Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The Clackamas print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1989-2019 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 2019)
4 NEW S Resources for the atypical student STOR Y A N O ,P H O T O BY IA N V A N O R D E N MANAGING EDITOR Apprehension upon beginning college is no new issue. M any who first arrive on a college campus will feel overwhelmed, perhaps out of place in the new environment. Those that often have the m ost trouble, though, are the ones that do not fall into the typical college age bracket. Those who are returning to school after a break, or perhaps those who are skipping ahead. Joan Jagodnik, an academ ic and career coach at CCC focuses on helping these students with their transition. The Clackamas Print spoke w ith Jagodnik about what issues these students face, and w hat resources are available to help them succeed. TCP: Tell m e a little about yourself. A: I ’ve been here just a little over a year, in this position. I started in November 2017. I actually worked here previously eighteen years ago, in a different advising role. In betw een tim es I w orked at Portland State University and Marylhurst University and I think I even worked for Portland Com m unity College for a while in between there. So, always kind of in that student services, doing advising, all student service kind of roles. I love the com m unity college, I actually attended Clackamas Com m unity College right out of high school and so was very happy to work here before and happy to come back. It’s a great place to be. Q: Tell me about your role here. W hat do you do specifically? A : So , m y title is academ ic and career coach. There are, I forget how many of us with that title and primarily we work for student services but there are some of us that are distributed to different areas. So, we have one of our advisors who focuses on working with student athletes and one in one of the more career technical areas, so different specializations. M ine is working with students in our adult basic skills areas w hich includes English as a second language, adult basic ed, GED, and then developmental writing, the word 90 classes. I work with those students who are students who are in the ESL and GED programs who are getting close to fin ish in g those program s and startin g to th in k about tran sitio n in g to college course. For exam ple, when a student starts tak in g their GED class, there are four of them to take and they usually don’t take them all at once, some do, but when they start taking them and are feelin g pretty confident that they ClackamasPrint_________ - are go in g to pass them then we start talking about what their next step is. So, if all they needed was their GED, their fine, their good to go, they just needed it for their job or whatever, that’s great. But if they are thinking about changing careers or jobs, or a career path, need some training, I just help them with that process and w hat that looks like and how to fund that. How to find finances, financial options to help pay for that. Q: W h at are som e unique issues that those kinds o f students run into? A: It’s all over the board. It really depends on the student. There are some students who might be more traditional high school age and for whatever reason high school just didn’t work out for them and they just come to do their GED and they’ve got a path and th ey know w hat their doing and th a t’s fin e. Or h igh school just w asn’t for them and they do their GED but they have no path and so to help them figure out what is their next step. We actually have a lot of students who are in that 16-17-y e a r-o ld range and th a t’s kind o f & challenge to fit them into the programs that will fund students of their age or that’s kind of an appropriate path for them to go down. Other students, their all over age wise, what’s happening in their life. A big factor is confidence, often. T h at’s often w hy they’ve never come back or why they’ve started and stopped, started and stopped and are trying again. Which is greatthat they are trying again. So, trying to help them build that confidence that they can move forward. Once they finish their GED it’s like yes, you can actually do college classes and help them move forward at that. Finances are often an option. One o f the program s I w ork w ith we have a grant funded program for students _____________________ _ Joan Jagodnik worked for a variety of colleges in the Portland Metro area including Portland State University and Marylhurst University before returning to CCC. who are receiving SNAP benefits, the old food stamps benefit to help pay for some classes, to help pay for transportation, books, and those other things that are hard to fund sometimes. Q: W h a t’ s a u n iqu e issu e s y o u n ger student would face? Someone who isn ’t o f college age? A : O ften , it ’s the not really know ing what they want to do yet. Trying to find some exploratory classes that they can take. Depending on what their history is, whether work is a realistic option, finding theclackamasprint.com a living wage. It can really depend on what, their home situation is like, whether they have a stable home situation or not. Q: If you could give one piece o f advice to every student, w h atw ou ld it be? A: Come and talk to me. D o irt be afraid to ask questions and get some direction. There are a lot ofpeople here to help and can get you on that right path. We don’t always have the bandwidth to reach out to every student but if you reach out to us we will definitely be there. F e b ru a ry 6, 2019