![]() |
Mariah Perkins works in the field for a GIS lab project. |
![]() |
First-year student Steve McFall works part time in the GIS lab. |
![]() |
Mariah Perkins works in the field for a GIS lab project. |
![]() |
First-year student Steve McFall works part time in the GIS lab. |
This year's WC SIFE team has contributed over 550 hours to 18 projects, impacting over 900 people. The team continued successful projects such as the Career Expo and working closely with the Center for Career Development to host the Washington College Career Fair (which just had its fifth anniversary), as well as starting new projects helping people in Chestertown, Kent County, and Ghana. Students presented a budgeting workshop to participants of the Kent Family Center, and collected athletic shoes to help the Perpetual Prosperity Pumps Foundation support Ghanaian villagers pursue environmentally sustainable farming techniques. In addition, in a project designed and proposed by the team, sixteen families from the Community Food Pantry will receive Earth Box® container systems and tomato plants so that they can supplement non-perishable food received from the Food Pantry with fresh vegetables they will grow themselves this summer. The WC SIFE team has partnered with a host of organizations to make these projects happen, including the Center for the Environment and Society, Master Gardeners, HomePorts, the Kent County Chamber of Commerce and S.C.O.R.E.
Students of all majors who want to make a measurable difference in the lives of people locally and globally are welcome to join anytime. Meetings are held Monday evenings at 7 p.m. in Daly 108. For more information, contact Megan Jasion, WC SIFE president, at mjasion2@washcoll.edu.
Chestertown, MD, February 23, 2007 — The Center for Career Development is hosting a variety of workshops and information sessions for Career Week, February 26 - March 2, 2007.
Walk Right In!
Resume Review, Career Fair Tips, Job Search Ideas, etc.
No Appointment Needed. Free Portfolios.
Career Center 8:30 - 4:30
What Happens After May 20th?
Recent Grad Alumni Panel will share their post-WC, first job, grad school and life experiences.
Kim Dannenfelser '06 - Wells Fargo Finanicial
Julie Smith '06 - Echo Hill Outdoor School
Eric Christopher '06 - Queen Anne's County Schools
Career Center 4:30 PM
Money: Making It & Keeping It !
Nuts & bolts discussion regarding basic budgeting, investing, insurance, etc.
Free personal follow-up available.
Alice Glen, '63 - Financial Advisor
Career Center - 1:30 PM
Alumni/Senior Networking Dinner
Seniors - Join us for dinner after which alums 3-10 years out will talk about their career paths after WC.
Tim Reath, '96 - Financial Advisor, Morgan Stanley
Gia Grier, '02 - Public Outreach Specialist, Tetra Tech., Inc.
Rob Savidge, '01 - Environmental Scientist, Straughan Environmental
Jennie Corwell, '03 - Financial Analyst for US Navy
Travis Elliott, '04 -Research Associate, Center for Strategic & International Studies
Amy Levak, '04 - Assistant Director Annual Fund, Goucher College
Hynson Lounge - 5:30 PM
Walk Right In! - Day 2
More opportunities to ask questions about job search, interviews, cover letters, resumes, grad school, etc.
No appointment needed. Free portfolios.
Career Center 8:30 - 4:30
Chestertown, MD, March 1, 2006 — The Center for Career Development and Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) invite students to attend the 2006 Washington College Career Fair, Wednesday, March 22, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Casey Academic Center Gallery.
Interested students should begin their preparation now, and the Center for Career Development has organized a series of workshops to help. All will be held in the Career Library.
Stop by the Career Center to pick up your copy of the Career Fair Booklet for resume and career fair tips, and info on all vendors.
Get your resumes in shape and thoroughly research any of the companies in which you are interested. Wear professional attire and remember that the Center of Career Development is here to help you!
Contact: Ann Atwater Bourne, Center for Career Development, abourne2@washcoll.edu
Chestertown, MD, February 3, 2006 — Washington College's Sophie Kerr Committee and theOffice of Career Development presents "Careers in Writing Every Day," a lecture by Susan Luster '72, Monday, February 20, at 10:30 a.m., in the Rose O'Neill Literary House. The event is free and open to the public, and Washington College students are encouraged to attend.
While Luster always longed to be a poet or a novelist, she will address the realities of her writing career spent promoting renewable energy and environmentally sound buildings and lifestyles. From writing press releases and fundraising letters to editing technical reports and manuals, she will discuss the use of basic writing skills to support the field of sustainable energy.
"With a liberal arts degree, I found a topic with which I was passionate and applied my skills to advance that field," Luster says. "I created a career using my skills in writing and editing, with a purpose beyond just making a living: to spread the word about solar energy."
Currently a studio potter near Raleigh, North Carolina, Luster worked the field of environmentally-friendly, sustainable energy advocacy for more than twenty years. Former chair and past executive director of the North Carolina Sustainable Energy Association, she also served as a senior project manager and communications specialist for the North Carolina Alternative Energy Corporation. She recently concluded 10 years of service on the board of the American Solar Energy Society and four years of service on the North Carolina Conservation Network Board of Directors. She opened her own business, Susisolar Clayworks, in 2001, creating hand-thrown pottery with botanical themes.
The presentation is co-sponsored by the Sophie Kerr Committee, which works to carry on the legacy of the late Sophie Kerr, a writer from Denton, Md., whose generosity has done so much to enrich Washington College's literary culture. When she died in 1965, Kerr left the bulk of her estate to the College, specifying that one half of the income from her bequest be awarded every year to the senior showing the most "ability and promise for future fulfillment in the field of literary endeavor" and the other half be used to bring visiting writers to campus, to fund scholarships, and to help defray the costs of student publications.