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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Feb. 9, 2007) – Tennessee Tech University is
the place to be this week for anyone who’s ever thought about continuing
her education but may not be sure how to juggle it along with such daily
responsibilities as being a spouse, parent and employee.
Creating an educational seminar to serve as an orientation for incoming
non-traditional students will be the topic of a round-table discussion
set for 3 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 15, in Room 370 of the Roaden University
Center.
The session, which is free and open to the public, is a part of TTU’s
“Project Linking Lives,” a women’s mentoring initiative
for nontraditional students made possible through a grant from the American
Association of University Women’s Leadership and Training Institute.
“As one of only 10 proposals selected from a nationwide pool of
applicants, it continues the AAUW’s focus on higher education as
the gateway to women’s economic security,” said principal
investigator Lachelle Norris, an associate professor of sociology at TTU.
With a campus population that is approximately 12 percent nontraditional,
more than half of that student category is made up of women.
“There are currently no resources or services specifically provided
to nontraditional students at TTU,” Norris said. “This has
resulted in a growing segment of this student population frequently expressing
feelings of isolation, invisibility and frustration.”
When students feel those barriers have become insurmountable, they often
drop out of college — and women face even greater challenges when
it comes to being nontraditional students, she said.
“Female nontraditional students face particular challenges, since
they are more likely to be the family caregivers and employed, as well
as being students,” Norris said.
Compounding those challenges, research from the Tennessee Economic Council
on Women has shown that counties in the Upper Cumberland region rank among
the lowest in the state for employment, earnings and economic autonomy
for women.
“For many women, higher education is seen as the way to become more
economically self-sufficient, and many are entering or returning to college
with the goal of working toward a degree to support themselves and their
families — yet when they arrive on campus, they often find little
support or resources available to nurture, encourage and sustain them
in their efforts,” Norris said.
For those reasons, the objectives of “Project Linking Lives”
are threefold.
It will offer a series of workshops — such as the one on Thursday
— and culminate with the Transitions Conference, which is set for
later in the spring and includes invitations for experts from other colleges
and universities in the area to participate.
Secondly, a Nontraditional Student Mentoring Center will be created on
campus, where entering nontraditional students will be mentored by peers
and resources and services will be available to the campus’s entire
nontraditional student population. It is temporarily being housed in the
TTU Women’s Center while a permanent location is being secured.
Finally, the topics presented at the Transitions Conference will be recorded,
compiled and combined with additional resources from the mentoring center
to create a Nontraditional Student Survival Manual to be given to all
incoming nontraditional students.
“We expect this project to have a significant impact on TTU’s
female nontraditional student population,” Norris said. “The
success of this project will enable more women to successfully complete
their degree work, which will directly translate into greater economic
self-sufficiency for women of the Upper Cumberland region.”
Norris added that the leadership experience being gained by the female
nontraditional students who make up the project’s team is equally
important.
“The goals of this work, and the means by which to achieve these
goals, have been determined by the women who are currently facing the
challenges. They are the heart and soul of this project,” she said.
For more information about “Project Linking Lives” or about
the round-table discussion set for Thursday, call Norris at 931/372-6220.
--Tracey Hackett
This information posted 12 February 2007
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