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  • Holocaust Survivor Eva Olsson to speak at Richland Campus

    Posted February 12, 2014 at 4:16 pm

    Pennsylvania Highlands Community College is honored to bring community members the opportunity to hear the moving and visceral story of Holocaust survivor Eva Olsson. On Tuesday, March 25th, Eva Olsson will give three free presentations to the general public: 9:30am, 12:15pm, and 7:00pm. All presentations will be held in the College’s Richland Campus Auditorium at 101 Community College Way.

    Eva Olsson was born in Szatsmar, Hungary in October of 1924 into a poor family of Hasidic Jews. This was the beginning of her lifelong struggle against other people’s attempts to control her.

    She is a survivor… of a repressive religious upbringing, World War II, the deaths of many of her loved ones, bigotry and racism, and being ostracized because of her determination to live life on her own terms. Eva’s innate curiosity and need to develop along a different spiritual path would not be stifled and she struggled against this restrictive life.

    The outbreak of World War II plunged Eva into the heart of the Holocaust concentration camps, slave labor factories, disease, and the deaths of millions, including most of her family. Eva’s strong faith in God and in herself has enabled her to maintain a positive focus throughout the rest of her life.

    For 50 years she remained silent about her experiences during the Holocaust, partly out of denial and partly out of fear it might happen again. Since 1996, Eva has been speaking about her life in over 3,000 schools, churches, meeting halls, conference rooms, colleges and universities, and to over one-and-a-half million individuals throughout Canada, in the hope that people who hear her story will know that it is possible to survive the worst life has to throw at them.

  • New Dean of Continuing Education appointed

    Posted February 10, 2014 at 2:52 pm

    MR - 20140210 - Larry M CocoPennsylvania Highlands Community College is proud to announce the appointment of Larry M. Coco as the Dean of Continuing Education.

    Mr. Coco will provide leadership across the Southern Alleghenies region for the College’s corporate training, professional development, and workforce education programs. Services include face-to-face and online continuing education, technical training, community education courses, and WEDnetPA. WEDnetPA is considered to be Pennsylvania’s primary delivery system for incumbent workforce training.

    A native of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Mr. Coco brings expertise in technical program management with a focus on environmental safety and health, quality assurance, and training with commercial firms and federal contracting. This includes government training protocols for IT-based and live classroom education programs. Prior to his appointment at Pennsylvania Highlands Community College, Mr. Coco served as the Johnstown Office Manager for Booz Allen Hamilton.

  • PA Community Colleges respond to Governor’s Budget Proposal

    Posted February 6, 2014 at 11:02 am

    Pennsylvania’s community college leaders are concerned about the impact of static levels of state support for the colleges given their important role in the Commonwealth’s education and workforce development systems. Governor Corbett’s proposed 2014-15 Budget recommends level operational funding for the Commonwealth’s community colleges. This funding recommendation is equal to the amount the colleges have received in each of the preceding three fiscal years.

    The colleges collectively asked for increases in operational and capital funding from the state to support and expand programs for Pennsylvanians who are seeking an affordable pathway to a degree or skills to enter the workforce.

    “Pennsylvania Highlands has made great strides in providing access to affordable, quality higher education opportunities in West Central Pennsylvania with campuses and academic centers in Cambria, Blair, Huntingdon, and Somerset counties,” said Dr. Walter Asonevich, President of Pennsylvania Highlands Community College. “We are concerned that shrinking government support for our operations will prohibit our ability to provide cost-effective options for post-secondary students and reach further into unserved and underserved areas of Central Pennsylvania.”

    Asonevich and his colleagues from across the state are concerned that it will be difficult for the colleges to limit tuition increases and make needed investments to ensure program quality and alignment with developing workforce needs, including programs linked to the natural gas and healthcare industries.

    “Community colleges train the workforce that supports Pennsylvania’s economy,” said Elizabeth Bolden, President and CEO of the Pennsylvania Commission for Community Colleges, the nonprofit entity that represents the interests of the state’s 14 community colleges. “Additional investments in the colleges are necessary to enable them to develop and offer cost-effective workforce training programs to meet existing and emerging industry needs.”

    Last year, Pennsylvania’s community colleges partnered with employers and others to provide customized training for nearly 50,000 Pennsylvania workers.

    “The colleges are hopeful that as budget discussions evolve, the General Assembly will ultimately pass a budget that recognizes the vital role of community colleges in sustaining and accelerating the Commonwealth’s economic recovery,” Bolden said.

    Pennsylvania’s 14 community colleges serve students from every county in the state. The Pennsylvania Commission for Community Colleges is a voluntary membership association for Pennsylvania’s community colleges. Its members include the college presidents, members of the colleges’ boards of trustees, and key college administrators. The Commission represents the interests of and advocates for the collective needs of the community colleges to federal and state policymakers.

  • College adds three Full-Time Faculty Members to Family

    Posted February 3, 2014 at 2:34 pm

    Pennsylvania Highlands Community College is proud to welcome three new full-time faculty members to its growing family.

    Robin Hughes joins the team as Instructor of Mathematics. Ms. Hughes is currently the temporary Lecturer, Mathematics at Pennsylvania Highlands Community College and has also taught as an adjunct at Kent State University, Pennsylvania Highlands Community College, and University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown. She has a B.S. in Actuarial and Applied Mathematics from the University of Pittsburgh, a M.B.A. from St. Francis College, and a M.Ed. from Kent State College.

    Dr. Russell Newman joins the team as Assistant Professor of English. Dr. Newman comes to us as a freelance author and editor at Online Indiana and has taught as an adjunct at several universities in the area such as University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, Clarion University, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Mount Aloysius College, and Penn State University – Altoona and Dubois. He has a B.A. and M.A. in English from James Madison University, and a Ph.D. in English from Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

    Dr. Matthew Sisak joins the team as Instructor of Biology. Dr. Sisak is President of Sisak Chiropractic Clinic, P.C. and has taught as an adjunct at Pennsylvania Highlands Community College and Westmoreland County Community College. He has a B.S. in Natural Sciences from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and a Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Palmer College of Chiropractic.

  • PTK announces Fall 2013 Induction Class

    Posted January 27, 2014 at 12:59 pm

    The Beta Epsilon Omega Chapter of the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society at Pennsylvania Highlands Community College is proud to announce their Fall 2013 Induction Class. With this class, Beta Epsilon Omega inducted seventeen new members into the prestigious international honor society.

    Phi Theta Kappa is the international honor society of the two-year college. The mission of Phi Theta Kappa is to recognize and encourage the academic achievement of two-year college students and provide opportunities for individual growth and development through participation in honors, leadership, service and fellowship programming.

    The seventeen new inductees are:

    Altoona: Robert Lynn

    Ebensburg: Kimberly Lloyd, Chelsea Nelson

    Friedens: Erikia Marek

    Huntingdon: Katie Brenneman

    Jerome: Bethany George

    Johnstown: Jennifer Biggs, Laura Eidem, Hunter Furman, Brittany Szczepanik, Hannah Walter

    Ligonier: Hannah Pelger

    Mount Union: Kendra Holderman

    Nanty Glo: Rebecca Yokitis

    New Paris: Steve Domonkos

    Spruce Creek: Lauren Shearer

    Westover: Marissa Whited