MICUA MATTERS NEWSLETTER
Good Neighbors: WAU and Montgomery County By Weymouth Spence, President of Washington Adventist

MICUA Matters

Summer 2010

 

Weymouth Spence, President of WAUFor more than a century, Washington Adventist University (WAU) has been a proud member of the Montgomery County community. With a 19-acre campus in the heart of Takoma Park, WAU is the only four-year residential college in the County.

 

Founded in 1904, WAU is a Christian institution welcoming students of all faiths and backgrounds and focused on preparing individuals for lives of service, leadership, and civic engagement. With classes offered in Shady Grove and Takoma Park, WAU provides career-building undergraduate and graduate programs. WAU offers a number of baccalaureate degrees including acclaimed programs in nursing, education, psychology, music, and pre-law. The School of Graduate and Professional Studies offers certificates, undergraduate degree completion, and graduate programs in an evening format for adult professionals.

 

The WAU student body mirrors the diversity of Montgomery County and is one of the most diverse in the nation (ranked in the top 10 by U.S. News & World Report). More than a quarter of our student body resides in Montgomery County. The diversity of the County also provides us with a rich resource of scholar practitioners that enhance the learning environments and experiences of our students.

 

The County’s supportive business environment provides our students with outstanding internship opportunities—a key facet in a WAU education. Through these professional interactions, our students gain insight and skills that prepare them to be competent leaders in their chosen professions.

 

A recent $1.3 million grant from the Maryland Hospital Association, made possible in part by Adventist Health Care, has allowed us to increase capacity in our nursing program to help stem the staffing shortages. Our students do clinical work in several County facilities, including Shady Grove Adventist Hospital and Washington Adventist Hospital. WAU nursing program graduates have achieved a 100% pass-rate on the NCLEX-RN licensing examinations.

 

Our education program has developed key partnerships with Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS). WAU education majors gain tremendous experience working with mentor teachers through a student practicum program at several MCPS locations. In partnership with MCPS, WAU also teaches County para-educators seeking to better serve the needs of MCPS students. In this program, Montgomery County teachers combine either early childhood or elementary education and special education to receive dual State certification and a bachelor’s degree. With the growing number of children in our region who are identified with diverse learning styles, this focus on special education is particularly important to our community.

 

In the center of our campus stands a brick and iron gateway that symbolizes our long held motto: “Gateway to Service.” We take that motto to heart. Each year on WAU Service Day, more than 200 students volunteer with local organizations to serve in a variety of ways. This year students packed food at food banks, cleaned up neighborhoods, assisted the Takoma Park Police Department, helped at an animal rescue farm, and pitched in at a pediatric AIDS relief organization.

 

And we are growing. In April we broke ground on a music building—a new home for our proclaimed music performing groups: the New England Youth Ensemble and Columbia Collegiate Chorale, who perform regularly in the region, the country, and around the world.

 

Our vision at WAU is to produce graduates who bring moral leadership and competence to their communities. We remain one of Montgomery County’s vital organizations and will continue to seek ways to serve our neighbors and this County.

 
Johns Hopkins Program Leads to More Baltimore City Homebuyers

MICUA Matters

Summer 2010

 

Michelle CarlstromSince Johns Hopkins launched a revamped and incentive-laden program aimed at distributing $5 million to help employees buy homes in select Baltimore City communities, 108 employees have been awarded $635,500 in grants, and more are expected to apply as the weather warms and the home-buying season kicks into high gear.

 

The program was launched in 1997 to help Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Health System employees become homeowners in Baltimore City while cutting down on commuting time, saving gasoline, and strengthening urban communities. The Live Near Your Work Program currently offers grants of up to $17,000 to help with down payments and closing costs for properties near various Johns Hopkins campuses.

 

Program director Michelle Carlstrom noted that, of the grants awarded this fiscal year, 28 were for home sales near the Homewood campus, including those in the Barclay and West Greenmount communities, situated southeast of Charles Village. “This is exactly how we wanted the program to work—to go out from historically strong neighborhoods and keep moving out to make a difference in emerging neighborhoods where home sales (previously) were flat,” she said. Carlstrom said that indicators are also promising in the area just north of the medical campus, the site of East Baltimore Development Inc.’s $1.8 billion revitalization project.

 
“Listening Project” Supports Loyola’s York Road Corridor Efforts

MICUA Matters

Summer 2010

 

The Loyola University Maryland community came together this past winter and spring for a series of “listening” events designed to help shape Loyola’s growing engagement with the York Road corridor adjacent to the University’s Evergreen campus. The Loyola is Listening project matched neighborhood residents and business owners with Loyola faculty, staff, administrators, and graduate students trained to ask an extensive series of questions about what the residents enjoy about their neighborhood, what they would like to change, what services and amenities they would like to add, and what role Loyola should serve in the community.

 

“Loyola’s participation in the future of the York Road corridor is a key component of our strategic plan,” said Vice President for Administration Terrence Sawyer, whose division developed Loyola is Listening with guidance from the American Friends Service Committee. The information gathered from the Loyola is Listening sessions will be used to guide Loyola’s York Road activities. The University is considering a wide range of ways of making positive contributions to the future of the York Road community, from a business resource center to afterschool programs for neighborhood youth. These efforts will be supported in the coming academic year with the addition of a full-time Americorps VISTA worker assigned to the project.  

 


 

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