full Germanna Stafford Campus to meet future educational and training demands,

    and we are working with officials there to make one a reality.

    • At Germanna’s Locust Grove Campus in Orange County, we have doubled the capacity

    for our well respected nursing program and more classes than ever are being offered

    there. We are working toward expanding and our facilities there, including our high

    tech Virtual Hospital, to meet the health care needs of graying Baby Boomers.

    • More classes are being offered at GCC’s Daniel Technology Center in Culpeper, and

    we’re working to add even more, making degrees and certificates more accessible to

    Culpeper and Madison counties.

    • As Caroline County prepares for expected future growth, we are planning a

    Germanna Center there.

    • We are expanding Workforce Development in our communities and Dual Enrollment

    offerings that allow students to earn college credit at their own high schools and

    saving their families money.

    • We have continued to expand our Fredericksburg Campus in Spotsylvania by adding

    a much needed parking garage to go with our beautiful and cutting-edge Science &

    Engineering Building and Information Commons and renovated Dickinson Building.

    • Residents of King George County will be pleased to know that Germanna will pilot

    three classes by interactive video in fall 2013 at the University of Mary Washington

    Dahlgren Campus – Calculus 1 and 2 and Engineering.

    • Germanna and University of Mary Washington have partnered to offer courses at

    UMW at GCC tuition rates.

    We thank community leaders who have played a major role in our funding, service and

    expansion.

    Special thanks go out to the donors, fund-raisers and all those who played a role in

    increasing support for Germanna student success.

    Let there be no doubt that, with your help, the college that continued to grow and

    maintain its academic excellence through economic storms and an earthquake will

    continue to succeed in its mission of making quality higher education affordable and

    accessible to all in our service region.

    Doug Rogers

    Chairman, Germanna Local College Board

  • 20 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Educational Foundation

    A Message from Jane Wallace, President

    Making a Difference Feels Good

    Dear Friends of Germanna,

    Harlan Ellison once wrote that the only three words more meaningful than “I love you” are

    “Let me help.”

    During the March 15, 2013 Germanna Community College Educational Foundation

    Scholarship Reception at the College’s Fredericksburg Area Campus in Spotsylvania, donors

    learned how much their uttering the words “Let me help” has meant to students they have

    given a hand up at GCC.

    They learned that their donations are turning lives around.

    And they learned that providing they’re making a real difference not only for the students

    and their families, but for our communities. Over 80 percent of Germanna students remain in our area to put the skills they’ve

    learned at GCC to work helping their neighbors in growing fields such as health care and engineering.

    In the past academic year our Educational Foundation has provided about 275 students scholarship awards of more than

    $230,000. Still, many more students need assistance to realize their potential.

    We’ve been able to give more students the help they need thanks to new scholarships from donors including Atlantic Builders, its

    CEO Adam Fried and his wife Rhonda, and through the continuing generosity of longtime supporters like Joe and Linda Daniel.

    Continued support from Mary Washington Healthcare and CEO Fred Rankin has boosted our widely respected nursing program.

    And continued support from Culpeper Regional Health System and its President and CEO Lee Kirk have made it possible for us

    offer Dual Enrollment nursing students at Eastern View High School as part of a program through which they can graduate from

    high school as LPNs.

    Our annual events were all smashing successes.

    • Our Sept. 6, 2012 GCCEF Golf Tournament raised nearly $30,000.

    • A big crowd came out to the Fredericksburg Country Club as the GCCEF honored Charles G. McDaniel on Feb. 15, 2012 as

    Distinguished Person of the year for decades of making a difference

    • Our April 20, 2012 Scholarship Monte Carlo Night raised a record $144,000 for our Germanna Guarantee Scholarship

    Program

    CRHS CEO Kirk presented the Germanna Educational Foundation with a $40,000 donation at the November 16, 2012 GCCEF

    Annual Dinner & Celebration of Philanthropy.

    These difference makers were recognized at the annual dinner:

    • The Rev. Lawrence A. Davies, who had recently retired after 50 years as pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church (Old Site) in

    Fredericksburg and was the city’s first black mayor from 1976-96 as GCCEF’s first ever Community Member of the Year.

    The new award will be named for Davies and will recognize an individual each year that has made a major difference in our

    communities.

    • Madison County husband and wife John W. “Bill” Price III and Patricia Adams Price were named Germanna Community

    College’s 2012 Philanthropists of the Year. Bill Price is CEO of Madison Wood Preservers.

    • Steve B. Jones of Spotsylvania County was named GCCEF Alumnus of the Year. He is President and Chief Operating Officer

    of the Fried Companies, Inc.

    • John J. “Butch” Davies, III, a Culpeper attorney and former member of the Virginia House of Delegates, was named the

    GCCEF Board Member of the Year.

    Thank you for saying to our students, “Let me help,” and in doing so, making a difference in our communities.

    Sincerely,

    Jane WallacePresident, Germanna Community College Educational Foundation

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 21

    2012 Germanna Community

    College Educational Foundation Board

    Jane Wallace, President

    George P. Snead

    Immediate Past President

    Felix Fraraccio, Treasurer

    David A. Sam, Secretary

    Darla K. Burton, Chair,

    CORPs Volunteers

    Wendell Anderson

    Linda C. Beale

    Earl Thomas “Tom” Blalock, II

    Henry “Hap” Connors, Jr.

    Trish Crowe

    Joseph “Joe” R. Daniel

    John “Butch” J. Davies, III

    Carlos Del Toro

    Kenny L. Dotson

    Georgia M. Fauber

    Chris Hallberg

    Edward “Ted” B. Hontz

    Edd Houck

    Gordon “Pete” Humes

    Russell James

    Barbara Kane

    Constance R. Kincheloe

    Ann M. Lewis

    Linda J. “L.J.” Moyer

    Stanley Palivoda

    J. William Price, III

    Terika Richardson

    Jack Rowley

    Frank S. Turnage

    Annual Dinner & Celebration of Philanthropy

    The Reverend Lawrence A. Davies, who retired after 50 years as pastor of Shiloh

    Baptist Church in Fredericksburg and was the city’s first black mayor from 1976-96,

    was honored as Germanna Community College Educational Foundation’s first ever

    Community Member of the Year at the 2012 GCCEF Annual Dinner & Celebration of

    Philanthropy at Stephenson’s Ridge Lodge in Spotsylvania County.

    Germanna President Dr. David A. Sam said the new award will be named for Davies

    and will recognize an individual each year who has made a major difference in the

    community.

    GCCEF President Jane Wallace said Davies and his wife Janice have together “been a

    force for peaceful and positive change” over the past half century.

    Reverend Davies expressed his gratitude that Germanna was a place where their

    daughter Lauren, who had sickle cell anemia and passed away at age 36, felt comfortable

    as she broadened her horizons.

    Culpeper Regional Health System President and CEO Lee Kirk presented the Germanna

    Educational Foundation with a $40,000 donation at the dinner.

    Other honors conferred at the dinner: John J. “Butch” Davies, III, a Culpeper attorney

    and former member of the Virginia House of Delegates, was named the GCCEF Board

    Member of the Year.

    Steve B. Jones of Spotsylvania

    County was named GCCEF

    Alumnus of the Year. He graduated

    from Germanna in 1979 with

    an associate’s degree in business

    management. He is President and

    Chief Operating Officer of the

    Fried Companies, Inc. a regional

    residential and commercial real

    estate development firm based

    in Fairfax County with offices

    in Springfield, Spotsylvania and

    Greene County.

  • 22 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Annual Golf Tournament raises nearly $30,000

    Germanna Community College’s Educational Foundation raised

    nearly $30,000 when sponsorships, entry fees and additional

    donations were tabulated following the September 2012 GCC

    Annual Golf Tournament at the Fredericksburg Country Club.

    The tournament was won by a team from StellarOne.

    The start was delayed for about two hours by a thunderstorm, but

    the skies cleared and the sun came out and players were able to

    complete 18 holes.

    Stafford EDA Honored with

    Philanthropy Award

    The Stafford County Economic

    Development Authority was awarded

    the 2012 Virginia’s Community Colleges

    Chancellor’s Award for Leadership in

    Philanthropy at a luncheon ceremony at the

    Country Club of Virginia in Richmond in

    April 2012.

    It was nominated by Germanna Community

    College, which had earlier named the

    Stafford EDA GCC’s 2012 Philanthropist of

    the Year.

    In May 2011, the EDA awarded Germanna

    a matching challenge grant of up to $1 million toward the

    establishment of a permanent campus. EDA officials said the

    campus will aid workforce and economic development. GCC is

    looking at possible sites in the Stafford Courthouse area for the

    campus, which it expects to serve 10,000 students.

    “Germanna is grateful to the Stafford EDA for its investments in

    the college,” GCC President David A. Sam said, “and we will work

    hard to help give Stafford students an edge in the job market and

    make county businesses more competitive in an evolving world

    economy.”

    “The Stafford EDA’s vision and leadership make this is a well-

    deserved honor,” said Michael A. Catell, Director of the GCC

    Educational Foundation. “Their support of Germanna is making

    a real difference for county residents.”

    The EDA has awarded a total of $1.375 million to Germanna, also

    donating $300,000 toward Germanna’s Stafford County Center,

    which opened in 2009 and is now over capacity with about 1,200

    students.

    The EDA also awarded $75,000 toward the construction of a

    GCC Automotive Program facility near the county airport.

    Stafford EDA Chairman Don Newlin and member Jack Rowley

    accepted the honor at the Chancellor’s Award for Leadership

    in Philanthropy luncheon, hosted by the Virginia Foundation

    for Community College Education to honor the leading

    philanthropists from each of the state’s 23 community colleges as

    well as the statewide foundation. This marks the seventh year the

    awards have been given.

    This year’s class of distinguished philanthropy leaders has

    contributed a combined total of more than $48 million dollars to

    Virginia’s Community Colleges.

    “These philanthropic leaders are tremendous partners,” said

    Glenn DuBois, Chancellor of Virginia’s Community Colleges.

    “These individuals, organizations and employers are difference-

    makers who play an essential role in helping our colleges fulfill

    their mission of addressing Virginia’s unmet needs in higher

    education and workforce development.”

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 23

    Community Foundation of the Rappahannock River

    Region, Youth in Philanthropy Awards Scholarships

    Four $500 scholarships were made available through funds

    awarded to Germanna Community College’s Middle College by

    the Community Foundation of the Rappahannock River Region,

    Youth in Philanthropy organization. These funds were awarded

    to assist Middle College graduates in their pursuit of higher

    education at Germanna Community College.

    The Middle College Program is designed to meet the needs of

    those between 18-24 years old who have not graduated from high

    school. The goal of the program is to have the students complete

    the Middle College Program, enroll in a certificate or degree

    program at Germanna, and enter the workforce.

    Michelle Ly - Legacy Scholar

    Unlike most 18-year-olds, Michelle Ly knew what she wanted to

    do when she graduated from high school.

    The 2012 Culpeper High School graduate has a gift for math.

    “It’s always come easily to me,” she said.

    Ly knew she wanted to become an accountant and decided she

    wanted a bachelor’s degree from George Mason University. And

    she knew the smartest way to get where she wanted to go was

    to spend her first two years at Germanna Community College.

    Ly was selected as a Virginia Community College System

    Commonwealth Legacy Scholar based on her work at CCHS.

    The Commonwealth Legacy Scholarship Program awards

    scholarships to first-time students attending one of Virginia’s 23

    community colleges, providing $3,000 for a full-year of tuition,

    books, and fees.

    Ly plans to earn her associate’s degree in business administration,

    then study accounting at George Mason. Ly eased into

    community college life by taking online courses, then classes

    on campus. She said online courses require a little more self-

    discipline, “but if you apply yourself, the quality is good.”

    Rappahannock Electric Coop’s Operation Round Up

    Rappahannock Electric Cooperative’s Operation Round Up has

    raised $5,000 to support Germanna’s Middle College. Middle

    College Director Carolyn Bynum said the GED test will be

    changing in 2014, and the funds will be used to purchase new

    curriculum.

    According to REC’s website: “Operation Round Up lets REC

    members volunteer to have their electric bills rounded up to the

    next highest whole dollar, with the extra change dedicated to

    charitable causes and “The purpose of Operation Round Up is

    to support individuals, school programs, philanthropic groups,

    non-profit organizations and other deserving causes within REC’s

    service area. A board of directors reviews applications for support

    and decides how donations are made.”

  • 24 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    GCCEF 2013 Distinguished Person of the Year

    The Germanna Community College Educational Foundation honored

    Charles G. and Mary Wynn McDaniel on February 15, 2013 for decades of

    making a difference.

    “We want to thank the McDaniels for all you’ve been and done, for your

    model of leadership and service,” said Germanna President Dr. David

    A. Sam. “It will be hard for anyone to follow in your footsteps.”

    “Together, you have served this community … in economic development

    and job creation, philanthropy and community service,” said the

    foundation’s Distinguished Person of the Year Committee Chair Darla K.

    Burton.

    “Mary Wynn and I are both very strong on family and education,” Charles

    McDaniel said in accepting the GCCEF 2013 Distinguished Person of the

    Year Award at the Fredericksburg Country Club. He said that despite the

    fact that the family was not always well off, four generations of McDaniels

    had gone from public school at James Monroe High School to highly

    regarded colleges like the University of Richmond and the University of

    Virginia. “The world of education has changed” in a way that makes higher

    education seem out of reach to too many, he said. “The reason we’re here is

    to support Germanna.”

    “Germanna is the ideal answer to many of our problems,” he said. “It

    allows people with very little resources to go and get an education.

    Germanna trains a lot of the workforce, whether it be the nurses at Mary

    Washington [Hospital], truck drivers–they train all kinds of people,” he

    said.

    The award has been given since 2009 for exemplary service to

    the community over an extended period of time. Past winners have been

    Jane Ingalls, Sen. John Chichester, Ed Allison and Fred Rankin.

    19th Annual Scholarship Monte Carlo

    The Germanna Community College Educational Foundation’s 19th Annual

    Scholarship Monte Carlo Night grossed a record $144,000 for the Germanna

    Guarantee Program. The program provides financial assistance to students unable

    to continue their education because of financial obstacles.

    “Joe Daniel’s leadership was instrumental in the record gross for the event,” said

    Mike Catell, former director of the Foundation. “This year our net will exceed our

    gross goal of $120,000. That has never happened in the history of the event.”

    Catell said a crowd of about 250 attended the event.

    In 2012, more than 100 students benefited from the Germanna Guarantee

    Program.

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 25

    ScholarshipsAgetro Fund

    Alfred & Mary Jane King Scholarship for

    Nursing

    Ann J. Sam, RN Scholarship for Nursing

    Anna Ruth Inskeep Scholarship

    Ardiena Ann Tromley Scholarship for

    Teaching

    Atlantic Builders Scholarship

    Bertha M. Massey Scholarship

    Byrd L. “Jack” Daniel Scholarship

    Caroline County Agricultural Fair

    Scholarship

    Charles H. Huffman Scholarship

    Commonwealth Legacy Scholarship

    Corbin Homebuilders Family Scholarship

    Culpeper Regional Hospital Scholarship

    Culpeper Wood Preservers Scholarship

    D. French Slaughter, Jr. Scholarship

    Dale Featherston Scholarship

    Dulcie H. Potter Memorial Scholarship

    Duval Scholarship

    Elizabeth Golsen Schneider Scholarship

    Elna H. Daniel Scholarship

    Frank S. & Nancy W. Turnage Scholarship

    Fredericksburg Ambulatory Surgery

    Center Scholarship

    Fredericksburg Rotary Club Scholarship

    Fredericksburg Savings Bank Scholarship

    Freta B. Napier Scholarship

    Gencorp Engineering Scholarship

    George P. Beard, Jr. Scholarship

    Georgia Willis Scholarship

    Germanna Guarantee Program

    Scholarship

    Gertrude Hudson Yates Scholarship

    Giles H. Miller, Jr. Scholarship

    Glenn DuBois Student Success Fund

    Hazel Harris Heath Scholarship

    Henrietta Margaret D. Pattishall RN

    Memorial Scholarship

    Henry & Iva Smith Scholarship

    India Studies Fund

    J. Carlton “Zeus” Clore Scholarship

    Jack Condon Memorial Scholarship

    Dr. Jane Ingalls Nurse Educator

    Fellowship

    Janet Swan Scholarship

    Jean B. Oravits National Security

    Scholarship

    Jefferson Home Builders Scholarship

    John A. Nere Scholarship

    John J. “Butch” Davies, III Scholarship

    John William Price, Jr. Scholarship

    June B. Stallings Nursing Scholarship

    Kaye and Marie Andrus Scholarship

    Kristen and Kati Lisk Memorial

    Scholarship

    Lake of the Woods Lioness Club

    Scholarships

    LaZalia Richardson Scholarship

    Linda Nelson Memorial Scholarship

    Loren Franklin & Linda Fagan Sealy

    Scholarship

    Margaret & Tommy Pitts & Richard

    O’Neill Scholarship

    Mary Ball Woman’s Club Scholarship

    Mary Frances and James G. Willis

    Scholarship (Kiwanis Club of

    Fredericksburg)

    Mary Washington Hospital Nursing

    Alumni Association Scholarship

    Mildred C. King Scholarship for Nursing

    Molly K. Nogrady Scholarship

    Nursing & Health Technologies Fund

    OMWCF Dental Hygiene Scholarship

    Otis & Mescal Burke Scholarship

    Papa John’s Books-for-Students

    Scholarship

    Pearline T. Soltes Memorial Scholarship

    Phylis Martin Faculty Chair Scholarship

    PNC Bank Scholarship for Nursing

    Ray and Joyce Zachmann Scholarship

    Raynold “Randy” Collier Glazebrook, III

    Scholarship

    Rebecca Boniface Scholarship

    Richard Gossweiler Student Emergency

    Fund

    Ron Parker Hope Scholarship

    Second Bank & Trust Floyd White

    Memorial Scholarship

    Shannon Broom Scholarship

    Somerset Steam & Gas Engine

    Association

    Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center

    Nursing Fund

    Stella Rhodes Almond Scholarship

    Stepping Stone Scholarship

    Steve and Nancy Jones Scholarship

    Technologist to Nursing Award

    The Reynolds Family of Orange

    Scholarship

    The Sunshine Lady Foundation

    Scholarship

    The Woman’s Club of Fredericksburg

    Viola M. Smith Scholarship

    Volkswagen & GCC Partners in

    Education

    William & Rosemary Walker Scholarship

    for Nursing

    Willis Clyde Locker Scholarship

    Middle College Scholarship

    William Carpenter Scholarship

    Workforce Development & Community

    Service Fund

  • 26 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Local ScholarshipsAfrican Methodist Episc. Church

    Allen, Allen, Allen & Allen

    Alpha Delta Kappa

    American Farm Publications, Inc.

    American Legion

    AT Johnson Alum Assoc.

    Belmont Ruritan Club

    Bowen Engineering Corp

    Career Partners, Inc.

    Caroline’s Promise

    Carter-Bennett

    Chancellor High School

    Charlottesville Postal Fed.

    Chic-fil-A

    CNV Scholarship

    Colonial Beach Education Found

    Colonial Beach High School

    Columbia Lodge 285

    Comm. Foundation Rappahannock River

    Region

    Courtland High School

    Culpeper Bus. and Prof. Women

    Culpeper County High School

    Culpeper Lions Club

    Culpeper Reg. Health System

    Culpeper Regional Hospital

    Culpeper Unit. Meth. Church

    Culpeper Women’s Club

    East Orange Ruritan Club

    Eastern View High School

    Emmanuel AME Church

    EOD Mem. Scholarship

    Erma Chadwick School

    Fraternal Order of Eagles

    Fredericksburg Agriculture Fair

    Gables Limited Partnership

    Growing Hope, Inc.

    GW Carver High School

    Hopewell United Methodist Church

    Hunter Garner School

    King George Fall Festival

    King George High School

    King George Lodge 314

    Kitchentech

    Lake of the Woods Lioness Club

    Lake of the Woods Lions

    Lake of the Woods Players

    Lake Youth Foundation

    Liberty High School

    Little Ark Baptist Church

    Local Funds Scholarship

    Loyal Order of Moose

    Margaret Johnson

    Marine Corps Scholarship Found

    Mary Washington Healthcare

    Massaponax Band Parents’ Assn.

    Metropolitan Community Church

    Military Firefighter Heritage

    Mom’s Scholarship

    National Youth Cutting Horse Assoc.

    Orange County Education Foundation

    Orange County High School

    Orange Grove Baptist Church

    Potomac Chpt MOAA

    Prince William County

    Project Big Heart

    Rappahannock Rotary Club

    Rappahannock Rotary Ed. Foundation

    Rehoboth United Methodist Church

    Rising Zion Baptist Church

    Rotary Club of Caroline

    Round Oak Baptist Church

    Ruritan National Foundation

    RWS Enterprises, Inc

    Salem Ed. Foundation

    Scholarship America

    Sgt. Joshua Frazier Memorial

    Sharon Masonic School Fund

    Sheet Metal Workers Local Union

    Sisters of Ivy Foundation

    SMART Scholarship

    Spotsylvania High School

    St. John Baptist Church

    St. Peters Lutheran Church

    Stafford High School

    Stafford Rotary Club

    Stafford Voc. Education Foundation

    Sunshine Lady Foundation

    The San Diego Foundation

    Theresa and William Brosche

    Timothy Murphy School

    Tulsa Community Foundation

    Two Ten Footware Foundation

    UDC Chapter of Culpeper

    Union Belle Baptist Church

    US Bowling Congress

    USMCCCA Foundation

    VA Space Grant Scholarship

    Virginia DECA Foundation

    Virginia Tech. Foundation

    Volkswagon & GCC School

    Wayland Blue Ridge Baptist Assoc.

    Welcome Lodge #125

    William A. Cooke

  • Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community 27

    Community

    Connie Kincheloe Receives Honorary Degree

    President Dr. David A. Sam presented Culpeper community

    leader Connie Kincheloe with an honorary degree during

    the 2013 Spring Commencement held on May 8 at the

    Fredericksburg Expo. & Conference Center.

    “It is my privilege to recognize a member of the community for

    her significant and long-standing contributions to Germanna

    and the Commonwealth of Virginia,” Dr. Sam said. “Connie

    Kincheloe has been a friend to the College for many years. She

    has furthered the College’s mission by serving on the Germanna

    Educational Foundation for nearly 20 years.”

    “I want you to know how much this means to me,” Kincheloe

    said. “There is no organization I admire and respect more than

    the VCCS.”

    “Ms. Kincheloe’s dedication to education extends beyond

    Germanna to serving the Virginia Community College System,”

    Dr. Sam said. She was appointed by Gov. Mark Warner to the

    State Board for Community Colleges, where she served for five

    years, including one year as chair. She has served five years as a

    State Board member on the Virginia Foundation for Community

    College Education. She was instrumental in establishing the

    DuBois Student Success fund in 2010. It provides unrestricted

    emergency funding for students enrolled in Middle College.

    “She has served the entire Commonwealth and VCCS and is

    universally respected and admired,” Dr. Sam said. “She always has

    the greater good in mind, seeking to open doorways for countless

    students. Even when some students did not believe in themselves,

    Ms. Kincheloe has always believed in them and has taken action

    to help them find and achieve their dreams.”

    Chmura and Senator Reeves Speak at Annual

    Workforce Advisory Board Meeting

    Christine Chmura, President and Chief Economist for Chmura

    Economics & Analytics in Richmond, spoke at the Annual

    Germanna Community College Workforce Advisory Board

    Meeting at the Daniel Technology Center in Culpeper.

    Chmura told the crowd the national economy was healing, but

    had slowed, partly because of federal reductions in spending and

    spoke about the risk sequestration posed to Virginia.

    State Senator Bryce Reeves was the keynote speaker and over 100

    business leaders from Germanna’s service region provided the

    college with feedback on training needs at the meeting.

    Chmura has been named one of The 50 Most Influential

    Virginians by Virginia Business Magazine.

    The meeting featured IT, Health Care, Industry & Construction

    and Business & Professional breakout sessions.

    Science Saturday

    Fredericksburg Parent and Family magazine won an $8,000 grant

    from the Rappahannock Community Foundation’s Women and

    Girls Fund and partnered with Germanna Community College in

    a four-week Science Saturdays “mini med-school”, The magazine

    described it as allowing girls as young as fourth-graders to “tackle

    hands-on projects, including dissections.” The purpose of Science

    Saturdays is to foster interest among girls in careers in STEM

    fields.

  • 28 Germanna Community College • 2012-2013 Annual Report to the Community

    Associate of Arts & Sciences (AA&S) • Business Administration

    • Education

    • Education (K-8)

    • General Studies

    • General Studies - Psychology Specialization

    • Liberal Arts

    • Science

    Associate of Science (AS) • Engineering – Mechanical

    • Engineering – Electrical

    Associate of Applied Science (AAS) • Business Management

    • Dental Hygiene

    • Early Childhood Development

    • Emergency Medical Services (EMT)

    • Information System Technology

    - Information Management or Network

    Security

    • Information System Technology

    - Networking

    • Nursing

    • Police Science

    • Technical Studies Industri