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Powerful Learning Experiences This Summer for Algonquin Students

When the world casts its attention on Canada this summer, among the sea of security staff ensuring the Pan Am Games run smoothly, will be as many as fifteen Police Foundations students from Algonquin College’s Waterfront Campus. The students will spend up to ten weeks working along side police officers and security guards, earning a good summer job salary, but more importantly gaining real life work experience at an international event.

Pan Am Games - Security Team

The students will work full-time shifts and make $17 an hour with the opportunity to work overtime hours as well. The Games will run from July 7 to 26th and bring together thousands of athletes, volunteers and spectators from around the world, requiring a tremendous amount of teamwork for the security staff that will be assigned to the Games.

While the Police Foundations students will be gaining invaluable work experience on Canadian soil, a group of third year Bachelor of Science in Nursing students and three of their faculty will travel to impoverished Guatemala where they will spend a week helping under-privileged children.

Nursing Students go to Guatemala for Missionary Work.The student nurses will be working directly with doctors and nurses at small health care clinics, providing check ups and basic medical care in poor communities and at orphanages. Their work will be a powerful learning experience for the students who will gain insight into the status of health care in third world countries, and will gain new perspectives on the important role nurses play around the world.

Engaging in these type of opportunities can have a profound impact on students. They inspire them and reinforce the reasons why they chose their program of study. They also create memories that will stick with them for a lifetime.

Media Release-Nursing Students Missionary Work in Guatemala-March 2015

Did you have a summer job or experience that shaped your future? Share your stories and thoughts.

Posted by: Jamie Bramburger, Manager of Community and Student Affairs

Orientation-Getting Off to a Good Start

Track athletes are trained to be ready when the starter’s pistol sounds. They know the importance of a good start! Attending College for the first time is like getting set for a race. You are excited, but apprehensive; Confident, but yet unsure; Eager, but controlled. Above all, you are looking to find your place so the journey to the finish line will begin with a strong start.

For thousands of college and university students, orientation is an opportunity to take control of those butterflies in your stomach by making connections with other students, as well as faculty and staff on campus. Those early days on campus can be so meaningful to students, and can set a foundation for academic and social success. On the other hand, not taking part in orientation activities can leave some students isolated, making it more difficult for them to develop relationships which often create the support network students need to manage their college experience.

Web Banner Orientation - Pembroke Campus

At Algonquin College in the Ottawa Valley, a week of orientation activities have been planned for this coming school year, running from August 23rd to September 1st. In addition to an academic orientation when students meet with their faculty and fellow students to learn more about the expectations of the program they are enrolled in, there are also plenty of fun activities and events to attend.

games day thor

Things like scavenger hunts, pubs and sporting events can be great ways to meet new people, but structured workshops that are geared to specific student populations, such as mature students, can also take away a lot of the anxiety students feel when they first step on campus. So, let’s plan a typical student’s orientation week, by giving you an example of what it might look like.

We’ll call our student John. He is 19 years old, new to Pembroke, and studying in the Forestry Technician program. Not surprisingly John loves the outdoors and likes sports. He’s decided to come to Pembroke a week before classes start so he can take part in orientation.

John signs up for the alumni association golf tournament on August 23rd. It only cost him $30 for nine holes of golf, a streak dinner and he won a signed Ottawa RedBlacks jersey by hitting the longest drive at the tournament. More importantly he met a lot of new people including graduates from the Forestry program and some students that will be in his class.

John takes the next day off to get his apartment set up, but on Monday, August 25th he visits the campus to purchase his textbooks and parking pass. He also takes advantage of the free fitness zone passes that are available to students during orientation. After pumping weights and running on the treadmill, he shoots some basketballs in the gym. He returns the following day to the fitness centre, and walks through Pembroke’s downtown to get familiar with the area.

On Wednesday, August 27th, John checks out the Loggersports demonstrations and engages in some of the activities like cross-cut sawing. He has already planned to try out for the varsity team, and gets to know the coach of the team and some of the other graduating students who are helping out with the demos. While at the campus, he purchases his $15 ticket to the Ottawa REDBLACKS-B.C. Lions football game on September 5th in Ottawa. The ticket price includes bus transportation to and from the game, and with his new jersey he won at the golf tournament, John is really looking forward to the game.

The following day, John connects with some Police Foundations students and has a blast taking part in the college scavenger hunt. Earlier in the day, he checked in with the Information Technology staff to get his laptop computer configured to the college wireless network and to log on to his college email account. He also met with the financial aid office to go over some of the documents concerning his student loan. In the evening he attends the Tight and Bright dance put on by the Algonquin Students’ Association.

Financial Aid Banner

On Friday, August 29th, John attends his program orientation for the Forestry Technician program. He meets his faculty and the more than 40 other students that are in his program. Like him, most of them are from out of town. They decide they will be attending the “country” night at the college, and are all looking forward to riding the mechanical bull that will be there.

Saturday morning comes early after a great night at the college, and John and his new buddies attend a free brunch at the college. The rest of the day, they head over to nearby Riverside Park to check out one of Canada’s largest fiddling festivals, an event that attracts hundreds of campers and fiddling enthusiasts to Pembroke every Labour Day weekend.

On Sunday evening, John and some of his Forestry classmates take advantage of the free movie tickets made available at the Algonquin Cinemas in the Pembroke Mall, by the Algonquin Students’ Association. The next night, they cram into one of the student’s cars and attend the retro movie night at the Skylight Drive In, one of only a handful of Drive Ins that still exist in the province. It’s a new experience for John and he loves it, and so do his new friends. It’s a great way to end a week of fun!

Classes begin the next morning at 8 a.m. Thanks to orientation, John is feeling pretty good about attending Algonquin College!

Please share your thoughts on orientation.

Posted by: Jamie Bramburger, Manager of Community and Student Affairs at Algonquin College’s Pembroke Waterfront Campus

Click here for full Orientation Schedule for Pembroke Campus: Advantage Week Orientation

Awareness = Success!

We believe that awareness is an integral component of success and in staying true to our beliefs we are introducing a number of Program Awareness Camps for some of our full-time programs this spring.

Success

Students who have confirmed their offers of admission or are interested in the programs listed are invited to take part our new Awareness Camp. These are intended to provide a snapshot of what you as a fall 2014 student will experience during your program. This interactive learning experience will also connect you as a student to faculty, support staff and fellow classmates.

Students who have applied to our Environmental Technician and Outdoor Adventure Naturalist programs are invited to participate in a two-day experience Friday, May 30 and Saturday, May 31, 2014, where you will camp overnight at our educational partner, Wilderness Tours and get a taste of activities both on and off the water to expose you to a learning experience representative of your specific program. In addition, students get to participate in a gentle river raft trip on the beautiful and scenic Ottawa River!

outdoor adventurer naturalist students with binoculars

Prospective students who have applied to our Police Foundations, Practical Nursing, Radiation Safety and Social Service Worker programs also get the opportunity to experience a snapshot of their program at our new Waterfront Campus. This is an idea opportunity for all students in these program areas to become more aware of what awaits them in the fall. These Awareness Camps are intended to help with the transition from high school, work life or being out of school for a number of years.

Mock Disaster 2Mock Disaster Simulation – Police Foundations, Practical Nursing, Radiation Safety and Social Service Worker programs

Students new found ability to perceive, to feel, or to be conscious of what is required of them for their full-time program will help them to be empowered and have a level of success that they can adhere to their educational journey.

Would a Program Awareness Camp have helped you transition to college life? Do you wish we offered Program Awareness Camps for our other full-time programs? Let us know!

Posted by: Jodi Bucholtz

Time Flies

TimeFlies

Whoever first coined that phrase was certainly correct. It’s amazing that January is almost past and students are beginning the 4th week of the winter semester. Some students are focused on the end of term but many more, I think, are looking forward to the winter break which begins in two weeks.

For many students at our Waterfront Campus in the fourth semester of their two-year program, they are deep into developing capstone projects to complete their studies.

Our Early Childhood Education students are deep into their 210 hour Teaching Practicum, where they have the opportunity to experience assuming the teacher’s role in a childcare setting and become fully involved in all aspects of the program. The Top 50 ECE Blogs is a fantastic resource for prospective and current Social Service Worker students.

On the other hand, our Police Foundations students, with the help of Dan Labelle, Coordinator Police Foundations and has experienced team of professors, are delving into their Conflict Management studies. They are currently perfecting their abilities to effectively intervene in conflict and crisis situations with absolute confidence and competency. These observational students are learning how to:

  • Examine conflict situations
  • Engage various problem-solving skills
  • Intervene using non-violent techniques
  • Recognize behavioural patterns

A fantastic student experience that offer direct employable skills! If you are interested in learning more about policing, check out some firsthand experiences with the Police One Blog.

And lastly, our Social Service Worker students are roughly 70 hours into their 240 hour advanced field placement. What better place to transfer those theories learnt in class and develop skills directly related to the social service setting than during an intensive placement! Check out this one-stop-shop for Social Service Blogs.

Wiarton-WillieIt’s hard to say if Wiarton Willie will prognosticate an early Spring, but we can enjoy what’s left for the balance of winter in Ottawa Valley. Local carnivals are up and running and the ice is perfect for some shinny hockey…if you wear your long underwear! For students at our Waterfront Campus, ten weeks and counting before the end of term but lots to do before summer arrives! The expression, “time flies when you’re having fun” hopefully applies.

Posted by: Jodi Bucholtz