Category: Faculty (Page 2 of 2)

APA Honors Dean Alfonso with Bardon Distinguished Service Award

Dean Vincent Alfonso

SPOKANE, Wash. – The American Psychological Association’s Division of School Psychology honored Gonzaga University School of Education Dean Vincent C. Alfonso earlier this week with the 2017 Jack Bardon Distinguished Service Award.

The annual award is presented at the APA Convention to seasoned school psychologists who throughout their careers have demonstrated exceptional programs of service that merit special recognition. This award is given for accomplishments relating to:

  • Major leadership in the development, delivery or administration of innovative psychological services, and policy creation and implementation in school psychology;
  • Sustained professional contributions, including holding offices and committee memberships in state and national organizations.

The award recognizes education leaders who are at least 50 years old or have earned their doctoral degree at least 20 years prior. The division presents the annual award in honor of Bardon, who helped bring school psychology to maturity.

Recipients are professional and academic school psychologists who have continued Bardon’s work through voluntary professional service exceeding the requirements of their position and demonstrated an exceptional program of service throughout their careers.

In 2014, the national Trainers of School Psychologists Organization honored Alfonso with its Outstanding Contributions to Training award. In letters of recommendation for the award, peers described Dean Alfonso as an outstanding leader, incredible mentor, and a knowledgeable, thoughtful and visionary educator. One former student singled out Dean Alfonso for his extraordinary commitment to students.

In 2015, Alfonso began a three-year term on the APA’s Board of Educational Affairs. The APA is the nation’s largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology, and is the world’s largest association of psychologists with some 130,000 member researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students.

Alfonso, who became dean of the School of Education in 2013, earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, and his master’s and doctorate in clinical/school psychology from Hofstra University. His scholarly work focuses on assessment and treatment of preschool children, psycho-educational assessment, life satisfaction and well-being, professional training, stressful life events, social support, and health.

He is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of dozens of articles in peer-reviewed journals, more than 20 book chapters, and six scholarly books. A licensed psychologist and school psychologist, Dean Alfonso is a frequent invited lecturer and consultant to schools, as well as professional and training organizations.

The Department of Sport and Physical Education partnered with the Career and Professional Development office to host a Sport Management Panel Discussion. The goal was to have students hear firsthand from those working in a variety of sport career fields. Dr. Heidi Nordstrom organized the event on behalf of the department.

Panelists included: Jay Stewart, VP of Sponsorships for the Spokane Chiefs; Bailee Neyland, Director of Brand Strategy & Business Development for Spokane Hoopfest; Josh Roys, VP of Development for the Spokane Indians; Eric Sawyer, President/CEO of the Spokane Sports Commission; Ashley Blake, Director of Sports for the Spokane Sports Commission; and Shane Santman, VP of Sales for the Tacoma Rainiers.

Many questions were asked of the panelists. Topics included: education paths to reach current positions; important lessons learned in their particular field; advice on transitioning from college to sport careers; and what panelists look for when hiring potential employees and interns.

Students and attendees enjoyed the chance to hear from sport professionals. Below are a few key points that students said they found important after the panel discussion:

  • “Networking and creating great relationships with those in your field is vitally important.”
  • “Research the organization to which you are applying. Understanding the mission and culture are the key to success in an application and interview.”
  • “Once you land your first job, don’t relax. You have to work very hard to show they made the right hire.”
  • “Take internships seriously, your supervisor could one day be the connection you need for a job.”
  • “If you make a mistake, own up to it, and figure out how to make it right. We are all going to mistakes at some point.”
  • “Be authentic and be able to articulate yourself well during an interview.”

Dr. Nordstrom explained that, “It is important for our students to hear from sport professionals, it reiterates what we are teaching them in the classroom. The panel discussion was a great way for our department and our students to network with the many great sport organizations in Spokane, as well as the west side of the state.”

Sam Brown receives the Wardian Award from department chair, Kristen Kavon.

It is my pleasure to present Sam Brown for the Jeanne Foster Wardian Student Leadership Award. This award represents evidence of excellent scholastic achievements, disciplinary competence, commitment to education through service, and integrity of character.

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Never done learning. Never done teaching.

Kelp may be the new kale, and orange may be the new black, but if you want the snowclone that Kathy Nitta obviously believes in, it’s this: when it comes to age, apparently 50 is the new 20.

That’s because even though Kathy is now in the third age bracket, she’s attending classes at WSU, a feat usually undertaken by Millennials who were in diapers at the same time as Kathy’s own children.

When we’re trying be a little more euphemistic, we might call this type of student “non-traditional.”

So why the heck would someone already in their age of fulfillment do this? Good question.

And while you’re trying to figure that out, here’s the real kicker: she already has a full-time job as a senior lecturer at Gonzaga University.

Not only that, she’s pretty darned decent at it, winning the Gonzaga School of Education 2016 Faculty Excellence Award.

Her award certificate from Gonzaga states, about Kathy: “A member of our faculty who models the mission of the University and the School of Education in her personal and professional life, contributes to the improvement of processes and practices in order to enhance our work together, and is respectful and supportive of the common good.”

In other words, Kathy is a rockstar…

To read more please click here —> Washington State University – Kathy Nitta

AJCU Education Deans Conference

We are delighted to announce that we will be hosting the Education Deans Conference for the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities (AJCU).

The AJCU is a national organization that represents Jesuit higher education among its various constituencies, provides a forum for the exchange of information and experiences in Jesuit higher education, and encourages and facilitates collaborative initiatives among its member institutions. The AJCU Education Deans Conference, made up of deans and professors for schools of education at Jesuit colleges and universities across the U.S., meets annually. This is the first year this meeting will be hosted by Gonzaga University.

To read more about the conference, please visit:  http://www.ajcunet.edu/education-deans

Turn around

Chuck Salina, associate professor in Education, and collaborators worked with Sunnyside High School to turn around graduation rates from under 50 percent to nearly 90 percent in just a few years.

From powerless
to powerful

Chuck Salina still gets a little choked up when he thinks about the power of positive relationships and their potential to raise our society to new heights.

In a partnership between Gonzaga, the federal government and the state of Washington, Salina was loaned to the Sunnyside School District as a researcher and then as principal of Sunnyside High School from 2010-12. When he began, the graduation rate was 49 percent in this low-income community. Now, little more than three years later, the Sunnyside graduation rate has reached nearly 90 percent, which leads the Yakima Valley, and continues to grow.

Salina says what he brought to the district was a belief system founded upon his Jesuit, Catholic, humanistic foundation. Three things helped turn this program around: 1. the power of positive relationships and the trust they build, 2. the use of data to support positive change rather than as punishment, and 3. the creation of systems that support teachers in their work.

“Too often the blame for lack of success falls upon the teachers,” Salina says. “That’s backwards. We need to look at responsibilities differently, and focus on improving systems that better support teachers in their work. Thus, their work becomes more intentional.”

When Salina left Sunnyside High after two years, he noticed a new swagger and a sense of hope. “The students, teachers and administrators had a ‘Together We Will!’ attitude. The support they received made them feel powerful to make a difference,” Salina says.

“Students say, ‘The teachers care about us now.’ Of course, the teachers always cared about the students, but it’s more apparent now due to intentional  supports given at all levels of the team approach,” says Suzann Girtz, GU associate professor. Her research allowed Gonzaga to share lessons learned with the state Superintendent of Public Instruction’s office to scale this work on the state and national levels. Salina, Girtz and then-Assistant Professor Joanie Eppinga wrote one book on the turn around, “Powerless to Powerful,” and a second book is in the works.

Meanwhile, the same Sunnyside leadership team is in place. Salina’s assistant principal Ryan Maxwell is now the principal, who, by the way, was just named Washington state’s Principal of the Year. “The staff wouldn’t let the district hire from outside and mess up what we had begun,” Salina says.

Salina also passed on kudos to AVP Patricia Killen, former Education Dean Jon Sunderland and Dean Vincent Alfonso for their support of the program.

Gonzaga University Sport and Physical Education students present sport marketing plan for Vancouver, WA area high school.

On Tuesday May 10th a group of Gonzaga University sport management students will travel to Vancouver, WA to present a sport marketing plan to the Mountain View High School (MVHS) athletic department. Dr. Jimmy Smith, Assistant Professor of Sport Management in the School of Education, selected six students from his sport marketing course to present their strategic plan to several MVHS athletic administrators, the principal, students, sponsors and local media. “This is a tremendous opportunity for these students to apply the knowledge gained from their sport marketing course to a real-world scenario” said Dr. Smith. MVHS athletic officials contacted Dr. Smith this past December for assistance in marketing and re-branding their athletic department. Presenting their sport marketing plan are seniors Terry Milner, Jen Porras and Ben Reece as well as juniors Amanda Hardt, Emilie Laakso and Patrick O’Rourke. For more information about this project or information about the Sport and Physical Education program at Gonzaga University, please contact Dr. Jimmy Smith at 509-313-3483 or smithj1@gonzaga.edu.

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