Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Size Of Students' Drive Matches A Bigger Campus

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Size Of Students' Drive Matches A Bigger Campus

    SIZE OF STUDENTS' DRIVE MATCHES A BIGGER CAMPUS
    By Walter Yost - Bee Staff Writer

    Sacramento Bee, CA
    May 21 2007

    In all his years as an educator, Stuart Van Horn said the dedication
    of students at the Rancho Cordova Center is what makes the hairs
    stand up on the back of his spine.

    Van Horn, dean at the Folsom Lake College satellite campus, recalled
    the student body's reaction last fall when students were relocated
    to National University for six weeks while construction was completed.

    "I could've put them in a minivan stalled in the middle of Highway
    50 and said we're having classes here," Van Horn said. "Few others
    can match their commitment."

    "We are the true people's college," Van Horn says of the nearly
    600-student Rancho Cordova Center.

    Located in a Rockingham Drive strip mall, the school operates out of
    a leased storefront next door to the Mt. Zion Church Center and the
    Toner Cartridge Testing Lab.

    Even though recent expansion nearly doubled the college's size to
    10,000 square feet -- adding new classrooms, offices, a conference room
    and a student lounge -- there are homes in Granite Bay that are larger.

    The college center's cultural diversity is a reflection of the city
    surrounding it. English is the primary language for only about 40
    percent of the students, and English as a second language courses
    constitute nearly a third of this fall's class offerings.

    At the school's open house earlier this year, Van Horn said the
    campus multicultural club held a food fair -- offering dishes from
    21 different ethnic groups.

    Students' family-income levels are significantly lower than at
    both Folsom Lake College's main campus and its El Dorado Center
    in Placerville.

    Asmik Dallakyam, a native of Armenia and the mother of six, has taken
    several art classes at the Rancho Cordova Center and wants to open
    an interior design business.

    Sitting in a crowded watercolor painting class last week, Dallakyam
    said one of her challenges attending college is transportation.

    The Rancho Cordova resident doesn't drive and said it's hard for her
    to get to the Folsom Lake College campus.

    Her husband drives her to the Rancho Cordova Center, where she's also
    taken business and computer classes.

    It's not just the center's students who have to make adjustments at
    the storefront campus.

    Talver Germany teaches beginning watercolor painting in a classroom
    not designed for art classes.

    Approximately 25 students and their drawing pads fill the room --
    which is otherwise used for academic subjects like English and math.

    A small sink in the back is the only place to clean up.

    "We make it work," said Germany, a full-time counselor at Folsom
    Lake College.

    Part of the campus' recent expansion includes a new student services
    office, where Victor Duron, Brandon Cruz and Gayane Pustovit work.

    Many of the students they assist, Duron said, are juggling school,
    family and work.

    "We help them with selecting courses, the application process and
    applying for financial aid," Cruz said.

    Cruz said the center provides "equal access to higher education."

    Pustovit, who speaks Armenian, Russian and Ukrainian, keeps busy as
    a translator at the college.

    Van Horn, who also serves as Folsom Lake College's dean of career and
    technical education, said college officials want to open a permanent
    campus in Rancho Cordova by fall 2012. They've been shopping for a
    site along Folsom Boulevard with light-rail access.

    Enrollment has continued to grow since the campus opened in spring
    of 2001 and the school currently offers courses in 24 disciplines.
Working...
X